AFL has read the room in opting out of pro-Voice activism
The AFL has a history of relentlessly leftist political activism so you know the ‘yes’ Voice case is circling the drain when it decides not to campaign on its biggest day.
The AFL has a history of relentlessly leftist political activism so you know the ‘yes’ Voice case is circling the drain when it decides not to campaign on its biggest day.
Time’s up for Alan Joyce, who took Qantas from the “spirit of Australia” to an underperforming, activist airline that shoved toxic race politics down passengers’ throats.
The power of the increasingly intolerant and extremist trans lobby is evident in the way politicians, bureaucrats and celebrities bend to its ideology.
Even in the middle of the Voice debate, activists including ex Australian of the Year Adam Goodes are uttering untruths about Indigenous people once being covered by a “flora and fauna act”.
The AEC’s skewing of the Voice referendum by declaring that a tick will count as a ‘yes’ vote but a cross will not count as a ‘no’ vote is a step too far.
Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has maintained a quiet but fierce dignity as she withstands the most dreadful vitriol and threats to fight for what’s right.
The airline’s latest divisive move to support the race-based referendum shows the national carrier is a shell of its former glory.
Australia is an energy-rich nation that has burdened its citizens with high energy costs, but if Peter Dutton can hold his nerve and deliver a nuclear policy he’ll go a long way to securing government.
An important lesson conservatives can learn from the Voice debate is whatever the battle, they’re on solid ground when they stand up for core principles instead of trying to appease their ideological opponents.
It’s now evident that it wasn’t just members of the media and politicians behaving improperly but also the ACT Director of Public Prosecutions.
Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/journalists/rita-panahi/page/15