{"id":918,"date":"2010-01-24T11:17:16","date_gmt":"2010-01-24T01:17:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.cameronburgess.org\/?p=186"},"modified":"2010-01-24T11:17:16","modified_gmt":"2010-01-24T01:17:16","slug":"on-mandatory-internet-filtering-pt-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cameronburgess.com\/on-mandatory-internet-filtering-pt-2\/","title":{"rendered":"on mandatory internet filtering pt 2"},"content":{"rendered":"

Close to two years ago, on January 8, 2008, I posted the below rant on a facebook discussion board<\/a> for The Greens<\/a> – an Australian political party with typically strong social and environmental sustainablity policies. The idea on the table at the time – from which there has been a significant departure, was that the end user could opt out of the proposed filter by registering with their ISP (now, it seems, there is not even going to be an opt-out option).<\/p>\n

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In contrast with the post immediately preceding this one, I’m reasonably comfortable with asserting that the Australian public is (as a general rule) fundamentally lazy when it comes to civil liberties.<\/h3>\n<\/blockquote>\n

After all, I honestly thought when I originally posted this, emailed everyone I knew about it and brought it up (to the point of being obnoxious) in almost every social situation I found myself in, simple logic would be exercised and the entire ridiculous idea would be abandoned.<\/p>\n

But no! Instead, those who pay attention to what’s actually going on in their own country – less than 124 000 (or less than one percent of the country’s registered voters) are opposed to it if you use Getup!<\/a> as a guide – have invested millions of hours and hundreds of thousands of dollars opposing it.<\/p>\n

Money and time that could have been better exercised toward dozens of more meaningful engagements.<\/p>\n

So the responsibility for not only this travesty of civil liberties, but the other various (inter)national problems that have not been leveraged into better positions through the application of time, intelligence and capital wasted on this endeavour rests with the general public.<\/p>\n

It also rests as strongly with those of us who knew about it for not conducting a more consistent, organised and effective campaign to put the kibosh on this sooner. The lesson for me here is to organise as well as agitate – and to find a way to bring these changemakers together so that they can succeed faster (hence my commitment to W1SD0M<\/a> – a project I’ll riff about in more detail at a later point).<\/p>\n

So I’m throwing down the gauntlet, as much out of necessity as disgust, to Australians everywhere. If, as a nation, we invested even one percent of the time we spend gawking at sports on the more pressing issues of our time, surely it’s possible that less and less people will abandon our shores for more favourable climates where the necessity for change is not only realised but acted upon?<\/p>\n

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