The Cairns Post

Taking a stand for our culture

- Sharri Markson is Political Editor-at-Large for The Daily Telegraph

VICTORIAN Premier Daniel Andrews stared down the barrel of television cameras and barked at anyone who dared complain they couldn’t play a game of golf.

He tried to block partners who didn’t live together from seeing each other.

Our political leaders slammed Bondi Beach-goers and backpacker­s for breaching strict social-distancing rules, and yelled at shoppers for hoarding toilet paper and stockpilin­g groceries.

But then there was a bizarre change of attitude towards those engaging in the riskiest behaviour of all during a pandemic – a mass gathering in the form of a protest.

Our political leaders inexplicab­ly lost their voice. There was no hectoring, lecturing or yelling.

Just mealy-mouthed phrases. No bans and virtually no fines.

Tens of thousands of protesters who deliberate­ly flouted the rules have walked away smug and unpunished while cafe owners across the country nurse fines for having one or two additional people seated, in an economic environmen­t in which they’re already struggling to survive.

The double standard is unacceptab­le.

There is one rule for most Australian­s and one rule for the protesters.

It’s even more difficult to stomach that the very same people who angrily demanded schools remain closed and the lockdown continue went on to justify the attendance of tens of thousands at a protest.

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann comprehens­ively understood the public sentiment about the protests from the outset.

He reflected the red-hot anger in the community on this issue when he described the protesters as “selfish”.

His overall point is that the states should impose the current penalties under the current rules.

That means the police need to start issuing fines or arresting protesters who stick their finger up to the law.

Cormann has also suggested withholdin­g JobSeeker payments for those who attend protests.

There’s precedent for it in the No Jab, No Pay vaccinatio­n scheme in which welfare payments are withheld from parents who do not vaccinate their children.

The same principle applies with these protests. If you attend a mass gathering and put the health of others at risk, you lose JobSeeker payments.

It’s an idea that would have widespread public support.

Our politician­s need to remember that the subject matter of the protests is irrelevant. They shouldn’t disregard all health advice just because it’s a politicall­y sensitive topic.

These protesters are breaking the ban on mass gatherings. They are breaking the law. They’re risking their lives along with everyone else’s.

Racism or the plight of refugees can be championed in many ways other than a protest, such as donations, petitions or emailing politician­s.

George Floyd’s murder was horrifying and the struggle of black Americans and our indigenous people must be addressed, and urgently, but not in a way that risks more lives.

On Anzac Day, commemorat­ions were held on front lawns around the country while services were conducted online. The problem is, protest organisers seem to be looking for trouble. It seems to be less about the cause they claim to champion and more about provoking fights with police and with those in authority.

If the protests were about the supposed cause – saving the lives of indigenous Australian­s or refugees – then clearly they would not have a medically high-risk mass gathering.

Instead, they would stay home in order to save lives.

But we know now this movement is no longer about equality. It has become a terrifying global movement to get rid of the police, to destroy literature and entertainm­ent, to tear down monuments and to censor free speech. Madness has taken hold around the world.

You can’t wipe out aspects of history that are disdainful or disagreeab­le, such as monuments, just as you can’t remove entertainm­ent, such as the movie Gone With The Wind or Chris Lilley’s satirical work, from public consumptio­n. Where will this all end? The move to retrospect­ively censor our history is insanity.

History is there to study, analyse, learn from and reflect on.

 ??  ?? UNACCEPTAB­LE: Captain Cook statue in Melbourne was vandalised 2018.
UNACCEPTAB­LE: Captain Cook statue in Melbourne was vandalised 2018.

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