canberratimes.com.au/story/914…

No member of Australia's Jewish community feels safe. Their fear of violence has been growing since the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel and the subsequent Israeli attack on Gaza as overseas conflicts and hatreds sadly get imported into Australia.

If you did not know about that fear of violence, you certainly know about it now.

As Australia tries to do something about addressing these fears, our jurisprudence will change in subtle but significant ways. We will be rebalancing rights, duties, and freedoms.

Law does not develop in the abstract. It develops in response to society's needs and desires - to its culture and history. Law is dynamic even though it may not seem to be.

Australia has developed as a multicultural society made up of people from a huge diversity of ethnic, linguistic, religious, and racial backgrounds. It is a liberal, rule-of-law democracy.

We have cherished freedom of speech but also responded to a rightful expectation of people to be free from fear of violence. That means going beyond merely making the violence itself unlawful and punishing it.

This legal balancing in the face of assaults on the freedom from fear of violence is not new. We have tried rebalances in the past, sometimes successfully, sometimes not.

Violence in many areas has decreased, but still too many live in fear.

This year, 43 women have been murdered in domestic and family violence in Australia. Too many live in constant fear of violence in the home. Too many women are harassed, verbally abused, and assaulted outside the home, and usually fear violence alone outside at night.

Racial violence remains too high. Verbal and physical attacks against people showing apparel signifying religion are far too frequent.

This time last year, the fifth Islamaphobia in Australia report detailed 309 in-person incidents between January 2023 and December 2024 - up two and a half times from the previous period. The majority were against women.

We have to stop the self-congratulatory nonsense that Australia is a tolerant society until we do more about violence and the fear it engenders in people who should not have to live in fear. Perhaps we need stronger vetting for visas and permanent residency as a means of preventing the import of overseas hatreds, conflicts, and violence.

To reduce (if we cannot remove) fear of violence and to reduce the severity of the consequences of violent acts will mean changing the legal balance - impinging upon what had hitherto been the rights of some to improve the rights of others.

Fifty-two years ago, the Whitlam Labor government attempted the first rebalance with the Racial Discrimination Act. It outlawed discrimination on the basis of race and religion in areas such as housing and employment.

It took away the hitherto unbridled right to employ or lease your property to whomever you like. It was opposed by the Coalition. The Coalition only agreed to the final 1975 act after using its Senate numbers to weaken it significantly.

In 1995, the Keating Labor government strengthened the act considerably by outlawing racist speech - the famous Section 18C. Again, it was opposed by the Coalition on the grounds of free speech. Again, the hitherto right of people to vilify others on the grounds of race or religion was taken away.

The issue came to prominence in 2011 when the Federal Court found right-wing commentator Andrew Bolt had breached the act.

The then Coalition leader Tony Abbott, promised to repeal the section if elected in 2013, but abandoned the promise after public outcry. Several other Coalition attempts to repeal or weaken the section between 2013 and 2022 also failed.

So now is a critical time because the Coalition appears to have opportunistically reversed its position of being the robust defender of free speech in the face of trendy, woke lefties who want to oppose racism.

For the Coalition, I suppose, it depends more on who is doing the vilification and who is being vilified than general principles about balancing freedoms.

The Jewish community has rightly called for broader measures against hate speech. In the light of what happened at Bondi and its lead up, now is the time for rebalancing the right of free speech and the right of people to live without an ever-present fear of violence. It is a rare window.

It is also time to rebalance the right to bear arms (if there ever was one).

After the Port Arthur massacre in 1996, prime minister John Howard, against a lot of opposition, did the right thing in enacting uniform national gun laws, outlawing some types of guns and establishing a licensing scheme.

He rebalanced the hitherto almost unbridled right to buy firearms.

No one suggests that he did not go far enough, even after Bondi. But the lesson is there. These things need constant review. Gun technology changes, unintended gaps emerge, and so on.

Well before now, a ban on all firearms in built-up areas (people in uniform and police excepted) would have been a good idea. Why anyone but a farmer with feral pests needs a firearm at all is beyond me. Do you need a deadly weapon to prove you can hit a target. Why not use laser technology instead? And what individual, even a farmer, needs four guns?

Tighter gun laws are perhaps of paramount importance. The 1996 laws have probably saved dozens of lives, not just from perpetrators motivated by racism, religious bigotry, and far-right ideology, but also from violent criminals and perpetrators of domestic violence.

Hate speech laws, too, will need constant revision. Legislation against specific phrases, such as "Globalise the Intifada" or "From the River to the Sea", might satisfy a temporary political demand, but will lose force over time. A more general law that captures hate speech more widely than Section 18C is needed.

The heat of the moment can be seized as a catalyst for reform, but a one-off, job's-done exercise will not be good enough, as the 1996 gun law has since showed.

The other reason for constant revision - or even a sunset clause that would force revision - are the inevitable unforeseen consequences and the possibility of the executive government obtaining for itself much wider power than needed.

Those wider powers usually take the form: "The Minister may declare ... ". Enacted in haste, regretted at leisure.

But remember, after these changes are made, Australia will still be a free, rule-of-law, liberal democracy where you are free do what you like, provided there is no law against it. And our elected representatives will still make that law.

  • Crispin Hull is a former editor of The Canberra Times and regular columnist.


#auspol #society #hate #bigotry #violence #WomensSafety #racism #guns

A tolerant society? You don't have to look far to find an Australian living in fear

This brings us to a free speech crossroads.

7. Who asked for this? (Yes, I ask that question everywhere. What is the demand to which all this is the supply? Please don't say 'supply creates demand' unless you are the narcos.)

8. What is the threat model that the system in the Rules addresses? Is that the threat model for the most significant quantum of fraud in India as the source & destination of fraud?

#digitalrights #cybsersecurity #fraudprevention #womenssafety

canberratimes.com.au/story/912…

It's been a terrible year for men.

Sure, it's not like they are murdered by their partners every other week but it's still a terrible year for men.

And it's not like men are the victims of rape and domestic violence every other hour but it's still a terrible year for men.

Why terrible? Because men, many, many men, are not changing. They are not turning away from violence. They are not turning away from trying to control their partners. They are being called to account - but unless they seize this moment to make change, they will forever be trapped in their man box, a term coined by US violence prevention activist Paul Kivel. What's the man box? All the ludicrous expectations of masculinity. All the horrifying entitlements of masculinity.

Imagine being groomed to become a perpetrator.

I'm not even sure that groomed is the right word - but something terrible continues to happen to men and to boys.

We now know the impacts of the problem because we have seen the detailed recommendations from the state coroner, Teresa O'Sullivan, who presided over the inquest into the murder of Lilie James, the young woman who was murdered in the toilet at the school where she'd worked for two years. We know because of the man who went back for his hat a second time, Bruce Lehrmann. This week he lost his second attempt to have his name cleared. I doubt it will ever be cleared - particularly given the appeal judges left it in an even worse place.

Kate Fitz-Gibbon, professor at Monash University, was called to the Lilie James inquest as an expert adviser to the crown solicitor and she reviewed the evidence. Fitz-Gibbon sat through the entire proceedings. Absolutely heartbreaking. Lilie was young. Her murderer, who later took his own life, was also young.

"It's an opportunity for us to think about young people and their role as bystanders. It's really important to understand that no one in that friendship group is responsible for Lilie's death ... but when we look back in hindsight, there's absolutely learnings in terms of what could be gained by improving capacity amongst young people to act as bystanders and to be able to identify risks for themselves as well as others."

Which is tough, because who wants to be the drag in the lively group chat, the one to point out someone's being a dick.

The recommendations are thorough and slightly overwhelming. The coroner says we need more education to raise community awareness of how to identify and respond to coercive controlling behaviours. It's become even tougher now because it's been normalised to share locations. We must all learn to think much more critically about how technology is used to track and abuse. Lilie James's murderer was tracking her location on Snapmaps and her friends just thought it was a sign of affection.

Those of us aged between 16 to 24 need much more awareness of what looks cute but can be controlling and calculating - and universities, TAFE and other forms of higher education better get their skates on.

Remember the ridiculous Coalition fuss about respectful relationship education. We need it. Sure, girls need it but boys need it more. How do we get boys to become kind and nurturing and caring and not violent boofheads? Someone out there knows (try Matt Tyler from Jesuit Social Services, wrangling the Men's Project).

As for me and my kind, journalists need to stop quoting idiots who say that these murders, these rapes, are "out of character". Or that, heaven help me, these murderers were delightful. Murderers are not delightful and all the alleged delight was expunged the minute they chose to murder.

First, let me introduce you to Peta James, the mother of Lilie. The coroner said she spoke "powerfully about raising her daughter to be brave and strong. Peta's words - that we must teach boys to respect and value women's opinions and choices, and to accept rejection - resonate deeply. It is my hope that Peta's message, and the lessons learnt from this tragedy, echo beyond this courtroom and contribute to meaningful change."

Now let me introduce you to Justice Michael Lee, who found Lehrmann was "so intent upon gratification to be indifferent to Ms Higgins's consent and hence went ahead with sexual intercourse without caring whether she consented". The appeal found more and said Lee "should have found actual knowledge on the part of Mr Lehrmann that Ms Higgins did not consent to sexual intercourse".

Value women. Accept rejection. Brittany Higgins did not consent.

This is where we are today - when the most obvious observations about how we should live our lives are not, indeed, observed. As a result? We can't imagine those final moments of a woman's life, when she knows she is going to die, when she is begging the perpetrator to stop, shouting she will do anything to make the violence stop. We hate to imagine the many moments every day when a woman is begging a man to stop his assaults.

This year we have had further insights into the minds of men who rape and murder, who threaten and bully, who track the object of their obsession every minute of every day. We've heard from the family of Lisa Lynn, first wife of Greg Lynn, the man now serving a decades-long sentence for the murder of Carol Clay, 73. We now discover that Lynn had intervention orders against him, that he threatened his wife, the mother of two small boys. She was found dead on her lawn and police said it was suicide. That didn't satisfy the family then, given the previous threats they had reported, and it doesn't satisfy them now.

All too often I hear that police don't do a good job of family violence investigations.

Fitz-Gibbon is clear on this - the coroner in the Lilie James case has made really specific recommendations that are relevant to every single state and every single territory in Australia.

"We have a national crisis in this country. These recommendations will progress much needed actions - if fully implemented and resourced, they will save lives."

#FsckRWNJs #FsckThePatriarchy #FsckMisogynists #FsckSexists #Feminism #WomensRights #WomensRepresentation #misogyny #sexism #DomesticViolence #DieDickswingersDie #WomanNeedsManLikeFishNeedsBicycle #MaleViolence #WomensSafety

Poor men. They're not getting murdered by partners every week. But what a terrible year for them

The behaviour of many men is not changing. So who's going to call it out?

Forensics student reveals the two types of women predators target based on how they walk

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.upworthy.com/predators-choose-victims-based-on-how-they-walk-ex1

📱 What is a personal safety app — and why is it becoming a daily essential?

From SOS alerts to Bluetooth panic buttons, personal safety apps like I’M SAFE are giving people the tools to act fast in real-life emergencies.

🔎 Learn how personal safety tech is changing the way we stay safe:
https://shorturl.at/bJMYx

#PersonalSafetyApp #WomensSafety #ImSafeApp #SOSAlert #StaySafe #WhatIsPersonalSafetyApp #SafetyAppsForWomen #TechForGood #BluetoothSOS #SafetyMatters #IamSafe #PersonalSafetyTech

Delhi Police launch an inquiry after activist Bharti Chaturvedi’s viral X post detailing an alleged assault by an Uber driver and the lack of police response. https://english.mathrubhumi.com/news/india/activist-bharti-chaturvedi-uber-ordeal-delhi-police-response-tevbfbno?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon #DelhiPolice #Uber #WomensSafety #DelhiNews
Jacquie Thomson was brutally attacked and then misidentified as the aggressor. She's working to hold police accountable

Jacquie Thomson is one of a large number of women who police continue to misidentify as primary aggressors instead of as victim/survivors.

Women's Agenda