Senate debates
Tuesday, 8 October 2024
Statements by Senators
Freedom of Speech
1:51 pm
Malcolm Roberts (Queensland, Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
In the last three weeks the Prime Minister has been subjected to five community notes on X, formerly Twitter. The X community has called out Prime Minister Albanese five times for spreading misinformation. We know this because Elon Musk's system of community notes allows the public to moderate each other and agree among them what's true and what's not. I can see why disgruntled former Twitter executive and e-safety commissar Julie Inman Grant detests X and detests Elon Musk. As the infamous Hillary Clinton admitted last week in a CNN interview, social media platforms like X need to censor content because, if they don't, 'we lost total control'—her words. Maintaining total control is the purpose of the United Nations pact for the future, which is really a pact for their future, not ours. Hillary Clinton's unusual honesty exposed the real motivation for introducing the m-a-d—mad—bill: misinformation and disinformation.
Control means censoring the truth. There's no better evidence of this than the treatment dealt to two of the world's most respected medical professionals. I proudly welcome in the gallery one of the UK's leading oncologists, Professor Angus Dalgleish, from St. George's, University of London, and Dr Paul Marik, a leading American physician persecuted for challenging the pharmaceutical corporate narrative. Both these amazing medical professionals are on an Australian speaking tour with the Australian Medical Professionals' Society, a union One Nation proudly and strongly supports. Its highly qualified and respected health professionals, like our guests in the gallery, have suffered the consequences of the war on truth that drives the Liberal-Labor uniparty's misinformation and disinformation bill, appropriately abbreviated to m-a-d—mad. I urge everyone to come along and listen to the real COVID story, not the government's lie, while we still can and to join us in our ongoing, four-year campaign to protect free speech.