Dear Mr Porter MP
I recently signed a petition
regarding the current review into religious freedom (Religious
Discrimination Bill 2019 (Exposure
Draft). I regret
that I was not able to write a detailed submission before the cut-off date.
However I still wish to forward some broader concerns to you regarding freedom
that are relevant to this process.
I am a State Servant of 20 years
standing and a professional policy analyst. I have worked as a policy adviser
for Premier and Cabinet (2005), the Commonwealth Department of Environment
(DSEWPAC), and currently work as the rescuer of crisis projects/processes
within the Department of Justice in my State. I am also the author of an
on-line training course in civics (www.3ptraining.com.au
) and maintain an active interest in a number of policy areas including
defence. I am a former left wing activist now conservative writer, and have
studied the ‘progressive’ movement for some years. I am also studying for
ordination.
Thank you for conducting this review
and giving the ‘quiet Australians’ a chance to be heard. You will recall that the
Coalition Government allowed the plebiscite on redefining marriage on condition
that this review would take place, and that it would adequately protect those
who hold to the traditional view of marriage and sexuality. More broadly the success
of the ‘yes’ vote was based on the public reassurance that no one would be made
worse off if this country changed its official view on human sexuality and
relationships. It follows that, if this review does not adequately protect those
who hold to the traditional view of marriage and sexuality then:
- the redefinition of marriage has no legitimacy and should be reconsidered; and
- the Coalition Government lacks legitimacy.
In that context, the problem
requiring resolution is that ‘anti-discrimination law’ so called, is now used
as a one sided weapon by the Left to impose cultural Marxism on society, (including
with respect to human sexuality). It is a consequence of the ‘long march
through the institutions’ and is a form of ‘repressive tolerance’ by the Left.
See further my paper on Defeating Cultural Marxism that I attach for reference.
I could cite many examples but I am sure the Australian Christian Lobby and
others have already supplied them in submissions.
In addressing that problem your
government has two options. The first option is to try to make anti-discrimination
law fair by granting broad exemptions. In my view that cannot work in practice
because:
- the relevant tribunals are controlled by cultural Marxists who will ensure that any such attempt fails; and
- one should not have to be a member of a recognised religious group to avoid punishment for expressing an opinion; and
- creating two classes of citizens – religious people who can avoid punishment for their beliefs and non-religious citizens who can be punished for the same beliefs – is inherently unfair; and
- any proposal broad enough to allow genuine freedom of belief would so fundamentally undermine the existing law as to call into question the purpose of that law.
In that context I note that the
current proposal in manifestly inadequate and will fail. For example:
Clause
41 (1) of the Bill does provide that statements of religious belief will not
contravene Section 17 of the Tasmanian Anti-Discrimination Act. This is
welcome and would have avoided Archbishop Porteous being dragged through
mediation. However, Clause 41 (2) provides that any statement of belief that is
likely to “vilify” another person or group of persons will not be protected by
Clause 41 (1). What does “vilify” mean? Is a statement which someone feels
insults or criticises (these are synonyms of vilify) them, enough to render a
statement of belief discriminatory? This is a term that has caused widespread
criticism of Section 17 and of Section 18C of the federal Racial
Discrimination Act as being too low a threshold for a claim of discrimination.
If the government wishes to continue
with the bill then at an absolute minimum the bill must:
- allow employers to select staff whose views align with the stated mission of their organisation, whether that organisation is religious or secular
- protect members of professional associations from discrimination on the basis of their professional and/or scientific opinions and personal values (including for example refusal to refer children to gender re-assignment surgery or referring/not referring a person to an abortion provider)
- protect employees from compelled speech (e.g. gender pronouns)
- Protect employees from discrimination for expressing opinions that are not directly relevant to their employment
- protect the right of parents to choose the educational method and moral instruction of their children e.g. the right to be prior informed about sexual content in school curriculum and the right to remove their child
The second option is to largely abolish
existing anti-discrimination law by means of a Federal bill of rights. This
approach is not about ‘religious freedom’ but freedom.
It is about the freedom to:
- rent your property to whomever you want based on whatever criteria you choose
- employ whomever you want based on whatever criteria you choose (subject to safety and licensing requirements, and professional qualifications)
- choose the educational method and moral instruction of your children
- hold to traditional religious and cultural beliefs (including indigenous beliefs) or not
- express your beliefs and opinions without fear of lawfare by radical activists, physical intimidation, de-registration from professional bodies, retaliation by employers, and persecution by quasi-judicial tribunals, professional associations, and non-judicial boards
Essentially it is about the right and
duty of adult citizens/residents to behave like responsible adults who can ‘live
and let live’. In that context it is about freedom not to:
- have your children psycho-sexually abused by schools
- be punished by your employer for expressing opinions they don’t like
- be professionally de-registered for expressing scientifically accurate/professional opinions that don’t align with specific social agendas
- be punished by quasi-judicial bodies for expressing opinions that other people don’t happen to agree with; or find offensive
- be compelled to use certain loaded words and phrases (such as gender pronouns) which compel agreement with highly contested and improbable ideologies
- be compelled to agree with highly contested claims and improbable ideologies by your employer (e.g. mandatory gender quotas, ‘misgendering’ in the workplace) unless that has a direct connection with your employment
This is a very different approach to that sought by the religious lobby
and will in some instances leave religious people open to discrimination by
employers. It will also remove the fear and the veil and make public all the
prejudices and hatreds that we as a community hold. Would that be a bad thing? Should
government act like a controlling parent and make us all be nice to each-other?
Should Muslims have to rent to Jews? Should Christians have to employ
transgender wierdo’s in their schools? Could we actually tell the truth about
one-another? Must we be compelled to pay homage to the secular gods of
multiculturalism, feminism, transgenderism, Marxism, consumerism, environmentalism,
nationalism, globalism, or any other ism? Should the market place of ideas not
be free?
As a Christian I am used to having my views ridiculed and I am not afraid
to have them challenged, or to compete in the market place of ideas, or to be
wrong. I am afraid of the creeping censorship and repression currently masquerading
as tolerance, and the consequential loss of our national character. This review
represents a generational opportunity to turn that around.
Of the two approaches outlined I commend the latter approach. In support
of this, allow me one example. Suppose the law were evenly applied. Professor
Dawkins has published a book currently for sale in Australia titled “The God
Delusion”. By this title he states that anyone who believes in divinity is
delusional and by implication suffering from a mental condition. This insults at
least four fifths of humanity including me. For reference, in the USSR Christians were
sent to mental institutions for ‘treatment’ for their delusional beliefs. It is
a statement at least comparable to arguing that transgenderism is a mental
illness or that homosexuality can be cured. It arguably meets the current bar
for hate speech. How should Dawkins be censored? Should his books be banned in
Australia? Should he be denied a visa like Milo Yiannopoulos was? Should the
British government compel an apology? Should he be thrown out of his university?
Should all publishers be forced to submit their titles for approval by a
government board? The Left support the current regime because it supports their
purposes but if the law were evenly applied they would be the first to scream
about censorship and big government, and I would agree with them.
If your government lacks the moral
courage to adopt the latter option and allow us to be Australians again, please
consider my points on the former option.
Respectfully yours
No comments:
Post a Comment