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About this website

SydWalker.Info is a personal website. I live in tropical Australia near Cairns. I oppose war, plutocracy, injustice, sectarian supremacism and apartheid. I support urgent action to achieve genuine sustainability and a fair and prosperous society for all. I rely upon - and support - free speech as defined in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (see below).

with the dawg

"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers"

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Unless otherwise indicated, material on this website is written by Syd Walker.

Anyone is welcome to re-publish material sourced from this site, as long as the source is acknowledged with a hyperlink.

Material from other sources reproduced here is presented on a 'Fair Use' basis. I try to cite references accurately. Please contact me if you have queries, comments, broken link reports, complaints - or just to say hello.

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Open Letter to Senator Jan McLucas
Sep 8th, 2010 by Syd Walker

ANOTHER plea that Labor drops the policy of mandatory internet censorship FORTHWITH

Dear Senator McLucas,

Senator Jan McLucas

Queensland ALP Senator Jan McLucas

Congratulations to you – and to Julia Gillard and Wayne Swan – on the re-election of a Labor Government.

I’m one of the people in the community who hoped to see Labor remain in power – but I’m also delighted the ALP will be forced to rely on support from progressive cross-benchers.

One of the main reasons why is the mandatory internet censorship issue (aka Conroy’s Filter).

The ALP’s blind support of this policy, justified only with cliches – and despite extraordinarily widespread criticism from within the IT industry and by IT users – is a major reason I’m glad Labor will not be able to govern alone at this time.

I have no doubt this absurd and widely-despised policy very nearly cost Labor government.

It tarnished the ALP’s reputation with a large number of computer-literate, uncommitted voters – offsetting the positive impact of the ALP’s much larger broadband expenditure pledge. In a very close election, that unnecessary loss of support was decisive.

I refer to the recent article by the ABC’s Technology Editor Nick Ross:

I wrote an article in similar vein on my own blog around the same time:

Yesterday evening, I made the following comment on Twitter.

SydWalker
Julia Gillard. Get yourself another tech advisor. Not Conroy again! PLEASE!!!
#labor #greens #ausvotes #openinternet #nocleanfeed #abcnews24

It has been been re-tweeted 33 times – and counting.

On election day, I was handing out for the Greens. I’ve done that for a decade or so, and I’ve got to know my Labor equivalents. I asked one of them what on earth had been Labor thinking re: the Internet censorship issue? He rolled his eyes and told me he’d tried to lobby within the party for a couple of years to get the policy reversed, without success.He told me it was like banging his head against a brick wall.

The Labor leadership’s determination, to date, to continue pushing the ‘filter’ proposal, strikes me as akin to neuroticism. It’s habitual – but lacks any coherent rational explanation.

PLEASE drop this discredited policy NOW – so the Gillard Government can regain community trust and move foreward with what is potentially a first class IT policy.

We need an NBN with built-in guarantees of affordable universal access, net neutrality, freedom of information flow and best-practice privacy standards.

Substantial progress towards implementing this, by the time of the next Federal election, would stand Labor in good stead with the electorate.

I respectfully suggest you need a new Minister to implement this – someone with genuine empathy for the whole objective.

At the very least, PLEASE drop the mandatory internet censorship policy forthwith.

Yours sincerely

Syd Walker

near Cairns,
Queensland

New South Wales: two sides of a sex-obsessed Parliament
Sep 2nd, 2010 by Syd Walker

New South Wales has the oldest Parliament in Australia.

The State has a lower, government-forming chamber called the Legislative Assembly. It is dominated by the major political parties and runs rather like a smaller version of Australia’s Federal House of Representatives or the British House of Commons.

The Reverend Fred Nile

Reverend Fred Nile, Father of the NSW Legislative Council. Likes well-researched moral crusades

The State of NSW also has a Legislative Council – an upper house akin to the Federal Senate – to which members are elected by a form of proportional representation. Other parties, such as the Greens, are currently represented in the Legislative Council. In fact, there’s a smorgasbord of political flavours in the NSW Upper House, because the quota for success is relatively low. One of the long-standing beneficiaries has been the Reverend Fred Nile and his Christian Democratic Party.

The Reverend Nile has been an MLC since 1981. He’s ‘Father of the House’. In fact, he the longest-serving NSW Parliamentarian.

Views tend to polarize on the subject of Fred Nile. His supporters believe he’s a valiant defender of traditional Christian values. Opponents tend to view him as a moralizing reactionary hypocrite.

Yesterday yet another NSW Government Minister was forced to resign from Premier Keneally’s beleaguered Labor Government.

An audit of Parliament House computer use turned up the fact that Ports Minister Paul McLeay MLA had been accessing gambling and porn sites on his parliamentary computer. Embarrassed, the Minister stood down immediately, even offering to resign from the Labor Party.

The same audit also established that one of NSW’s largest Parliamentary visitors of pornographic websites – a much larger porn consumer than Paul McLeay – is the office of the Reverend Fred Nile.

Far from resigning or showing contrition, the Reverend Nile pointed out that his staff are required to research pornography.

Amanda Fazio

Legislative Council President Amanda Fazio: opposes internet censorship

How can he know what he’s so vehemently against if he hasn’t studied the subject?

Quite so. The Daily Telegraph’s headline Christian MP Fred Nile engulfed in net porn scandal is unfair in the circumstances. That’s News Corp, at it again. Sleazy sensationalists!

A mandatory ‘filter’ was  put on all Legislative Assembly computers in July, so weak-willed MLAs are now assisted in their internal struggle with moral depravity.

Legislative Council computers, however, will not be filtered. President of the Council, Labor’s Amanda Fazio, is reportedly opposed to internet censorship. She believes MLCs should be free to research what they like.

It’s a fascinating instance of two different models of democracy running in parallel, within the same building.

When it comes to debating online pornography:

  • MLCs are expected to do copious amounts of research and its anticipated their contributions will be well-informed.
  • MLAs are expected to be ignorant; their speeches attract suspicion if they show any indications at all of knowing what they’re talking about.

Maybe I’m just old-fashioned, but I’ll go for the Legislative Council approach.

I also love to see consensus across the political divide. How nice that a senior Labor politician – and a noted conservative Christian – apparently find areas of agreement.

  1. Politicians and their staff should not be summarily dismissed for viewing pornography.
  2. Like the rest of us, they should be free to carry out research using an uncensored internet.

_____________________________

POSTSCRIPT:

Friday 3rd Sept. I am deeply disappointed.

My optimism that the anti-censorship cause has found an unexpected new ally was rapidly deflated.

Today’s Sydney Morning Herald reports:

“…At his news conference yesterday (Fred Nile) explained his need for the research. It was part of his campaign against pornography, which had included support for the federal Labor government’s proposed internet filter.

“Such a filter, he said, should be imposed on all computers at state parliament.

“This might interfere with his research…

Opponents of mandatory censorship cannot, as I had cheekily claimed, count on the support of Fred Nile.

Au contraire. Nile demands the freedom to access whatever he wishes from his own computer and face no legal consequences; the rest of us, however, should have access limited by Nile’s “research”. Presumably he thinks we should feel the full force of the law if we ever enjoy equivalent success in our own ‘research’.

In short, Fred Nile has a very un-Christlike tendency to do what he says – not follow his example.

Best of Fred

Best of Fred

The Herald’s story tells us Nile has at least stood by his office staff. They have not, he tells us, been “sitting there perving”.

Perhaps not Fred. Who knows and really, who cares?

What I do know now, Fred , is that you most certainly ARE a moralizing reactionary hypocrite. As readers have pointed out, you are also an Islamophobic bigot.

Indeed, you are such an unctuous hypocrite that your membership gives the NSW Parliament a bad name.

In our day and age, that takes quite some doing.

Saga from down-under: brain surgery and the global mind
Aug 29th, 2010 by Syd Walker

It’s an oddity of the human character that brain surgery, a very serious matter, is often the subject of jokes.

Perhaps it’s our way of dealing with the frightening and unthinkable.

The notion of an utter incompetent engaging in something as delicate as tampering with our brains makes us squeamish. What might he do to our minds? Ouch! So we joke about it.

Communications Minister Senator Stephen Conroy

Communications Minister Senator Stephen Conroy: mash-ups by Bob Whidon

In similar vein, many informed Australians have been making jokes about Senator Stephen Conroy for some years now.

The sniggers began almost as soon as he begame Australia’s Communications Minister, after the Rudd Labor Government was elected to power in 2007. They took off the next year, when it became apparent the Minister was quite insistent on imposing a mandatory internet ‘filter’ on all Australians.

The internet can be viewed as the neuronal structure of a globalizing humanity. It provides the basis for closely interwoven global society. Information streams through the network – information about people, activities, ideas, money and other data. It travels at the speed of light. This is the information flow that binds us together and makes our interconnected world work.

Our generation has grown used to the technology and participated in its growing sophistication. We are alive at a most remarkable time in human history. It’s a time when the mind of humanity is literally coming together, in ‘real time’. We’re still at the beginning of this extraordinary metamorphic process.

Like other people around the world, many Australians quickly embraced the new technology and have been enthusiastically exploring its potential ever since. It connects us to each other – and to the world. In a large and isolated continent, both are important. The internet opens up a global market for buying and selling, a global information exchange for giving and receiving, a global playground for fun and creativity.

So far, so good. Then along comes Senator Conroy c 2007. As the newly-appointed Communications Minister of the incoming Rudd Labor Government, Conroy announced his intention to impose a mandatory filter on the internet connection entering Australia from the outside world. His rationale for proposing this was purportedly concern about ‘child pornography’.

The Minister has a unique style

At first, his proposal gained traction. Who, after all, wants to be branded a peodophile? Who doesn’t want to protect children? A handful of well-promoted supporting voices popped up to push the case for the ‘filter’ and for a short time all seemed to be going well for the Minister and his censorious schemes.

But a civil libertarian reaction of unparalleled ferocity slowly erupted. It has been spurting giant blobs of angry lava ever since. Conroy’s simplistic scheme for fencing off Australia’s internet ‘feed’ by mandatory filters, forcing ISPs to ban a secret government list of web pages, has provoked a quite unprecedented furore of outraged opposition from technologically literate Australians.

Quite soon, Conroy found himself despised by his natural constituency as Communications Minister: the IT industry and experienced IT users.

A Minister at odds with his industrial (and even his public) constituency can be just what’s needed, if a government believes urgently-needed reforms are blocked ny an intractable bureaucratic log-jam and shameless vested interests. But a Minister at odds with his constituency had better be competent. He’d better know what he’s doing – and been seen to know what he’s doing. Otherwise, he’s in trouble.

In Stephen Conroy’s case, there has been precious little sign throughout his term in office that the Minister has much of a clue about modern communications. His spoken contributions to debates are frequently the butt of ridicule. When he waxes lyrical about IT, it often sounds ridiculous.

By April 2009, with the Rudd Government’s three year term half over, there was no discernable progress towards new broadband. The Minister was bogged in negotiations with major Telcos (most notably Telstra) that seemed to be going nowhere. Most noticeable of all, he kept pushing an increasingly unpopular mandatory government censorship scheme. It seemed the wheels might be coming off for Stephen Conroy’s Ministerial career.

The Minister's new credit card

Then came a remarkable turn-around. Just at the moment when it seemed he was most in peril, Senator Conroy managed to extract an agreement out of Prime Minister Rudd for a MASSIVE new public investment – potentially more than $40 billion – to create a new government owned wholesale monopoly: the National Broadband Network.

This was upping ante in the Government’s broadband infrastucture spend by an order of magnitude.

A Minister who can extract a LOT more money for his portfolio is usually regarded as a hero by his constituency. Access to large pot of public loot is a good way to make industry lobbyists respectfully polite. Rudd and Conroy presumably calculated that the $40+ billion honey pot would calm the bees, and the IT industry could be expected to fall into line and back a man who’d turned out after all to be a very effective Minister.

That happened, to some extent. But by mid-term, Conroy was already a seriously tainted brand. Even though the NBN gave him a new story to tell – he still had to deal with the ‘filter’ issue.

If Conroy and the ALP Government had backed down on mandatory internet censorship at almost any time between then and the recent Federal election, I think Labor would now be back in power with a clear majority. That’s despite its much-reported failures in other important policy areas, most notably climate change.

The NBN was a huge advantage for Labor in the election campaign. It may still be decisive in pursuading cross-benchers to support Labor in forming Government now, after the knife-edge August 21st election. But Labor’s stubborn insistence on hanging onto the ‘filter’ policy took the shine off the NBN. Many IT fans would have pushed hard for Labor at this election because of the size of its NBN commitment, which dwarfed the Coalition’s counter-pledge. As it was, many of us had split loyalties. In general, we want a major new public investment in telecoms infrastructure. But many Australians – myself included – regard issues of censorship, net neutrality and data privacy as even more significant.

Unexpectedly – and to its credit – the Liberal-National Party Coalition came off the fence during the election campaign on the ‘filter’ issue. It opposed the mandatory ‘filter’,  reaffirming its Howard era policy of assistance to home-users wanting ‘filters’ and no mandatory censorship. The Coalition undoubtably gained votes as a result. The number of votes that shifted is unknwon, but even one in two hundred would have proved decisive in this very close election. Interestingly, the much vaunted ‘Christian backlash’ against the Coalition never happened. Few Christians who’ve thought about the issue share the extreme pro-censorship views of their would-be spokeman, ex-SAS Commander Jim Wallace. The case for censorship had always been based on hype and exaggeration.

Viewing the internet as an evolving global brain explains why the internet-using public reacted as we did to the threat of censorship – to such an extent that in the pre-election peridod, articles published about the ‘filter’ attracted hundreds of comments and online polls showed an anti-filter sentiment as high as 99:1.

As the internet evolves, its needs sophistication in regulation. As a general rule, let freedom rule! Freedom to trade. Freedom to exchange information and ideas. Freedom to play.

The Minister and his new boss

Any attempt to interfer with these freedoms must be rational, demonstrably necessary, evidence-based and implemented with broad consent. If not, it will encounter staunch resistence – and rightfully so.

At this time, a week after the election, it’s still not clear who will form government from a parliament in which no single party has a majority.

Prime Minister Gillard and the ALP may have the best chance. Ironically, the NBN is a key issue which may give them the edge with the five or six cross-benchers. But with almost every political force in the country  now opposing the ‘filter’ apart from Labor and the one-Senator ‘Family First’ party, it would seem the public have dealt this unpopular proposal a fatal blow.

Let’s hope the Prime Minister is not so cocooned by out-of-touch advisers that she misses the significance of the filter issue.

Conroy poll

A poll on Australia's 'Whirpool' IT website; it's based on a small self-selected sample of IT fans. Even so...

During the election, on one of the few occasions she fielded a question on the ‘filter’, Gillard made  idiotic remarks implying the internet can and should be regulated like cinemas. If that’s what she truly believes Gillard is not up to the job. Perhaps, as she ponders her tenuous hold on power, Ms Gillard can find a better adviser than Stephen Conroy on the way forward for her communications policy.  She could do a lot worse than talk to EFA activist and telecoms engineer Mark Newton.

Australians won’t tolerate a lumberjack posing as a brain surgeon messing with our share of the evolving global mind.

The global communications web is a delicate miracle. Please show respect, Ms Gillard.

Tens of billions of dollars of new NBN neurones may well help speed up Australia’s mediocre data transmission speeds. That will be a blessing.

Even so, brain stimulus is no substitute for an enlightened mind.

The Third Man
Aug 14th, 2010 by Syd Walker

Bob Ellis

Bob Ellis: raconteur and political fantacist

The much-loved (and occasionally reviled) veteran Australian journalist Bob Ellis has introduced a new artform into the 2010 Australian election.

Bob has begun reporting conversations that didn’t happen at all – but might well have happened.

This is more fun than chattering about unproveable anonymous ‘leaks’, that have dominated the campaign thus far. When inventing an imaginary conversation that did not happen, an author can put in more detail and even set the ambience. Perhaps this is why fiction was invented?

Here’s my own contribution to the genre…

They sat in a bar frequented by Gen Y, somewhere in Canberra, at the end of a long day. It was one month into the gruelling five-week Federal election campaign. The date was August 13th. One week to go! Time to crack a bottle and take stock.

One of the men was still anxious about the election.

“Lighten up Bruce” said his companion. “Have a drink!”

“I’m worried about Queensland” murmured Bruce.

“Don’t be” said Frank. He exuded confidence. Labor Party operatives such as Bruce wondered where he got it from.

“It’s OK said Frank. We’re putting extra troops in Queensland. Get Up’s marginals campaign will swing it. You’ll see.”

Filter Crazies Tweet

What a News Corp journalist thinks about Australians who remain steadfastly opposed to mandatory internet censorship

“What about the filter crazies?” said Bruce. They’ve been driving us nuts. I’m getting back-benchers ring up demanding we change the policy. They don’t usually demand anything except celebrity visits and money for their bloody electorates. It’s giving me gutrot.”

“She’ll be right Bruce” interjected the third participant in this informal catch-up between mates. “Just stay the course. The IT lobby will shut it now. They can say the filter’s off the agenda. The Libs have dumped it. That takes the heat out… for now. And that juicy $42 billion NBN – it’s even got the EFA nicely wedged. Talking of wedgies, anyone fancy a steak?”

Bruce chattered on: “It’s not just the filter. There’s that poxy data retention thingy too. Who the hell dropped that FoI document just before the election? 90% redacted! Now the nerds are twittering Labor’s gone North Korean!”

“It’s OK” said Frank. “Chill out. Get Up’s public recognition as the authentic voice of the trendy left is higher than ever. We have the data to prove it. And what have we said about data retention?”

“What have you said?” asked Bruce.

“Exactly” said Frank.

“I must be off!” The third man rose. “I’m starving!  Just remember this. Get Up – respond to press inquires and play straight bat. Get the troops out. That’s it. Labor, just stay the course. You won’t have probs this last week. The leaks might well have stopped” and he winked.

“’It’s the economy stupid!’ We’ll see to the rest!” the third man concluded with a tone of finality.

He departed for his favourite steak bar salivating at the prospect of juicy beef, well-cooked and tender.

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