breaking
paint huffing moron
....from sydney BDO this year as organisers fear it will incite racial tensions.
discuss.
discuss.
THE Australian flag has been banned from this year's Big Day Out in Sydney after organisers branded it a "gang colour" and symbol of hate.
The Daily Telegraph has learned organisers of the Aussie rock festival at Homebush will confiscate any flag or bandana bearing the national symbol at the gate.
Labelling Sydney a hot bed of racism, producers of the Sydney Showground event said it will be the only city in the nationwide event to be subject to the draconian action.
Promoters have already moved the event from the traditional Australia Day gig to a day earlier to avoid nationalistic overtones.
Spooked by last year's event, which came only weeks after the Cronulla riots, organisers will outlaw flags being brandished as a "gang colour".
Prime Minister John Howard said the Big Day Out should be cancelled unless organisers reversed their decision to ban the flag. Big Day Out patrons were intimidated and harassed at the Sydney event on Australia Day 2006 by bigoted fans brandishing flags and demanding people pledge their allegiance. [...]
Quoted for absolute stupidity.PoliticalExile said:The problem with Australian forces in Afghanistan, Iraq, or any other nation for military purposes, is that it can create refugees, who have strong political feelings towards Australia.
If we don't want people not liking our flag it would be wise to not go into these countries at the behest of America in the first place. The Australian military should only be for defending Australia and Australian embassies, consulates and some shipping which is publicly owned.
The more overseas Australian military involvement, for whatever reasons, will produce refugees which do not like Australia.
Australia should consider rearranging it's United Nations contributions in a way in which the payments are at a far distant future date. Technically that would not be a separation from the UN, but it would significantly reduce Australia's globalist related problems with regards to people not liking the Australian flag.
We need to pull back Australian overseas globalist military and start building up Australia. Let's begin to put Australia first.
Well it seems to me that the problem is not the Australian flag but rather the excessive consumption of alcohol... flag or no flag, confine a large group of inebriated persons in a small area and you are asking for problems.dagwoman said:I don't see why it's that big a deal. If they think it'll reduce violence, being the day before Australia day, where there'll be a large group of drunk people, I think they should do it. People take this crap far too seriously. The obsession with the flag and respecting it so excessively just seems nationalistic to me. It's not like it's an event honouring Australia, where an Australian flag would be relevant. It's a music festival. Lighten up.
The tension is being caused by somebody with a problem to Australia and the Australian flag."... an increased incidence of flags brandished aggressively and this has led to increased tension."
It would be a stretch if such people were referring to the above call. I must admit that I do consider the "Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, Oi, Oi Oi" chant to be mind-numingly dull and somewhat cringeworthy when it's chanted by a group of drunks, but by anti-social I and others are clearly referring to more overt displays that upset and disgust others who are merely out to enjoy the day. Think rampant and invasive chest-beating and beer-swilling if you're stuck and unable to realise what it is that the chardonnay socialists are talking about.banco55 said:I like the emerging consensus that overt displays of patriotism (or nationalism) is somehow anti-social. I mean drunken people calling out "Aussie, oy, oy" might be viewed as boorish or undignified by the chardonnay socialists but to claim that it is "anti-social" is a strecth.
I consider the above to be true. The problem is the excessive consumption of alcohol by anti-social youths, not the flag. However, given the mentality of the mob and that the flag is a both a respected and a readily abused symbol, it's easy to see why the organisers would want to discourage misguided young men from abusing something should stand for much more than a petty need to express just how 'patriotic' such young men happen to be.frog12986 said:Well it seems to me that the problem is not the Australian flag but rather the excessive consumption of alcohol... flag or no flag, confine a large group of inebriated persons in a small area and you are asking for problems.
Yes, but left-wing tendencies have harmed more people. 100 million killed by communism.Dongle said:And in my experience, flags have always been a medium to express arrogance and excessive patriotism instead of all those noble values flag-wearing proponents use as an excuse to justify their right-wing tendencies.