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THIS HATE IS NOT A JOKE, EVEN WHEN THE GUARDIAN MAKES ME LAUGH
The hatred from the Left is just not taken seriously enough. Sure I laughed when a Guardian columnist blamed Trump for making her fatter. But I stopped laughing when a student magazine joked about killing conservative students. My editorial from The Bolt Report.
Fake News from Bolt it seems. Farrago wasn't making reference to kill only conservatives as Andrew Bolt fraudulently tries to make out. In fact in the paragraph below shows more ALP students appeared on that list. Given the numbers Bolt says are on campus hardly any conservatives would be harmed. Is Bolt suggesting they are in fact the majority of students?
Student magazine Farrago published the satirical article, “An Exhaustive List of Whom We Shall Kill on the First Day of the Revolution”. The list includes “The Liberal Party Club”, “The Labor Right Club: they gave us Kevin Rudd”, “The Labor Left Club: they stuffed up so badly Kevin Rudd came back”, and “People who lose 30 Newspolls in a row”.
University of Melbourne acting vice-chancellor Mark Considine said the article should not be taken seriously.
“Without denying the use of inflammatory language — noting the heading is ‘Rant’ — the university also values freedom of expression and actively encourages respect for diversity of opinion,” Professor Considine said.
He said Farrago was an independent publication over which the university had no editorial control.
What would Andrew Bolt know but not tell
Victoria is in the grip of a renewable energy boom, with more wind and solar power in operation or being built than all the state's households would use in a year.
An analysis of all large-scale wind and solar farms across the state has found they will soon have the energy-generating capacity to power more than 2.9 million homes.
The analysis, by advocacy group Environment Victoria, is based on the Australian Energy Market Commission’s estimate that the average Victorian household used 3865 kilowatt-hours of electricity last year.
This would equate to 9663 gigawatt-hours of consumption by 2.5 million homes, significantly less than the 11,394 gigawatt-hours of solar and wind generation in operation and in development.
Environment Victoria chief executive Mark Wakeham said the state was well on the way to powering the equivalent of every home in the state with energy from the wind and sun.
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