Australia Defamation Case Signals a Crackdown on Ordinary Citizens, Critics Say (nytimes.com) 147
Australia's defense minister on Wednesday won a defamation case over a six-word tweet that called him a "rape apologist." From a report: Critics and experts said the court case exemplified the conservative government's heavy-handed approach toward regulating damaging commentary on social media -- what Prime Minister Scott Morrison called "a coward's palace." The case also represented a troubling shift as politicians bring more lawsuits against ordinary citizens, they said. The dispute began when Shane Bazzi, an advocate for refugees who has 13,000 Twitter followers, wrote a Twitter post in February about Peter Dutton, then the country's home affairs minister and now the defense minister.
"Peter Dutton is a rape apologist," the tweet said, and linked to an article about comments Mr. Dutton had made that women seeking asylum in Australia used rape claims as an excuse to enter the country. The post was published on the same day that Mr. Dutton also used the phrase "she said, he said" in reference to explosive accusations by Brittany Higgins, a former government staff member, who said she had been sexually assaulted in Australia's Parliament House. Mr. Dutton began defamation proceedings soon after, saying that the post had "deeply offended" him and had wrongly suggested he condoned and excused rape. Mr Bazzi's blue Twitter check mark, Mr. Dutton also argued, implied recognition by the social media giant and had led the minister to believe that the post was not just the "rant of somebody randomly on Twitter."
"Peter Dutton is a rape apologist," the tweet said, and linked to an article about comments Mr. Dutton had made that women seeking asylum in Australia used rape claims as an excuse to enter the country. The post was published on the same day that Mr. Dutton also used the phrase "she said, he said" in reference to explosive accusations by Brittany Higgins, a former government staff member, who said she had been sexually assaulted in Australia's Parliament House. Mr. Dutton began defamation proceedings soon after, saying that the post had "deeply offended" him and had wrongly suggested he condoned and excused rape. Mr Bazzi's blue Twitter check mark, Mr. Dutton also argued, implied recognition by the social media giant and had led the minister to believe that the post was not just the "rant of somebody randomly on Twitter."
right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:3, Informative)
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https://www.ag.gov.au/rights-and-protections/publications/religious-discrimination-bills-2021
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Just curious, as a non-Australian, are the right-wing nutjobs aware that they're going be passing a law to protect Islam and the rights of Muslims?
(I"m all for that, since they need more protection than other religions in countries like Australia, but I suspect it's not what the people pushing for it intended).
Re:right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately we have dumb people who put themselves in positions where they complain when its their own fault https://www.smh.com.au/nationa... [smh.com.au] residents buy next to amusement park and complain about the noise
Re: right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:2)
You really ought to give punctuation a try.
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You really ought to give punctuation a try.
Why? It's not like what he wrote was particularly long. Is your attention span short? Do you freak out when you see a run on sentence?
I have kept each sentence here intentionally short.
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that does not incite hatred or violence
And we know that saying "gods don't exist" never led to such things as hatred or violence in religious populations....
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the bill as it was intended was to stop the person applying and getting a job in for example a religious school (Catholic, Anglican, Muslim etc) and then complaining that the schools teachings conflict with there own values and then causing the school pain
Does it stop a religious person (Catholic, Anglican, Muslim etc) from applying and getting a job in for example an atheist school and then complaining that the schools teachings (for example, evolution) conflict with there own values and then causing the school pain?
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No, that's already legally covered.
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That would make sense if it were say an atheist school founded on atheist beliefs. The legislation might even be broad enough to cover that, but it definitely doesn't cover firing anyone in any job for their religious beliefs.
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I though that "unable to think clearly" was the first requirement to join a church.
Interestingly, there's evidence to back this up. Training to be a priest involves a lot of training in textual analysis & logical & critical thinking. As a result, there's a surprisingly high percentage of atheist priests who've thought it through & decided that theism isn't rational but have already committed to that life & feel it's too late to back out. If anyone remembers the Irish comedy series, Father Ted, atheist priests & priests questioning the existence of god was a running gag
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'Murica's a Christian country. Soon to be a theocracy.
Blessed be the fruit.
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So proclaim yourself a Pastafarian and demand everyone has to respect you wearing a colander as a hat, and talking like a pirate.
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Ignore it. It's all pointless noise that if anyone is actually stupid to pass it will be knocked down instantly as a breach of article 116 of the Australian Constitution.
The government can't legislate away secular society without winning a supermajority in a referendum.
Re: right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:2)
Yeah ScumMo is as he is. It continues a long tradition that includes John Howard's mateship with a leader of the Exclusive Brethren and goes all the way back to B A Santamaria. But who is standing up for the Atheist? The ALP are shit scared of opposing this. The media fail to even call it controversial let alone present any opposing views.
Re: right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:2)
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Serious question. If right wing is authoritarian and left wing is big government, what is someone who believes that government should be significant smaller and interfere far less in our lives? Libertarians are right-wing, yes?
Serious answer - people who claim to be in favor of making government so small you can drown it in a bathtub (Grover Norquist) are of three types. One is the anarchist, another is the person who pretends to be in favor of small guvmint, but just wants different government rules, and the third are those who want the smallest form of guvmint possible - one person sets the rules, aka dictatorship.
Re: right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:2)
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Neither of those represent my views. I want a government that administers justice for crime, mediates disputes, and provides a national defense. I do not agree with it interfering anything else, either taxing for it, nor regulating it
Problem with that, is that a government that provides only courts, and defense, and nothing else along with no regulations is going to be a pretty grim place.
As an exercise in thought, describe your highway system, where no area ncoordinates with any other, and there are no regulations. Each governeing entity from local to state sets their own standards, and no standards ar eallowed - Standards re regulations, and regulations are not allowed.
Now physicians. there is no more regulated group than people
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Is truth still a defense in defamation cases? In that case he should have just tweeted "Dutton is a second-rate right-wing asshole" and he would have got away with it.
Unless they prosecute him for revealing state secrets, although I don't think that really counts as a secret to most Australians.
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Actually, being a Satanist would actually be a form of theism not atheism.
Atheists don't believe in any form of higher being whether it represent good ("God") or evil (Satan).
Re: right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:2)
Re: right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:2)
Re: right wing nutjobs rule Australia (Score:2)
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Most of 'em don't, they're only in it for the hedonism.
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Members of the Church of Satan do not believe in Satan or any other higher being.
They mostly exploit that religious exception loop hole, by having a humanitarian philosophy and dogma without an actual deity. Instead the individual itself is seen as the most sacred of beings. Hence they can be seen as atheist, while some of them identify even as anti-theistic (taking more strongly after Ayn Rand), I think.
They are atheists, though of course not all atheists
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It actually depends on the brand of 'Satanism'. Members of the Church of Satan do not believe in Satan or any other higher being. They mostly exploit that religious exception loop hole, by having a humanitarian philosophy and dogma without an actual deity. Instead the individual itself is seen as the most sacred of beings. Hence they can be seen as atheist, while some of them identify even as anti-theistic (taking more strongly after Ayn Rand), I think.
I much prefer the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Have you been touched by his noodly appendages? A religion as valid as any, and I am looking forward to my pirate reward of fresh beer volcanos and fine strippers. R'amen.
huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Dutton is a vile piece of shit, but in this case I think the judge made the correct decision relevant to the defamation. $35k seems like way too much, though.
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But his lies did not meet the threshold for him being rape apologist, that is all.
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Defamation generally has to be specific, I can't be held accountable for saying "slashdot posters don't read articles", but might if I claim specifically "t.raegan didn't read this article".
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Defamation generally has to be specific, I can't be held accountable for saying "slashdot posters don't read articles", but might if I claim specifically "t.raegan didn't read this article".
So you could say that anyone who was in the QLD police at the time of the Pinkenba six has serious questions to answer about racism, but you couldn't say Peter Dutton is a racist.
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https://www.betootaadvocate.co... [betootaadvocate.com]
In 1994, three Murri boys, aged 12, 13, and 14, were ordered into paddy wagons by six of Dutton’s police colleagues in Fortitude Valley. Each boy was driven in a separate patrol car to a swampy area in Queensland’s bayside. The officers threatened to throw the boys into the swampy wasteland, and threatened to cut their fingers off. before being abandoned after their shoes were taken from them. The boys later retrieved their shoes and began to walk home. They fini
Re: huh? (Score:2)
No no no.
You can, and have the freedom to say "Peter Dutton is a $DEFAMATORY_THING"
Whether you should, or shouldn't depends on how confident you are about avoiding the consequences of that speech.
That said, there was, at one point, precedent that you cannot defame an elected official. Or at least I'm sure a lawyer once told me there was. So how can an elected official susue for defamation?
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Australia's defamation laws changed several years ago, now truth is a defence, amongst other changes, I understand.
This 'elected official' issue may have been one of the changes as well?
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Do facts exist?
Peter Dutton is a politician. That's the first and last fact relevant on the topic of truth :-)
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Well, they are also free to sue him for defamation. In the suit he brought, the defendant was apparently unable to prove that the guy's statement was false and knowingly so, so the prospects of winning the other suit seem slight.
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So he's rape-neutral then.
"If you are neutral in situations of [rape], you have chosen the side of the [rapist]." --Desmond Tutu
Re:huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Desmond Tutu's comment is just another in a long, long line of false dilemmas from idealogues. I don't care how influential he is, it's horseshit to split the world into two camps on any subject.
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I see you're not in the "I believe you can split the world in two" camp, as opposed to the other camp that believes you can.
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You should read the actual legal decision. Setting the current charged issue aside, it may correct some misconceptions you have about defamation and libel, at least in Australia. Whether or not his reputation was harmed wasn't in dispute and was barely even a factor.
The dispute was whether the tweet conveyed defamatory meaning beyond anything actually said in the article. To your analogy about prisoners, it would be more like if someone said they only stole the car keys, and someone tweeted they were flat e
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I hate replying to myself, but I don't like the way I tried to tie it to the car thief analogy.
It's more like if I said "The car thief is a violent monster."
and they said "literally no one got hurt, I just stole something when no people were around, you can't call me violent with a link to an article about a non-violent crime"
and then my defense was "well I just meant they were you know, generally bad, people should know what I meant"
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Extrapolating from one woman to women in general is something HE invented.
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In civilized countries stating the truth is a defense against defamation suits. And Peter Dutton was and is a rape apologist, as you should be able to tell directly from his own statements.
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Truth is not an automatic defence in commonwealth countries. If you maliciously spread the truth to cause disproprotionate reputational damage, you are liable for libel (e.g. hiring a PR company to nationally spread the news that some kid in your class you don't like picks his nose).
In this case, as a high-profile politician, spreading the (let's assume) truth that Dutton believes rape is acceptable moral behaviour would not be disproportionate. You seem to think his statements suggest that's his belief, I
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Yeah, as I said civilized countries doesn't do that. The UK (and apparently Australia), has weirdo libel laws meant to empower the already powerful and make it easier to crack down on people "smearing" them by telling the truth about what they actually do and are.
I don't think. It is his own statements. He is a rape apologist, somebody apologizing for rape, and defending sexual assault. It isn't this one thing, he does it regularly, it is a pattern of behavior, which is why using the term for him is an appr
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You seem to disagree with everyone in the courtroom, including the defendant. The Tweet said;
Dutton is a rape apologist
The proceedings revolved around whether the Tweet meant
The applicant condones rape
The defendant claimed
1. The Tweet does not imply Dutton condones rape
2. It would be defamatory if the Tweet implied that
3. Dutton's original statements did not imply he condones rape
Ultimately the court found the Tweet did have that implication. Perhaps you could argue the defendant is only admitting the t
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There was Andrew Laming [canberratimes.com.au]
There was Christian Porter [theguardian.com] (backed by shadowy money).
There was this case.
So it does seem very much a "Government" tactic, in the sense that it is seems to be being pursued by members of the governing party.
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And Sarah Hanson-Young (Greens senator, anti-government) sued and rightfully won a defamation case also.
Say stupid things, loose stupid money, whatever side of politics the defamed is on.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/20... [abc.net.au]
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SHY sued a fellow politician, not a constituent.
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There is a huge power imbalance. It's not a new situation - it's part of the legal system we inherited from England via colonisation.
Former prime minister Bob Hawke was famous for the number of defamation actions he brought when he was in politics.
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I've met Dutton twice and found him intelligent and reasonable, unlike Garth Evans whom I also talked to in private and found very wanting.
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Gareth?
Possibly because Gareth Evans is 26 years his senior and been out of politics longer than Dutton's been elected. Evans was well establish in politics before Dutton was born. They are of different generations and by all measures Gareth Evans career and accomplishments and reputation as a statesman, dwarfs Dutton.
Dutton's is easily characterised as cold, cruel and heartless, making regular despairing comments about asylum seekers and is why is widely despised outside his QLD electorate. Of late he's be
Blue checkmarks (Score:3, Insightful)
Mr Bazzi's blue Twitter check mark, Mr. Dutton also argued, implied recognition by the social media giant and had led the minister to believe that the post was not just the "rant of somebody randomly on Twitter."
I always considered that the "blue checkmarks" really meant @jack shit, given the many assholes on Twitter with those marks; now it seems like they might actually be more for a liability than anything.
A good start (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A good start (Score:5, Informative)
Way too much is tolerated because it's done online. People threaten others with death or rape. They dox other people. They make unfounded accusations. Then they get away with it. It's got to stop. I support your freedom to say your opinion, even opinions I detest, but don't threaten people, and if you want to defame someone, you'd better be able to provide evidence of that in court, because that's against the law.
Afaik here was no such threats involved here. Skimming thru the judgement it seems like the defendant lost the case because there was some confusion what he actually meant by "rape apologist" and he denied that he believed the plaintiff excuses rape, so the opinion defense went out the window and the judge was annoyed that he didn't testify. https://www.judgments.fedcourt... [fedcourt.gov.au]
Conclusion
239 In summary, for the reasons set out above, I have found that the Tweet did convey the imputation that Mr Dutton excuses rape; that this was defamatory of Mr Dutton; that Mr Bazzi has not established the statutory defence of honest opinion or the common law defence of fair comment on a matter of public interest; that judgment should be entered for Mr Dutton in the sum of $35,000; and that Mr Dutton’s claim for injunctions should be refused.
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Would be keen to hear others thoughts on how we might start to label this behaviour.
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I like 'neopuritanism'.
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Yeah, it'll turn into a circlejerk for the people in charge. Great for civility, until the people in charge become uncivil themselves but there's nobody daring to speak out against them.
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In a civil suit in the US, and probably in Oz as well, it's preponderance of evidence. There is no presumption of "guilt" or "innocent," and the trial isn't even about guilt or innocence, it's about liability for a tort.
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If you want to accuse someone of defamation you need to be able to prove it otherwise you have committed defamation!
So it's defamation all the way down...
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I would point out, however, that in the US, if the plaintiff is a "public figure," he has to prove actual malice as well, which is a very high bar. That high bar is currently controversial. In other countries like the UK, they don't have that criterion. The suit at issue here probably would have failed in the US.
Thanks (Score:4, Insightful)
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Link to the judgment https://www.judgments.fedcourt... [fedcourt.gov.au]
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Thanks Slashdot, for linking to a paywalled article. Again.
Not just a paywalled article. a New York Times article. Australia is a country of 26million people. They have news outlets too. Fuck whoever constantly posts this NYT paywalled shit. At least you could be partially forgiven if it were the Sydney Morning Herald.
But Yanks do this all the time (Score:2)
what crackdown? (Score:4, Insightful)
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While it may not be leveraging the executive powers of the state, there still seems to be a power imbalance (not least because Parliamentary Privil
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There is also John Barilaro (NSW Deputy Premier) suing YouTuber FriendlyJordies for defamation and hiding behind Parliamentary privilege.
https://www.theguardian.com/au... [theguardian.com]
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Politicians have legal immunity against defamation actions for statements that they make in parliament due to parliamentary privilege.
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Read the article; ScoMo echoed the same “I’ll have to start suing people for defamation” that Dutton said before filing a suit. It does have a chilling effect to it.
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A chilling effect on what? Defamation and slander?
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calling out cunts for being cunts.
i.e. the very thing that makes Australians Australian.
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What chilling about defending your character against malicious claims.
If I called you six time kiddie fiddler to my social media group of millions, why wouldn't you have the right to defend your character.
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Well agenda, narrative etc (Score:2)
"On the internet" = IRL (Score:3)
I must be a rape apologist (Score:2)
I think that an 80 year old man who pinches a waitress' rear end shouldn't be given a prison sentence.
To the stocks with me! I'm a rape apologist.
The circumstances might not be comparable, but the idea holds.
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but the idea holds.
Yeah, the idea holds. You excuse sexual harassment. Only your opinion matters, not the opinion of either people involved, just yours, the guy neither doing the harassment or the one being harassed.
Question. Are you a piece of shit in real life, or only when you hide behind a pseudonym on the internet?
Shit Article (Score:2)
Yet another utterly shit article on Slashdot.
Someone said something on Twitter.
Someone got offended and went to court.
1st Someone found to have libelled
2nd Someone collects costs
Hardly world shattering is it ?
If it was Albanese, the Labour Leader, involved I can guarantee you 100% this article would not be here despite him having the same right to sue.
For the Yanks : Australia does not have free speech laws. You can sue for Libel and Defamation.
Stop it (Score:2)
Also stop linking to fucking paywall articles
No. Wrong. (Score:2)
Anti-defamation case signals prosecution of a defamation.
There, FTFY.
Some noisemaker crossed the line on Twitter and has to pay the consequences.
No news here.
Of course (Score:2)
There are many ways of disagreeing with a person without calling them someone that excuses and therefore likely supports rape. I'm pretty certain that he does not support rape.
Maybe write an opinion piece, maybe noting that you believe he was being very insensitive. Going for the nuclear option sometimes nukes the nuker.
And as always, Twitter is one of the most ridiculous yet effective ways for a person to destroy themselves. As well, it is an
Australia is the Elite's wet dream.. (Score:2)
a national surveillance network.
whistleblowing illegal.
revealing government crimes illegal.
use of the diebold voting machines that were proven rigged.
the main difference between Australia and the US is that there's actually a political party not being run by the Elites that can get voted in IF they exceed the margin of rigging.
Non-Paywalled Version (Score:2)
https://www.straitstimes.com/a... [straitstimes.com]
Apparently this is not uncommon in Australia, and multiple people have been either forced to settle or sued.
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The above statement seems like it isn't fake news, and is also something most people might agree with. Today the internet surprised me.
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But he says he's sorry. So I guess he IS a rape apologist.
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dude - in Australia the 'Liberals' are completely opposite of what you think they are in North America - you'd call them right wing republitards.
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but.. but.. they have brown skin.. that proves their Muslims!!!1!!
*sigh*
You have to wonder how much of the posting here on slashdot are people being employed to be shitbirds, or just plain morons. considering that slashdot is not covering the kind of things morons are interested in, i bet shitbirds.