There are two words that we all use so much, they have lost their meaning – “Don’t judge”.
We beg it of others and we claim not to do it ourselves.
And yet it’s an impossible ask. We make judgements about every piece of information that enters our crowded brains, every moment of every day. Of course we do, and of course we should.
Questioning is powerful, automatic acceptance is foolish.
But there are some circumstances, some experiences, about which there is no alternative: Do not judge.
Until now, the Australian people and the Australian media have held themselves to that position when it came to what happened to 17 Sydneysiders on December 15, 2014. The day of the Sydney siege.
But then the Reverend Fred Nile – a caricature of a religious extremist, yes, but still an elected member of the New South Wales Parliament, a person who holds considerable power – opened his mouth and unleashed his judgement on the way the male hostages behaved that day.
On Sunrise this morning, Nile made the astonishing assertion that, “The only man really there [in the Lindt cafe] was the man with the gun.”
“Usually men try to protect the women,” he went on to say. “But it looks like the men were trying to protect their own skins.”
The day before, talking to 2UE radio, he addressed the issue, raised by Prime Minister Tony Abbott, of whether the siege hostages, those that died, Katrina Dawson and Tori Johnson, and those 15 that survived, should be awarded medals for bravery.