I see that Andrew Bolt's self assigned job (although encouraged with much hand holding by the IPA and, I suspect, News Ltd itself) as professional martyr continues unabated.
Today, complaining that Marcia Langton was mean to him, he writes:
I could prove that my banned articles argued against racism and racial
division by republishing them - but the Federal Court has ruled that I
may not. Mein Kampf can be published, but my articles fighting racism cannot.
The articles remain (and as far as I know, have always been) available
on his own blog, although they are headed by a notice required by the Court that it had made findings that they were inaccurate.
As for Langton, she may (for all I know) have been exaggerating as to the effect Bolt's comments on Misty Jenkins, but Bolt is also being disingenuous if he is claiming he was not having a go at her for identifying as aboriginal. The quote in Q&A:
Page four has a feature on Dr Misty Jenkins, a blonde and pale science
PhD who calls herself Aboriginal and enthuses: “I was able to watch the
coverage of Kevin Rudd’s (sorry) speech with tears rolling down my
cheeks ...
Given that we know the question of self identification of aboriginality has been a strongly contested matter even with aboriginal circles, and has been
commented on by other right wing figures even in the Australian without there being any legal consequences, the matter has always been not that Bolt deals with the issue, but how he goes about doing it.
Andrew is not big or sensible enough to recognise this, and right wing activists (with who knows what corporate backing) are happy to see him play the role. All a bit sad for Bolt, really. As with his gullible acceptance of climate change denialism, he just really continues to prove he's not so smart.
(Oh sure, getting rich on his Fox Lite media performances, no doubt. But showing himself to be dumber by the day.)
In related news: it's amusing to read today that
the IPA is stamping its feet over the prospect that the Abbott government is not going to repeal s18C in its entirety. Fairfax writes:
The dispute is likely to get worse, especially if Senator Brandis
introduces, as some expect, a new criminal offence of racial
vilification. IPA executive director John Roskam said he would rather
there were no changes to the law than a new criminal ban on hate speech.
He also said it had ''got back to me'' that Senator Brandis had been
criticising the IPA in private conversations.
Oh noes! A politician who might be rather sick of the bullying blowhards and culture warriors of the IPA (see
Sinclair Davidson publicly suggesting that Brandis shouldn't be re-elected if he doesn't toe the IPA line) says he doesn't appreciate their attitude. How surprising.