July 13 – 19, 2019
News
Comment
Comment
Tanya Levin
What Scott Morrison’s faith means
“Despite claiming that his ‘faith is not a political agenda’, the prime minister’s religious values are evident in his speeches and policies. Scott Morrison talks about his Christianity all the time. Listeners might not be faulted for absorbing his analogies and colloquialisms as metaphors. For Morrison, however, they are facts. The Pentecostal faith does not describe itself in the abstract: a miracle is literally a miracle. His language is full of references to evangelical fundamentalism and the supernatural.”
Comment
Paul Bongiorno
Scott Morrison, prayers and Hillsong
“Rapturous applause welcomed Scott Morrison to the annual Hillsong conference. Twenty-one thousand delegates bowed their heads as the prime minister led them in prayer for our nation – for veterans doing it tough, young people considering suicide, those facing the challenges of middle age, remote Indigenous communities, people with disability, and drought-breaking rain.”
Letters, Poem & Editorial
Culture
Profile
Artist Michael Armitage
With his bold, sumptuous paintings, Michael Armitage is intent on challenging colonial assumptions about East Africa and revealing the region’s complexities. “Sex, poverty and dictators: if you are talking about this part of the world, you always come up against those stereotypes and that’s been very difficult … For me, it’s been important to use an exotic language but show that it is also a form of dumbing down.”
Books
Life
Puzzles
Quotes
NAIDOC WEEK
“I think that idea is divisive.”
The Liberal MP says he will not support any constitutional reform that enshrines a First Nations “voice to parliament”. Few know a divisive idea better than the man who called Cardinal Pell’s conviction a “witch-hunt”.
MEDIA
“I suspect you would advance a position where the government was in a no-win situation.”
The foreign minister attends a media freedom conference in London. She says she’d be criticised for not doing her job if she didn’t show, which is still preferable to getting raided by the Australian Federal Police for doing your job.
HUMAN RIGHTS
“I’m pleased to announce today the formation of a Commission on Unalienable Rights.”
The United States secretary of state announces a renewed American commitment to human rights. One can only assume this will not include the right to seek asylum.
CHRISTIANITY
“Suck it up.”
The senior fellow at the Centre for Public Christianity weighs in on the religious freedom debate by suggesting Christians do what Jesus did. Some would prefer to take the Lord’s other lead, turning themselves into martyrs who are persecuted for their beliefs by the frenzied mob.
ME TOO
“As Alan Dershowitz wrote recently, ‘feeling unsafe is the new mantra for McCarthyism’.”
The News Corp columnist quotes the controversial lawyer to support her claim Me Too has failed. An interesting choice, given Dershowitz stands accused of assaulting two teenage girls allegedly trafficked by his former client, Jeffrey Epstein.
HOUSING
“I want to put a positive spin on it as well and not just say Australia’s in a housing crisis when it affects a very, very small percentage of the population.”
The assistant community housing minister looks for the upside of rising homelessness figures. Real estate agents describe Australia’s social housing program as a “renovator’s delight”.