Julia gets her Roxoff …

It’s now a race against time for Nicola … what sort of dent can she make in our freedom of speech with so little time left to do it.

Julia tells us that she knew of Nicola’s plan to depart a year ago. It must have been shortly after telling Julia the news that she was promoted to Attorney General, makes sense.

And farewell Senator Chris Evans, with three years of his term unserved (yet another Parole Board error?). Famous for dismantling the Pacific solution and boasting …

“The Rudd government pledged to dismantle the Pacific Solution. It has been done and there is no intention to return to that shameful period.”

He will be replaced in the portfolio for Tertiary Education, Skills, Jobs, Science and Research by Chris Bowen, fresh from his half arsed attempt to return us to “that shameful period.”

But some good news for the government … the celebrity minister for pink batts announces that the computer hand-out has been ‘’delivered on time and within budget’’. The importance of this project can be judged by his own words just 12 months ago …

“If the Opposition had their way, thousands of kids would miss out on new technology and the computers they do have would never be replaced or upgraded,” Mr Garrett said.

“In contrast, the Australian Government believes every kid in every school should have the best possible education … “

Can’t understand why they’ve scrapped it really.

 

Our Tim …

I had got the notion that all he did was race around in the prime ministerial car but apparently our Tim is passionately working for the cause of mens’ health.

To that end he has composed a racy little advertising jingle …

If you have to get it checked
Don’t be glum
Get a little Asian girl
To poke you in the bum.

I’ve got just the lady for him.

Greens leader Christine Milne thought it tasteless. Shows the importance of keeping your fingers out of your mouth.

Nicola Roxon will be delivering us from all of this by making it illegal to offend anyone, although the government will be exempt, I wonder if that exemption extends to the first bloke.

 

Fidei defensor …

There are seven countries where atheist can be executed for their beliefs

Pakistan

Saudi Arabia

Iran

Afghanistan

Sudan

the West African state of Mauritania

the Maldives

the states that forbid non-religiousness – typically as part of “anti-blasphemy” legislation – include seven nations where atheism is punishable by death. All seven establish Islam as the state religion. Though that list includes some dictatorships, the country that appears to most frequently condemn atheists to death for their beliefs is actually a democracy, if a frail one: Pakistan.

Thought police …

The knock on the door …

Glenn Dirix's home was raided by the  AFP after he sent emails to politicians.

Mr Dirix considers himself a blogger who merely makes comments about Australian politics. He sends the emails using his own name to the public email accounts of the politicians.

He said among the emails, for example, were pictures of politicians with clown hats on, a picture that described Treasurer Wayne Swan as an “economics illiterate”, and a picture of Ms Gillard and Mr Swan in a parody of Custer’s last stand, a commentary on the 2013 federal election.

Mr Dirix, who runs a mowing business, said the federal police officers knocked on his front door yesterday around 10am, then they entered and confiscated his wife Sheryl’s computer.

He was charged with seven counts of using a carriage service to “menace, harass or cause offence” and one charge of assaulting police.

He believes the AFP seizures relate to 79 emails, sent by him to various political leaders between June and December.

He was also required to visit Caloundra Police Station to surrender his passport and is expected to be fingerprinted shortly.

Who will tend his tomatoes? Who’ll tend mine … ?

Offensive …

This stuck its head out from behind the pay wall long enough for me to capture it …

ABC chairman and former top jurist Jim Spigelman has warned that a planned overhaul of discrimination law will impose unprecedented restrictions on free speech, including making it unlawful to offend people, leaving the nation isolated from international norms.

The Gillard government’s planned consolidation of all federal discrimination laws would significantly redraw the line between permissible and unlawful speech and open the way for the banning of publications, said Mr Spigelman, the immediate past chief justice of NSW.

If the government’s draft bill were enacted, discrimination in all areas would be affected by provisions of the Racial Discrimination Act that were used last year against newspaper columnist Andrew Bolt so that merely offending people would amount to unlawful discrimination.

“I am not aware of any international human rights instrument or national anti-discrimination statute in another liberal democracy that extends to conduct which is merely offensive,” Mr Spigelman said.

“We would be pretty much on our own in declaring conduct which does no more than offend to be unlawful. The freedom to offend is an integral component of freedom of speech. There is no right not to be offended.”

Mr Spigelman’s warning, contained in a human rights day oration for the Australian Human Rights Commission, is in line with longstanding criticism from the federal opposition and civil libertarians that some of the provisions of the Racial Discrimination Act go too far by imposing liability for statements that merely offend and insult.

Bolt, who wrote a series of articles about fair-skinned Aborigines, was found to have engaged in racial vilification after the Federal Court applied section 18C of the act, which imposes liability for statements that offend, humiliate, insult or intimidate on the basis of race.

Mr Spigelman told an audience in Sydney yesterday that none of the nation’s treaty obligations required any person or group to be protected from being offended.

“We are, however, obliged to protect freedom of speech,” he said. “We should take care not to put ourselves in a position where others could reasonably assert that we are in breach of our international treaty obligations to protect freedom of speech.”

The government’s proposed changes would mean that liability for speech that offended would be extended beyond the subject of race to cover statements about age, gender and disability.

The scheme would reverse the onus of proof so that those accused of discrimination would bear the onus of proving their innocence after their accusers provided prima facie evidence of wrongdoing.

Mr Spigelman said another aspect of the draft bill would have the effect of introducing a blasphemy law for the nation’s workplaces. This would occur because religion was among the “protected attributes” that would apply only in the context of employment.

“The inclusion of religion as a protected attribute in the workplace appears to me, in effect, to make blasphemy unlawful at work, but not elsewhere,” he said.

“The controversial Danish cartoons could be published, but not taken to work.”

Similar anomalies could arise with other workplace-protected attributes such as political opinion, social origin and nationality, Mr Spigelman said.

He also warned that the government’s scheme could lead to the banning of publications.

Each of the four commonwealth anti-discrimination acts proscribed publication of advertisements or notices that indicated an intention to engage in discriminatory conduct, but the proposed bill went “further into freedom of speech territory by extending the proscription beyond advertisements to any publication”.

He said enough time may have elapsed for the merits of section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act to be discussed dispassionately “and not on the basis of whether or not you like Andrew Bolt”.

Opposition legal affairs spokesman George Brandis, who has previously expressed concern about the Racial Discrimination Act ban on speech that offends and insults, said the opposition agreed with Mr Spigelman’s address “in its entirety”.

A spokeswoman for Attorney-General Nicola Roxon said the government was committed to achieving the right balance of rights and freedoms in its bill.

“This consultation process is being conducted to receive important feedback like this, which will be closely considered before legislation is introduced into the parliament,” the spokeswoman said.

The government had no plans to change racial vilification laws, and the draft bill defined discrimination as “unfavourable treatment”, she said.

Legal academic Spencer Zifcak of the Australian Catholic University welcomed Mr Spigelman’s intervention in the debate.

“Spigelman has made an immensely valuable contribution to the current free speech debate,” Professor Zifcak said. “He rightly contends that speech that offends or insults, even on racial grounds, should not be unlawful.

“It is also of great concern that the draft legislation extends the definition of discrimination to include speech and action that merely offends – on grounds far beyond race and religion. This compounds the error initially made with respect to racially prejudicial speech alone and may have a chilling effect on free speech across the board.

“It is worth noting, as Spigelman does, that international law restricts free speech on racial grounds only where it advocates racial hatred, vilification or intimidation and even then only if it incites discrimination or violence.

“Legislation like this should be drafted carefully to ensure that only speech that is really wounding to members of minority groups or subjects them to hostility is caught by the law.”

Don’t be rude about the Pope …

McGhie, of Carluke, Lanarkshire, jumped a wall as if to invade the pitch after Rangers scored their third goal against Caley Thistle at the Tulloch Stadium on February 26.

He then straddled a fence and joined in with offensive songs which referred to the Pope and the Vatican and called Celtic “Fenian b******s”.

Two witnesses reported McGhie to police and he was arrested at the end of the game. He pled not guilty but was convicted.

Presumably that wasn’t code for a bunch of stars, buggers is one star too few, so may be bastards, The Daily Record is too shy to tell us exactly.

And for being so extremely rude Mr McGhie was sentenced to three months in jail …

McGees of the world must stand together, no matter their spelling.

Theatre of the absurd …

Back in the old country …

The council worker is suing bosses after accusing colleagues of making racist comments – including constantly greeting him with ‘G’day, sport’.

Mr Stephens, 48, is a community warden who has lived in Britain for 26 years.

He said he was on a ‘cocktail of anti-depressants’ because of the constant abuse which he claims will ‘eventually kill him’.

He added that he asked fellow wardens to stop making Australian jokes, but they continued.

They regularly greet him by saying ‘G’day, sport’ and ‘Is your girlfriend called Sheila?’.

Other phrases include ‘throw another shrimp on the barbie’ and jokes about kangaroos.

Stupid Australian …

The Daily Mail reports that the row started after New Zealander Chelsea O’Reilly called the police following a fight between her neighbour Petra Mills and her husband in Macclesfield, England.Ms O’Reilly said: “She called me a stupid, fat Australian …

Judge Brian Donohue …

“The word Australian was used. It was racially aggravated and the main reason it was used was in hostility,” he said.

She was fined 110 pounds ($168) for racially aggravated public disorder, 50 pounds to be awarded to Ms O’Reilly and 500 pounds to cover all court costs.

Stupid poms …

We couldn’t be that stupid could we? However, Nicola’s on the case …

For the first time ever, discrimination on the basis of “political opinions” will be unlawful. 

Further, the bill defines discrimination to be any “conduct that offends, insults or intimidates” another person (see Section 19 here). That means that expressing an opinion that offends someone else’s political opinions is now grounds for discrimination if it occurs in certain contexts, such as in the workplace.

Stupid Australians.

But the stupid Kiwi can have the penultimate word …

Miss O’Reilly, 21, who has dual British and New Zealand nationality, told magistrates: ‘She knew I was from New Zealand. She was trying to be offensive. I was really insulted.’

Insulted to be called an Australian, as an Australian I find that very insulting … where do I collect the compo?


 

Starry, starry eyed …

If you are naive to this issue start by reading this blog post by Professor Don Aitkin.

The next step … ask yourself if it insults anyone, except perhaps professor Aitkin’s ancestors.

Would you sue?

FORMER University of Canberra vice-chancellor and former chairman of the National Capital Authority Don Aitkin is being sued for $6 million for alleged racial discrimination.

Ngambri Aboriginal elder Shane Mortimer alleges the adjunct professor’s blog contravenes Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act and has lodged an application for damages in the Federal Magistrates Court. <Canberra Times>.

Is there any truth to the suggestion that Mr. Mortimer is as pale skinned as Professor Aitkin? Judge for yourelf.

Is being called pale skinned worth $6million in compensation? Don’t anyone say thin-skinned, that could cost even more.

Mr Mortimer said the case was very similar to that of Herald Sun columnist Andrew Bolt. Bolt was accused of breaching the Racial Discrimination Act and was found to have contravened Section 18C of the act.

But Professor Aitkin said there was no comparison. ‘’That’s stupid, I’m an academic, I’m an emeritus professor of the University of Canberra….”

… and just writing a blog, a blog that doesn’t suggest any overtly racist tendencies in the good professor, but the law of the land applies to everyone. Bad laws have bad consequences for everyone.

18c is a very bad law, it should be repealed.