A HEART committed to justice beats strongly at the
Billabong, where all sorts of toxic “isms” can get a Bunyip riled.
Discrimination against mythical creatures tops the list, of course, but a close
second is speciesism, which imagines some lifeforms innately superior to all
others.
Take horses, for example, which
are intelligent , noble and loving animals, yet their dignity is compromised
every day by the exploitive compulsion of imperialistic humanity to ride
about on their backs. Once, before the world bore the tracks of mankind’s
jackboots, horses roamed at will and exercised their equine right to
self-determination. No longer. Tormented by the whips of bipedal oppressors,
lacerated with spurs of hegemonic subjugation and confined for generations in squalid camps
known as “stables”, horses have been disenfranchised, robbed of their
birthright to roam freely o’er the grassy plains and seen the blood of martyred
mobs poured into human food products.
It has gone on long enough!
So, comrades, a call to action and an invitation to join the
Professor’s brand new, grassroots movement, Banish Dobbin’s Shame – BDS for short. Campaigners against equine
injustice will be kicking off the crusade
any day now with a protest outside the Macclesfield Adult Pony
Club, which may sound kinky to some, but is no more than your usual collection
of bankers, media manipulators and scheming horse oppressors. The goal
will be to stop supporters of equine injustice getting into their clubhouse,
scare off their sympathisers, annoy the club’s neighbours and have an awful lot
of self-righteous fun with chants and shouted slogans.
Mr Garnett said while privately owned, QV was a public space and the protesters had a right to exercise their freedom of speech. Mr Garnett said there was no evidence the accused heard requests by QV management and police to leave."They entered for the purpose of conducting a political demonstration. They had a lawful right to enter QV Square," he said."It cannot be said it was the actions of the protesters that caused any obstruction, hindering or impediment to members of the public."They did not surround the premises with hostile intent or demeanour."
Magistrate Garnett, a workers comp specialist and keen student of ambulances' rear perspective before elevated to
the bench in 2006 by then-Attorney General Rob Hulls, will find himself
personally inconvenienced when he arrives to sling a saddle on his steed, but
fear not! As his Max Brenner ruling demonstrates, he recognises the right to protest, to ruin
others’ fun or businesses, is sacrosanct.
Sacrosanct, that is, until Tame Ted Baillieu, or whoever
replaces Victoria’s Premier, gets around to putting some fresh bottoms on the bench.