New Australian book on marriage hits censorship roadblock
Why are gay marriage supporters afraid to debate?
One of today’s Australian headlines is “We can already see how a ‘debate’ about love will lead to violence and hate”. The article was written after a bomb threat to an LGBT FM station in Melbourne by a strong supporter of same-sex marriage and vehement opponent of a plebiscite.
However, there may a grain of truth in her prediction, judging from the way doctor, activist and author David van Gend has been treated.
Dr van Gend, a general practitioner from Toowoomba, is the author of the just-published bookStealing from a Child: the Injustice of 'Marriage Equality'. He makes a strong case for traditional marriage, attacks the “genderless agenda” and critiques the push for gay marriage. He describes it as "a manifesto in defense of society's inviolable foundation: Father, Mother, Child".
I read an advance copy. Van Gend has firm ideas, but expresses them respectfully and insults no one.
So he was quite surprised when the printer contacted the publisher, Connor Court Press, on the evening before the book was launched to announce that the company would not fill the order. "Due to the subject matter and content of your book, unfortunately I have been instructed by senior management not to proceed with printing this title," the publisher was told.
If Connor Court had not had been prudent enough to run off a couple of thousand digital copies, the carefully planned book launch would have collapsed. "This was a shock,” says Dr Van Gend, “because you don't expect a printing firm to act as a political censor for the gay lobby.”
But this was act of sabotage number 3 for Van Gend.
Act of sabotage number 2 took place last week when Mercure International Hotel in Sydney cancelled the venue for a gathering of groups opposing same-sex 'marriage', after gay activists threatened hotel staff. According to The Weekend Australian the hotel received threats of physical harm. This was backed up by a coordinated social media campaign -- unlike the bomb threat.
Act of sabotage number 1 took place last year when a television advertisement around the time of Sydney’s Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras banned at the last minute by the SBS network.
So, yes, some people in the community have become heated enough to threaten violence, impose financial intimidation and censor the free flow of ideas. But, by and large, it is not going to be supporters of traditional marriage. It will be the LGBT thought police. In fact, they have already started.
"We are meant to be an open society where great issues are debated freely. What's the difference between burning books and banning them being printed?” asks Van Gend.
Michael Cook is editor of MercatorNet.
Long before same-sex marriage was topical, same-sex schooling was heatedly debated -- or as it is usually termed, single-sex schooling. The debate over whether boys do better in all-boys schools and girls do better in all-girls schools continues, though more vigorously in Australia and the UK than in the US, where single-sex schools are uncommon. An American expert who has spent her whole career fighting single-sex schools spoke recently in Melbourne. She presented data purporting to show that perceived advantages are "trivial and, in many cases, non-existent".
Dr Andrew Mullins, a former headmaster of two schools in Sydney, contends that this is quite wrong. He says, "There is absolutely no consensus that a child, because he or she is educated in a single-sex school, is disadvantaged, and there is plenty of evidence to the contrary." It's a fascinating read.
Michael Cook
Editor
MERCATORNET
New Australian book on marriage hits censorship roadblock By Michael Cook Why are gay marriage supporters afraid to debate? Read the full article |
How kids can benefit from boredom By Teresa Belton TV, the internet and smartphone can stifle imagination Read the full article |
The real issue behind the single-sex education debate By Andrew Mullins There is no consensus that children are disadvantaged by studying in a single-sex school Read the full article |
Why your kids shouldn’t be your friends By Tamara El-Rahi Because you love them and want the best for them. Read the full article |
The declining institution of marriage in China By Marcus Roberts Further signs that China's longterm population prospects are not rosy. Read the full article |
Young adult novel meets social agenda By Jennifer Minicus Teens deserve better than what this book has to offer. Read the full article |
Hubris and hype in stem cell research By Philippa Taylor The recent news about 'motherless babies' was gobbled up by gullible media Read the full article |
The toxic fumes of democracy By Michael Cook Heated debate and stable democracy go hand in hand, even with same-sex marriage Read the full article |
Regensburg, Ratzinger, and our crisis of reason By Samuel Gregg Defending reason from fideism and 'feelings'. Read the full article |
The spy in your pocket By Michael Cook A philosopher describes how our privacy is threatened by the continuing encroachment of technology. Read the full article |
Pay no attention to the man behind the algorithm By Heather Zeiger Our digital gatekeepers fall short of their own hype. Read the full article |
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MercatorNet: New Australian book on marriage hits censorship roadblock
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