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   alt.censorship      All matters of censorship in society      12,782 messages   

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   Message 12,629 of 12,782   
   D. Ray to All   
   Australians told to report friends and f   
   03 Sep 24 13:19:13   
   
   XPost: aus.politics, talk.politics.misc, alt.politics   
   From: d@ray   
      
   Opposition leader Peter Dutton has called on Australians to report their   
   friends and family to intelligence agencies or the police if they change   
   their thoughts on the government.   
      
   Mr Dutton made the comments in an interview with Sky News host Laura Jayes,   
   who asked him about Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Australian Security   
   Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) boss Mike Burgess on Monday warning of an   
   increased risk of terrorism.   
      
   “We saw the terror threat raised to Probable yesterday. But there are   
   multiple fronts now. One of those fronts that I found most interesting has   
   come out of Covid,” Ms Jaye asked.   
      
   “There’s the conspiracy theorists, the anti-vaxxers, who are finding   
   support in dark corners of the internet. What does this say to you about –   
   and I know we can all be perfect in hindsight, Covid was unprecedented –   
   but what does it say to you about government overreach, and government,   
   essentially, controlling people’s lives and the effects that that can   
   have?”   
      
   Mr Dutton responded by agreeing that government overreach during the   
   pandemic had a “huge mental impact on young people” and laid the blame for   
   much of that on former premier Dan Andrews and his lockdowns in Victoria.   
      
   But he then added: “None of that, though, should give rise to the sort of   
   conduct that you’re referring to.   
      
   “I would say to anybody in our community, whether it’s within your   
   friendship group, your family group, the work group, whatever it might be,   
   where you see somebody’s behaviour changing, regardless of their   
   motivation, or if they’ve changed radically their thoughts about society   
   and government, etc., you need to report that information to ASIO, or to   
   the Australian Federal Police as a matter of urgency.”   
      
   Mr Dutton was heavily criticised for his comments, with fast fiction author   
   John Goddard saying: “I love this new version of democracy where you get   
   reported to the police if you don’t like the government.”   
      
   Another social media user called Aussie Phil wrote: “At this stage, if you   
   don’t oppose government, you are a traitor, a coward or both.   
      
   “Government is meant to serve the people, even the ones that don’t want a   
   big bloated globalist controlled government.   
      
   “My conservative views are not extreme, they are similar views to my   
   ancestors that built this great nation.”   
      
   Dean Anderson said: “We are now entering the dark days of the USSR. Opposed   
   to the government ? Dob in your neighbours.”   
      
   Mr Burgess said on Monday that the terror threat had been raised after   
   eight incidents in the past four months were deemed terrorism, investigated   
   for terror links, or were prevented by ASIO.   
      
   Intelligence sources have said all eight were alleged perpetrated by young   
   men aged 14 to 21, including the alleged Islamic terror attack on Orthodox   
   Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel in April.   
      
   “Politically motivated violence now joins espionage and foreign   
   interference as our principle security concerns,” Mr Burgess said.   
      
   “Anti-authority beliefs are growing, trust in institutions is eroding,   
   provocative, inflammatory behaviours are being normalised.   
      
   Mr Albanese added: “Governments around the world are concerned about youth   
   radicalisation, online radicalisation and the rise of new, mixed   
   ideologies.”   
      
   Other factors cites as leading to alleged radicalisation and the raising of   
   the threat level include social isolation, COVID-19, conflict in the Middle   
   East and the high cost of living and housing.   
      
   Mr Dutton is just back from a controversial trip to Israel which was   
   criticised by Australians from across the political spectrum.   
      
      
      
      
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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