lowing wrote:
THis is what the judge said:
"Federal court justice Mordy Bromberg ruled that fair-skinned Aborigines were likely to have been "offended, insulted, humiliated or intimidated by the imputations" " he didn't say it was a lie.
Bromberg ruled out Bolt and his publisher's defence under a clause of the Racial Discrimination Act that exempts "fair comment" because the articles "contained errors of fact, distortions of the truth and inflammatory and provocative language".
This is what he used to uphold it: blanket coverage. If the article had errors, distortions, inflammatory, or provocative language. What was it? There certainly was no language in it that was inflammatory or provocative. Unless you are counting the fact that he called them out as such. What were errors or the distortions? You would think that would something Bolt was called out on, yet we do not read what they were.
I've tried to make this simplier and just highlight it for you...
If you'd like, you can read the judgement here
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/ … /1103.htmlAndrew Bolt imputed that some people are too fair-skinned to be genuine Aboriginal people, that those people choose to falsely identify as Aboriginal for personal gain. Those were the untruths that Bolt was unable to provide ANY evidence for. He even stated in court his research was simply based on google searches. No interviews with anyone involved at all.
Again and again, his Honour found that Bolt’s articles contained falsehoods or significant omissions:
“The facts in question have not been proven to be true. To the contrary, in relation to most of the individuals concerned,
the facts asserted in the Newspaper articles that the people dealt with chose to identify as Aboriginal have been substantially proven to be untrue. … Some of the facts relied upon as the basis of the comments made about motivation
have been proven to be untrue. … Each of these
assertions was erroneous. Mr Bolt accepted that they were wrong because they were exaggerated. … The comment is unsupported by any factual basis and is erroneous. … That statement is untrue. … The omission occurred in circumstances were the facts were likely to be either publicly available or readily obtainable, including by Mr Bolt contacting the individuals concerned. Mr Bolt presented evidence of having undertaken some online research about the individuals, but it was not evidence upon which I could be satisfied that a diligent attempt had been made to make reasonable enquiries. … Mr Bolt disingenuously explained the omission as due to a lack of space. …
The facts given by Mr Bolt and the comment made upon them are grossly incorrect.“
As his Honour explained at [386], “[t]he lack of truth in conduct which contravenes 18C, seems to me to have an obvious bearing on whether the conduct should be exempted from unlawfulness by s 18D.”