Cory Bernardi, March 30, 2016:
“Outside of the militant homosexual lobby and the twitterati, the conversation around the dinner table isn’t about redefining marriage. Regular people are worried about their jobs, how they can pay their bills, and the education, hopes and dreams of their children.
“But if you listened to the popular press, you’d think they were consumed with all manner of fringe issues.”
Cory Bernardi, yesterday, on why he was introducing a bill to water down section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act:
“It’s important to get it on the agenda now and we can then deal with it in the next three years.”
But is it? Bernardi’s colleague Trent Zimmerman on RN this morning:
“I think around most dinner tables in this country 18C is not the first issue that people are talking about.”
Turnbull, meanwhile, is still committed to bringing back the draconian anti-union Australian Building and Construction Commission, which we are sure is the subject of many lively dinner table debates, right after “please pass the salt” and “stop hitting your sister”.
In his ice-breaking conversation with Alan Jones, Mr Turnbull let it out that the ABCC would be used to reverse wage rises obtained by the CFMEU through use of legitimate, legal channels.
It seems that a lack of education in English grammar has confused Cory.He seems to think that someone could be called a black monkey over and over and if that person said that they were happy with that then no insult has occurred. Clearly an insult has occurred as a direct result of some perceived defect over which the insulted person has no control.
In the interest of social harmony most Australians , and the high court have endorsed this law for twenty years.
Insult is a transitive verb it is entirely the responsibility of the person doing the insulting.
As Cleese would put it Bernardi is an odious piece of excrement.
Let us hope that Borey Carnadi continues to Krudd Talcum – let all the evils in the ooze emerge.