Senator Jenny McAllister said failure of the bill to pass meant the government would ‘not be in a position to help keep Australians safe.’
Inman Grant also said her job is not to be concerned with what Elon Musk is doing unless he is hurting the safety of Australians
The Australian Senate is due to consider the Bill next week, after it passed the House of Representatives with support of Labor and the Teals.
Labor’s bill has passed the House of Representatives, but faces an upcoming showdown in the Senate.
The legislation has been described as ‘dangerous’ by the Opposition.
Two independent Senators Tammy Tyrrell and David Pocock have already indicated they will oppose the bill.
However, Labor defended the legislation as a necessary step to protect the safety of Australians and uphold democracy.
Theologian Nigel Biggar is touring Australia.
The Christ the Good Shepherd Church condemned the use of the Sydney stabbing incident earlier this year to further a ‘political censorship agenda.’
The Labor government has introduced the second version of its Misinformation Bill.
Labor Minister Michelle Rowland says the new Misinformation Bill is aimed at safeguarding democracy.
New arrangements will help stem the spread of misinformation across the Indo-Pacific, the US Secretary of State said.
‘It would be of great concern if people use the attack on me to serve their own political interests to control free speech.’
‘Often what they mean by misinformation is ordinary people who have the temerity to disagree with the elites.’
Australian authorities are pushing Musk to remove content from its platform from all global users.
An NPR senior editor, who has since been removed from his job, has stepped forward to reveal how ‘ideological corruption’ found its way into news.
‘We are noticing a dramatic increase in global censorship,’ Rumble CEO Chris Pavlovski said.
Following the Novak Djokovic vaccine saga, Australian authorities find themselves once again head-to-head with the global ‘freedom’ movement.
The authority encouraged Australians to report harmful content online to eSafety.
‘It’s a scourge in many ways, social media,’ Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said.
Senator Jenny McAllister said failure of the bill to pass meant the government would ‘not be in a position to help keep Australians safe.’
Inman Grant also said her job is not to be concerned with what Elon Musk is doing unless he is hurting the safety of Australians
The Australian Senate is due to consider the Bill next week, after it passed the House of Representatives with support of Labor and the Teals.
Labor’s bill has passed the House of Representatives, but faces an upcoming showdown in the Senate.
The legislation has been described as ‘dangerous’ by the Opposition.
Two independent Senators Tammy Tyrrell and David Pocock have already indicated they will oppose the bill.
However, Labor defended the legislation as a necessary step to protect the safety of Australians and uphold democracy.
Theologian Nigel Biggar is touring Australia.
The Christ the Good Shepherd Church condemned the use of the Sydney stabbing incident earlier this year to further a ‘political censorship agenda.’
The Labor government has introduced the second version of its Misinformation Bill.
Labor Minister Michelle Rowland says the new Misinformation Bill is aimed at safeguarding democracy.
New arrangements will help stem the spread of misinformation across the Indo-Pacific, the US Secretary of State said.
‘It would be of great concern if people use the attack on me to serve their own political interests to control free speech.’
‘Often what they mean by misinformation is ordinary people who have the temerity to disagree with the elites.’
Australian authorities are pushing Musk to remove content from its platform from all global users.
An NPR senior editor, who has since been removed from his job, has stepped forward to reveal how ‘ideological corruption’ found its way into news.
‘We are noticing a dramatic increase in global censorship,’ Rumble CEO Chris Pavlovski said.
Following the Novak Djokovic vaccine saga, Australian authorities find themselves once again head-to-head with the global ‘freedom’ movement.
The authority encouraged Australians to report harmful content online to eSafety.
‘It’s a scourge in many ways, social media,’ Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said.