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Costello's hopes PDF Print E-mail
News - Aust News Feed
Written by The Australian | Ross Fitzgerald   
Thursday, 22 January 2009 13:12



Costello's hopes should have burned out after sermon PETER Costello's chances of heading the nation should have been extinguished, not because he failed to grab the shadow treasurer's position offered last week or because he continues to posture around his backbench pew like a Morris dancer, every time there's a leadership issue in the Coalition. No. He's blown it via a video featured on YouTube, which has shocked many loyal Liberal voters who are left wondering what the hell he stands for these days.

I'm referring to Costello's videoed Australia Day address to the Catch The Fire Ministries. There seems little doubt that he produced this cinematographic epic at the request of Pastor Danny Nalliah, head honcho of the firebrand US Pentecostal-style church. Nalliah is the man who claims that Victoria's burned and broken townships were the result of a vengeful God getting his own back on sinners, who allowed new abortion laws into the state. Informed Liberal voters will also know Nalliah is from a rival party: Family First.

So why would Costello make a film to support a candidate of another party? Could it be to cement political ties with Family First in the Senate or even to cement personal ties with a newfound Pentecostal God. But supporting someone who would later blame Victorians for their dreadful sufferings, even as they lay burned and bleeding in intensive care units across the state, showed extremely poor judgment on Costello's part. Yes, he outwardly showed outrage at Nalliah's comments but he sought no formal apology from the Pentecostal preacher and made no comment about his ongoing relationship with Australia's Pentecostal movement. If Costello were a serious contender to the Liberal throne, he would have publicly ended it then and there.

Costello's video is both disturbing and laughable at the same time. If you've seen a couple of episodes of the new forensic body language TV show, Lie To Me, Costello's facial expressions take on extra meaning. The angled eyebrows, the omniscient and pontifical smile and the flicking tongue. He's the Tom Cruise of Australian politics. Don't worry about balancing budgets and dumping deficits, Saint Peter is now out to save Australia's soul with his own brand of politicised religion.

Like the Pope or the Dalai Lama he welcomed the faithful to the video with, "I bring you special greetings ...". And then, "What greater gift is there than the gift that God has given us in Jesus Christ and the Cup of Salvation?" It's already sounding like an excerpt from The Da Vinci Code. "One of the things that has been absolutely central to the development of Australia and the foundation of our society is that biblical heritage; that heritage we have through the scriptures and the Ten Commandments. It's been the basis of our peaceful tolerance of each other and of order ..." What can you say? Government policies on employment, social welfare etc don't count toward maintaining law and order? And how many "Christians" attended the Cronulla riots? "If we walk away from those God-given commandments then we as a society will be threatened with the breakdown of that order, will be threatened with losing our heritage and losing opportunities. There are many people today that are telling us that religion is all a lot of superstition, that the laws that have been laid down; and respect for individuals and property; and for our creator are a load of nonsense. If we fall for that trap, if Australia falls for that trap, then the very basis of our society and its order will be threatened."

Is this really the language of someone who is able to separate church and state? It's certainly the language of someone who sees himself as part of a group of religious adherents ("we") that are separate from the rest of us ("Australia"). Costello's allusions to the God-fearing start to the nation are laughable. So is his fuzzy logic that draws respect for individuals and property as one and the same with a religious outlook on life. In case he hadn't noticed, there have been hundreds of pedophile priests and ministers before the courts in the past 25 years. But it's his fear that we will all be swallowed up by a big black hole if we abandon religion that is at the heart of his video. For most rational Australians the fear of a bushfire or a market meltdown surely must loom larger. Notwithstanding this, the gist of what he said is not all that different from a speech he gave to the Hillsong Church a few years ago. It was primarily the delivery and the commitment that dramatically intensified in his message to the Catch the Fire Ministries.

So is Australia really ready for a leader with strong links to US style, fire and brimstone evangelism? I think not. Especially as Costello's addresses to religious groups rival in number the very few speeches he's delivered in recent times to the federal parliament.

We already have a Prime Minister who is the titular head of the Parliamentary Christian Fellowship. Since Kevin Rudd's ascendancy, this group in federal parliament is rumoured to have grown to more than 90 members. In a democracy you'd expect that the ratio of committed Christians in the parliament would mirror the same ratio as it is in the community. Far from it. Using figures from the latest census and the 2006 National Church Life Survey on the numbers of Australians who call themselves committed Christians, there should be 19 members of the PCF, not 90. So how is the political culture of a large secular nation such as Australia being seemingly hijacked by the nation's Christian churches?

And it's not just at the federal level. The NSW Liberal Party has been heavily infiltrated by Opus Dei and recently members from both Liberal and Labor parties supported Fred Nile's benchmark moralist call to ban topless bathing on Sydney beaches and take us back to the time of Queen Victoria. And while the Christian Environment Minister, Peter Garrett, used the Quakers to rally against John Howard's involvement in Iraq and Rudd holds up Christian theologians such as Dietrich Bonhoeffer as personal role models, they never mention the insidious effect that the Australian Catholic Bishops have on gay rights or the Australian Christian Lobby on internet filtering.

For a while at 3pm on Saturday, Costello's Australia Day address was temporarily taken down from YouTube with the message "This video is no longer available". Fortunately for those of us interested in freedom of speech and expression, it was back up again a couple of hours later. As the majority of the comments make clear, it's scary stuff.

 

 
Strange bedfellows: Net censorship PDF Print E-mail
News - Aust News Feed
Written by RNA   
Wednesday, 21 January 2009 09:50

Strange bedfellows: Sex and IT unite to stop Net censorship

With the government spending millions on an impossible Internet filter, even the sex and IT industries agree its a bad idea
Rodney Gedda (Techworld Australia)

Who would have thought the government's proposed Internet filtering scheme would bring together so many disparate groups all united in their opposition to mandatory censorship?

The newly-formed Australian Sex Party, for example, has come out and blasted the idea of Internet filtering, putting itself on the same side as the entire tech industry — from networking vendors to ISPs.

Sex Party leader Fiona Patten believes the government is already backing down on its original promises and is shifting the focus of what type of content will be filtered — a significant concern for all who are seeking more transparency.

“In meetings I had with Senator Conroy last year he indicated that they had no intention of banning non-violent erotica or X-rated material,” Patten said. “But that is not the case — the ACMA Web site lists the types of material that will 'qualify' for the blacklist. This includes material that would be rated X (18+).

Read more... [Strange bedfellows: Net censorship]
 
Sexual Politics In Australia PDF Print E-mail
News - Aust News Feed
Written by Independent News | West Ender   
Friday, 16 January 2009 13:17

Eros Foundation Launches The Australian Sex Party - a sex and gender party to run for the Senate.

Amidst a rapidly changing political landscape and an increasing resistance to ‘nanny state’ politics, Australia’s national adult industry association The Eros Foundation has launched the Australian Sex Party,  a new force in the Australian political landscape.

Eros CEO and party convenor, Fiona Patten, said the party was a sign of the times and an acknowledgement of the importance and scope of sexual issues in ordinary people’s lives these days. “People want their House of Reps members to balance the budget but increasingly they want their Senators to look after their rights and freedoms”, she said. “The Sex Party is the beginning of a new chapter in Upper House politics.”

The party is a sex and gender party that will run candidates in the next Senate election and in some state Upper House elections over the next few years. Its first priority would be to alert Australians to the unprecedented censorship of legal material that Senator Conroy’s proposed internet filtering scheme represents. “Senator Conroy’s plans actually threaten the existence of the Sex Party online which represents a real challenge to political free speech”, she said.

Read more... [Sexual Politics In Australia]
 
Protests against web filter PDF Print E-mail
News - Aust News Feed
Written by News.com | Andrew Ramadge   
Tuesday, 06 January 2009 10:35

Digital Liberty Coalition protests against web filter held across Australia

  • Protests against web filtering scheme
  • Held in capital cities across Australia
  • Monthly rallies until March

HUNDREDS of people attended rallies in Australian capital cities yesterday to voice their opposition to the Rudd Government's planned internet filtering scheme.

The rallies, held in seven cities including Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney, were the first in a series of demonstrations organised by anti-censorship group Digital Liberty Coalition (DLC).

In Sydney a crowd of up to 300 mostly young and tech-savvy protestors gathered at Town Hall to hear guest speakers including bloggers and musicians criticise the web filtering scheme.

IT worker Jon Seymour, who runs the blogs Broadbanned Revolution and Filtering Fallacies, said he was concerned the filter had the potential to be misused.

"Even if there's no realistic scenario where it's going to be abused now, it's certainly possible that future governments might choose to use (it) to start frustrating political opinion," he said.

"We have to resist this now, because once it's in place it will be very hard to dismantle."

Full Story: http://www.news.com.au

 

 
Simpsons cartoon rip-off is child porn: judge PDF Print E-mail
News - Aust News Feed
Written by Th Age   
Saturday, 03 January 2009 14:20
A NSW Supreme Court judge has ruled an internet cartoon in which lookalike child characters from The Simpsons engage in sexual acts is child pornography.

In a landmark finding, Justice Michael Adams today upheld a decision convicting a man of possessing child pornography after the cartoons, depicting characters modelled on Bart, Lisa and Maggie engaging in sex acts, were found on his computer. The main issue of the case was whether a fictional cartoon character could "depict" a "person" under law.

"If the persons were real, such depictions could never be permitted,"Justice Adams said in his judgement. "Their creation would constitute crimes at the very highest end of the criminal calendar."

Alan John McEwan had been convicted in the Parramatta Local Court of possessing child pornography and of using a carriage service to access child pornography material, the latter of which has a maximum penalty of 10 years' jail.
Read more... [Simpsons cartoon rip-off is child porn: judge]
 
Flawed internet filter PDF Print E-mail
News - Aust News Feed
Written by Herald Sun | AAP   
Friday, 02 January 2009 14:11

Report condemns 'flawed' internet filter

THE Federal Government has distanced itself from a report that found internet censorship technology under consideration is flawed.

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy says the Internet Industry Association (IIA) report was commissioned and paid for by the former Howard government.

It was "not an analysis of the ALP's policy", he said.

The report concluded schemes to block inappropriate content - such as child pornography - could slow the internet and result in over- and under-blocking of material.
Read more... [Flawed internet filter]
 
When Good Chimps Go Bad... PDF Print E-mail
News - Aust News Feed
Written by Defamer | Jess McGuire   
Friday, 02 January 2009 11:40

This story... Just for some fun, well it's not really funny at all but worth a read.

When Good Chimps Go Bad... Firstly, this post title is a lie. There are NO good chimps. I used to work at the Zoo, and lemme tell you - keepers are the nicest, most loving people on earth... and they still described chimpanzees to me as "the Ivan Milats of the animal kingdom". True!

The stories I could tell you about evil chimp behaviour would horrify you. Let's just say that one of them ends in a male chimp using his fingers to make a hole in the back of a pigeon, and then rooting said pigeon in front on a whole lot of school children.

Here is another example of BAD CHIMPS.

Read more... [When Good Chimps Go Bad...]
 
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