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Category Archives: Liberal
ICAC not a consideration as Liberals say Berejiklian shifts thinking on federal tilt – The Sydney Morning Herald
Posted: December 7, 2021 at 5:30 am
Senior Liberals say the pending findings of a corruption inquiry into Gladys Berejiklian will have no bearing on whether the former NSW premier decides to run federally in Warringah.
Ms Berejiklian is weighing up the possibility of running in the northern Sydney seat two months after resigning from the top job when the Independent Commission Against Corruption revealed she was being investigated over whether she breached the public trust or encouraged the occurrence of corrupt conduct during her secret relationship with disgraced former MP Daryl Maguire.
Former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian is considering a tilt at federal politics. Credit:Nick Moir
The Herald reported that nominations for the seat had been pushed back to January 14 specifically to give Ms Berejiklian more time to weigh up her options.
The ICAC will not report back publicly before the January date but on Sunday a senior Liberal who did not wish to be identified due to the sensitive nature of the talks said the corruption watchdogs inquiry was not a consideration for Ms Berejiklian in whether she runs.
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The feds clearly dont care and I dont think the public cares either, the Liberal Party source said. The ICAC has clearly made up its mind, everyone knows what its going to say.
The main question is does she really want to throw her life back into politics after a massive five years [as premier]. What does she want for this next chapter?
Ms Berejiklian had told those in the party two weeks ago that she was not prepared to take on independent Zali Steggall in a bid to win back a once safe Liberal seat. But another Liberal source said she has walked it back considerably in recent days.
I have no idea why, they said. But two weeks ago it was, not doing this, no way.
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8 times liberal media tried to ruin Thanksgiving, from ditching turkey to declaring genocide remains on menu – Fox News
Posted: November 28, 2021 at 10:04 pm
As Americans prepare to gather with relatives and enjoy a Thanksgiving feast on Thursday, far-left pundits, columnists and news organizations have set their sights on the holiday.
Woke critics have labeled Thanksgiving "a celebration of racist genocide," frowned upon eating turkey when "manyvegan turkeyalternatives" are available and even credited White supremacy for the holidays popularity.
NBC SUGGESTS NOT HAVING THANKSGIVING TURKEY THIS YEAR TO DEAL WITH INFLATION COSTS
"You there, fellow American! Were you under the impression that Thanksgiving is the uniquely American holiday that celebrates how English settlers and Native Americans peacefully crossed linguistic, cultural and racial barriers to share a meal together and create a model for gratitude and tolerance that would be the envy of the world? Wrong! Says Woke America," New York Post columnist Kyle Smith recently observed.
"Thanksgiving is about murder, plunder and hate. Invite your relatives over to spread love and gravy? No, if you really want to honor the spirit of Thanksgiving, you should whip yourself with barbed wire all day," Smith continued.
A liberal website urged Americans to eat vegan turkey alternatives on Thanksgiving. (iStock)
Here are some of the most egregious examples:
MSNBC segment declares genocide is "still on the menu" in America
An MSNBC segment aired on Saturday that accused White people of not accurately telling the story of Thanksgiving and blaming the pilgrims for the "White supremacy" affecting the nation today.
"Instead of bringing stuffing and biscuits, those settlers brought genocide and violence. That genocide and violence is still on the menu," guest essayist Gyasi Ross said on "The Cross Connection."
"State-sponsored violence against Native and Black Americans is still commonplace and violent, private White supremacy is celebrated and subsidized," Ross continued. "Indigenous and Black people are still being murdered by those paid to protect us."
Americans scolded for consuming turkey with "so manyvegan turkeyalternatives on the market"
Green Matters, a website dedicated to fighting climate change and environmental justice, published an article looking at the history of Thanksgiving. It details a variety of reasons why the holiday is "bad" and eventually lands on the tradition of eating turkey as the centerpiece of the annual feast. The article notes "there is actually no written evidence that turkeys were eaten at the 1621 Thanksgiving" and scolds Americans for sticking with the tradition modern despite vegan options.
"Every year, Americans breed,kill, and eat around 46 million turkeys on Thanksgiving and there's really no reason for this cruel and unsustainable tradition. These days, there are so manyvegan turkeyalternatives on the market, which are all more compassionate and environmentally-friendly choices," Green Matters writer Sophie Hirsch wrote.
"If you are hosting or attending a Thanksgiving dinner this year, remember the true origins of the holiday and consider sharing the true story with your friends and family," Hirsch continued in the piece headlined, "Thanksgiving Glorifies the Abhorrent Colonization of Indigenous Peoples."
THANKSGIVING TRAVEL: BEST AND WORST TIMES TO GO
As Americans prepare to gather with relatives and enjoy a Thanksgiving feast on Thursday, far-left pundits, columnists and news organizations have set their sights on the holiday. (iStock)
NBC suggests not having Thanksgiving turkey this year to deal with inflation costs
A segment on NBC's "Today" on Saturday suggested American families could drop the traditional Thanksgiving turkey from their tables this year to deal withinflation.
"With inflation on the rise, prices are going up on everything from your Thanksgiving meal to your gifts for the holidays," anchor Kristen Welker said to introduce the segment.
NBC News correspondent Vicky Nguyen noted the 6.2% rise in prices in October from a year ago a three-decade high calling it "real money." Nguyen then said something she admitted may be controversial.
"Perhaps forgo the turkey," she said. "Bear with me. I know that is the staple of the Thanksgiving meal. However, some people think turkey is overrated. It tends to be the most expensive thing on the table. Maybe you do an Italian feast instead."
Nguyen added that if you tell people you're ditching the turkey, "some guests may drop off the list, and that's a way to cut costs too."
While the segment was light-hearted, it was swiftly mocked on social media
USA Today reports holiday is "a day of mourning" for Indigenous people
USA Today published a story Tuesday headlined, "What is Thanksgiving to Indigenous people? 'A day of mourning," which focuses on what certain Native Americans feel about the holiday. The story is reported, not an opinion piece, so it comes across as more serious and thoughtful than bold hot takes by American pundits, but it remains an example of liberal media pooh-poohing Thanksgiving nonetheless.
"For many, rather than a celebration of peace and shared prosperity between Native Americans and Pilgrims, Thanksgiving represents the dark shadow of genocide and the resilience of Native people," reporter Michelle Shen wrote.
Shen spoke with tribal citizens Dennis W. Zotigh and Julie Garreau, who both explained the holiday isnt a happy time for them and they consider it a day of mourning.
"This year, Julie is not celebrating Thanksgiving and is instead organizing an event onNative American Heritage Day called Thanks for Kids, which celebrates Native children," Shen wrote.
Many liberals dont think Thanksgiving is a reason to celebrate. (iStock)
WALL STREET JOURNAL REFUSES TO BOW TO LEFT'S DEMANDS TO CANCEL THANKSGIVING EDITORIALS: 'WE WON'T BEND'
Critics of Wall Street Journal want to cancel Thanksgiving editorials
The Wall Street Journal editorial board was forced to announce that the paper will continue with the publishing of its annualThanksgivingeditorials despite efforts by the left to cancel them.
Ina Monday op-ed, the board declared that efforts by progressives to stop the publishing of the "racist"1620 accountof the first Thanksgiving, as well as a mid-20th century "contemporary contrast" of American progress, would not succeed and that The Journal wouldn't "bend to political demands for censorship."
"No doubt it was only a matter of time. The progressives have come for our annual Thanksgiving editorials. They wont succeed, but we thought wed share the tale with readers for an insight into the politicization of everything, even Thanksgiving," the board wrote.
It noted that the pair of editorials had been run every year since 1961 without complaint.
"But we live in a new era when the left sees nearly everything through the reductive lens of identity politics. It sees much of American history as a racist project that should be erased," the board wrote, before noting that the motivation to censor the Pilgrim editorial was being driven by a petition on left-wing site Change.org.
The author of the petition, which has garnered around 50,000 signatures, claims that "it's time to stop publishing 17th century racism" in 2021. It also complains that the editorial refers to Native Americans as "wilde men" and says that the Pilgrims were separate from "all the civil parts of the world."
CRITICS PAN THANKSGIVING ADVICE IN NEW YORK TIMES THAT KIDS WHO AREN'T FULLY VACCINATED SHOULD EAT QUICKLY
New York Times suggests kids "eat quickly" to avoid infecting vaccinated Americans with coronavirus
The New York Times published a guest essay last week in which a Virginia Tech professor suggested semi-vaccinated children "eat quickly" on Thanksgiving to avoid spreading COVID to vaccinated adults.
"If our child, 9, and a cousin, 10, have each received one dose of the vaccine two weeks prior to Thanksgiving, is it safe for us to eat indoors? There will be about 20 guests, all vaccinated, and the 65 and older crowd have all received boosters," one reader from San Francisco asked in the essay.
"Im glad to hear that the children and all guests are vaccinated. As the kids will not be fully vaccinated until two weeks after their second shot, I think some care is warranted, especially because some attendees are 65 and older and thus at greater risk of more serious breakthrough infections. You could have the kids wear masks, eat quickly and stay away from the older adults when eating," Virginia Tech engineering professor Linsey Marr wrote in response.
4 SMART TIPS FOR THANKSGIVING TRAVEL
Philadelphia Tribune declares Thanksgiving to be a celebration of racist genocide, mass land robbery
The Philadelphia Tribune published a column Saturday by correspondent Michael Coard headlined, "Celebrating Thanksgiving is celebrating racist genocide."
"When the Pilgrims arrived on the Mayflower in 1620, they didnt bring thanks. They didnt even give thanks. Instead, they brought racist genocide and gave nothing," Coard wrote.
"And they eventually succeeded in mass killing and mass land robbery not because they were smarter or stronger but because they were sadistically evil racists who initiated the use of a weapon of mass destruction that previously had been unheard of on this land," Coard continued. "Thanksgiving, as an American holiday, is a celebration of that racist genocide and massive land robber."
Coard then listed "five indisputable facts you must know about Thanksgiving so you wont make the mistake of celebrating racist genocide" on Thursday.
Washington Post examines why Native Americans regret helping Pilgrims
The Washington Post started early, publishing a Nov. 4 piece headlined, "This tribe helped the Pilgrims survive for their first Thanksgiving. They still regret it 400 years later," which examines how members of the Wampanoag Nation wish their relatives didnt participate.
"Just as Native American activists have demanded the removal ofChristopher Columbus statuesand pushed to transform the Columbus holiday into an acknowledgment of hisbrutality toward Indigenous people, they have long objected to the popular portrayal of Thanksgiving," Post reporter Dana Hedgpeth wrote.
Hedgpeth dove into a lengthy explanation of why the Mashpee Wampanoag doesnt celebrate the holiday, noting that American children are often taught "fiction" in school pertaining to Thanksgiving.
"This year some Wampanoags will go to Plymouth for the National Day of Mourning. Others will gather at the old Indian Meeting House, built in 1684 and one of the oldest American Indian churches in the eastern United States, to pay their respects to their ancestors, many of whom are buried in the surrounding cemetery," Hedgpeth wrote. "Plenty of Wampanoags will gather with their families for a meal to give thanks not for the survival of the Pilgrims but for the survival of their tribe."
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Fox News Andrew Mark Miller, David Rutz and Brandon Gillespie contributed to this report.
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Liberals introduce bill to provide sick pay, ban intimidation of patients and health-care workers – CBC.ca
Posted: at 10:04 pm
The Liberal government has introduced legislation to provide workers in federally regulated sectors with 10 days of sick pay while also making it an offence to intimidate or preventpatients from seeking care, orto interfere with healthprofessionals trying to deliver it.
Bill C-3, which amends the Criminal Code and the Canada Labour Code, was unveiled today by Labour Minister Seamus O'Regan and Justice Minister David Lametti.
O'Regan said the pandemic showedhow a lack of sick days left many workers at risk. He saidthat now is the "time to close the gap that the pandemic exposed in our social safety net."
"It is important for our well being, important for health and safety and important for our economic recovery," O'Regan said. "It is crucial to finishing our fight against COVID-19."
According to government officials speaking on background, about 950,000 people workin the federally regulated private sector. About583,000 of those workershave less than ten days of paid sick leaveand would stand to benefit from the legislation.
O'Regan said that while the federally regulated workforcemakes up only about five per cent of workers in Canada,the law could set a standard for provinces to follow.
"We know that the only way we are going to get through this pandemic is [that] when people are sick ...they stay at homeand [don't have to be] afraid about losing compensation," Unifor's national president Jerry Dias said Friday.
WATCH| Labour minister discusses new bill on CBC's Power & Politics
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, who had been calling on the federal government to make this change throughout the pandemic, welcomed the announcement.
"Today's announcement is very long overdue. Justin Trudeau owes frontline workers an explanation about why he couldn't help them when they needed this over a year ago," Singh said in a media statement.
Lametti said the pandemicalso revealed the abuse and intimidation inflicted onhealth-care professionals and patientsat vaccination centres, abortion clinicsand hospitals.
Protests against vaccine mandates and other COVID-19-related public health measuresheld outside hospitals in September were condemned by politicians and health-care organizations as unacceptable and unfair to staff and patients.
The changes to the Criminal Code create two new offences meant to protect patients and health-care workers from abuse.
The first offence makes it illegal to intimidate health-care workers and patients to prevent them from accessing health-care services, or to prevent health-care workers from administering care.The second change to the Criminal Code makes it an offence to bar anyone from accessing health services.
Those convicted of either offence could face up to 10 years in prison.
Lametti said the government is also drafting new sentencing provisions that will require courts to consider serious penalties for anyone targeting a health-care provider at work.
Lametti said he'sdisappointed that such a law is necessary.
"Even this week, COVID deniers were trying to stop children from receiving vaccinations," hesaid."Every day, health-care workers are coming forward and speaking out. They are exhausted, they are discouraged and they are fearful, and the sad reality is that these sorts of threats predate the pandemic."
Linda Silas ispresident of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, which represents some 200,000 nurses across the country. She welcomed the announcement, calling it a first step in recognizing the threats facing health-care workers.
Silas said that before the pandemic, 90 per cent of nurses reported beingexposed to physical violence on the job. During the pandemic, 60 per cent of those nurses reported that the level of violence had increased.
Lametti said he hopes Bill C-3 moves swiftly through Parliament. Silas said she wants to see all federal parties jump behind the initiative.
"In the previous Parliament both the NDP and the Conservatives proposed private members bills to do something similar here,"Silas said."So I would be stunned and very disappointed if there's not unanimous consensus to protect health-care workers."
In an interview airing Saturday, criminal defence lawyer Ian Runkle told Chris Hall, host of CBC Radio's The House, that it's already a criminal offence to block access to a hospital. He said that if those cases are not being prosecuted, it's because of a lack of will, not a lack of legal authority.
"Police have more than enough tools in their toolbox here in terms of offences like mischief, which makes it an offence to obstruct, interrupt or interfere with the lawful use, enjoyment or operation of property," Rundle said. "That covers blocking off infrastructure."
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A 20-year spike in inflation could put the bite on the Trudeau Liberals – CBC.ca
Posted: at 10:04 pm
Heath Krevesky is a self-confessed political junkie and a bit of a nerd.
That's his way of explaining why he's been tracking his weekly grocery bill for years now. And why he's worried that inflation is taking a bigger and bigger bite out of his food budget.
"In 2019, it cost me $9,826 to feed myself. In 2020, that cost of feeding myself went to $11,994,an increase of 22 per cent," he said.
"I can't wait to find out how this year wraps itself out. It appears as though it's going to be close to $14,000 for a single individual to feed themselves."
Food prices. Gasoline. A meal out. The cost ofmanyeveryday items is going up after inflation hit 4.7 per cent last month the highest rate in nearly twenty years.
For Krevesky, higher prices means scaling back the menu and adjusting his tastes.
The resident of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island said he buysless meat these days, and when he does, he leans to beef ribs rather than steak.
"It's sort of like your poor man's choice of beef, if you will," he said during an interview for a special segment on inflation airing on this weekend's edition of CBC's The House.
"Everybody would like to be able to afford a prime rib, you know, on a semi-regular basis, I cannot afford that ... Ideally, I like to eat a little bit of beef or chicken, fish, throughout the week, so I get a balanced diet, but it's becoming increasingly more [expensive]."
16:57Whats causing Canadas inflation woes?
It's hard to point to a singlefactor behind rising prices.
Droughts in Canada and other countries reduced crop yields. The pandemic reduced production in manufacturing plants as consumers emerged fromlockdowns with money they're both willing and able to spend.
"What we're seeing around the world is supply chain bottlenecks," Finance Minister Chrystia Freelandsaidthis week when asked by a reporter if the Liberals' plan to spend another $100 billion on post-pandemic programs is to blame forthe jump in inflation.
"We are seeing higher energy prices. Energy is a global commodity. When those prices are higher in one country, they are higher around the world. We're seeing a basic challenge that shutting down the world's economy turned out to be a much simpler process than turning the global economy back on."
But for a government that remains relentlessly focused onwhat it likes to call "the middle class and those working hard to join it," inflation isn't some abstract economic concept. It's making life less affordable for those very same people.
Kathy Wainberg is the owner of Pita Ikram. She has two locations,strictly take-out, in the northwest corner of Toronto. Like many small restaurateurs, she struggles to hire staff andserve asteady stream of customers.
A few months ago, she put up a noticeletting customers know the prices of their favourite shawarma meals were going up by about 20 per cent.
"Things like oil that we use for frying food have, like, tripled in price," she told The House. "We waited to raise prices for as long as we possibly could but in the restaurant industry, the margins are razor thin, so we were unable to absorb maybe as much of the costs as the customer would have liked to have seen."
It's stories like these that makeinflation a convenient target for any opposition politician intent on linking government policy to rising prices.
Conservative finance critic Pierre Poilievre led the opposition charge this week. He accusedthe Liberal government of wanton spending, saying inflation is worse in this country than most other democratic countries because, like the United States, the Liberals have been "printing money to pay their bills" instead of controlling spending.
"The cost of government is driving up the cost of living. Almost a half a trillion dollars of inflationistLiberal deficits mean more dollars chasing fewer goods, driving higher prices," he said.
Poilievre is one of those politicians who can boil down complicated issues like fiscal policy into easily-understood soundbites, packaged with claims that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is entirely out of touch with Canadians' lives.
"The prime minister says he doesn't think much about monetary policy," he said."That's no surprise. After all, it's 'Justin-flation.'"
But economist Trevor Tombe of the University of Calgary said Poilievre is stretching the data by suggesting inflation is worse in Canada than in places like Switzerland.
"I can cherry-pick countries, too. Israel has among the highest rates of money supply growth in the developed world, but among the lowest rates of inflation," he said.
"So overall, across all developed economies, there really isn't a strong relationship between the money supply growth and observed inflation."
Economist Armine Yalnizian acknowledges the Liberals aren't immune to the political impact of rising prices, even if the inflation rate now is more of a short-term spike than a long-term trend.
"Of course the Liberals are vulnerable to people feeling like they're losing purchasing power," she said.
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A 20-year spike in inflation could put the bite on the Trudeau Liberals - CBC.ca
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Liberal MP crosses the floor to support independent bill for federal integrity commission – The Guardian
Posted: at 10:04 pm
Tasmanian Liberal MP Bridget Archer has crossed the floor to support an independent bill for a federal integrity commission, after accusing the government of inertia over the issue.
Telling parliament it was a difficult decision to second the motion by independent MP Helen Haines to suspend standing orders to allow her federal integrity commission bill to be debated, Archer said that the time has gone on long enough and progress on the issue was needed.
I dont take this decision lightly at all. I take this decision very seriously to stand here. And its a difficult decision. This is one of the most important things that we come to this place to do, Archer said.
The MP for the marginal Tasmanian seat of Bass said she believed all sides of politics wanted to see a robust federal integrity commission, but the legislation had stalled because it was too politicised.
There is a place for politics, theres a place for the partisan point-scoring, but on something as important as trust and confidence in elected officials, that is not it.
The move to suspend standing orders sparked confusion in the House of Representatives under the management of the newly-elected speaker, Andrew Wallace.
As a result of changes made to Parliamentary procedure to prevent the spread of Covid, questions are framed in the negative so that MPs dont have to unnecessarily cross the chamber. This meant the vote had to be taken a second time, but was lost because an absolute majority was required.
Guardian Australia reported on Thursday that Archer was considering the dramatic move, criticising the coalitions inertia over the legislation.
Archer said she was perplexed at the Morrison governments failure to release a revised bill to establish a commonwealth integrity commission, almost three years after it was promised before the last election.
The government has been under pressure from within its ranks and from crossbench MPs to finalise the bill, with the attorney general, Michaelia Cash, undertaking consultations after a draft of the bill released last November was criticised for being too soft.
I really have a strong view that this is the most important thing we need to do, Archer told Guardian Australia on Wednesday.
I am a bit perplexed at one level as to why we havent brought something forward, I accept there was a draft bill, there was extensive consultation, there were a number of submissions and it would have been my expectation that some work would have been going on to draft it, given the feedback.
I am a bit offended, in a way, that we are prioritising in a rush I might add the religious discrimination bill over an integrity commission.
Archer had warned earlier she was absolutely prepared to cross the floor to support the legislation.
To be perfectly clear, I always reserve my right to cross the floor, that is one of the reasons I sit on this side [in the Liberal party], Archer said.
It has certainly been my view that the government and the opposition ought to be working together constructively with Helen Haines on her bill. Whats in there that we think is good? What is in there that we could amend?
There is a real tribalism to politics at the moment and I think that is sometimes at the expense of governance, and what I think we end up with is inertia. That is probably why the government hasnt brought it forward, because it is so politically contested now and it just creates a vacuum, and there is inertia.
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Archer said that she believed the integrity commission bill should be above politics. She said without a multi-partisan approach to the development and implementation of such a body no one is going to have trust in it anyway.
Archers call for the bill to be introduced to parliament swiftly was echoed by the Liberal MP for the seat of Curtin, Celia Hammond, who said the establishment of a federal integrity agency was an issue that had been raised by her constituents since she was first elected in 2019.
It is something I support and have advocated for over the past two years and I continue to do so, Hammond told Guardian Australia.
I recognise there are many different bodies and models across Australia and many different views on what should or should not be included and covered.
I know that the attorney general has undertaken significant consultation and work on this matter with a goal of producing an appropriate model and legislation for the federal context. I appreciate that there may be further consultation required, but personally I would like to see the legislation introduced as soon as possible.
Haines has been lobbying MPs to support her bill, with the proposed model including all of the robust features of an integrity commission with teeth, and safeguards that means we dont see vexatious and frivolous referrals.
The legislation also includes an exoneration clause, that would see anyone whose reputation was unfairly tarnished by an Australian federal integrity commission hearing to be the subject of a report to parliament exonerating them.
In question time on Wednesday, in response to a question from Haines, the prime minister, Scott Morrison, defended the delay in releasing the legislation for the integrity commission, saying the government was returning to priority legislation after being diverted by the pandemic response.
The attorney general has been working steadily away and been working with cabinet on our draft legislation for an integrity commission, and that also soon will be available for people to give their responses to, and we will see whether that has support, Morrison said.
Haines said that if the government truly want to pass a bill they would have written it, tabled it and brought it on for debate.
Thats what I have done, but youve shut down debate on my bill in the House, youve shut down debate in the Senate and youve muzzled the attorney general, who is missing in action on this, Haines said.
Come clean with the Australian people. Prime minister, do you honestly expect Australians to believe you truly want a robust integrity commission?
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John Rawls and Liberalism’s Selective Conscience – The Nation
Posted: at 10:04 pm
In December of 1944, on the Philippine island of Leyte, the soldiers of F Company of the 128th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Division, dug in. Stationed just outside the town of Limon, they were attempting to take a strategic ridge overlooking the town. In the face of fierce Japanese resistance, it was all they could do to hold their position. A first lieutenant who was also a Lutheran pastor addressed the company and gave words of encouragement by means of a brief sermon. God guides the US Armys bullets toward the Japanese, the lieutenant assured his fellow soldiers, while protecting us from theirs. Books in Review
These words failed to lift the spirits of at least one young soldier in F Company; instead, they infuriated him. Years later, he described this incident as one of the experiences that best explained why he eventually abandoned his faith. Whatever Gods will actually was, he decided, it would have to accord with the most basic ideas of justice that we havethereby ruling out the lieutenants assertion that God had selective concerns for one side in a clearly godless war. What else could the will of an all-just God be? By that same token, what else could justice be? If absolutely nothing else, any true God would have to be fair.
Katrina Forresters In the Shadow of Justice provides a detailed account of the intellectual development of this young soldier, John Rawls, who eventually became the celebrated philosopher. The question of fairness would remain with Rawls for the rest of his life. In 1971, his 600-page magnum opus, A Theory of Justice, debuted to critical acclaim and cemented his position as one of the most famous political philosophers in the English-speaking world by insisting that justice was fairnessthat the kind of objective standards for human society and individual action capable of replacing God required an ability to view the world from a distance and assess what allocations of duties and wealth were fair. In the book, Rawls argued that basic liberties and the equality of citizens were essential to this idea of fairness. Societies could deviate from an equal distribution of benefits and burdens only in cases governed by the difference principlewhich includes a requirement that inequalities should provide the most benefits to the least advantaged. Otherwise, a just society would have to be governed by the fair distribution of responsibility, work, hardship, and the wealth produced by a communitya distribution whose fairness, he insisted, could be determined from behind a veil of ignorance that prevented a hypothetical person from knowing exactly where he or she would end up in the social hierarchy.
With its doctrine of fairness, A Theory of Justice transformed political philosophy. The English historian Peter Laslett had described the field as dead in 1956; with Rawlss book that changed almost overnight. Now philosophers were arguing about the nature of Rawlsian principles and their implicationsand for that matter were once again interested in matters of political and economic justice. Rawlss terms became lingua franca: Many considered how his arguments, focused mostly on domestic or national issues of justice, might be applied to questions of international justice as well. Others sought to extend his theorys set of political principles, while still others probed the limits of Rawlss epistemology and the narrowness of his focus on individuals. A decade after A Theory of Justice appeared, Forrester notes, 2,512 books and articles had been published engaging with its central claims.
Rawlss liberal theory of justice as fairness has continued to define the shape and trajectory of political philosophy and liberalism writ large to this day. In this sense, In the Shadow of Justice is aptly named. But as Forrester shows, the limits of Rawlss theory and the political philosophy that it helped birth remain with us as well. By redirecting us from both history and sociology and premising justice on abstract game theory, Rawlss book and its liberal vision of justice ended up promoting a political philosophy that was ill-equipped for the era of sustained academic and popular attention to historical injustice.
Rawls was born in 1921 in Baltimore, the second of five sons in an affluent Episcopalian family. He had a privileged and mostly happy childhood; the kinds of calamities and hardships suffered by many during the Depression were sharply attenuated by his familys wealth and status in the city. After attending private schools, Rawls quickly rose through some of the most prestigious universities in the world: He received his doctorate from Princeton and studied at Oxford, after which he taught at MIT and Harvard.
Yet Forrester reminds us that not everything was as rosy as it might seem on the surface. Two of Rawlss siblings died in childhood from diseases they had contracted from him; such tragedies likely influenced his later interest in questions of fairness and luck and how both formed the basis of a just political system. His native Baltimore was a deeply segregated city and had cultivated social norms and mores to match. (Rawls later recounted his mothers fury when she learned that he had struck up a friendship with a Black boy and had even visited his house.) But Rawls knew from an early age that the luck of being born into an affluent white family entirely explained the difference between his opportunities and those of his Black friend. As well, Rawlss graduate studies at Princeton were interrupted by the trauma and violence of his three years in the infantry in the Pacific theater during World War II, and his experiences with luck during the war likewise shaped his view of justice. At one point, he was passed over for a mission because he had the right blood type to donate to a wounded soldier; the man who went in his place was killed in an ambush. This was only one of the countless examples of bad luck and unfairness found in any warbut in particular in the wars that had become commonplace in the first half of the 20th century. When Rawls returned to Princeton, his wartime trauma and disillusionment led him to abandon his interest in theology and to turn instead to political philosophy in his search for a system that would ground political decision-making in an objective morality rather than in God or fealty to the state. Current Issue
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Rawlss highly abstract and intricate philosophical system was not a flight from the real worlds effects on him, Forrester argues, but rather a direct response to the harrowing experiences, personal and political, that had shaped much of the first three decades of his life. Rawls was trying to find something to stand in place of the God that had abandoned him and his enemies alike on the battlefield as well as the two siblings who had died when he was growing upbut it also had to be something that did not involve simply trusting in the state. Neither the God he had lost faith in nor the military he had served in could be fair, Rawls contendedbut perhaps, if we relied on the kinds of rules that could emerge from rational decision-making processes, society could be.
Forresters book next turns to the real-world politics of the 1950s and 60s, which made Rawlss pursuit of a tidy, fairness-preserving system of justice so difficult. The postwar years were an era of social upheaval, defined by the struggles against Jim Crow at home and the Vietnam War abroad, and to develop his system in these uncertain years, Rawls began to publish a series of essays reckoning with the times that would eventually become A Theory of Justice.
Rawls advanced his view of justice as fairness in these years, but with certain qualifications. A fair and just society, he argued, would be one with a basic structure of democracy: The societys major institutions would endow everyone with a fundamental set of political liberties and divide the benefits and burdens of social cooperation in a broadly egalitarian way. Social inequalities could be tolerated only if they met two conditions: They needed to be attached to offices open to all under the conditions of fair and equal opportunity, and they needed to work to the greatest benefit of the societys least advantaged members.
Rawlss view of justice as fairness would apply in a society free of racial segregation. But since he was convinced that Jim Crow was so clearly unjust, he addressed it only indirectly: The philosophical questions he regarded as worth asking were exclusively implementation ones about how to dismantle it. At the same time, for Rawls, the questions concerning Vietnam and the draft in particular were harder to engage. In one sense, being conscripted into the military was a matter of luck, as some young men received draft cards and others did not. But college men, predominantly from privileged class and racial backgrounds, were able to escape military service when other men could not: 2-S deferments exempted some university students from conscription. If distributive justice was at the center of Rawlss overall theory of justice, then he had to reckon with how the deferments that many of his students received gave them an unfair advantage at the expense of othersand this meant not only pondering his political arguments in the abstract but also in terms of the institution where he actually worked. To remedy this situation, Rawls helped organize Harvards faculty to oppose the deferments.
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The civil disobedience tactics that various youth movements used to challenge the war posed another problem for Rawlss theory of justice. His own and his contemporaries commitment to liberalism and its attendant values, such as stability and the rule of law, needed to reckon with the fact that civil disobedience was a response to an unjust war that the countrys citizens had every right to protest and oppose. Could breaking the law be justified, Rawls wondered, if the law itself was conceptualized as a fair agreementthe outcome of a process of rational deliberation among the people subject to it? How could political philosophers account for the kind of moral exception being claimed by those breaking from this overall cooperative scheme to conduct sit-ins or burn their draft cards?
Rawls finally published his answer at the end of the 1960s. Civil disobedience could be justified as an occasional escape hatch, he maintained in a 1969 essay, when the majority overreached and placed too heavy a burden on others. But individual conscience could not reign supreme: Even if would-be protesters had a serious moral objection to some decisions of the majority, this was not enough to justify breaking the law, as it would result in an unstable scheme of society. In coming to this view, Rawls made a telling shift from his earlier fair play view of social cooperation, in which obligations were voluntarily acquired, to a stronger one that regarded stability as a natural duty binding all citizens within a society. Thus, civil disobedience could be tolerated, but only within strict limits. Such protest had to be aimed at changing a societys laws, and its participants had to accept punishment and arrest without resistance.
Rawlss evolving views on obligation and civil disobedience, Forrester notes, helped shape A Theory of Justice. In general, Rawls believed that the aim of political philosophy was to find a reliable method built on noncoercive procedures to justify ethical beliefs and judgmentsand that included acting according to ones political duty (such as military service) and also according to ones moral conscience (such as opposing an unjust war). Rather than try to generate freestanding moral principles to guide human conduct, Rawls argued, or uncover hidden truths that were separate from life as it was actually lived, philosophers needed to study the ethical principles already implicit in peoples intuitions and actions and then develop a system through which these could be judged and assessed.
Mining the nascent field of game theory, Rawls contended that this system could be built on the rational procedures that follow from someone acting in their economic and material interests. To decipher a moral approach to real-world problems required a system that could, in effect, step outside the real worldone that was bound not by history or sociology but by human rationality alone. Rawls described a hypothetical procedure, conducted from behind a veil of ignorance about ones status in society, for deciding on its basic rules. Heads of households, he argued, should be placed in an original position that allowed them general facts about psychology and economic life but denied them information about the past history of their society as well as where they would themselves end up in the society they were designing. This disinterested position, Rawls argued, would allow these heads of households to formulate rules that would benefit people in a range of social positions, since they would have no clue which one they might fall into, and these rules would then form the basis for a fair and well-ordered society.
Of the many things that Rawls proposed in his 600-page opus, the original position is among the most hotly debated and sharply criticized. It is indeed a move that prominently displays many of the shortcomings of his approach to philosophy. Populating the original position with heads of households involved a seemingly uncritical nod toward patriarchal social relations, and the related organization of family life drew serious and sustained criticism from feminist political philosophers like Susan Muller Okin and Iris Marion Young. Philosophers attentive to race and colonialism, like Charles Mills, likewise criticized the original positions abstraction from the history of society, which Mills argued would serve to obscure issues like racism and other forms of injustice that a theory of justice ought to respond to directly.
While many of these criticisms have teeth, they also demonstrate the profound success of Rawlss thought. The Harvard philosopher Tommie Shelby noted as much in his high-profile debate with Mills: While the latter offered strident objections to Rawlss racial amnesia, he stopped short of providing alternative principles or procedures or suggesting that the liberalism undergirding so much of Rawlss thought should be fully abandoned. And while Mills would later offer his own principles of corrective justice, they were explicitly presented as additions and revisions to Rawlss set. Whether this effort succeeds or not, it was literally proposed on Rawlss terms.
If anything, Mills was ahead of many of Rawlss critics in having a comprehensive and positive position on what constitutes a just society. While there were examples of alternative systems of distributive justiceespecially from the so-called communitariansmost of the writing on the subject was dedicated to critiquing Rawlss system and offering suggestions on what to avoid when theorizing on such questions in the future, whether the objection was to the patterns of abstraction (heads of households instead of past injustice), or to abstracting too much or too freely (e.g., criticisms of ideal theory and of systematic moral philosophy), or even to the purported objectivity or universalism undergirding the abstractions in the first place. But proffered alternatives to the Rawlsian approach were few and far between, and their authors often found it difficult to match the scale and systematic nature of A Theory of Justice, tending instead to offer ad hoc, incomplete, and overly specific moral systems instead of all-encompassing ones.
Forrester tracks in exacting detail the responses that Rawlss elaborate system of thought prompted. But if theres a criticism to be made about her book, it is that this meticulous tracking of key figures and concepts risks overwhelming readers with unnecessary detail. At times, Forrester seems to take the challenges posed by the historical moment more seriously than the subjects of her investigations did. As a result, the abundance of detail about how Rawls and his contemporaries did change their political commitments in response to their times can risk obscuring the fact that they mostly did not. Indeed, they were often selective about which of the many philosophical questions posed by their tumultuous times they deigned to answer, and it is this selective conscience that is the most assailable aspect of Rawlss legacy. He may have been speaking on laudable principle when he insisted that Jim Crow was obviously unjust, but in the same breath he also excluded it from philosophical discussion.
Rawlss leadership in the faculty opposition to 2-S deferments marked another principled stand against the consequences disproportionately suffered by others because of race, class, or perceived mental ability. But even here, selective conscience ruled the day. The decades of the Cold War were punctuated by intense levels of violence. The Vietnam War killed 2 million Vietnamese civilians, injured over 5 million more, and displaced some 11 million people. This violence included known massacres like the infamous My Lai incident and untold numbers of unknown ones; as recently as 2001, the results of internal war-crimes investigations lay rotting and forgotten in a nondescript case of records in the National Archives. And yet the body count for this war piled up largely outside the United Statesand thus mostly outside the sphere of domestic justice that Rawls was willing to consider at the time. The barbarity and injustice of the war itself went neglected in his discussions of military conscription and its opponents.
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So too did the violent footprint of the American empire as a whole. Vietnam, after all, was but one theater in a hot war waged by the United States and its allies for control of the global economic and political system. In Indonesia, for instance, nearly 1 million civilians were murdered by a US-backed anti-communist dictatorship. Indonesia was simply one of 22 third world countries in which the United States facilitated mass murder between the end of World War II and the 1990sat which point, Forrester observes, international politics finally attracted Rawlss consideration. Throughout the period of the Vietnam War, liberation movements confronted US-supported apartheid regimes in wars of national liberation: in Mozambique, Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, and South Africa. What differentiated Vietnam from these struggles? I can hazard a guess: their lack of major deployments of US troops, and thus a link for a domestically focused philosopher like Rawls to consider.
To his credit, Rawls was a vocal and public opponent of the Vietnam War from the beginning. But amid all the global carnage, it was the draft deferments that he chose to organize against. The primacy of domestic justice and the natural duty of social stability directed his political action toward fighting the unjust distribution of draft cards in the United States rather than the unjust distribution of napalm and Agent Orange in Southeast Asia. One would be on principled grounds to insist, contra Rawlss own theory and pattern of political action, that addressing the latter injustice ought to have far outweighed addressing the former. Such an approach might acknowledgeas a younger and perhaps wiser Rawls had clearly been willing to dothat neither God nor justice should care whether you were American or Vietnamese.
Rawlss selective concentration on the homeland has parallels in the basic tenets of his political theory. He developed what has been called a two-tiered approach: Domestic politics constituted one tier and international politics the other, with the former taking precedence. Meanwhile, waves of national liberation struggles in Africa and Asia upended the map of the world. Through it all, the Cold War stamped the domestic politics of these new nations and the old ones alike with the indelible mark of geopolitical maneuvering. Rawlss theory gave so much primacy to domestic justice that Forrester describes him as having set aside the international realm altogether until the 1990s.
Despite Rawlss relative inattention to supposedly secondary global matters, prominent philosophers in the 1970s began to bring his insights to bear on the international realm. The fit was odd and unwieldy: Rawlss theory makes the basic structure the target of domestic justice, which he takes to be the institutions that primarily distribute the benefits and burdens of social cooperation.
Under the highly theoretical conditions of A Theory of Justice (including a society that is closed to external intervention), the basic structure can reasonably be assumed to refer to a given country. But in the context of an international system, the central Rawlsian assumption of a closed society does not apply. The United Nations debated a New International Economic Orderone predicated on economic sovereignty for every countryunder pressure from many of its new member-states. The most dynamic political movements of the time were attempting to literally remake the world, and Rawls and his colleagues were content merely to add the occasional epicycle to their existing theories of ideally just practice.
None of this is to say that they were politically unserious or responding cynically to the events of their day. In Rawlss case especially, the point is exactly the opposite: At the end of the day, he was genuinely committed to the project of liberal philosophy as he understood it. As such, he was also committed to the fundamental intellectual tenets that sustained it: trust in liberal political principles and in the basic common-sense arguments of the state system that had spread them (even though he was less interested in the historical particulars of how that spreading was done).
As a serious and committed liberal, Rawls did not position his theory as a response to the many radical tendencies of his day, because he was convinced that his position, like liberalism itself, already represented an adequate response. These challenges were, in the main, the same radical challenges that liberalism has faced since its inception. That inception did not take place in a hypothetical state of nature but rather in a real era of slave states and imperial conquest on a planetary scale, and it was these forces that spread its putatively universalist tenets around the world as it developed ever more incisive criticisms of injustice and inequality. That liberal vision had long been wedded to theories of property and popular sovereignty formed in response far more to imagined histories of political and economic inheritance than to the actual history that explained the distributions of income, rights, and privileges that liberalism and liberals promised to equitably manage. By every indication, Rawls really meant what he said about equality, fairness, and justice in his personal and intellectual life, though he came to a partial and selective understanding of what those things required of him and the structures around him.
Of course, things could be worse. Many of liberalisms cousins to its political right could not manage to sustain even a pretense of interest in equality and justice for all. Perhaps this lack of even a pretense is what irked the young Rawls as he listened to that first lieutenant insist that God was on their sideand their side alonein their deadly struggle with the Japanese. Whats so godly, after all, about a selective conscience?
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John Rawls and Liberalism's Selective Conscience - The Nation
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Liberal Party members running as independents, community candidates in local elections – The Sydney Morning Herald
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Liberal Party members are running in the upcoming council elections as independents and under the banner of community tickets, with no mention on their websites or promotional material that they hold Liberal Party membership.
The NSW Liberal Party does not endorse candidates in some council areas, including North Sydney, Kiama and Shoalhaven.
Local Liberals who wish to run for office in those councils are not allowed, under Liberal Party rules and the NSW Electoral Act, to use Liberal Party branding, even if they openly identify as Liberals.
Elle Prevost, a first-time candidate who is running as an independent for North Sydney council, said she was a proud Liberal party member.
North Sydney candidate Elle Prevost.Credit:ellefornorthsydney.com
I am a Liberal, but we are not endorsed in the North Sydney area, she said. Maybe its me being naive, but because I am not endorsed by the Liberal Party, my understanding is Im an independent.
Ms Prevosts ticket is called Team Elle. Its website announces her as an Independent for North Sydney council and her Liberal Party membership is not mentioned. The membership is disclosed in Ms Prevosts candidate nomination form, filed under a subheading in a PDF document on the NSW Electoral Commission website.
This is a really Liberal area, so I should be screaming it from the rooftops because it would win me more votes, she said.
Retired naval officer Mark Croxford is a member of the executive of the NSW Liberal Party, and a Liberal Party member. But his connection to the Liberal Party is not mentioned on the promotional materials for his run at the Kiama council in the upcoming elections on December 4.
Mark Croxford is standing for election in the Kiama LGA elections.Credit:Janie Barrett
Mr Croxford is at the top of the Your Community Candidates ticket, which pledges to form a council free from party political agendas. The groups website urges voters not to risk a council influenced by party politics and says that party politics has no place in local government.
Mr Croxfords bio on the Your Community Candidates website lists his background as a lobbyist and a senior ministerial adviser in the Howard government, but not his position as a country representative on the NSW Liberal Party executive, or his party membership.
The membership is declared on his nomination form on the Electoral Commission website.
I hide in the open, Mr Croxford said. I am in the Liberal Party for the purpose of federal and state politics. I personally dont believe there is any room for party politics in local politics.
He said he always discloses his Liberal Party roots when he is speaking to constituents.
I am happy to say I am a Liberal member but as a councillor I want to be a representative of my community, he said.
The Declaration of Independents Local Government, created by the Voices of North Sydney group, has been signed by 56 candidates in the Lane Cove, North Sydney, Willoughby, Hunters Hill and Georges River councils.
Rod Simpson, the co-convener of the Voices of North Sydney group, says the intention of the declaration is to get some transparency into local government.
Its asking people what their political status is and whether they have been [a member of a political party] in the past and whether they have made political donations or been a staffer, says Mr Simpson, who is a former environment commissioner with the Greater Sydney Commission.
Its really hard for people to untangle this and we are just trying to bring it up to the surface and make it easy for people to see what on earth is going on.
The Declarations stated intention is to differentiate community-minded independents from independents who are affiliated with political parties. A community minded independent is defined as a candidate who is not currently a member of a political party, and will vote as an individual.
At the Shoalhaven Council, Serena Copley is billed as an independent on the ballot form, but the NSW Electoral Commission records show she is also a Liberal Party member.
Serena Copley is a candidate for Shoalhaven City Council.Credit:Facebook/Serena Copley for Shoalhaven City Council
The same goes for the other candidates on her ticket, Fred Campbell, Leonard White and Francoise Sikora.
Ms Copleys team is called A Fresh Approach and does not mention any connection with the Liberal Party in its promotional materials.
Council candidates Fred Campbell OAM and Leonard White.Credit:Facebook/Serena Copley for Shoalhaven City Council
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In response to questions from The Sydney Morning Herald, Ms Copley said she had been a member of the Shoalhaven community for more than 30 years.
They know me and what I stand for, she said. I am running as an independent so I can represent my community and only my community, not any party or their agenda.
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No need for overdevelopment: Labor, Liberal councillors united in opposition to apartment towers – The Sydney Morning Herald
Posted: at 10:04 pm
The site is bounded by busy roads and opposite the Waverley Bus Depot, which in the past has been speculated as a target for property development.
Ms Glass said the apartment towers would destroy a local heritage area and overshadow Oxford Street, creating wind tunnels like the ones further east on the street.
Ms Glass also criticised the planning process under which changes were made to local planning rules to accommodate the development.
The state government in 2019 approved an increase in maximum height and floor space ratio controls for the site to support urban renewal, a Planning Department spokesman said.
More than 570,000 new homes have been approved in NSW in the past decade, with 194,000 more homes planned for delivery by 2026.
Planning alone cant solve housing affordability, but were driving the biggest reforms to the planning system in decades to unlock more housing supply, the spokesman said.
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Waverley Liberal councillor Angela Burrill said the apartment towers were an overdevelopment and would breach height limits, which were more than doubled to 36 metres over the opposition of residents and the council.
The site is in a high traffic area and can only increase congestion already experienced locally, she said.
Cr Burrill said a huge amount of apartments had been built in Waverley Council in the past five years, meeting housing targets so there was no need for the overdevelopment of this site.
Certainly residents voices, impacts on congestion and density as well as heritage should factor into decisions on increasing heights that allow these large apartment blocks, she said.
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Waverley Labor councillor Paula Masselos said overdevelopment, affordable housing and population growth were major concerns for voters who will elect a new council on December 4.
She said the proposal showed a total lack of concern about its negative impacts on the community and stress it places on already overtaxed infrastructure.
Feeder schools have already said they are full and cannot take any more students, while Oxford Street is already gridlocked, she said.
Cr Masselos said the apartment towers would also undo efforts by local mayors to protect Centennial Park from the impact of private developments.
This building is visible from the centre of the park, which goes against the charter of the park that promotes views of the sky to the horizon not high-rise buildings, she said.
But Mr Leis said the project did not directly impact on any neighbouring residents or encroach on the heritage area or Centennial Park.
Mr Leis said Bondi Junction was an established town centre with good public transport links, access to park and beaches as well as shops, schools and medical services.
The site was presented to us by a local agent who highlighted the merits of the location for residential housing and held the view that this end of Oxford Street was also in need of some revitalisation, he said.
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Harassment on rise in federal bureaucracy – Daily Liberal
Posted: at 10:04 pm
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Harassment and bullying are on the rise in the public service. The number of recorded complaints made by federal public servants has increased in recent years, from 422 in 2018/19 to 588 in 2020/21. And the number of recorded complaints of sexual harassment more than doubled from 32 in 2019/20 to 78 in 2020/21. "There is no doubt that more work is also required to improve the reporting culture around harassment and bullying," the latest State of the Service report says. The report, tabled in federal parliament on Monday, says a refreshed gender equality strategy is set to be released soon, strengthening ways to prevent and respond to gender-based harassment and discrimination, sexual harassment, sexual assault, and bullying. Unacceptable behaviours, such as harassment or bullying, were not tolerated in the Australian Public Service and contrary to its values and code of conduct, the report noted. "The APS monitors and actively works to eliminate incidents of these negative acts." The proportion of people experiencing harassment or bullying had fallen from 17.2 per cent in 2015 to 11.7 per cent in 2021. But the most common types of harassment or bullying have remained the same: verbal abuse, interference with work tasks such as undermining or sabotage, and inappropriate and unfair application of work policies or rules Australia's response to the COVID-19 pandemic has seen public service workforce numbers rise. The report showed there were 153,945 employees in the Australian Public Service - up 2.3 per cent on June 2020. Public Service Commissioner Peter Woolcott described it as a "modest" rise. "This was a rise in both ongoing and non-ongoing roles to assist the government's recovery plan, providing essential services and supporting the roll out of the 2021 Census," he said. Mr Woolcott said while there were more women, Indigenous people and non-English speakers joining the public service, there was more work to be done on increasing the representation of people with disability. "People from non-English speaking backgrounds, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander employees and public servants with a disability also still remain under represented at the most senior levels. "For the first time women in the APS have reached, and in most cases exceeded, parity with men at every level up to and including the collective (executive) cohort." Women comprise 60.2 per cent of the public service. Australian Associated Press
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November 29 2021 - 12:46PM
Harassment and bullying are on the rise in the public service.
The number of recorded complaints made by federal public servants has increased in recent years, from 422 in 2018/19 to 588 in 2020/21.
And the number of recorded complaints of sexual harassment more than doubled from 32 in 2019/20 to 78 in 2020/21.
"There is no doubt that more work is also required to improve the reporting culture around harassment and bullying," the latest State of the Service report says.
The report, tabled in federal parliament on Monday, says a refreshed gender equality strategy is set to be released soon, strengthening ways to prevent and respond to gender-based harassment and discrimination, sexual harassment, sexual assault, and bullying.
Unacceptable behaviours, such as harassment or bullying, were not tolerated in the Australian Public Service and contrary to its values and code of conduct, the report noted.
"The APS monitors and actively works to eliminate incidents of these negative acts."
The proportion of people experiencing harassment or bullying had fallen from 17.2 per cent in 2015 to 11.7 per cent in 2021.
But the most common types of harassment or bullying have remained the same: verbal abuse, interference with work tasks such as undermining or sabotage, and inappropriate and unfair application of work policies or rules
Australia's response to the COVID-19 pandemic has seen public service workforce numbers rise.
The report showed there were 153,945 employees in the Australian Public Service - up 2.3 per cent on June 2020.
Public Service Commissioner Peter Woolcott described it as a "modest" rise.
"This was a rise in both ongoing and non-ongoing roles to assist the government's recovery plan, providing essential services and supporting the roll out of the 2021 Census," he said.
Mr Woolcott said while there were more women, Indigenous people and non-English speakers joining the public service, there was more work to be done on increasing the representation of people with disability.
"People from non-English speaking backgrounds, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander employees and public servants with a disability also still remain under represented at the most senior levels.
"For the first time women in the APS have reached, and in most cases exceeded, parity with men at every level up to and including the collective (executive) cohort."
Women comprise 60.2 per cent of the public service.
Australian Associated Press
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Teen went to Byron bar before vanishing – Daily Liberal
Posted: at 10:04 pm
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Belgian teenager Theo Hayez was ejected from a Byron Bay bar without a chance to tell his friends the night he disappeared two years ago. An inquest into the 18-year-old's disappearance has heard the ejection has caused his family great distress. Theo was near the end of a backpacking trip around Australia when he went missing on the night of May 31, 2019. His remains have never been found, nor have his phone or clothes. A hat he was wearing was found in bushland on the route he walked after being kicked out of the Cheeky Monkey's bar. Counsel assisting the inquest, Kellie Edwards, told the NSW Coroners Court in Byron Bay that police's working theory is he tried to climb cliffs at Cosy Corner beach, fell and was swept out to sea. However, the coronial investigation has found no evidence he was reckless, engaged in dangerous physical activity, or was particularly interested in alcohol or drugs. Although his phone hasn't been recovered, it continued to send a weak signal until the next afternoon. He was close with his family, had good, close relationships with friends and was looking forward to starting the next phase of his life when he returned home, an engineering degree. There is "no evidence at all" to suggest he would kill himself, Ms Edwards said. Theo had consumed some cheap "goon" wine at his hostel with fellow backpackers before heading out to Cheeky Monkey's about 9pm. While there, he had two schooners of beer. CCTV footage shown to the court showed the occasional stumble, but the evidence he was actually intoxicated was "ambiguous", Ms Edwards said. The backpackers he was at the bar with only learned he'd been ejected by security around 11pm during the police investigation. They were confused when they learned about it, Ms Edwards said. "Theo didn't seem drunk and others in the bar seemed much more drunk," they told investigators, Ms Edwards said. He only had contact details for one of the people he was with. Theo's ejection on his own, without any chance to tell his friends, had caused his family great distress, she said. His family, some of whom have flown in from Belgium, are sitting in the courtroom observing the proceedings. Google account data shows Theo searched for directions back to his hostel after his ejection. However, he walked in the opposite direction to Tallow Beach. The last data point put him at Cosy Corner. He appears to have turned off his location services just after midnight to save battery. The last messages sent to his friends and family were lighthearted and in French, suggesting he had his phone on him and that he felt safe, Ms Edwards said. The last message was sent to his stepsister Emma at 12.55am. The inquest into his disappearance is expected to run for two weeks. Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 Australian Associated Press
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November 29 2021 - 12:46PM
Belgian teenager Theo Hayez was ejected from a Byron Bay bar without a chance to tell his friends the night he disappeared two years ago.
An inquest into the 18-year-old's disappearance has heard the ejection has caused his family great distress.
Theo was near the end of a backpacking trip around Australia when he went missing on the night of May 31, 2019.
His remains have never been found, nor have his phone or clothes.
A hat he was wearing was found in bushland on the route he walked after being kicked out of the Cheeky Monkey's bar.
Counsel assisting the inquest, Kellie Edwards, told the NSW Coroners Court in Byron Bay that police's working theory is he tried to climb cliffs at Cosy Corner beach, fell and was swept out to sea.
However, the coronial investigation has found no evidence he was reckless, engaged in dangerous physical activity, or was particularly interested in alcohol or drugs.
Although his phone hasn't been recovered, it continued to send a weak signal until the next afternoon.
He was close with his family, had good, close relationships with friends and was looking forward to starting the next phase of his life when he returned home, an engineering degree.
There is "no evidence at all" to suggest he would kill himself, Ms Edwards said.
Theo had consumed some cheap "goon" wine at his hostel with fellow backpackers before heading out to Cheeky Monkey's about 9pm.
While there, he had two schooners of beer.
CCTV footage shown to the court showed the occasional stumble, but the evidence he was actually intoxicated was "ambiguous", Ms Edwards said.
The backpackers he was at the bar with only learned he'd been ejected by security around 11pm during the police investigation.
They were confused when they learned about it, Ms Edwards said.
"Theo didn't seem drunk and others in the bar seemed much more drunk," they told investigators, Ms Edwards said.
He only had contact details for one of the people he was with.
Theo's ejection on his own, without any chance to tell his friends, had caused his family great distress, she said.
His family, some of whom have flown in from Belgium, are sitting in the courtroom observing the proceedings.
Google account data shows Theo searched for directions back to his hostel after his ejection.
However, he walked in the opposite direction to Tallow Beach.
The last data point put him at Cosy Corner. He appears to have turned off his location services just after midnight to save battery.
The last messages sent to his friends and family were lighthearted and in French, suggesting he had his phone on him and that he felt safe, Ms Edwards said.
The last message was sent to his stepsister Emma at 12.55am.
The inquest into his disappearance is expected to run for two weeks.
Australian Associated Press
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