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Climate madness: Australian Human Rights Commission demands that speech about climate change be censored

The Australian Human Rights Commission (“AHRC”) has recently submitted to a Senate inquiry that regulation is necessary to stop “misinformation” and “false narratives” about climate change. The AHRC wants to prevent the spread of climate-re

Climate madness: Australian Human Rights Commission demands that speech about climate change be censored

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The Australian Human Rights Commission (“AHRC”) has recently submitted to a Senate inquiry that regulation is necessary to stop “misinformation” and “false narratives” about climate change.

The AHRC wants to prevent the spread of climate-related “misinformation,” citing the need to protect the human right to a healthy environment.  This will lead to censorship of legitimate debate and views that do not align with the official narrative, and the removal of a fundamental human right – free speech.

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Aussie Human Rights Commission Demands Climate Censorship

By Eric Worrall

A Senate inquiry run by the Greens is receiving lots of demands for censorship of climate sceptics. But the Australian Human Rights Commission (“AHRC”) submission really stands out.

The powerful Australian Human Rights Commission is the latest in a long list of climate change preachers that believe you and I are too stupid to figure out what misinformation is, writes James Bolt.

From the Human Rights Commission Senate inquiry submission:

  1. The Commission makes the following recommendations
  2. The Australian Government support independent research into the prevalence and impact of climate-related misinformation and disinformation, with a focus on human rights implications.
  3. The Australian Government’s response to misinformation and disinformation be grounded in human rights law – with sufficient protections for freedom of expression.
  4. The Australian Government strengthen transparency requirements for digital platforms, including improved access to data on the prevalence and impact of misinformation and disinformation.
  5. The Australian Government increase investment in targeted digital literacy programs, with a particular focus on helping individuals critically assess online information, understand algorithmic content curation, and identify misinformation and disinformation.
  6. The Australian Government legislate an AI Act.

The problem is that they start from the position that anyone who disagrees with alarmist positions is a suspicious actor. Consider the following from the same submission (emphasis added):

How crazy is it to suggest that anyone who casts doubt on the alleged connection between bushfires and climate change is a suspicious actor, who must be excluded from public discourse? Most past bushfire inquiries in Australia highlighted the lack of burn-offs as a major factor driving the intensity of Aussie bushfires, so it is entirely reasonable to doubt that climate change is suddenly the most important factor, or even a significant factor. But if the Human Rights Commission has its way, anyone who raises this issue could end up being censored or even imprisoned for casting doubt on the alleged link between bushfires and climate change.

Related: Are Australia Bushfires Worsening from Human-Caused Climate Change? Watts Up With That, 9 January 2020

The full list of Senate submissions is available here. The inquiry home page is here.

Our old friend Peter Ridd has also done a deep dive into the climate integrity inquiry, which is well worth watching.

If the video above is removed from YouTube, you can watch it on Rumble HERE.

You may recall Ridd recently encountered the ugly face of Australian censorship first-hand when he got fired from his university tenure for daring to assume that, as a university academic, he enjoyed academic freedom.

Related: University Appeal Upheld, Peter Ridd Loses – We all Lose, Watts Up With That, 23 July 2020

The Aussie human rights commission obviously hasn’t learned the lesson of the covid censorship debacle.

We’ve already been through this censorship merry-go-round during the covid lockdown and seen how damaging it was. Remember when Facebook was censoring anyone who suggested covid leaked from a lab? Then, when Fauci suggested it was a possibility, Facebook suddenly decided lab leak theories were no longer “disinformation” and allowed people to discuss lab leak theories. Censorship protects groupthink and the mistakes which arise from that groupthink – and sometimes those mistakes matter.

Related: Facebook: People Are Now Permitted to Speculate Covid-19 Leaked from a Laboratory, Watts Up With That, 27 May 2021

I don’t know if covid leaked from a lab – though I believe this is the most likely explanation – but people should not have been prevented from discussing the possibility.

On this occasion, knowing the origin of covid didn’t affect health outcomes for people, and there is no chance China will be made to pay reparations for their carelessness in the foreseeable future, but this Facebook debacle should be proof of how damaging censorship can be. Denying people access to good information because of prejudice forces people to act on bad information, which can lead to worse outcomes.

We’ve also seen plenty of evidence that Australia’s scientific institutions are far from perfect.

Who can forget Barry Marshall, the doctor who discovered that ulcers are actually a bacterial infection? Marshall got so desperate to get people to pay attention to his research that in the end, he infected himself to prove he was right. Imagine if the Human Rights Commission had ruled Barry’s outlandish ulcer theory was misinformation and tried to silence him? Millions who have been cured of a horrible, debilitating condition would instead still be suffering, or prematurely dead, from an entirely treatable condition.

Science advances when old theories are falsified as wrong or incomplete.Building walls of censorship to protect senior scientists from the embarrassment of criticism or falsification will retard the advance of science – and the realisation of better outcomes for everyone.

My poor Australia may be in for a very rough ride when past mistakes are ignored, and even the Human Rights Commission wants to clamp down on human rights. Let us hope there is an outbreak of sanity before life in Australia gets any worse.

About the Author

Eric Worral is a Product Manager with a passion for technology

Featured image taken from ‘Everything you need to know about Australia’s 2035 climate target’, Climate Action, 18 September 2025

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