The best bits.
Last night’s ABC Q&A panel was meant to be ‘dangerous’, stacked as it was with speakers from Sydney’s The Festival of Dangerous Ideas. There was feminist journalist Laurie Penny, climate change activist Naomi Klein, novelist and campaigner Tariq Ali, theology expert Miroslav Volf and (right-leaning) ABC Radio National Between the Lines host Tom Switzer. And as you’d expect, there were some pretty heated exchanges about feminism and climate change.
It went like this:
1. The discussion about why we got fired about ‘Operation Fortitude’ but not other issues.
One of the most heated exchanges in the show came when an audience member asked about the widespread protests against news that Border Force officials would be checking visas in the Melbourne streets.
(In case you missed it, the vocal opposition to that proposal eventually led to the cancellation of “Operation Fortitude”. You can read about that story here.)
While Naomi Klein and Laurie Penny welcomed protests against Operation Fortitude, both said they’d like to see people rise up against other oppressive government policies, too.
Klein invited Australians across the country to take a stand against the Federal government’s mandatory offshore detention policy for asylum seekers.
“Nauru is tantamount to torture,” she said. “I think the lesson of this is, when people do rise up and send a message, you can enact policy.”
Related: Claims a woman was raped on Nauru, then denied medical care.