
THE eSafety Commissar is demanding not just censorship in Australia, but global censorship of social media. She is an international embarrassment, doing untold damage to Australia’s international reputation and should be sacked, says former federal MP Craig Kelly, now National Director of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation.
“But Labor, Liberal, Greens & Lambie are so pathetically weak, they are all falling into line with this madness. Don’t they understand they are betraying the very concepts of free speech and the world is laughing at Australia?”
Cairns News also condemns the actions of Albanese and his “corporate power-woman”, the so-called eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman-Grant, a lackey of Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum posing as a public servant. It was Inman-Grant who told her WEF buddies are “going to have to think about recalibrating a whole range of human rights”.
Well listen up lady and take some advice form Cairns News editors: Neither you nor your WEF gang get to “recalibrate human rights”. “Human rights” and the rights inherited from centuries of English common and constitutional law don’t get wilfully changed by some upstart bureaucrat like yourself.
“Imagine if the Chinese Communists demanded global censorship of social media to try and hide a video of violence against ethnic minorities – just because they’d made a law in China censoring Chinese from seeing it?” said Kelly.
“Or what about if North Korea demanded global censorship of a video of a North Korean fleeing across the border into the South – because in North Korea there was a law preventing North Koreans from seeing it.
“Or what about if Iran demanded global censorship of women being beaten on the street for not covering their faces – because in Iran they’d made a law preventing Iranians from seeing it.
Or what about if during the Vietnam war, the South Vietnamese Government demand global censorship of images of the young girl naked & screaming after being burnt by napalm – because the South Vietnamese had made a law preventing South Vietnamese from seeing it?” said Kelly.
The eSafety commissioner has been granted a two-day legal injunction to compel X to hide posts that include graphic footage relating to the Wakeley stabbing.
X (Twitter) has been ordered to hide the material from all users worldwide until Wednesday at 5pm, when the matter will be considered again in more detail. X had hidden the content from Australian users but not all users, which lawyers for eSafety argued did not comply with Australian law.