Theatre Australia

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The government does it again

Tue, 25 Sept 2007, 01:49 pm
Na26 posts in thread
The government is hoping to curtail our freedom of speech (and reading) even further, by not allowing us to access all of the internet. Apparently. The following was posted on Mashable.com: Several privacy advocates are in an uproar in response to a bill introduced by Australia’s Parliament, which would grant the country’s federal police the power to control which sites can be accessed by users of the Internet. Titled the Communications Legislation Amendment (Crime or Terrorism Related Internet Content) Bill 2007, the federal police would have the power to add onto (or remove from) the blacklist, naming sites that are currently banned from Australia , as determined by the Australian Communications and Media Authority. This extends the rights of the ACMA onto the federal police, which appears to some as a way of limiting the rights of freedom of speech. The legislation is being promoted as a way to target phishing and terrorist sites, as well as those that publish information on other criminal activity. However, we’ve all been subjected to politicians taking action under the guise of protecting us from terrorism, and the result is several privacy groups that are wary of this bill being passed. Next thing we know, Australia will be blocking YouTube. Read more about it here.

Today's Herald Sun has

Wed, 26 Sept 2007, 11:15 am
Today's Herald Sun has Andrew Bolt going at the Melbourne Fringe festival and the fact that tax payers are paying to have artists perform anti-Howard shows. -Note: 'This tax payer funding' isn't direct to the festival but comes through sponorship by several Universities, the City council and both Liberal and Labour parties. This piece annoyed me for a few reasons- Bolt is often...no always, displaying his point of view on various topics and gets paid to do so. Yet when an artist, with a vision and an opinion decides to mount a show on the stage during a festival to display their opinion that is wrong? Because many shows are left wing? Because they are identifying faults? I guess a ban on freedom of speech online would lead to the end of the Fringe Festival and similar festivals across the country. And then I guess Andrew Bolt would be happy... Although they'd surely be knocking opinion pieces out of the paper too. ____________________________________________________________ Currently working on: A nice break before jumping into my next project.

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