Rudd Abbott Wars – Episode XVVVV – Religion And The Education System Strikes Out?
I am a teacher and was a practicing Anglican for many years.
I have taught in some very different schools, where a range of religious teachings are followed.
In Victoria, Religious Education is taught sensibly and sensitively. In primary schools it’s usually optional and non denominational.
In secondary schools the two main religious subjects offered to VCE (Year 11 & 12) students are Religion & Society and Text & Traditions.
They lend themselves well to a personal reflection on religion, comparative theology and the impact of religion on society.
There is a wide expanse of territory for study. Within Text and Traditions there are four recommended texts: Ezekial, the Gospels of Luke and John, and the Qu’ran.
Students may choose to study one of the four texts in isolation before comparing with others.
It has never been an issue.
Let’s be clear though, what I’m referring to are electives for senior students. Students, one would hope, who have a grasp of their own beliefs and some functional critical thinking.
We know religious beliefs are deeply held and highly personal. Most of us let it sit quietly; some choose to evangelize.
Some go to war in it’s name, but it still extends the promise of a healthier, more tolerant community.
I find it ironic Mr Rudd and Mr Abbott, two Christian politicians, are prepared to dance around each other on an issue that could actually bring them – all of us – together.
They could agree that universal messages of tolerance, compassion and forgiveness in senior classrooms are a good thing, or they could agree to both stay out of the debate.
They could agree diversity of faith makes us stronger and philosophical debate makes us wiser.
Instead, they’re eyeing each other off like feather-weight boxers, twitching and flinching each time the other makes a move.
Prime Minister Rudd used a back bencher, Senator Landy to question the merit of the Bible in the new National Curriculum. Opposition Leader Abbott immediately weighed in.
This threatens to degenerate into a circus.
We must send a clear message: We resent the exploitation of religious belief for political gain. It cheapens politics and demeans our beliefs.
If religion is to become nothing but a lever for politicians to pull, we may have to pretend we’re all Jedi so they leave the matter alone.
May the Force be with you.
Paul Roberton
Your Civil Rights overruled by Police Convenience: Strip-Searching your ‘Designated Areas’ at Will and without Consequence.
Big Brother 2.0 ?
The amendments to the Summary Offences & Control of Weapons Act that enable police to strip-search citizens at will are deeply disturbing.
I share the deep repugnance of YACVIC, the Youth Affairs Council of Victoria, at the Brumby Labor Government’s bill. They are aghast and rightly so.
The legislation empowers police to search at will or ‘move on’ individuals who are likely to breach the peace or endanger the safety of others who haven’t otherwise desisted from an illegal act.
Can any of us take our freedoms so for granted that we let this slip idly by?
It’s one thing to give police proper authority to act and to trust their professionalism and training. They are magnificent at their job, but they remain police – not psychics.
Let’s be fair. We don’t want to impede their essential work, but a millennium of the Common Law is being overturned here: surely they should form a reasonable suspicion first. This bill would no longer require it.
Should they really be empowered to stop someone, perhaps even a child, before they’ve formed a considered opinion of a person’s intent? The echoes of Police Union boss Greg Davies have scarcely faded on the presumption of guilt.
Before us is a Bill empowering police to search any individual – including children, for the legislation lists no age limit to these search powers.
What’s even more ghastly is that the state government sheepishly concedes the bill flies in the face of its own Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities”.
Well done to YACVIC for bringing our attention to this insidious weakening of our hard-earned civil rights, and shame on the government for its hypocrisy.
The YACVIC position can be viewed here.
Higgins voters aghast! Campaign Notes on Climate Change and Tony Abbott.

Higgins is regarded as a conservative area. It has always voted that way. Its settled affluence, extremely high education levels and orderly dignity suggests Tory.
In moving around the electorate campaigning over the last few weeks, the error of such assumptions has been dramatically proven.
On climate change – seemingly, the cause of the Left – Higgins citizens have been highly outspoken, expressing to me their horror at the Liberal Party’s denial/sceptic line.
If I can synthesize the comments of many, they say such slogans might play well to the self-interest of blue collar conservatives, but here, where people know how to think for themselves, it is seen as the politics of shallow cads.
They welcome the prospect of a low-carbon and low-pollution future. They always viewed air pollution as a wasteful and dangerous abuse, but never had the science to support their observations.
Electric cars? Bring it on!
A number said they hold shares in major companies but saw no difficulty in sacrificing earnings and dividends for a few years to migrate to an environmentally sound economy.
Voters made it very clear to me they accept the need to alter course on climate change and expect government to act quickly and decisively.
The real eye-opener came on Monday, with the election of Tony Abbott as Liberal leader.
The genteel voters of Higgins do not like this man, and while maintaining their decorum, were very rude about him.
They regard him as an interloper from the DLP, with his intrusive moralizing about what other people should and shouldn’t do.
Higgins voters reject his reactionary opinions: the free and open society in which we live has been hard fought for; we do not want to go backward.
The women in particular loathe his anti-abortion views. All seemed to have a niece – always a niece – whose life would have been ruined but for the help of an understanding surgeon.
I wonder whether their evident dissatisfaction will change their votes? We shall see on Saturday.
To the many Higgins voters who were kind enough to spare a moment for the Australian Democrats candidate, many thanks for your frankness and patience.
Senate Rejects ETS – Would The Democrats Have Improved and Passed this Law?
The dogs have been barking for some time – the Senate has now rejected the Rudd government ETS legislation. This sets in place, should the Rudd government choose to take it, a double dissolution trigger. Rudd can call a general election for the House of Representatives and all the Senate. Pundits are calling this for early March, others for August. In reality, it could be just six weeks away.
Liberal senators Sue Boyce and Judith Troeth voted with the government, but this support was far short of a Senate majority. The Mad Monk Tony Abbott, practicing as he does the “withdrawal method” when it comes to all things not conservative, forced the rest of the Liberals to vote NO despite minister Wong’s previous efforts to negotiate the bill’s passage.
The Greens voted NO – as is their custom on every piece of legislation before the house and the rest on the cross benches followed suit. Their eternal purity makes them politically irrelevant and a parliamentary menace. But politics isn’t about holiness, it is about securing the best possible outcomes, something the Democrats never, never forgot.
But what would the Democrats have done?
The ETS is not an ideal piece of legislation. The Democrats would have negotiated for improvements in line with our own policies. Fairer more equitable solutions, while not appealing to major polluters, would reduce the impact any climate change mitigation legislation would have on the overall economy and on the poor. Our view differs from The Greens’ “Put the oxy torch to all industries emitting a kilogram of CO2, dude!” economic vandalism.
We would have worked, as we always have, with the elected government to secure the best deal possible for the Australian people with a bill that, while limited, is a step forward. A step the Rudd government, despite having a fresh and clear mandate for it, will not now take.
That was role of the Democrat for 30 years in the Senate – negotiating. Ensuring the elected government functions, keeps its word and doesn’t cave in to sectional interests. That we are needed to do this line-by-line work is demonstrated by the failure of the ETS. A serious piece of legislation about a serious subject, one that ensures Australia’s future – from economy to environment – has been flagrantly reduced to petty party-based squabbling. John Howard must be laughing behind his hand as he eggs on the newly-anointed High Priest of Climate Denial – Tony Abbott.
Bob Brown is likewise congratulating the troops on a job well screwed with the rest of the cross benches looking for a pat on the head – from somebody or anybody!
Well done all! You’ve succeeded in reducing our federal Parliament to a circus. A national joke; a joke on the heads of the Australian people. Thanks a bunch!
I urge those entitled to vote in the Higgins by-election to send a message to Canberra. Use your ballot paper and the preferential system to its fullest. Vote 1 Australian Democrats – David Collyer, and if you’re a Liberal voter and feel so compelled then (and only then) send your second preference to those who have failed you: the Liberal Party of Australia.
Scott Kane
Four Wheels Good; Two Wheels Bad – Police Association demonizes motorcycles, bikie gangs and minorites
The Australian Democrats condemn in the strongest possible terms agitation by the police officers trade union for new Victorian laws that criminalize motorcycle riders. Such laws would breach many of the fundamental civil liberties enjoyed by all, oppress an innocent minority and foster a culture of intolerance.
“We want none of this,” the Democrats Higgins by-election candidate David Collyer said today.
“Motorcyclists are entitled to equal treatment under the law in all circumstances. They may be scruffy, and people may be affronted when bikes noisily zoom past their cars, but this does not make them criminals.
“Tyrannizing a minority will not make the majority safer; it merely opens a window for further discrimination and is an incitement to violence – both official and civil.
“And since when do trade unions get to re-write our criminal law? Police Association Secretary Greg Davies would be well advised to focus on the pay and conditions of his members, not in trying to overturn a thousand years weighty precedents by appealing to people’s thoughtless instincts.
“It may be superficially attractive to call for ‘strong laws’ – whatever that might mean – but it does nothing to advance us as a civilization and as a community.
“There are criminals in the bikie groups, this is known. But that does not give license to condemn all group members, and by implication all motorcycle riders.
Victoria’s Chief Police Commissioner Simon Overland is quoted today saying the state’s organised crime laws are tough enough to deal with any criminal gangs that try to operate here. Equally, there have been no calls for legal changes from the judiciary.
“If the Police Commissioner is satisfied, and our Judges are content with their tools, that ought be the end of the matter.
“If citizens have any doubts about the Democrats’ unflinching stance on this matter, just substitute ‘Jew’ or ‘Arab’ or ‘Hippy’ where you see ‘Bikie Gang’ in a sentence. The intolerance and bigotry on display will quickly become clear.
“I know this is a state issue and that I am a candidate for federal office but nonsense like this has to be resisted in all forums, at all times and with great energy.
“This is a matter of the highest principle,” Collyer concluded.
Media contact – David Collyer 0413 248 193
David Collyer is currently contesting the Higgins by election for the Australian Democrats against Clive Hamilton for The Greens and Kelly O’Dwyer for the Liberal Party,
It’s Time The Territories Got State Rights – An Issue For The Gay And Lesbian Community?
The Rudd government is set to follow – again - in the footsteps of John Howard’s ultra conservative government. Rudd and his administration are considering, we are told, overturning the recent legalization in the ACT of same gender marriages and rights.
The moral zealots are working overtime in Canberra pushing to see the gay and lesbian same sex union laws buried yet again.
This couldn’t happen if the ACT had the same standing as the Australian States – the responsibility and right to make binding laws on behalf of its citizens. The ACT and the Northern Territory risk a Federal veto on any legislation a majority of parliamentarians may pass. It’s way past time the territories were given the same constitutional standing State governments – and voters – expect and enjoy.
This disparity between territories and states means those living in the ACT and NT do not participate in or receive the same democratic freedoms the rest of Australia takes for granted. This must change. It will take a referendum to do it too. Surely this is a referendum that would command a majority of votes in a majority of states, one Australia would pass. The people in the territories are Australians too, after all.
Gay And Lesbian Rights
Naturally it follows, once the territories are given the same respect – and recognition and autonomy – as the states, we will see laws such as for gay and lesbian marriages in the ACT proclaimed, out of the hands of the moralising minority that somehow manage to populate the federal parliament.
We’d see it taken out of the hands of the conservative crusaders who claim to be christians (none of this newfangled compassion nonsense) shuffling around the corridors of parliament pushing one eyed, “our size fits all”, depraved, dishonest and dissolute doctrines.
I suggest to the gay and lesbian rights movement that to achieve their goals, autonomy for the territories would be the vehicle they need to accelerate their freedoms. This is common ground for their community and the heterosexual majority
This is a broader set of rights. At the end of the day, we all win.
Scott Kane