Terrorism laws are good for multiculturalism

Or so claims Gerard Henderson anyway. In addition to once again attacking the media for its alleged unbalanced coverage on the terrorism legislation, Henderson is actually making the argument that without these laws the Coalition will destroy multiculturalism.

Notice too how he continues his now weekly attacks the Age, ABC, artists, journalists (left wing?) and lawyers (which I guess are of the civil rights kind), while studiously avoiding the media elephant in the room, the Murdoch yellow press which dominates political commentary in our media landscape. Amusingly he says this.

And how many commentators defended the legislation? Absolutely zip

So in addition to not reading any News Limited publications, Gerry obviously doesn’t read himself.

But I digress…..

Coalition and Labor politicians are more likely to hold out against any demand to discriminate against Muslim immigrants, and/or to junk multiculturalism, if the majority of Australians believe there is adequate national security legislation in place.

Is the Coalition so weak that it would allow jackboot wearing tossers like John Stone to destroy one of the most successful cultural underpinnings of this country if it doesn’t get its way on national security? One that Henderson admits has made a difference in protecting us from homegrown terrorist attacks? It appears so if Henderson is to be believed.

So the really scary thing about Henderson’s column is that he is no doubt channeling some of the chatter going on behind the scenes within the Coalition, it’s clear that they may be unable to constrain their basest instincts in the face of a complex and changing world.

If, as Henderson alludes to, successful multiculturalism is partially responsible for our national security, wouldn’t the correct response to that suggestion be a strengthening of that policy rather than the obvious vilification of one section or our multicultural society under the guise of fighting the war on terror?

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152 Responses to “Terrorism laws are good for multiculturalism”


  1. 1 liam hoganNo Gravatar

    …And in addition to not reading people backing the legislation, he obviously hasn’t read Mark Lopez’s Origins of Multiculturalism in Australian Politics, which he cites.
    There’s a specious link in his article between multiculturalism and these new anti-’terror’ laws, in that he claims they were both products of Government rather than popular demand. Half true.
    Multiculturalism was a product of two decades of policy and theory work by the Department of Immigration, churches, academics, social researchers and migrants themselves. It didn’t meet with popular support until well into the late 1970s. On the other hand it was a) never one Bill, b) a very large group of sometimes contradictory ideas and beliefs, and c) brought into being over a long period of time, gradually and carefully.
    On the other hand the anti-’terror’ bills are a) Bills nobody’s read, b) one simple idea about reducing civil liberties, and c) going to be brought in quickly with as little debate as possible.
    Henderson, Gerard. Fail. Please make better use of secondary sources and avoid obvious errors of fact.

  2. 2 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    Multiculturalism

    Women’s groups are concerned the politically correct policing could give comfort to wife bashers and keep their victims in a cycle of violence.

    The instructions come in a religious diversity handbook given to Victorian police officers that also recommends special treatment for suspects of Aboriginal, Hindu and Buddhist background. Some police officers have claimed the directives hinder enforcing the law equally.

    Police are told: “In incidents such as domestic violence, police need to have an understanding of the traditions, ways of life and habits of Muslims.” They are told it would be appreciated in cases of domestic violence if police consult the local Muslim religious leader who will work against “fragmenting the family unit”.

    Where would we be without it?

  3. 3 Bill PostersNo Gravatar

    EP: At least they’re not stealing your sperm.

  4. 4 liam hoganNo Gravatar

    C’mon Evil, you can do better than that. I thought you’d jump at the opportunity of a thread involving the Fairfax press, multiculturalism and academics.
    Run out of reasons to support the laws already?

  5. 5 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    I haven’t even warmed up yet.

    Did you see that Paris is celebrating four nights of multiculturalism?

    Money quote: “For 30 years the situation has been getting worse in a number of neighborhoods”. That the worsening has parallelled the emergence of multiculturalist ideology is no coincidence.

    Instead of peaceful integration, multiculturalism promotes separatism and social alienation, with inevitable results. Time to put the brakes on, before we get to where Paris, London and Amsterdam are now.

  6. 6 observaNo Gravatar

    Henderson nails it. Moderate Muslims in this country have a strong vested interest in avoiding fundamentalist terror attacks on our soil at all costs. Islamic fundamentalism is bad for their political health in the long run. Hendo’s right to rely on the judgement of the Labor Premiers offices and the PM’s office to strike the right political balance here. That’s what we elect them for. You can give all the time in the world for unelected lawyers, doctor’s wives, artists and their talking heads to ‘debate’ the issue and it won’t change the fact that their necks are not on the line if they get it wrong. These are the same people who have supported Arafat and Co for years, denying that Arab Muslims want to wipe Israel off the map. Iran’s President has just exposed they and the Mahatirs, etc for the dangerous moonbats they really are. We don’t need to listen to their delusional ravings and chatterings any longer. It’s feelgood badge wearing stuff of no consequence, because they won’t ultimately bear any of it. Their best role will be ‘keeping the bastards honest’ in the execution of the new legislation.

  7. 7 MarkNo Gravatar

    Um, France doesn’t have a multiculturalist policy, EP. They believe in French universalism and integration. It’s just that it hasn’t worked - hence a shift in approach.

    Nor do the UK or Holland in our sense.

    Come back when you’ve done some serious historical research on European social policy. There’s no basis for your comparison.

  8. 8 Lefty ElitistNo Gravatar

    The PMs refusal to budge on the Premiers demands to keep a semblance of judicial review, separation of powers, individual rights against the state (ie liberal democracy) makes it clear this bill is not actually about the national interest. Its Howard’s new wedge for 2007.

    Junking our way of life, and 800 year old legal principles to wring another fear-based victory. He is beneath contempt.

    So, ye who didnt protest when they put asylum seekers in unreviewable adminsitrative detnetion be awawre: now they come for you.

    Administrative detention: for all of us.

    If the premiers dont hold firm, Australian becomes a post-democracy.

    I want to know why any RWDB would support us becoming a police state. This is precisely what’s happening: imprisonment on executive order without judicial review. That’s the sine qua non.

    The terrorists are winning. John Howard is a traitor.

  9. 9 MarkNo Gravatar

    So in addition to not reading any News Limited publications, Gerry obviously doesn’t read himself.

    He shows some good sense, then.

  10. 10 Phil GomesNo Gravatar

    Heh!

    Meanwhile and onion is slowly peeled.

    Mr O’Sullivan admitted before a Senate committee last night that Mr Parkin had not been violent while in Australia.

    I’m also interested in how alienation gets confused with multiculturalism.

    Please explain?

  11. 11 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    Shorter Lefty Elitist: The sky is falling! The sky is falling!

  12. 12 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    Multiculturalism causes alienation by encouraging separatism amongst immigrants, and promoting hatred for the host culture.

    One of the defining features of multiculturalism is its doctrine that all cultures are equally valid, with the exception of the indigenous culture.

    Thus in Australia, multiculturalists defend the traditional practices of immigrants, as in the example of Victorian police response to domestic violence in the Muslim community.

    At the same time, multiculturalist advocates promote hatred for Anglo-Australian culture by falsely accusing it of racism, genocide, and so on.

    This double standard lies at the heart of multiculturalism and is one of the reasons it is such a divisive policy.

  13. 13 MarkNo Gravatar

    Shorter EP: The sky is falling! The sky is falling!

  14. 14 JeremyNo Gravatar

    Gerard Henderson seems concerned that coverage of the anti-terrorism bill is unbalanced because most journalist’s, commentators and legal experts voice opposition to it.
    This is an interesting argument and one the flat earth society may like to run with…

    If the Prime Minister is doing what he ‘believes should be done’ as Gerard Henderson asserts, then he should allow sufficient time for debate, and release sufficient information for the public to participate in the conversation.

    Perhaps I’m a little confused, but I thought there is something in the word ‘democracy’ that encourages democratic engagement.

  15. 15 Lefty ElitistNo Gravatar

    EP, Some of us are concerned about unchecked state power. Others blithely fool themselves that this slide in arbitrary executive power is of no concern.

    When even National Party backbenchers like Neville are concerned about the impact on our way of life, you should be hearing warning bells.

  16. 16 liam hoganNo Gravatar

    I’d love to see the Family Impact Statement on these laws. I’d also love backers like Hendo to have a think about how they’d feel if the laws were used on them or their family, and why they seem to imagine that’ll never happen.

  17. 17 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    I’d love to see lefties approaching this issue with sanity and not hysteria.

  18. 18 FyodorNo Gravatar

    I’d like Kitten-Little to approach ANY issue with sanity.

  19. 19 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    As if you can talk, Crazy Hair.

  20. 20 MarkNo Gravatar

    Great to see the left/right exchange broadening all our boundaries and challenging our preconceptions that makes the blogosphere so justly famous.

  21. 21 FyodorNo Gravatar

    I have a medical condition. Besides, it’s only the hair that’s crazy. For you, it’s a full-time job.

  22. 22 Phil GomesNo Gravatar

    In an effort to be nice to the evil Kitten Little I like to make this small offering. I just found it, neat site too.

    I’m thinking cross promotional tie ins and revenue sharing EP, hell, at least a new bike……get your lawyer onto it.

  23. 23 MarkNo Gravatar

    A quick inspection of your link, Fyodor (don’t have time to read it carefully - must go to TAB and get a bet on) suggests that the thread is mainly about how Kimberella is the hotness.

    Hang on - aren’t they all?

  24. 24 FyodorNo Gravatar

    Yes, Mark. You might say (although, I couldn’t possibly comment) that it’s a recurring meme.

  25. 25 MarkNo Gravatar

    Ah, memories of FU - I believe the ABC shop has it all on dvd now!

  26. 26 Homer PaxtonNo Gravatar

    watch out EP, those criticisms might bring out Fyodor’s grandfather who reads this blog!

    Be afraid be very afraid!!

  27. 27 observaNo Gravatar

    Could these laws be used unfairly on us or the innocent? Of course they could, but what is to stop that? A Bill of Rights perhaps? When Howard was asked about that he stated he didn’t believe they can give any such guarantee. Rather, the best guarantee was our parliamentary system of democracy, and an open and inquisitorial (attack dog?) media. That’s also why he wasn’t in favour of anti-vilification laws generally.

    Now it is true that many on both sides of politics would be uneasy about the possibility of persecuting the innocent, with draconian law, which will not be immediately open to public scrutiny, but rather their public appointees. As Ronnie Reagan said ‘Trust but verify’ and in this we need to be comfortable that all the actors under the new laws know that ultimately their actions will be accountable. Nothing remains hidden for long in our democracy, although there needs to be some secrecy with the handling of terrorist suspects in the short run. These laws really reverse the onus of proof of guilt, which we are generally not in favour of. We’d rather the guilty walk through lack of proof positive than risk the wider ill of persecuting the odd innocent. Suicidal tendencies to mass murder, changes that perspective for most. We’d rather risk the short term injustice for the odd innocent than the alternative. It’s a tipping of the scales, but we’ll be alert to the tradeoffs involved. It’s not a Bill of Rights that guarantees any of that in the long run. Our sense of justice has evolved socially and civically and will respond to any perceived heavy handedness in operation accordingly.

    As for Stanhope being odd man out with the Premiers and PM. He might think his leafy Canberra and its middle class Muslims are just like Western Sydney, but he needs to recall how quickly his punters were outraged that their public servant peers were a bit tardy in predicting and preparing for the threat of fire.

  28. 28 Homer PaxtonNo Gravatar

    You know I always supports laws that I haven’t read just like Gerry.
    you people are just soooo pedantic!

  29. 29 MarkNo Gravatar

    Rather, the best guarantee was our parliamentary system of democracy

    Hello? When laws aren’t available til they’re rushed into parliament, when there are no committee hearings, and when the government has a majority in both houses?

  30. 30 Lefty ElitistNo Gravatar

    Nothing stops people being unfairly charged Observa, but our ancient system of judicial review preventw it turning into arbitrary, indefinite detention where there is no basis in law.

    Some people appear to still be labouring undere the misapprehension that current laws are inadequate. In fact, we have conspiracy laws which are entirely preventative in nature. What we need to is better intelligence and surveillance of suspects while sufficient evidence is being gathered. You know , terrorism is essentially murder, or attmept to. We DO have laws to deal with this. I agree its a new situation in terms of need for greater intelligence gathering; these laws will still need to rely on intellgence anyway(unless we’re going in on hunches now). So its bye bye to key civil rights with no net policing gain.

  31. 31 Lefty ElitistNo Gravatar

    On a lighter note: Feel the power!

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4394722.stm

  32. 32 Lefty ElitistNo Gravatar

    (Hmmm…. possibly in poor taste now Ive read it in full)

    On an *unusual* note perhaps….

  33. 33 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    These laws are not denying any civil rights that have not already been denied in other contexts.

    Freedom of speech has been denied by anti-vilification laws. Innocent-until-proven-guilty has been denied by Apprehended Violence Orders. Preventive detention has been enabled by laws to keep some offenders in prison even after the end of their sentence.

    These laws are hardly the radical departure from tradition that their opponents claim. They are an appropriate response to a threat that is not adequately addressed by present laws. Terrorism is not crime, it’s war — and needs to be addressed as such.

  34. 34 Lefty ElitistNo Gravatar

    The ‘threat we face’ EP is 6 to 8 whackos, who are under constant surveillance:

    “The figure “800″ is believed to be a dramatic exaggeration that has angered some intelligence insiders who maintain the correct figure of “persons of genuine interest” is perhaps 60 to 80 of whom, perhaps six or eight, are considered to be a genuine danger. They are under constant surveillance.”
    (From the Bulletin)

  35. 35 observaNo Gravatar

    “When laws aren‚Äôt available til they‚Äôre rushed into parliament, when there are no committee hearings, and when the government has a majority in both houses?”
    The laws are devised and agreed by the State Premier’s offices as well as the PMs. Bound to have some disagreements but a consensus will be reached via collective wisdom. I would have thought that was a fair amount of stored expertise and political savvy. In the final analysis it will come down to the professionalism and ability of the actors prosecuting the new laws. Perfection is reserved for the afterlife of course.

  36. 36 FaceLiftNo Gravatar

    EP,
    ‘Terrorism is not crime, it‚Äôs war ‚Äî and needs to be addressed as such.’

    I’m glad you meantioned war, because one of the tricks of the light is that this doesn’t seem like a conventional war. We can’t have any John Waynes, Robert Mitchums or Richard Burtons busting up an obvious enemy.

    One thing is common to this situation though, because in a war setting there has to be a degree of bipartisan agreement about ways to protect and defend the nation. This war has too many unknown qualities to make these simple decisions, yet we may not have enough time to let the decision making process linger.

  37. 37 David HeidelbergNo Gravatar

    Haven’t read the whole thread yet, but I’d like EP to point me in the direction of France’s multicultural policy.

    Should be an interesting search for you EP, since there isn’t one in existence. Do you actually research the crap that you write?

  38. 38 David HeidelbergNo Gravatar

    Oops, duplicate point. Though I’d still like to know the answer to my last sentence.

  39. 39 MarkNo Gravatar

    See above, David, where I said to EP:

    Come back when you’ve done some serious historical research on European social policy. There’s no basis for your comparison.

    To which there was no response, just the usual stuff about vilification laws, domestic violence and “we’re in a war”.

  40. 40 MarkNo Gravatar

    Comments crossed, David.

    I’d like to know as well, particularly since EP is always claiming that the Internet should replace Universities.

  41. 41 observaNo Gravatar

    Hey Lefty,
    Step back a moment and see yourself as a Pell or a Hollingworth trying to defend the vast majority of good priests against the charge of the Light Brigade who you believe are seeing a peddo behind every robe. You’re calling for calm and due process of the law- innocent until proven guilty and all that jazz and the Church is not responsible for the odd peddo or two. You’re not even talking about life and death with this issue either. With suicidal fundamentalists plotting bigger and better attacks you are. Now do you get it? Joe Public do. So do their elected representatives at the highest level.

  42. 42 observaNo Gravatar

    “Come back when you‚Äôve done some serious historical research on European social policy. There‚Äôs no basis for your comparison.”

    Come off it Mark. My company doesn’t have lots of mission statements quoting Adam Smith or John Stuart Mill and the like, but if it quacks like a free enterprise bastion of capitalism, guess what? What sort of implicit mission statements do the EU countries sign up to there and in the UN? How do they behave? Which country raised the most eyebrows for banning the Hijab? France or Turkey? Try wearing a Hijab or building mosques in China and you’ll end up like Falun Gong quick smart. As EP pointed out, a change from PC policing is raising some hackles. So is banning piggy banks, etc, etc.

  43. 43 MarkNo Gravatar

    Nonsense, observa - if you believe that national and cultural approaches don’t matter except as rhetoric, then we may as well forget about EP’s junk multiculturalism line as it won’t make a slightest bit of difference. France raised eyebrows for banning the hijab in public institutions because it’s consistent with their universalist/integrationist approach but clearly possibly a bad move given that their assimilationist policy hasn’t worked.

  44. 44 FyodorNo Gravatar

    Observa, you clown, there are tens of millions of muslims in China. As for mosques and hijab knock yourself out.

  45. 45 Lefty ElitistNo Gravatar

    Observa, its pretty simple. Im saying police crime; diligently, and with committed intelligence. You’re saying (well, Howard & Ruddock)we should police hearsay, inadequate evidence, and lock people up for 5 years who *report* on such proceedings, even when manifestly unjust. That’s an overreation to the threat level, and of great concern.

    Joe Public’s view is irrelevant to habeus corpus and limits on executive power in a liberal democracy. Its just that we usually have a political leadership who defends basic liberties,and doesnt seek to manipulate ignorance. We no longer do.

    You also appear to be ignoring the number of coalition backbenchers with concerns. This legislation is NOT unreservedly supported by the people’s reps, on either side.

    Incidentally, how come you want to ignore Joe Public over Telstra, but not on these issues?

  46. 46 observaNo Gravatar

    The times they are a changin’ all about you Mark
    http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,17100831-23109,00.html

  47. 47 KimNo Gravatar

    But that only proves Mark’s point (and refutes EP’s) - the UK does not have a multiculturalism policy.

  48. 48 FaceLiftNo Gravatar

    Can you really compare our situation with France? Their six million Muslims, if unassimilated, is a nation within a nation. A similar scenario with Germany.

    Australian Muslims number around 250,000, mainly moderate Turkish and Egyptian migrants and their families, spread out across the country.

    The laws need to cover potential terrorist acts by any group, regardless of their cultural background, but not be allowed to alienate or wrongly colour peaceful communities, or curtail freedom of action or speach.

  49. 49 observaNo Gravatar

    OK Fyodor. Let me qualify that relative statement given China’s overall population
    http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2005/04/13/2003250234
    Sounds like they’re doing a bit better than Falun Gong.

  50. 50 KimNo Gravatar

    FaceLift also makes a good point. Time for a smoko, observa!

  51. 51 observaNo Gravatar

    “But that only proves Mark‚Äôs point (and refutes EP‚Äôs) - the UK does not have a multiculturalism policy.”

    No Kim. It means they like most EU states are wising up fast.

  52. 52 FyodorNo Gravatar

    But they’re obviously not as wise as those inscrutable Chinese, eh Observa? Why don’t we just do away with the judicial process altogether? The Rule of Law is obviously for whimps, particularly when we’re at WAR, dagnabit.

  53. 53 fmNo Gravatar

    “Islam in European Social, Religious and Multicultural Policies”

    http://euro-islam.info/PDFs/Cesari.pdf

  54. 54 C.L.No Gravatar

    I hope the UK citizenship test includes the following:

    1) Name one of the deliberately misspelled names for Fawlty Towers as it appeared on the hotel’s front sign. (A: Farty Towels).

    2) Name the originator of the Daleks? (A: Davros).

    3) Complete this sentence: “It’s goodnight from me and it’s _________”

    4) The royals are:

    a) British to their bootstraps
    b) Welsh actually
    c) Mostly their Scotts
    d) Krauts

    5) Spotted Dick is:

    a) Usher of the Black Rod’s deputy
    b) A bird found in the Lake district
    c) The UK’s newest and most worrying STD
    d) A nickname for pale redhead, Neil Kinnock
    e) A famous dish

    6) Robbie Williams is popular because? (A: Nobody knows).

    7) Why on earth to do you want to move here?

    a) The climate
    b) The race riots
    c) The dental service
    d) The Spotted Dick

    8) Parkinson is:

    a) One of the world’s great interviewers
    b) A master of communication
    c) A journalist
    d) A predictable star-f*%#*@

    9) Prince Charles once longed to be:

    a) An SAS soldier
    b) A dentist
    c) A podiatrist
    d) King of England
    e) A tampon

    10) Are you or are you not a current cake to the Duke of York?

    11) Is it true that Hitler only had one ball and Goering had none at all?

    12) England’s greatest military hero was:

    a) Richard the Lionheart
    b) General Montgomery
    c) Prince Harry
    d) Horatio Nelson
    e) Captain Mainwaring

    Questions like this will keep out the riff-raff.

  55. 55 MarkNo Gravatar

    Hear, hear, C.L.

    Particularly with regard to Robbie Williams.

  56. 56 Phil GomesNo Gravatar

    Canada has a stated multicultural policy and is successful in doing so. It is the benchmark on how multicult works. It is a peaceful nation as far as community strife is concerned, in fact it’s only real community difficulties now lie with the separatists of Quebec and Alberta.

    And I would go so far as to suggest that most migrants have a higher regard and commitment for Canada that those two groups of agitators. In fact it’s not a suggestion, the Quebecers and Albertans wish to destroy Canada, migrants do not.

    Multicult has fostered this commitment because it has allowed these groups to feel a part of a whole without seeing their cultures destroyed because of some strange concept like the homogenous nation state held in aspic as propagaated by the white trash Alberta firsters and the ‘pure laine’ French Canadians.

    As a result of multicult, migrants are bound even tighter to the idea of Canada as a great nation. I’m willing to bet the house on that here too.

  57. 57 FyodorNo Gravatar

    At last, some definitive proof that the old laws weren’t adequate to deter violent terrorists.

    Forget the fecking theory. THIS is the government we’re going to trust with these draconian laws?

  58. 58 MarkNo Gravatar

    We’re very lucky the danger has so far proved illusory!

    On the example of Germany given above - a quite different case to France. Most Islamic immigrants to France are from former colonies - Algeria in particular - hence the tensions between neo-colonialist Universalism and an unintegrated already dissilusioned minority.

    Germany’s immigrants are largely Turks - brought over as guest workers and their kids. Turks whose brand of Islam is pretty moderate and who are already used to living in a secular nation. Under Schroeder, Germany, to some degree picking up on Habermas’ idea of constitutional nationalism (recognising that history is a flawed basis on which to build a national identity but that democratic values are a good one) reoriented citizenship policy to remove its former ethnic exclusiveness.

    Observa, EP, and the rest should note that precisely *one* country has to date had a problem with homegrown terrorism - the UK. The silliness that observa is talking about, by the way, was mooted ages ago when Blunkett was Home Secretary. Anyone with the slightest ability to reason can start to compare. EP’s ludicrous claim that EU countries are “multiculturalist” in practice and observa’s similar know-nothing bombast are demonstrably false. It should be very easy - as a matter of logic - to work out that alleged multiculturalism is not a cause of terror as it hasn’t been manifested in any but one country (which is not multiculturalist anyway, as I’ve argued).

    Therefore it’s much more likely that there are particularly British causes for terror to emerge there - one of which probably is a lax approach to policing and immigration (ie radical Imams) in the past - but only one. The actual statements of both the bombers and those inspiring them refer again and again to British foreign policy.

    QED.

    The approach of the unintellectual right in its slavish desire to empower the State and disempower some citizens (with the inevitable consequence of disempowering all) is so logically flawed it’s hardly worth contesting.

  59. 59 fmNo Gravatar

    Small point Phil and Mark, but I fear you both may have been somewhat unfair with Hendo. His point about the lack of commentators defending the legislation was made in the following passage:

    Take The Age’s opinion page, for example. Last month it ran about a dozen commentators critical of Howard, the Opposition Leader, Kim Beazley, or the premiers on this issue. And how many commentators defended the legislation? Absolutely zip, although an article by the Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, was published in defence of the counter-terrorism strategy.

    I think it’s clear he was referring to The Age where, if I recall correctly, he is no longer a columnist.

  60. 60 haiku hoganNo Gravatar

    The sky is falling
    Through humid November air.
    On who will it land?

  61. 61 MarkNo Gravatar

    Fair enough, fm, but you’d imagine from the context that he is arguing it’s representative. Also probably shows some sour grapes at The Age dispensing with his services.

  62. 62 C.L.No Gravatar

    The much larger question that has always interested me is why so many Muslims want to live in the West. Yes - greater opportunity for a comfortable, even wealthy life, greater personal safety, more individual freedom. But a very large number of them - by no means a minority of fanatics - actually resent and cynically play on the culture of tolerance they encounter. That is not fair to our culture.

    On the example cited above by Evil: police should not be told to get out the kid-gloves when dealing with Muslim spousal abuse. As for France, it’s not inconceivable that it will end up being Balkanised or Canada-ised in our lifetime. Our Western Judeo-Christian culture is also wonderful and Europe especially is now populated by a large minority whose intention (or whose unthinking sullen myopia) is to ruin it. It’s worth fighting for, despite the sacred bovine slaughter that may result.

    Furthermore, I think it is legitimate to point out that the UK, Europe, Australia etc cannot go on being liferafts for the entire world. It may sound like a an anti-migrant slogan - and, indeed, versions of it may indeed be used that way (Howard on Asians in the late 80s) - but it is true. The world’s most impoverished and/or authoritarian countries have to be reformed and it’s a shame that they lose so many talented people to the West. Most Muslims seem to want a Western rule of law culture, combined with an Islamic piety culture.

    What can we do to help them create that in their mother nations? What can they do?

  63. 63 Jack StrocchiNo Gravatar

    Ha, Ha, Ha. The multiculturalists are getting desperate and splits are starting to develop in their ranks. Of course Gomes is correct, Henderson is being illogical.

    But the solution to Henderson’s illogicality is to be logical, not ideological. ie oppose both the Left’s multiculturalist cultural identity policy and the Right’s authoritarian national security policy.

    If we continue to divide the nation into seperate ethnic identities then the natives will eventually have to impose custodial conditions on unmeltable ethnics. This has already happened in France and will happen in Holland and Denmark ie the most liberal jurisdictions in EU.

    I am having a whale of a good laugh watching the Wets of all parties trying to square the circle of a differing multicultural identities and a strong national security. Its just like watching them trying to square the circle of differing multicultural identities and liberal civil rights for females.

    No way jose.

    They will never learn. I am going to really enjoy rubbing in my special “I told you so” salt into their wounds.

  64. 64 Phil GomesNo Gravatar

    Unfair with Hendo? Never! Does he deserve fairness? He’s used all of his get out of jail free cards as far as I’m concerned, he’s just another apologist. What about sour grapes by Gerry at the Age FM? Absolutely. After all he was sacked by Jaspan and deservedly so, if only the SMH would do so as well, forty percent of his last ten posts have covered this same ground in much the same way. It’s like groundhog day and I’m sharing the same hole with him.

    Fact is, you cannot mention media comentators without taking a broader view he was using the Age to illustrate a broader point but it does not stand up to scrutiny.

    The simple fact is that the murdoch press dominates and is one voice on multicult and terrorism legislation, it’s impact is broad especially in single newspaper cities, so in the Melbourne Age it was different, big deal, the Herald Sun has a greater circulation and has stoutly defended the PM and the policy on this, as have many of it’s columnists. That more than balances his claim, a balance he does not show…..ever.

    Either way, my post was not so much at his media blindness but his stupid argument.

  65. 65 MarkNo Gravatar

    I am going to really enjoy rubbing in my special “I told you so” salt into their wounds.

    That rather begs the question, Jack, of what would justify your claim of “I told you so”.

    C.L. - I suspect that the Victorian police guidelines are being massively over interpreted by EP. Being culturally sensitive does not mean - condoning spousal abuse (though too many cops do that in the case of majority ethnic groups anyway) but just being aware that different cultural beliefs are going to shape the situation with which they have to deal.

    Contrary to your other arguments, I don’t see how Western culture is at all under threat from combining the rule of law with the ability of groups to express religious beliefs or cultural practices (insofar as they don’t do harm or conflict with the said rule of law). Rather, that’s what I thought it was all about.

  66. 66 fmNo Gravatar

    C’mon Mark, be a little gracious — you were wrong. And his point is pretty fair: apparently no one can be found at The Age who supports these laws. Is that representative?

  67. 67 MarkNo Gravatar

    I’ve accepted there’s more nuance there, fm, but three paras of his column are about what he claims to be the large majority of journos and columnists opposing the gov’t. It’s an old theme from Hendo, and a disingenuous one, when as Phil points out, he ignores a larger disproportion in the Murdoch rag.

    As to “representative”, I mean that in the sense of “Hendo argues that The Age is an example of a broader phenomenon”. I don’t at all see that The Age has to “balance” its opinion pages. Now that the Oz is an openly right wing paper, what’s wrong with a slightly liberal paper? If it fails to sell in the free market, they’ll no doubt change their tune - not that there really is a market for opinion - as I doubt that many people buy papers purely or largely on their basis.

    But the point stands - opinion is opinion.

  68. 68 fmNo Gravatar

    Well, it might be representative of The Age, but I mean the opinions of the country at large. (And having seen Phil’s last comment, I direct my last post to him as well)

  69. 69 MarkNo Gravatar

    Well, the country at large is sceptical about IR, one of the things Hendo takes commentators to task on. Why should op/eds be “representative”? By definition, their aim is to form and shape opinion.

    If you mean people as a whole having an opinion on the Terror Laws, that’s an entirely different question.

    For the reason that I’ve outlined in the first para of this comment, there’s nothing in Hendo’s charge that commentators are “out of touch” or whatever.

    It’s telling that Hendo can’t come up with any substantive arguments in support of the gov’t. Week in, week out, he repeats his elites/culture wars mantras. So what, Hendo? Why are the laws justified or necessary? In a complex and empirically based argument not just a few slogans?

  70. 70 fmNo Gravatar

    Mark, Phil erroneously brought up the News Ltd papers to bag Hendo. He was wrong. Hendo doesn’t need to bring up News Ltd papers because they at least have opinions for and against the legislation on their opinion pages.

  71. 71 MarkNo Gravatar

    Not too many against, fm, just like the SMH doesn’t have that many for. So what?

  72. 72 Phil GomesNo Gravatar

    Hang on a mo Jack. What??? I define national security as a culturally flexible society which is what multiculturalism can deliver, this can only make us strong, and it has in Canada. There is no dividing the nation into separate bits, just a recognition of our parts.

    There are no squares to be circled? it can be done, and has. I contend that this is what inures us from the corrosive elements of sectarian violence etc. Time and again this has been proven. Dicscord comes when we run counter to this and seek to impose things like no wearing of funny hats or eating of foods that come from the nether parts of farm animals.

    Or is it that only something like the white Australia policy is good for national security, as John Stone is suggesting?

  73. 73 MarkNo Gravatar

    Yes, I’m still at a loss to know what exactly Jack proposes as an alternative, Phil!

  74. 74 Phil GomesNo Gravatar

    So FM has outed himself as sounding like David Flint. By what standard is News Limited balanced? Like Mark I’m puzzled by this insistence on balance by apologists like FM when this balance is clearly not practised by his favourite read.

    Why should the Age be held to this standard when it’s not evenly applied to the OZ for example?

    There was no error on my part FM, it’s all part of the mix if your’e going to argue Hendo’s point. He’s wrong I’m not.

  75. 75 Evil PunditNo Gravatar

    Observa, EP, and the rest should note that precisely *one* country has to date had a problem with homegrown terrorism - the UK.

    Is there a meaningful distinction between ‘homegrown’ and ‘imported’ terrorism in the European context, where the movement of radical Islamists between nations and continents is so free?

    They’ve recently the Madrid bombings, the murder of Theo van Gogh in the Netherlands, and the arrest of numerous terrorist conspirators in France. The importation of Islam into Europe has undoubtedly coincided with the importation of terrorism.

    Radicals and terrorists are a seemingly inseparable part of any Islamic community. That being the case, we need to take appropriate preventative measures in Australia, rather than waiting for the fate of other nations to befall us.

  76. 76 MarkNo Gravatar

    So many category mistakes and conflations, EP, so little time.

    The murder of Theo van Gogh was a politically motivated murder, not a terrorist act.

    The Madrid bombings were largely motivated by Spanish foreign policy, as I’ve argued the British bombings largely were.

    The arrest of conspirators is not an instance of “terrorism”, and note that France doesn’t have draconian laws like ours.

    The government’s repeated justification is that “London” is the factor demonstrating the need for these laws. Again and again, from Howard down, they’ve referred to the danger of “homegrown” terrorism.

    Radicals and terrorists are a seemingly inseparable part of any Islamic community.

    Yeah? In New Zealand or Canada?

  77. 77 MarkNo Gravatar

    Or for that matter, the USA, where there is a large Arabic-American community - largely middle class, still mainly Muslim, but incorporated into the community through a very different culture than ours or the British.

    And how about Kosovan or Bosnian Muslim communities in Australia, EP? Worried about them?

    The problem lies in the Middle East, my friend, and the interplay of Western policy and Arabic discontent.

  78. 78 MarkNo Gravatar

    How about Muslims in Ireland, EP?

  79. 79 fmNo Gravatar

    “So what?” Mark, my point was in reply to this:

    It’s an old theme from Hendo, and a disingenuous one, when as Phil points out, he ignores a larger disproportion in the Murdoch rag.

    Hendo can ignore News Ltd and the SMH because, whatever the proportion, they at least have some commentary for and against. Sure, The Age can package opinion anyway they like to make a buck, but for a serious publication commenting on serious legislation, you’d have to admit no commentary whatsoever in favour of the legislation (when no one would deny that there is something approaching bipartisan support for it in State and Federal parliaments) it is somewhat strange, extremely partisan and certainly worth pointing out.

    Phil, you made an error mate. Whatever problems you might have with Hendo and his arguments, I’m sure you don’t need to rely on your errors to put the boot in. And BTW, I don’t think you’re engaging with my argument with the David Flint stuff. Hendo made a point about the complete lack of contrary views in The Age, and I think it’s a fair one.

  80. 80 MarkNo Gravatar

    Even if it is strange etc., Hendo uses it as an exemplar of his wider (and pointless) point. Had Hendo not been sacked, and if he’d written defences of the government (not that his columns are - just poorly reasoned attacks on opponents), would that affect the argument? Is one Hendo column enough? Hendo + another commentator?

  81. 81 fmNo Gravatar

    Given the lack of diversity, it certainly does put his sacking in perspective.

  82. 82 observaNo Gravatar

    “The murder of Theo van Gogh was a politically motivated murder, not a terrorist act.”
    Sorry Mark but I can’t let that statement pass muster
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/07/13/wbouy13.xml

    You must have a peculiarly broad definition of ‘political’. Yeah, yeah the context thingy! I think the political category you’re looking for is Nutzi!(See Slatts here)

  83. 83 Steve EdwardsNo Gravatar

    Jack made a very interesting point about the need to “…oppose both the Left‚Äôs multiculturalist cultural identity policy and the Right‚Äôs authoritarian national security policy”, with which I agree entirely. Of course, as recent history has established, and no doubt Jack would concur, you don’t actually have a choice between these two apparent opposites; they arrive in the same package as both the poison and the antidote to one another.

    You may wish to choose one product at the expense of the other (and observa/EP are equally guilty of this as Mark/Phil), but that just isn’t on offer, and until people work this out they’re simply going to have to get used to losing all their freedoms; and the Establishment will have won yet again.

    Gerard Henderson has done us all a service by inadvertently conceding the point that nobody will ever get to choose between multiculturalism and a police state, when all the clues consistently lead to a multicultural police state.

  84. 84 observaNo Gravatar

    To save you looking it up

    ‘A Muslim extremist accused of the murder of the Dutch film-maker Theo van Gogh confessed his guilt yesterday and said he would do the same again if he were ever released.

    Mohammed Bouyeri, a baby-faced 27-year-old with dual Dutch-Moroccan nationality, broke his vow not to co-operate with the Amsterdam court by admitting shooting and stabbing his victim last November.

    “I take complete responsibility for my actions. I acted purely in the name of my religion,” he told its three-strong panel of judges.

    “I can assure you that one day, should I be set free, I would do the same, exactly the same.” Earlier, Bouyeri had insisted that he did not recognise the authority of any non-Islamic court and forbade his lawyer to mount a defence.

    Spectators in the maximum security courthouse in western Amsterdam gasped as Bouyeri then turned to the victim’s mother, Anneke, in the public gallery, and told her he felt nothing for her. Mrs van Gogh watched as he read out from what appeared to be a statement: “I don’t feel your pain. I have to admit that I don’t have any sympathy for you. I can’t feel for you because you’re a non-believer.”‘

    Islamic Nutzi, pure and simple.

  85. 85 observaNo Gravatar

    Well Steve the right’s authoritarian national security policy is a response to the failed cultural immigration policy of the left. We should have stuck to a utilitarian (somewhat selfish) immigration policy, based on business and commercial needs, and ditch all humanitarian intakes. Essentially that would discriminate against immigration from LDCs, apart from their middle classes, who are inclined to be more secular in outlook. The tradeoff would be to up our humanitarian and military aid in response,