AS THE POT MELTS
As the pot melts and miscegenation begins to predominate, the questions arise: how does a civilisation overcome this degeneracy of its genetic identification? How does it repair the fabric of its society? How does it remove the multi-coloured stain and physical deviation which has tarnished it forever so that the offspring bear no resemblance to those courageous pioneers who developed this country?
Contrary to the constantly misinformation that the intermingling of the races is due to a new theory of racial equality and that the infusion will enrich our society, it is a blatant and surely quite obvious lie devoid of any credibility. In fact it is part of the deliberate attempt by the -international clique to destabilise and subdue the cohesive opposition of advanced Western culture which, in the main, is of Anglo/Celtic origin.
The UNO is the most successful instrument for propaganda unleashed against the West. Lurking in the background, stirring the pot is that sinister gang of international financial thugs attempting to foist upon us a Soviet-style One World empire. Australia to a large extent is now not governed by its politicians, but by diplomats and advisors enforcing the dictates of a U.N. organisation controlled by shadowy and subversive forces. From this power base they churn out directives and enforce treaties which override our constitution.
Question: What is the percentage of Islamics controlling the decisions and instructions emanating from the U.N?
Paul Sheehan
Labor's zealots have
a scheme which will
put religion in the dock.
Spreading the word of intolerance
The man who is set to become prime minister in 2006 is the slickest speaker in Australian politics. But Peter Costello wore his heart on his sleeve on Saturday night, may 29 2004, at Scots' church in Melbourne. His audience, 800 people filling the church, was evangelical Christian "it was, he said, the first fleet that brought the first chaplain and first knowledge of Christian faith to Australia. this was critical and decisive event that shaped country. if the Arab traders that brought Islam to Indonesia had brought Islam to Australia and settled, or spread their faith amongst the indigenous population, our country today would be vastly different. our laws, our institutions, our economy would all be vastly different.
"But that did not happen. Our society was founded by British colonists and the single most decisive feature that determined the way it developed was the judo - Christian western tradition. As a society we are who we are, because, of that heritage. I am not sure this is well understood in Australia today...
"Tolerance under the law is a great part of this tradition. Tolerance does not mean that all views are the same. It does mean that views are equally right.' what it means is where there are differences no matter how strongly held, different people will respect the right of others to hold them.
"I mention this because the age newspaper has reported that my appearance here tonight has been criticised by the Islamic council of Victoria. According to the president of that council [Yasser Soliman], by speaking here tonight I could be giving legitimacy to parties that the Islamic council is suing under Victoria’s racial and religious tolerance act.
"I do not think that we should resolve differences about religious views in our community with lawsuits between the different: religions. Nor do I think that the object of religious harmony will be promoted by organising witnesses to go along to the meetings of other religions to collect evidence for the purpose of later litigation.
"The proceedings which have been taken [under this new law], the time, the cost, the extent of the proceedings, and the remedies that are available - all illustrate, in my view; that this is a bad law."
Yes, it's a very bad law. Within months of being enacted, the excesses of this legislation became self-evident. The first test case, Islamic council of Victoria v Catch the Fire Ministries, has cost more than $1 million in legal fees and achieved nothing but enmity.
Yet, on August 4, in the Great Hall of Parliament in Canberra, Labor's shadow attorney-general Nicola Roxon, speaking before at a forum attended by 1,000 people, announced Labor would introduce a federal version of the Victorian Racial and, Religious Tolerance Act.
Suddenly the great Hall, which just minutes before had been filled with applause for Roxon was filled with booing.
Labor appears incapable of absorbing a fundamental lesson from its federal election
disaster in 1996, after Paul Keating, Gareth Evens ,Robert Tickner and Nick Bolkus had poisoned the national debate by repeatedly spraying the word "racist" across the political landscape. Look what happened to their, careers.
When the Bracks Government passed the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act, it did so, after the Victorian equal Opportunity Commission had logged just five complaints of religious vilification in the previous year. Yet the commission's head, Diane Sisely, had warned of a dramatic increase in attacks and insults against Muslims, despite the absence of evidence.
Exactly the same was going on in NSW, where the president of the Anti-Discrimination board, Chris Puplick, warned of endemic abuse of Muslims even as his own annual report reported only 55 complaints lodged by all groups in a year.
While Puplick was publicly eviscerated by the Premier, Bob Carr, Victoria went in the opposite direction. The Equal Opportunity Commission hired May Helou of the Islamic Council of Victoria to begin a large program advising Muslims of their rights under the new anti-vilification law. It was Helou who recruited three Muslims to attend a seminar, “The Nature Of Islam", organised by Catch The Fire Ministries, a national, nondenominational evangelical group.
After attending the seminar, the three observers prepared a 52-count complaint for the Islamic Council of Victoria. The Council then Lodged the complaint with the Equal Opportunity Commission against the ministry and two of its Pastors, thus Completing the ideological circle between bureaucratic agitation and litigation.
A mediation session was arranged. It lasted seven hours and forty minutes. It produced an ideological impasse. The Islamic Council commenced legal proceedings. Hearings began in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal in October last year. The hearings went for 40 days, spread over nine months. Final submissions were made in June. The maximum penalties under the act are a $30,000 fine and six months' jail. However the prospect of jailing people for their religious beliefs has proved so divisive that Judge Michael Higgins felt obliged to announce he saw grounds to jail anymore anyone.
"This has caused us tremendous amount of time and stress," the head of Catch The Fire Ministries, Pastor- Danny Nalliah, told me. That's the point, Danny. That's why the Equal Opportunity Commission went fishing for business. That's why the Islamic Council went to court. They don't need to win. They just need to send a message.
Nalliah was happy to summarise the views that led to this imbroglio: "I have lived in Saudi Arabia and learned the real nature of Islam It is to dominate other religions and other cultures. The Koran speaks of world domination. I have spoken to a lot of Muslim leaders who say it is easy to exploit the Western system. They say the key is to be patient to learn the language, and to build up numbers. Then build up political power. “Even Christians believe everyone should know about Christ and want people to follow Christ. But the worry is with Islam, it goes one step further. If peaceful methods fail, the Koran says you can use violence.".
The price for those views, so far, has been $300,000 in legal costs. The ministries' solicitors acting Pro bono, assess their costs at $400,000. With the costs of the complainant, plus the publicly funded cost of the hearings, total legal costs exceed $1 million.
Eighteen months after the Islamic Council of Victoria lodged its action the matter. remains, unresolved. And Labor wants a federal version of this law.