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All bets are off when a bill of rights comes in : Comments
By James Allan, published 24/4/2006Overseas experience offers a lesson for Australian states considering legislating for a bill of rights.
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But, when did you last feel the need for a Bill of Rights? If your answer is, “Never”, you are like the vast majority of Australians. The chances are that you didn’t know that Australia was the only developed country without such a Bill, and couldn’t have cared less. After all, who needs a Bill of Rights in a country like Australia? The answer is, of course, nobody. Australia does not need a Bill of Rights.
So, who started all this nonsense? The usual suspects of course: that relatively small minority of people inhabiting the left who think that they know what is best for us. But, in this case, it is not “us” – your average Australian - they are trying to think for. They know that we have no need for a Bill of Rights, so whom are they presuming to act for in their slavering for a Bill of Rights?
For the answer, see Judy Cannon (OLO 5/4/06). ‘The Bill draft refers to “All people in Australia” deliberately to include citizens, asylum seekers, people on a working holiday and tourists. It requires Australia to “better conform” with its international obligations, and in particular, in areas where the new anti-terrorism legislation violates those obligations.’
Australian citizens get a mention but, as it is extremely unlikely that the ordinary, law abiding Australian citizen will ever need this “help”, it is the illegal entrants, visa over stayers and wayward tourists who the Bill is really intended for. And don’t forget those poor terror suspects who, it is proudly claimed, would not be subject to the current laws had we had a Bill of Rights.
The Chair or the U.S Civil Rights Commission, Mary Berry said, “Civil Rights Laws were not passed to protect the rights of white men and do not apply to them.” (‘The Death of the West’, Patrick J. Buchanan).
Substitute Bill of Rights and Australian majority, and there you have what maniacal minority groups want for us.