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UK Gay Lord Slams Victoria

October 4th 2009 19:52
Rob Hulls
Rob Hulls


I wouldn't ordinarily post something here I didn't write myself, but I could not possibly put this Really Long Link any better.

Doug

The Chair

Lord R McDowall
LGBT Network
PO Box 4107
Glasgow
G53 9AP

5th October, 2009

To the Premier and the Attorney General of the State of Victoria in the Commonwealth of Australia

Dear Premier Brumby and Attorney General Rob Hulls,

I write to you a letter which I have previously written to representatives of the Egyptian Government, the Libyan Government, the Burundian Government, the Syrian Government, and the Government of Belarus; among other non-democratic, authoritarian states; to express my serious concern about a proposed or ratified law that adversely discriminates or affects Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual or Transgender citizens.

I never considered that I would have to write this letter to the head of a democratically elected government in a Western nation.

I have no further need to express to you the seriousness of this nature, of which you are most undoubtedly aware. Your Attorney-General, Rob Hulls, proposed last week a ‘compromise’ on discrimination law, to allow schools, hospitals and other welfare services to refuse to employ or provide services to gay people, to single mothers or people of other faiths, whilst it will be illegal to discriminate on the basis of race, disability, age, physical features, political beliefs or activity.


To allow faith groups that run services for the wider community to refuse to employ staff that they believe undermine their beliefs purely because they are unmarried or are a lesbian, or to allow those faith based groups to refuse any of their services to a gay pupil, or a patient of another faith is a completely at odds with the principles of not only a modern, cosmopolitan society, but of the Commonwealth of Australia.

Fairness, respect, a fair go. These proposals are incompatible with the values that each Australian closely holds, and that your Government has a duty to protect.

What makes a newly qualified, teacher with less experience but is heterosexual better than a teacher with decades of teaching knowledge and multiple advanced qualifications but is gay?

Why is a nurse who barely passed professional exams, has been complained against because of poor standards of care or hygiene but professes to be a Christian, better than a nurse who was top of the class and goes the extra mile to make those in care comfortable, safe and healthy, but is a Buddhist?

Why is it right or fair in a democratic, modern society, and in an urban, cosmopolitan state such as Victoria, that ecclesiastic religious scholars should decide who is best to deliver the services they have decided to offer, rather than the mangers who run those services?

In what way does it ensure the best possible standard of care or of teaching when hospitals or schools can be prevented by the clerics who oversee them from hiring best candidate for the job?

Why does whether someone has decided to marry their partner or not make the slightest bit of difference in how they can carry out a job that they have the experience, skills, and qualifications to deliver?

No doctor would say that there are better at their job because of their sexuality, religion or marital status, no teacher would claim that either, because these characteristics, like race, age and gender, have no bearing on job performance.

The proposals to allow religious run schools, hospitals or welfare organisations to refuse to provide services to gay people, or those of a different faith or marital status, is not just discriminatory, it is divisive.

Do you want Victoria to be a place where young people can be excluded from school because of their sexuality? Where someone can be refused entry to a hospital and left to die on the street outside because they are of a different faith? Because they don’t have a wedding ring on their finger?

In the United Kingdom, a single equality act was brought in which ‘outlawed discrimination in the provision of goods and services’.

The principles behind these measures are straightforward. It can’t be right in a decent, tolerant society that a shopkeeper or restaurant can refuse to serve a customer because of his or her sexual orientation. It cannot be right for a school to discriminate against a child because of their parents’ sexuality or not to take homophobic bullying as seriously as they should…

The Regulations make such discrimination illegal. We want to ensure that when people visit their hospital, study at school or college, or even do something as everyday as shopping or booking a holiday, they get treated fairly and with respect, no matter what their sexual orientation.

The Secretary of State who brought in these changes was Ruth Kelly, a staunch Catholic. She recognised that her beliefs were her own. She was more that entitled to them, indeed they were her right. However the right to her beliefs did not extend to denying rights to other people. That is the essence of human rights; that is the balance of justice in a democratic society. Creating a society of fairness and respect is vital to the progress and prosperity of a 21st century society. This law you are proposing will do the opposite.

To allow discrimination based on some parts of the human condition but not others is to wilfully and criminally neglect the duty of the state to care for all its citizens without prejudice or favour. This does not provide a balance between the rights of religious groups and of the general population, this will foster intolerance, breed hate and create a Victoria that is dislocated and fractured, where citizens are subjected to unequal treatment for no other reason than some people do not like who they are. It creates unnatural hierarchies in society, where none existed before. A gay person living in Melbourne will see their Asian or black friends protected from the racist sentiments of others, but they will not be allowed protections against those same people who do not subscribe to the values of fairness that marks Australia out.

It will drive religious communities deeper into themselves. Rather than encouraging Muslims and Christians to work together, live and access services together and to recognise and celebrate the things that unite them, it only serves to divide communities and for groups to see suspicion, fear and intolerance against others where there was none before.

All people are either treated equally or they are not, there is no middle way, no compromise when it comes to equal treatment of people in law.

A state, a party and a premier who allows such intolerance to embed itself in society may win a bare majority of voters who also hold such prejudices. Yet history will judge you not on how many elections you won but on the legacy you left to the people of Victoria.

This law will ensure that many, unequal, dis-unified Victoria’s will emerge. Cosmopolitan Melbourne will be left as a rump of only like minded individuals, while those who are refused education, services or medical treatment will be forced from their homes to seek out places where they are seen on the merits of their humanity, not judged on the prejudices that others hold.

The Victorian Government has already recognised these principles of fairness and equality and enshrined it in law. The Victorian Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities states it clearly;

People have the right to recognition before the law.

People have the right to enjoy their human rights without discrimination.

People have the right to equality before the law and equal protection of the law without discrimination.

This type of law, this sort of compromise you propose seriously violates the protections that were written into law only a few years ago. To remove a gay pupil from school, to deny an unmarried doctor a job, to ban a Hindu from teaching, is the exact opposite of equality before the law and equal protection of the law.

It is the exact opposite of the bedrock of Australian values and principles. It is incompatible with the guiding principle of the Commonwealth of Australia, the right of a fair go, for everyone, regardless of who they are or where they come from.

“At the heart of Victoria’s Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities is respect: the belief that everyone is entitled, as we say, to ‘a fair go’. It’s part of our national character. It’s behind our willingness to help in times of disaster or distress. Yet the notion of ‘a fair go’ can be ignored, eroded, or corrupted and rights we take for granted diminished or removed.”

The Attorney General Rob Hulls was right when he signed his name to the Charter, and that must be remembered. He and the Government of Victoria must respect its citizens, and most of all, respect their right to a fair go, at employment, at services, at life. To allow anything else, like this law proposes, is unfair, unequal, and Un-Australian.

Yours

Lord R McDowall GNB (CNLE) IMC MEA

Chair of the LGBT Network

lordmcdowall@lgbtnetwork.eu

44 (0) 871 2456 100
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Butchered to make a Roman Holiday

September 28th 2009 00:44
Priest and boy
Trust me, I'm a priest . .


Bizarre things happen in the lead-up to an election. Like Victorian Attorney-General Rob Hulls deciding to pre-empt the parliamentary review into anti-discrimination law.

He’s announced that regardless of the committee’s findings, religious organisations will still be able to discriminate against people on the grounds of religious belief, sex, gender identity, sexuality, and parental or marital status under the revised law.

But they will have to stop discriminating on the basis of age, race, disability, physical features, political beliefs – and breastfeeding.

As is clear from the Ministers statement, and the immediate response from Archbishop Denis Hart, this has been hammered out with Ratburgers Roman legions, acting as lead negotiators for an unholy alliance of priests, mullahs, rabbis and ministers. We’re being butchered to make a Roman holiday.

The ‘agreement’ of the religious not to discriminate on certain grounds has been presented as a concession on their part, but since when were the churches interested in discriminating against the old, ethnic minorities, the disabled, or in imposing standards of physical appearance, except perhaps to occasionally favour the prettier boys for service in church choirs and sacristies?

The test of religious belief will catch anyone whose political beliefs run counter to their own. That leaves breastfeeding.

“Excuse me Father, but would you mind if I got my yah-yahs out during the ‘Ave Maria’, only Breanna’s getting terribly hungry?”

“Not at all my dear, it’ll take my mind off young Brendan in the front row of the choir and that enticing lump in his surplice.”

This is a total victory for clerical prejudices, and talk of balance is just political spin.

Not being religious myself, I couldn’t give a holy wafer, yarmulke or prayer mat whether the myth-peddlers want us around or not. But I do object to government subsidised businesses and charities banning us as potential employees and clients.

Take Sanitarium, owned by the Seventh Day Adventist Church, and ‘donating’ 100% of company profits to them (on which it therefore pays no tax – effectively a government subsidy). Under these proposals they could refuse to employ a single mum to pack Weetbix, or a gay man to stack pallets.

Adoption agencies, schools, clinics, hospitals, job placement services and so forth run by ‘religious bodies’, who receive my taxes in subsidies and payments for services, could refuse to find a job for a transsexual, treat an infertile lesbian, or employ a gay man.

I can choose to withhold donations if I disagree with their attitudes – I never give to the Salvos or Vinnies, for example – but they continue to get money from me via the government, despite continuing to discriminate. This is wrong.

Where’s the sense in a hospital, for example, requiring all its doctors to be heterosexuals?

“Oh no Doctor Sarah, I know you have a Nobel Prize in Urology but we can’t have a homosexual on the staff. It would be a temptation for the Sisters.”

There is a little ray of sunshine: once new law comes in (in about 18 months) the exemptions are no longer automatic. They will have to prove, for example, your sexuality makes you unfit to be a pallet stacker – which might be a little difficult.

If in the meantime, if we want to make a little mischief, then let’s merge, say, the ALSO Foundation with the Metropolitan Community Church, and refuse to employ heterosexuals.
The test cases could get very interesting.
…………………………………….
In a previous column I blasted beyondblue for spending nothing on our community, and wasting money on fridge magnets. They have now sent a shopping bag, a poster, several booklets, a rubber wristband – and another fridge magnet. Plus a plea for free airtime. Consider me bribed – not
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Equal Love


First , tell the Senate you support marriage equality

The deadline to make a submission to the enquiry has now been extended to August 28th. Submissions can be as long or as short as you wish so long as you say why you support same sex marriage.

Here's how Really Long Link - you can either write your own submission or just sign the Australian Marriage Equality submission.

Second, come along to your local rally for marriage equality on August 1st. There's a motion supporting equal marriage before the Labor Party conference, so politicians will be watching the numbers closely. If you stay away they will think you support the existing ban on equal marriage.

Third, the Australian Christian Lobby are mounting a major offensive to block discussion of marriage equality at the Labor conference.

For a list of ALP National Conference delegates and information on how to lobby them visit
Really Long Link

For more information contact Alex Greenwich on 0421 316 335.

Updated rally details:

Perth:
WA Community Forum on Relationship recognition Saturday August 1st 2:00pm to 5:00PM, University of Western Australia UWA

Families for Freedom and Community Support Day
Sunday 16th of August, 11:00am to 2:00pm
Cottesloe Foreshore, WA

Really Long Link or Keegan Martens
martek01@student.uwa.edu.au 0424 594 417
Facebook: Really Long Link

Sydney:
Rally at Town Hall from Saturday, 12pm and March to the Sydney Convention Centre at Darling Harbour for a mass illegal wedding ceremony and to protest outside the National Labor Conference, demanding the Rudd government repeal the ban on Same Sex Marriage.

For more information, to get involved or to get married please call Ben Cooper
0412325231, email at ben8721@hotmail.com or check out
www.caah.org.au/nda
Facebook: Really Long Link

Lismore – Northern NSW:
Rally at 12pm, Saturday August 1st starts at Spinks Park aka Lismore Transit Centre, Molesworth St and March to the Winsome Hotel, Bridge St North Lismore where an after party will be held from 1:30pm

For more info or to get involved call Sean Rich 0266221555 between 9am & 5pm or alternatively email at scrawny_seany@hotmail.com
Facebook: Really Long Link

Canberra:

Meet at Garema Place, 1pm on August 1st, where there will be a rally followed by a march to Bob McMullen's office.

For more information or to get involved please check out www.cuaction.org/ or contact

John Kloprogge act@equallove.info 0422 913 942

Brisbane:
The Brisbane rally will be held at 1pm on August 1st at Queens Park.

To get involved, please email jessicapayne86@hotmail.com or call 0430375326. You can also check out the website at www.arcg.com.au

Adelaide:

The Adelaide rally is hosted by the South Australian Queer Lobby
Meet at Parliament House, corner of North Terrace and King William St, Adelaide, at 11am.
We will hold a demonstration at Parliament House, and then march to Barr Smith Lawns, University of Adelaide, where we will hold a picnic/bbq and speeches.

There will also be an after-party at Mars Bar.
To get involved or for more information phone Jason Virgo 0432 694 680 or email: saqueerlobby@gmail.com

Melbourne:

This year’s rally is on August 1st from 1pm at Federation Square

For more information, to get involved or to get married, please visit www.equallove.info or contact Tim Wright directly contact@equallove.info
0400 967 233

Hobart:
The Tasmanian Gay and Lesbian Rights Lobby (TGLRG) will rally and be launching a petition for Equal Same-Sex Marriage at their Salamanca stall at 11am on Saturday August 1st.
For further information and to get involved please visit www.tglrl.org.au or email rodney.croome@tglrg.org or call 0409 010 668
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Will a frost follow Nixon?

February 1st 2009 22:48
Christine Nixon Lucy Loosebox
Christine Nixon enjoys a joke with Lucy Loosebox - pic by Daniel Sutton


When Christine Nixon marched in Pride 2002, she got the biggest cheer of the day. Criticism in the tabloid press and talkback radio, fanned by Saltshaker zealots and other extremist “Christians”, did not deter her


[ Click here to read more ]
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A Gay Christmas List

November 23rd 2008 01:56
Kevin Rudd
Hey, look, I can do this 'blessing' thing, too!!


Santa Kev is on track to deliver my Christmas present: the Omnibus Bill removing the discrimination against same-sex couples identified by the Same Sex: Same Entitlements report. A big thank you to the Australian Human Rights Commission, to the government for keeping its promises, and to everyone working towards equality. But there’s lots of other things on my list for Santa Kev


[ Click here to read more ]
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Hostage
How Stuff Works - A Liberal/National 'Conscience' Vote


Q: When is a conscience vote not a conscience vote


[ Click here to read more ]
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Rainbow Report

It’s been a dramatic week in gay and lesbian publishing, with the collapse of bnews and the sudden emergence of two new gay media – Canvas, an arts and entertainment magazine from Evolution Publishing, and Southern Star, from Sydney Star Observer.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Bronwyn Pike
Bronwyn didn't pike it


The numbers may have been down – only about 300 turned out for this year’s Melbourne Equal Love Rally, well down on previous years – but two facts made it a memorable occasion


[ Click here to read more ]
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Dark Knight priest
Dark Night Priest


Well, I was going to lay off Jeff Kennett, but the man just keeps chewing on that foot in his mouth. In the Herald Sun today he continues to make a link between bisexuality and pedophilia. Such a link does not exist, and such a slur is incredibly damaging


[ Click here to read more ]
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Should Jeff Kennett Apologise?

July 27th 2008 22:37
I wrote about this yesterday.

The story also made Channel 7 news last night


[ Click here to read more ]
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