@jihadwatchRS@PeterWh59373347 It wasn’t a secret order.
He ruled that the recording was made wothout their knowledge & inadmissable in court.
There was also a ruling disallowing the finding of a bottle of restricted opiate medication in the male’s locker.
Another judge has said if challenged it would fail.
The sole purpose of the ‘human rights’ racket is to make it impossible for civilised countries to control their borders and keep violent foreign savages out.
The Albanese Government was staring down calls for a Royal Commission into Bondi.
The Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet was reportedly warning it had limited budget and staffing capacity to support a new inquiry.
At the same time, Albanese was telling Chris Minns a Royal Commission could place “undue strain” on key security agencies.
Think about that.
The Federal Government has found more than $300 million for years of investigations into alleged war crimes involving Australian soldiers including the pursuit of Ben Roberts-Smith VC.
But when Australians demanded answers after the deadliest terrorist attack on Australian soil, suddenly the concerns were cost, staffing and strain on government agencies.
Apparently, money can be found when Canberra wants to investigate our soldiers.
Finding out how Australia suffered its worst terrorist attack was considered a burden.
@RoadknightThe This guy is a meteorologist (and conservative). He has many posts on the subject and takes to task conspiracy theorists even if they are also conservative. I respect him for defending the science on the matter.
@RoadknightThe His interview was misquoted in order to attack him. What he said was he doesn't know.
What he didn't say is that he doesn't want to be wrong either way.
https://t.co/y2iz8xj3So
Further proof that language is used as a blunt instrument to stifle and in this case kill debate.
Axed: Fury as nurse union pulls suicide article over ‘trans distress’
Australia’s nurses union has retracted — and apologised for — an article in its official journal that accurately summarised the research on suicide in transgender people, following complaints by the union’s “LGBTQIA+ reference group” that the paper was causing “significant distress to the transgender community”.
The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation expressed its “sincere regret” for publishing the article, which outlined a number of long-term studies challenging the narrative that the risk of suicide increases dramatically if trans children and teens are not provided with gender-affirming medical treatment.
The author of the article, New Zealand registered nurse Jason Watson, is now threatening to sue the union after it accused him of “negativity and hatred” and of harming the transgender community.
The ANMF, Australia’s biggest nurses union, told its 350,000 members it had removed the offending article from the online journal and apologised that many members would soon receive a physical copy of the journal in their letterboxes.
“It is our responsibility to ensure that damaging and harmful opinions are not disseminated or appear to be promoted in our publications,” the ANMF said.
“Negativity and hatred have no place in our movement.”
https://t.co/Qgv2lhtr8m via @australian
Britain almost bankrupted itself putting a stop to slavery. We owe these grifters nothing.
If anyone deserves reparations it’s the British people for all the knife, gun and machete crime that black criminals have brought to the streets of our formerly civilised country.