Ok. Let me try to break it down into simple terms:
This is the eSafety Commissioner's profile. I'll allow you to draw your own conclusions about impartiality.
Not sure if that clarifies, but if you need more context, look at my post above.
EDIT: There is an election coming up next year. Government is at a slim chance of being a one-term wonder.
- Lefty Labor government that is at the whim of the far left in its own party and the even more extreme left of The Greens in the senate.
- Pissweak Prime Minister on a long series of Ls trying to look tough.
- 15 year old kid offender with dubious terrorism links
- Police still charged him with terrorism because that's what police do
- Syrian Christians who formed a mob outside the church to lynch the kid and ended up injuring police
- Came days after horrid stabbing incident in Sydney shopping centre where mental patient killed 6 people
- The priest himself has forgiven the attacker and also asked for the videos to remain online
- eSafery Commissioner is pretty useless and probably sees this as an easy win domestically
- Lots of politicians around the country blaming social media for their failures on youth crime
- Jacqui Lambie is a dumb arse Tasmanian politician who only got into the senate on a weird series of microparty preference deals. She's one of those salt of the earth, tell it like it is people who says what the unwashed are thinking but is well out of her depth.
This is the eSafety Commissioner's profile. I'll allow you to draw your own conclusions about impartiality.
Quote:Julie Inman Grant is Australia’s eSafety Commissioner. In this role, Julie leads the world’s first government regulatory agency committed to keeping its citizens safer online.
Julie has extensive experience in the non-profit and government sectors and spent two decades working in senior public policy and safety roles in the tech industry at Microsoft, Twitter and Adobe.
The Commissioner’s career began in Washington DC, working in the US Congress and the non-profit sector before taking on a role at Microsoft. Julie’s experience at Microsoft spanned 17 years, serving as one of the company’s first and longest-standing government relations professionals, ultimately in the role of Global Director for Safety and Privacy Policy and Outreach. At Twitter, she set up and drove the company’s policy, safety and philanthropy programs across Australia, New Zealand and Southeast Asia.
Spoiler: (click to show)
Not sure if that clarifies, but if you need more context, look at my post above.
EDIT: There is an election coming up next year. Government is at a slim chance of being a one-term wonder.