02-04-2014 12:29 PM - edited 02-04-2014 12:30 PM
Posted by: Tom Elliott | 1 April, 2014 - 4:15 PM
Last night I watched Q&A on the ABC.
I haven’t watched Q&A as much as I used to because it’s become a bit predictable, a bit boring and displays the same typical bias week-in week-out, but last night I did watch it and it made me bloody angry.
Last night it was all about human rights, so rather than get four or five Australians who might know something about human rights, Q&A got four people from overseas and one Australian.
The one Australian was Tim Wilson, our newly appointed Human Rights Commissioner.
But the other people on the program were Egyptian author Mona Eltahawy; Somali peace and human rights activist Ilwad Elman; ethics columnist with The Observer in the UK Lucy Siegle; and international director of Human Rights Watch in New York, Kenneth Roth.
That in itself isn’t bad, I think it’s great they’re getting good international guests on these sorts of programs. But then for the next hour, whenever they mentioned Australia it was always in the negative.
Honestly, if you knew nothing about Australia, if you didn’t live here or you had never encountered it before, by the end of that program I reckon you would have decided that Australia was pretty much on a par with Burma or North Korea in terms of what it was like.
- According to the various four foreigners, we are elitist because we have imperial honours that have recently been reintroduced: Yes but all honours are elitist – there is nothing wrong with that. You don’t just reward everybody, you reward the people who do a good job but ‘oh no, that sounds terrible!’
- We are all bigots because we’re having a debate about free speech: Notwithstanding the fact that in the US free speech is a constitutional right. The lone American on the panel decided there was something wrong with us because we contemplated having a debate about a particular issue.
- Apparently we’re all soon to be guilty of hate speak: Speaking out about groups that we don’t like and thereby vilifying them and making them feel bad about themselves.
- And again, when the subject of asylum seekers came up, as it does every week on this program, apparently we are a nation of human rights abusers.
Now, Tim Wilson did a reasonable job trying to stand up for Australia. But he should have done more.
LISTEN: Tim Wilson discusses his appearance on Q&A last night, says he won't be invited back anytime soon http://www.3aw.com.au/displayPopUpPlayerAction.action?&url=http://media.mytalk.com.au/3AW/AUDIO/wils...
The point is this: Australia is not such a terrible place. It is one of the best countries on earth, it really is. And I’m not just saying that as an Australian; I’m saying that because I’ve travelled to lots of places and I can tell you, you don’t have to go very far around the world to realise that we have a very good system.
We also have a very good lifestyle here; it’s a country that accepts people of all faiths and nationalities and by-and-large they get along pretty well, but you wouldn’t know it if you watched Q&A.
I think the ABC needs to have a look at itself about these sorts of things.
Simply slagging off Australia week-in week-out might appeal to a certain audience that thinks that there’s something terrible about being here and ‘we must write outraged columns about it in newspapers like The Age’, but have a look around the world.
You’d soon realise that we are not a country that massively abuses human rights; we’re not a country where people routinely engage in hate speak.
Judging by all the migrants who have made successes of themselves over here, we are not a nation of bigots otherwise why would so many people want to come here?
If you listened to the audience and more importantly, if you listened to the panellists on Q&A last night, you would think Australia was one of the most appalling places.
I think Q&A is full of bias; I think the ABC has an internal hatred of Australia and I think it was on display last night.
And just the question that these people from overseas do not seem to bother asking themselves is ‘why are people queuing up to get here if this is such a terrible place?’
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 02-04-2014 01:11 PM
never mind nero_wulf, isn't there a show on with that champion Bolt or Dolt or something, think there is even an entire thread of it - can't quite remember...
But Andrew Bolt IS a racist: In black and white
yeah that's him.
on 02-04-2014 01:16 PM
Q&A: a celebration of self-loathing and Leftist bias
Last night’s episode of Q&A was one of the most outrageously and offensively biased of an ABC show that has been uniformly biased.
It was also an insight into the broad Left’s loathing of free speech and the West, and into the racism that informs its anti-racist posturing.
Jewish readers should note one part in particular: the unchallenged account of one panellist telling how anti-"hate-speech" activism can be used against defenders of Israel. This is a point I’ve tried to warn Jewish leaders about again and again. Here is how the show unfolded.
FIRST, STACK THE PANEL
Host Tony Jones stacked the panel with known Leftists: Egyptian activist and commentator Mona Eltahawy, Somalian peace and human rights advocate Ilwad Elman; The Observer’s ethics columnist Lucy Siegle; and the international head of Human Rights Watch, Kenneth Roth. Add Jones and the count was five people of the Left to a single panellist, Human Rights Commissioner Tim Wilson, who is not.
NEXT, ATTACK THE TOKEN NON-LEFTIST
Even those odds - five to one - were still not good enough for Jones, who ambushed Wilson with a set-up. Jones devoted the second question to hostile videos from viewers attacking Wilson like no other panellist was attacked:
A very good read and the full article is here
Look at Q&A and despair. A culture of savage nihilism is engulfing us, and our right to even protest is being stripped away
02-04-2014 01:17 PM - edited 02-04-2014 01:18 PM
the editor,David is a good man
02-04-2014 01:19 PM - edited 02-04-2014 01:21 PM
Is it OK to be a bigot or not Nero_wulf ...so many mixed messages ..even from our PM
the Revisionalists of Australia and OS have their own views as well
on 02-04-2014 01:32 PM
Tony Abbott is a leftie. Have a look next time you see him with a pen.
on 02-04-2014 01:40 PM
"Hello everyone,
Please remember to keep the tone civil and not make interpersonal comments towards each other.
Thanks!"
02-04-2014 01:52 PM - edited 02-04-2014 01:53 PM
So when is this Government going to set up its "House Committee For Un Australian Activities?" and are you going to apply for the job of chairperson - or should that be witchfinder General?
on 02-04-2014 02:15 PM
I was sickened by this episode but apparenlty hating our country and our government is OK for Jones to facillitate.
This type of racial vilification indulged in by Joens and the panel is disgusting and Jones should be sacked.
on 02-04-2014 02:19 PM
I thought the programme was enlightening, I enjoyed listening to all panelists. Oh and isn't llwad Elman stunning?
on 02-04-2014 02:29 PM
I posted a link here a few months ago and that link illustrated there exists a closed-club at UK's BBC, i.e., virtually everyone employed by that establishment belongs to a certain group
Same in US where members of that group are esconced at the top of virtually all orgs and institutions, even US-Arab relationships and the Christian orgs (despite those with their hands on the steering wheel being in perpetual war with all other religions and races)
And it's the same at the ABC. If you're not a member of that group, you don't work there
Divisions, divisions is their agenda
At the same time, they insist on their right to 'homogeneity' and are openly and proudly racist in addition to telling the UN to get knotted
Switch off the ABC and do yourself a favour. Your blood pressure and renewed joy of life will thank you
Then, in your spare time, continue nagging the government to quit funding the ABC