Sunday, 16 June 2019
News Corp columnist's rant runs foul of Australian Press Council standards
Adjudication
1757: Complainant / The Daily Telegraph (June 2019)
Document
Type: Complaints
Outcome:
Adjudications
The
Press Council considered whether its Standards of Practice were breached by an
article published by The Daily Telegraph on 13 September 2017 by The Daily
Telegraph headed in print “An identity crisis” and online “WHAT MADNESS CAN
JUSTIFY MUTILATING OUR CHILDREN” and a Podcast on 16 April 2018 titled “Ryan T.
Anderson joins Miranda Devine live on gender identity”, included as a link in
the online article.
The
article referred to a “pernicious social fad for transgenderism in children
which has been embraced by an activist subset of the medical profession” and
stated that “new laws in Victoria can punish therapists who oppose
transitioning children” and “hundreds of children who say they are trapped in
the body of the opposite sex are being referred to gender clinics in Australia,
with numbers tripling in the past three years at one Sydney clinic.” It
included comments by a named University Professor, who it described as “one of
the few pediatricians courageous enough to speak out against this fashion for
‘child surgical abuse’”. It quoted the Professor saying that “Prepubertal
children have no idea about sexuality and choices of procreation afterwards”
and “We’re messing with their limbic system and expecting them to make this
great evaluation.”
The
article went on to say: “Yet there is no medical evidence to justify the
epidemic of transgender kids. No evidence that changing sex will reduce the
incidence of self-harm or suicide or lessen the impact of other associated
mental states such as depression or autism.” The article concluded: “When they
grow up, surely these children have grounds for a class action against the
hospitals and drug companies which have mounted such a monstrous assault on
their developing bodies.”
The
podcast was referred to as an interview with Ryan T. Anderson to “discuss
recent attempts in Australia and the United States to introduce gender theory
into anti-bullying programs”. The introduction said: “Children are being given
puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones and having their breasts removed at the
age of 14 and 15 with the permission of the Family Court. Yet there is little
medical evidence to justify this experimentation on children, no evidence that
these hormones are safe to be used on kids, no evidence of any reduction in
self-harm or suicide.”
Following
a complaint, the Council asked the publication to comment on whether the
article and podcast complied with its Standards of Practice. In particular, the
Council sought comment on the statement that there is “no evidence” that
“cross-sex hormones are safe to be used on kids, no evidence of any reduction
in self-harm or suicide” or “that changing sex will reduce the incidence of
self-harm or suicide”. The Council referred the publication to a number of
articles identified by the complainant, including one entitled “Endocrine
Treatment of Transsexual Persons: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice
Guideline” (2009).
In
addition the Council sought comment on whether the article’s statement that
“new laws in Victoria can punish therapists who oppose transitioning their
children”, given the provisions of the new Victorian Health Complaints Act, and
on the descriptions of medical procedures as “mutilation” and “child surgical
abuse” and a “monstrous assault on their developing bodies” were a breach of
the Council’s Standards.
The
publication said the article and the content of the podcast were clearly
identified as opinion and the author was entitled to express her opinion
concerning the medical practices administered to children and adolescents in
gender clinics. It said that in making comments, particularly those concerning
there being “no evidence” of the matters referred to, the author relied on
interviews with medical experts in the field, widespread reading of the
scientific literature and anecdotal evidence of parents and people who regret
childhood hormone or surgical interventions, as well as the experiences of a transgender
friend of the author. The publication identified a number of medical articles
as relevant.
The
publication said the Victorian Health Complaints Act is designed to prevent
conversion therapy of sexual minorities and to provide for a complaints process
about health service provision.
It
said the columnist was entitled to express her views on the appropriateness of
how sections of the medical profession are treating children who they believe
are transgender and to express her view that it is wrong for a child as young
as 15 years to be receiving medically unnecessary double mastectomies.
Conclusion
The
Council’s Standards of Practice applicable in this matter require that
publications take reasonable steps to ensure that factual material is accurate
and not misleading and is distinguishable from other material such as opinion
(General Principle 1), and presented with reasonable fairness and balance, and
that writers’ expressions of opinion are not based on significantly inaccurate
factual material or omission of key facts (General Principle 3). If the
material is significantly inaccurate or misleading, or unfair or
unbalanced, publications must take reasonable steps to provide adequate
remedial action or an opportunity for a response to be published (General
Principles 2 and 4). The Standards of Practice also require that
publications take reasonable steps to avoid causing or contributing materially
to substantial offence, distress or prejudice, or to a substantial risk to
health or safety, unless doing so is sufficiently in the public interest
(General Principle 6).
The
Council notes that the article and the podcast contain expressions of the
author’s opinion. However, the Council considers they also contain material
presented as facts, including the statement in the article that there is “No
evidence that changing sex will reduce the incidence of self-harm or suicide or
lessen the impact of other associated mental states such as depression or
autism” and in the podcast that there is “no evidence that these hormones are
safe to be used on kids, no evidence of any reduction in self-harm or
suicide”.
The
Council accepts that it is open to an author to question the appropriateness of
particular medical treatments and procedures. There may be conflicting evidence
in support of, or opposition to, such treatments which the Council will not be
in a position to resolve. However the statements that there was “no evidence”
was not qualified in any way, such as asserting that there was no reliable
evidence. The Council notes that the publication did not rely on any particular
article as supporting a statement that there was “no evidence”. The Council
considers that, given the existence of medical guidelines which recommend
various treatments and procedures to assist transitioning children and
adolescents, the statement that there was “no evidence” was made in such
absolute terms that it was inaccurate and misleading. The Council
considers the publication failed to take reasonable steps to ensure these
statements were accurate and not misleading.
Accordingly,
the Council finds that the publication breached General Principles 1 and 3 in
these respects. This conclusion does not amount to a finding on the
appropriateness of the medical treatments available.
As
to the new laws in Victoria, the Council considers that the broad term
‘therapists’ could include persons who, if providing a general health service,
may fall under the remit of the new Victorian Health Complaints Act and
therefore be subject to penalties under the Act. The Council is satisfied on
the material available to it that the statement “... new laws in Victoria can
punish therapists who oppose transitioning children …” is not inaccurate or
misleading. Accordingly, the Council does not consider that General Principles
1 and 3 were breached in this respect.
As
the publication was not approached for a correction or right of reply, the
Council considers there was no breach of General Principles 2 and 4.
The
Council accepts that the columnist’s descriptions of medical procedures as
“mutilation”, “child surgical abuse” and a “monstrous assault on their
developing bodies” were likely to cause offence and distress amongst those
undergoing such treatment and amongst their families, and were also likely to
cause or exacerbate prejudice. However, the Council considers there is public
interest in vigorous public debate about the issue, even when an argument is
expressed in very strong terms, as is the case here. The Council considers that
to the extent there was substantial offence, distress and prejudice, it was
justified in the public interest. Accordingly, General Principle 6 was not
breached.
Relevant
Council Standards (not required for publication)
This
Adjudication applies the following General Principles of the Council.
Publications
must take reasonable steps to:
General
Principle 1 – Ensure that factual material in news reports and elsewhere is
accurate and not misleading, and is distinguishable from other material such as
opinion.
General
Principle 2 – Provide a correction or other adequate remedial action if
published material is significantly inaccurate or misleading.
General
Principle 3 – Ensure that factual material is presented with reasonable
fairness and balance, and that writers’ expressions of opinion are not based on
significantly inaccurate factual material or omission of key facts.
General
Principle 4 – Ensure that where material refers adversely to a person, a fair
opportunity is given for subsequent publication of a reply if that is
reasonably necessary to address a possible breach of General Principle 3.
General
Principle 6 - Avoid causing or contributing materiality to substantial offence,
distress or prejudice, or a substantial risk to health or safety, unless doing
so is sufficiently in the public interest.
Labels:
adjudication,
News Corp,
The Daily Telegraph
USA 2019: The Fool On the Hill
There are really only two rational responses to the actions of US President Donald Trump - spontaneous loud laughter or appalled silence.
This time it was the laughter......
The
Guardian, 12
June 2019:
Mexico’s foreign
minister, Marcelo Ebrard, said Mexico also agreed to a 45-day timeline to show
increased enforcement efforts were effective in reducing the people flows. If
that fails, Mexico has agreed to consider a longstanding US demand that Central
American asylum seekers crossing through Mexico apply for refuge there, not the
United States, making Mexico a “safe third country”, a demand that Mexico has
long rejected.
“Safe third country
could be applied if we fail, and we accept what they say,” Ebrard said on
Tuesday evening, noting that Mexican legislators would then give consideration to
accommodating a change in migration law.
Nevertheless, Ebrard
said other Latin American countries should share the burden, something that the
United States appeared to have agreed to.
The document that Trump
waved at reporters laid out “a regional approach to burden-sharing in relation
to the processing of refugee status claims to migrants”; talked of “45 days”;
and said Mexico had committed to immediately examine its laws and rules to
enable it to implement such an agreement.
Snapshot of the piece of paper Trump was waving about.......
CBS, The Late Show |
Labels:
Donald Trump,
US politics,
USA-Mexico relations
Saturday, 15 June 2019
Quote of the Week
“First Nations
children account for almost 90 per cent of the suicides of children aged 14 and
younger. The nation should weep.” [National Critical Response
Trauma Recovery Project Co-Ordinator Gerry
Georgatos writing in The
Sydney Morning Herald, 3 June 2019]
Friday, 14 June 2019
Parents with LGBTIQ children call on Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison "to do as he promised which was to govern for all of the people which surely must include the LGBTIQ people"
Media
Release
10th
June, 2019
Religious
Freedom is not an issue - Religious Privilege is a huge concern
After
Marriage Equality was achieved, the right wing of the Government decided
Christian rights were at risk. A Religious Review was held due to concerns
about the rights of Christians.
Mr
Ruddock, a conservative and Att. General who was the architect of rewording the
“marriage act” to read as “man and woman” to exclude same sex couples, was the
Chairperson.
Eventually,
after much delay the Review showed there was very little concern for
Christians.
However,
the government’s paranoia about LGBTIQ people is a great concern to LGBTIQ
people and their loved ones.
Because:
Welfare
groups, aged care and hospitals are predominantly run by Religious bodies
Teachers
working at Christian schools may be retrenched and students expelled
Businesses
owned by Christian individuals or organisations
May
all be given the right to refuse service or care, just because their clients,
customers or staff involved are LGBTIQ.
Additionally,
there is the concern of the promotion of hate speech. Christians may not believe
their words are harmful, or may not care but the impact of what is said or
written can be devastating for the LGBTIQ person and their loved ones. Again
any freedom, including freedom of speech should never be used as a tool for
abuse.
The
ratio of Christians suffering poor mental health or suicide from hate speech is
minimal. However, the negative impact of hate speech, homophobia and transphobia
against LGBTIQ people is extremely high.
So,
as National Spokesperson for parents with LGBTIQ children, I am calling on Mr
Morrison and his team to do as he promised which was to govern for all of the
people which surely must include the LGBTIQ people. They pay taxes, contribute
to society and vote.
Labels:
children,
free speech,
hate speech,
human rights,
LGBTIQ,
religion
The Fight for the Great Australian Bight continues
Fight For The Bight
Last month, Patagonia
Surf Ambassador Heath Joske joined an Australian delegation to Oslo,
Norway, taking the fight for the Bight directly to Equinor. The delegation was
led by Peter Owen from The Wilderness Society and included Aboriginal elder and
singer Bunna Lawrie and various local and international environmental groups.
The delegation met with Norwegian Indigenous Sami people to discuss their shared experiences in the fight to protect their oceans and lands from development by the oil industry.
The delegation also found support in the 500-strong crowd of local Norwegians who joined them for a paddle out in the harbour in front of the city’s Opera House. This peaceful protest was one of the largest paddle-out demonstrations held in the country's history and members of the delegation were buoyed by the camaraderie shown by the local community who braved near freezing water temperatures in support of the Great Australian Bight.
“Borders were smashed and countries were united,” said Heath. “Thank you to the people of Norway for supporting our pleas to save our southern seas! You turned up in hundreds and screamed “Fight for the Bight!” with me, and when I stopped, you kept screaming. That was incredibly moving and heartening.”
The delegation met with Norwegian Indigenous Sami people to discuss their shared experiences in the fight to protect their oceans and lands from development by the oil industry.
The delegation also found support in the 500-strong crowd of local Norwegians who joined them for a paddle out in the harbour in front of the city’s Opera House. This peaceful protest was one of the largest paddle-out demonstrations held in the country's history and members of the delegation were buoyed by the camaraderie shown by the local community who braved near freezing water temperatures in support of the Great Australian Bight.
“Borders were smashed and countries were united,” said Heath. “Thank you to the people of Norway for supporting our pleas to save our southern seas! You turned up in hundreds and screamed “Fight for the Bight!” with me, and when I stopped, you kept screaming. That was incredibly moving and heartening.”
Taking on Goliath
The delegation also
attended Equinor’s Annual General Meeting in Stavanger where they presented a
shareholder proposal that the company should refrain from oil and gas
exploration and production activities in frontier areas (such as the Great
Australian Bight), immature areas and particularly sensitive areas. Heath Joske
also spoke at the AGM, taking to the stage to explain his connection to the
Bight as both a surfer and fisherman. Following the meeting, he personally
delivered over 300 letters from concerned Australian citizens to Equinor’s CEO,
Eldar Saetre.
“For the campaign, the AGM is not an end-point in any way,” says Norwegian citizen and Great Australian Bight Alliance campaigner Rune Woldsnes. “It is a step on the way to getting Equinor out of the Bight. There is no question the Board got the message.”
“For the campaign, the AGM is not an end-point in any way,” says Norwegian citizen and Great Australian Bight Alliance campaigner Rune Woldsnes. “It is a step on the way to getting Equinor out of the Bight. There is no question the Board got the message.”
Heath Joske at the Equinor AGM from Patagonia Australia on Vimeo.
BACKGROUND
North Coast Voices:
17 April 2019, Norway
needs to withdraw its majority-owned petroleum mining company from the Great
Australian Bight
4 March 2019,From
September 2019 onwards underwater seismic blasts will rock the Great Australian
Bight around the clock over a 30,100 sq kilometre area
8 January
2019, Why
proposed offshore mining in the Great Australian Bight matters to all of
Australia
12 October
2016, Multinational
gas and petroleum giant BP withdraws from offshore exploration in the Great
Australian Bight - for now.
23 May 2016, Australian
Federal Election 2016: which major political party is likely to put brakes on
the petroluem industry's risky commercial ambitions in the Great Australian
Bight?
Thursday, 13 June 2019
The one about the Australian entitled private school twit & political dunce, with a penchant for fishnet and leopard skin, who did the United States of America the favour of the century
ABC
News, 24 May
2019:
One rainy night in May
2016, a Trump campaign advisor named George Papadopoulos walked into a posh
wine bar in affluent West London.
The meeting at the Kensington Wine Rooms was
only meant to be a drink with Australia's High Commissioner to the UK,
Alexander Downer.
However, the Mueller Report indicates at a number of points that this is the case.
U.S. Dept. of Justice, Report On
The Investigation Into Russian Interference In The 2016 Presidential Election,
Volume
I of ll, Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller, III, March 2019, extracts:
In late July 2016, soon after WikiLeaks's first release of stolen documents, a foreign government contacted the FBI about a May 2016 encounter with Trump Campaign foreign policy advisor George Papadopoulos. Papadopoulos had suggested to a representative of that foreign government that the Trump Campaign had received indications from the Russian government that it could assist the Campaign through the anonymous release of information damaging to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. That information prompted the FBI on July 31, 2016, to open an investigation into whether individuals associated with the Trump Campaign were coordinating with the Russian government in its interference activities……
July 2016 was also the
month WikiLeaks first released emails stolen by the GRU from the DNC. On July
22, 2016, WikiLeaks posted thousands of internal DNC documents revealing information
about the Clinton Campaign. Within days, there was public reporting that U.S. intelligence
agencies had "high confidence" that the Russian government was behind
the theft of emails and documents from the DNC. And within a week of the
release, a foreign government informed the FBI about its May 2016 interaction with
Papadopoulos and his statement that the Russian government could assist the
Trump Campaign. On July 31, 2016, based on the foreign government repo11ing, the
FBI opened an investigation into potential coordination between the Russian
government and individuals associated with the Trump Campaign…..
In late April 2016,
Papadopoulos was told by London-based professor Joseph Mifsud, immediately
after Mifsud's return from a trip to Moscow, that the Russian government had
obtained "dirt" on candidate Clinton in the form of thousands of
emails. One week later, on May 6, 2016, Papadopoulos suggested to a
representative of a foreign government that the Trump Campaign had received
indications from the Russian government that it could assist the Campaign through
the anonymous release of information that would be damaging to candidate Clinton…..
Further
reading
Labels:
Australia-US relations,
Donald Trump,
US politics
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)