“Non Resistance and Passive Obedience were the only Orthodox and Catholick Doctrines, so long as they imagined it would never come to their own turn to practice them.”
— Samuel Snowden, 1693
It will come as no surprise that people have been pointing the hypocrisy of conservatives on religious freedom for several centuries. As the above-quoted English cleric pointed out after the Glorious Revolution had brought a Dutch monarch to England, suddenly being on the receiving end of political power can alter one’s mindset rather radically about how it should be used. William III was determined to extend official toleration to Nonconformists outside the Church of England, so Anglicans now had to live by the very words they had used to demand that, under the previous Stuart regime, Nonconformists endure persecution: the king’s word is divine law, so if you don’t like it, too bad. Shut up and comply.
Fair to say, the Anglicans didn’t like being told to tolerate Nonconformists. Not one little bit.
Scroll forward three and a bit centuries and the same hypocrisy is causing tensions here over religious freedom. Of course, the “freedom” involved is not the basic freedom being discussed, with what by late 17th-century standards was vintage snark by Sam Snowden — to worship whatever deity you wish, and to do so without being the subject of discrimination or persecution. Instead, the debate is about a vaguer freedom to refuse to bake wedding cakes, or perform at a wedding reception, or publicly vilify LGBTI people.
But what might be called the Snowden Somersault is being performed here as well. Suddenly conservatives are calling for slabs of UN texts to be incorporated into law and special protections for the religious are being invoked. As more than one critic has noted, these are people who normally wouldn’t have a bar of international treaties or the UN, and in some cases who have railed at any manifestation of sharia law — which, those critics warn, could be ushered in if you start putting in place special protections for religious feelings.
The somersault extends to the self-portrayal of No campaigners. Before last Wednesday, in their view, the religious Right were the silent majority of Australians. Now they claim minority status instead, and bid for victimhood and protection against secular persecution — these days a consistent tactic of any powerful group that finds its power diminished marginally. Thus, the protections of special laws for religion, or perhaps even a bill of, at least, religious rights, are now under discussion, when such thinking was dismissed as egregious left-wing ratbaggery just weeks ago.
There’s more somersaulting. The government has employed Philip Ruddock to head a panel to consider the issue of religious freedom. That’s to bolster the case being made by Turnbull-aligned conservatives who want marriage equality off the table by Christmas and religious freedom can be dealt with separately next year. Other conservatives, like Scott Morrison, aren’t buying it, and want the matter dealt now, with in Dean Smith’s bill. But Ruddock is a bizarre choice. As Attorney-General, not merely did he impose religious-based discrimination by overseeing the Howard government’s amendment of marriage legislation to limit it to men and women, he oversaw the most egregious attack on basic freedoms since the 1950s courtesy of the Howard government’s anti-terror laws (since rejected as inadequate by Ruddock’s successor, George Brandis, who has made them much worse). If his past is anything to go by, Ruddock’s idea of religious freedom probably involves preventive detention and blasphemy laws.
At this rate, who knows where we’ll end up on the issue when the government finally lets the House of Representatives meet the week after next.
This odious old hypocrite. The human rights lawyer with the Amnesty badge who locked up the refugees for Howard. He is the lowest of the low. 30 years ago he would have defended gays. Power and corruption.
What a bunch of hypocrites. Couldn’t agree with you more. Trying to add parts of a UN charter we have already signed. Why bother since we are breaking the charter in respect of treatment of refugees every day?
Yeah but Amnesty did ask him not to wear their badge in public. So during the ‘Children Overboard’ fiasco, he could only wear the badge on his pyjamas. (Then of course there was his double dipping over his $200K pension as our human rights champion.) What a good choice, and what a good role model.
so PW, to get this right, he still gets paid
1. his parliamentary pension
2. his stipend for being our “human rights ambassador”
3. another few bob for heading this enquiry into “religious freedom”
4. anything he might get for being mayor up Hornsby way
& they have the gall to revere this guy for his “service”??
He probably wet his pyjamas in shame. As an Amnesty Supporter I cant really understand how msny of our politicians can sleep at night. I appreciate the concept of border security but not demonising people that we have helped make refugees in the first place because of our misplaced concept of an ally in all wars with the US. If we are going to create Concentration Camps at least have the decency to do it on the mainland under full and open view of the public.
On topic. If Christ turned up today I am positive he would be disgusted with our current Government. The Abbotts & Bernardis (parliamentary speaking) cannot espouse religious principles while condoning & supporting our refugee solution.
Never let Turnbull or Brandis near anything, not with their reverse Midas touch.
If Parliament is to go on after this to debate religious freedom, let it turn its attention to the squandering of taxpayers’ money – in what is supposed to be a secular democracy – on a range of privileges for religion starting with religious prayers in the Houses of Parliament and dwelling on the subsidising of schools for religious indoctrination (a form of child abuse), chaplaincy programmes, and the inclusion of church authorities in national and State decision-making. Let the pollies focus on the fact that religious freedom means freedom FROM religion.
I think you’re right Dion. This ‘freedom of religion’ could come back and bite them on the bum. I’d have to assume anything they write in legislation could equally be used by the non-religious to stop themselves being harassed by god-botherers.
But thinking things through is not one of their strong points.
Religious freedom? What the majority of Australians need is freedom and protection from religion. Mainstream and all the American happy clapper varieties of religions come to mind.
From the outset the ‘No’ campaign insisted that the plebiscite was not just about equal access to marriage; but also (and equally) about political correctness, freedom of speech and religious freedoms – by which they meant their right to continue to practice bigotry. Now that the vote has been roundly lost, they want to reverse their argument, and claim that the plebiscite was only about marriage equality – so those self-same rights that they demanded be taken into account in the vote must now either be included in the legislation, or dealt with separately. It’s the height of self-serving hypocrisy for them to now argue that the outcome reinforces their need to be granted those same protections when in truth they have been hoist on their own petard.
The religious cant emanating from the Liberal Party’s cast-iron conservatives is nauseating. As a secular nation it is egregious to find the political arena embroiled in the religious wars of Australian politics of the 1950s.
Malcolm Turnbull, he of staunch and courageous individualism, (JOKE) claims to have been responsible for the peoples yes vote in the recent SSM poll. No sooner did the people make their choice for the ‘yes’ vote Malcolm Turnbull hires-at our expense-the doddery old warhorse Phillip Ruddock, a keen supporter for the ‘No’ vote to screw the outcome.
Not content with his duplicity Malcolm Turnbull dismisses parliament for a week. King Charles II would have approved. For Christ’s sake, how long do we have to suffer this gutless creep? Not content with this stunt he then tosses out a hint of potential tax breaks to come in the next budget. How is he going to fund this? Easy, he will up the Medicare rates. Malcolm Turnbull, you make me vomit.
Charles the Second survived. I suspect you mean Charles the First who lost a civil war and his head. In this case Malcolm the Last will only metaphorically lose his head (although the Nationals can be a bit literal).
Actually I did mean Charles II. Not referring to loss of head. Wasn’t Charles II frequently (now here you can help me-I seem to remember reading the term ‘pirogue’ for dismissing of parliament. A hasty spell check revealed the only usage of the word is a boat. Which I knew anyway. I think Charles II was always strapped for money which seemed to have some bearing on the matter.)
I love ‘Malcolm the Last’ and agree the Nationals to be red of claw.
Many say that Malfeasance Turnbull is a spineless political klutz, and yes on checking that statement it is NOT fake news!