on 18-03-2014 07:54 PM
The ABC has apologised to News Corp commentator Andrew Bolt after a Q&A panellist accused him of "racial abuse".
In a discussion about racial discrimination laws last Monday night, indigenous academic Marcia Langton accused Bolt of heaping "foul abuse" on indigenous woman Misty Jenkins, forcing her to withdraw from public life.
Her comments stemmed from newspaper articles Bolt wrote that questioned whether "fair-skinned" people who identified as Aboriginal, such as Ms Jenkins, had exploited their ancestry to make political or career gains.
"Nothing that he said about her was political. It was simply racial abuse," Professor Langton said on the program.
"He argued that she had no right to claim that she was Aboriginal and, like most fools who put this argument in public, we are expected to deny our parents and our grandparents because somebody believes in race theories."
Bolt wrote in a blog that he was "devastated" by the comments.
Professor Langton later apologised to Bolt in an interview with him and broadcaster Steve Price on 2GB, saying that although she does not think Bolt is racist, "he's playing with racist ideas — he goes too far to the line".
Bolt published a transcript of the interview in his blog and called on the ABC to respond.
Last night on Q&A the ABC issued an apology through host Tony Jones, who said that Professor Langton had publicly apologised "so as a result the ABC also apologises for broadcasting her remarks".
But the apology was not enough for Bolt who said it "did not go far enough".
The columnist criticised the apology for "failing to include a specific acknowledgement that claims I'd subjected Dr Misty Jenkins to "foul abuse" and driven her from "public life" were utterly false. "
"But it is a start," Bolt said.
In September 2011 a Federal Court judge found that Bolt breached a section of the Racial Discrimination Act by writing newspaper opinion pieces about "fair-skinned" indigenous people.
The section, which the federal government has pledged to repeal, protects people from "offensive behaviour because of race, colour or national or ethnic origin."
The judge ruled the offending articles were not covered by the legal exemption for making fair comment in good faith, because they "contained errors of fact, distortions of the truth and inflammatory and provocative language".
God it's wonder Tony Jones didn't choke on that apology, lol.
Some interesting comments there down to the right.
on 19-03-2014 06:41 PM
trolled into giving Andrew Bolt what he wanted
on 19-03-2014 06:59 PM
yardy yardy yardy yard,,,,,,,,, yawn
on 19-03-2014 07:01 PM
OK to attack a man about colour as long as he’s straight, fit and white
19-03-2014 07:05 PM - edited 19-03-2014 07:06 PM
@tall_bearded wrote:It appears that your interpretation of the record differs with mine. So to be absolutely certain I replayed the relevant Q and A segment and that portion of her interview when she retacted and apologised, and my interpretation remains the same.
So it appears we’ll just have to agree to disagree. That is of course until the court hands down it decision, because, as Langdon has now published a 5000 word ‘explanation’ as what she meant, this is where this issue appears to be headed.
Did you read her explanation
http://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/pdf/Marcia_Langton_on_Bolt.pdf
People like Bolt seem to forget that not all indigenous people were ever very dark skinned. The top end people were very dark and the further south people were not as dark. The Tasmanian people were described as honey or caramel coloured in Capt Cooks day.
She apologised for hurting his feelings and offending him. She did not retract any statement she had made.
And for the record, if you you mean that interview in which she was attacked by 2 people at once, that was no interview. That was a rude exchange in which she was bullied by a couple of thugs trying to corner her and not letting her get a sentence out.
19-03-2014 07:08 PM - edited 19-03-2014 07:10 PM
one of his blogs the Title is will the ABC apologise to a conservative
Politics , The ABC , 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act ...all in one
on 19-03-2014 07:14 PM
@nero_wulf wrote:OK to attack a man about colour as long as he’s straight, fit and white
I can't read that.It's behing a paywall.
Did you know about Warren Mundine's tweet to IA or the one re the 100 000 Australians involved in the March ?
Has he apologised?
on 19-03-2014 07:15 PM
Nero_Wulf wrote : She is whiter than me
and ?
on 19-03-2014 08:10 PM
Bolt breached discrimination act, judge rules
Updated Thu 29 Sep 2011, 11:05am AEST
Chief plaintiff Ms Eatock said she was not holding out hope of an apology from Mr Bolt.
"I will never get an apology from Mr Bolt. He made that clear giving his evidence earlier in the year," she said outside court.
"But we will, I hope, get some sort of acknowledgment through the press that what he wrote was just unacceptable, totally unacceptable. He set out to offend from the word go and in fact he acknowledged that in his evidence."
After the verdict, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott warned against restricting "the sacred principle of free speech".
"Free speech means the right of people to say what you don't like, not just the right of people to say what you do like," he said.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-09-28/bolt-found-guilty-of-breaching-discrimination-act/3025918
Isn't he precious expecting apologies from others
on 19-03-2014 08:12 PM
@izabsmiling wrote:Nero_Wulf wrote : She is whiter than me
and ?
So?
on 19-03-2014 08:14 PM
@freddie*rooster wrote:
@izabsmiling wrote:Nero_Wulf wrote : She is whiter than me
and ?
So?
and? so? ????????????
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