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Draft
Submission to:
Office of Film and Literature Classification
(OFLC) Guidelines for the Classification
of Films and Videotapes

by
Jack Sonnemann,
Australian Federation for the Family
29 November 1995
SUFFER
THE LITTLE CHILDREN
It
has been correctly stated that a democracy
is only as good as the level of mutual respect
and love between men and women who produce,
care for and protect children who then are
able to develop as responsible, self-governing
citizens. In this important regard, Australian
children are not given much of a chance.
The level of protection afforded to the
children of Australia from material of a
sexual and violent nature is simply not
good enough.
We
have parliamentary "leaders" who legislate
to allow our daughters to become whores.
Our 16 year olds (year 10 schoolgirls) are
legally allowed to be stripped naked by
the pornography professionals and photographed
spread-eagled as porno centrefolds. Because
the OFLC refuses to place these magazines
in a "ADULT ONLY" category, Australian children
of ALL ages have legal, unrestricted access
to offensive pornographic magazines such
as Playboy, Penthouse, Picture and People.
OFLC
Information Bulletin number 7 states that,
"Our right to see what we please cannot
be allowed to infringe the rights of others.
Children and young people, in particular,
must be adequately protected from material
likely to harm or disturb them, and people
who may be offended by certain material
have a right to expect that it will not
be thrust upon them against their will or
without warning." It should be pointed out
that in a civilised society, persons should
not have offensive material thrust upon
them at all. Imagine graphic posters of
Nazi death camp guards torturing and sexually
molesting Jewish schoolgirls being thrust
upon shoppers and pedestrians in predominantly
Jewish areas, even with a warning.
Australia's
regulatory agencies have failed miserably
according to the OFLC existing guidelines.
Christians, Jews, Hindus, Moslems and even
those of no religious faith who find public
nudity objectionable must endure prominent
displays of young women, and increasingly
young men, in various stages of undress
and in obscene poses on the covers of the
smut magazines on open display in virtually
each and every petrol station, newsagent
and corner shop in this nation.
The
important fact that Canberra is the video
porn capital of Australia and also the rape
capital of Australia seems to have escaped
media notice
.
Inspector Sprague, head of the Spectrum
Task Force set up to deal with the "Mr Cruel"
schoolgirl abductions and death in Melbourne,
has this to say, "I'm convinced - and the
experts will say I'm wrong - there's a strong
link between pornography and the amount
of sex crimes we get." The so-called "experts"
we have listened to in the past have not
had the right answers. Clearly something
different must be done.
The
OFLC has been entrusted with the task of
protecting children. They have not done
a very good job and must recognise their
'duty', which means a moral obligation to
do what is right, to better protect (censor)
children from material that has been proven
to cause harm. Professor Riaz Hassan from
Flinders University says that youth suicide
in Australia has risen five-fold since 1900
and is now the biggest killer of 15 to 19
year olds. Prof. Hassan points out that
suicide used to be a problem of old age,
"But since the 1960's it is the very young...
who are most at risk." For every suicide
in Australia - an average of 2300 each year
- another 30 have attempted suicide and
failed according to Hassan's research.
The
significance of what people see influencing
their behaviour is no longer arguable. A
rocket scientist you do not have to be.
The
United States Senate received testimony
from the American Psychological Association
documenting the link between screen violence
and aggression. George Comstock and H. Paik
were cited for their meta-analisys of 200
studies looking at the relationship between
violent programming and aggressive behaviour
in 1993. Visual imagery has been proven
to have a significant impact on behaviour.
Comstock and Paik also presented a report
to the National Research Council for the
Panel on the Understanding and Control of
Violent Behaviour in Syracuse, New York.
They stated that aggressive behaviour including
"criminal activity" was significantly associated
with viewing violent programming.
The
Wall Street Journal quotes Dr. Victor Cline
on the link between media violence and aggression.
He says that the literature concerning the
link between violence in the media and aggression
"is rather impressive in its consistency
in suggesting a variety of harms or possibility
of antisocial outcomes to this material.
This should not be surprising after 40 years
of research on film and TV violence arriving
essentially at the same conclusion."
The
past President of the American Psychiatric
Association (APA), Dr. Brandon S. Centerwall,
in an address to the annual APA convention
in 1993 stated that "fully 50% of all crime
and violence in society today can be blamed
on television and film violence."
Centerwall
writes in the American Journal of Epidemiology
and warns that, "The rigourous techniques
of epidemiology are too seldom brought to
bear on mass media effects." He conducted
a cross cultural evaluation of media as
a causal factor in homicide and other aggression
from the United States, Canada and South
Africa, pre and post television. He found
"that exposure to television violence is
etiologically linked to aggression" in the
same way that exposure to pornography is
linked to rape. Pornographic and violent
imagery are categorised by the brain in
exactly the same way.
Dr.
Centerwall studied an extremely unique situation
involving a remote Canadian town and the
impact the introduction of television had
upon its children. Called "Notel" by the
researchers (for no television), the town
was studied using double blind design to
compare 1st and 2nd grade students in "Notel"
with students in two communities which already
had television. Rates of physical aggression
(hitting, biting and shoving) did not significantly
change in the communities that already had
TV, but "Notel" children increased their
aggressive activity by 160% in two years.
This
remarkable study, with its understandable
findings, will come as no surprise to any
schoolteacher or child-carer in Australia.
These professionals can all readily attest
to the "copy cat" aggressive behaviour of
small Aussie children after the introduction
of children's TV shows such as "Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles" or "Mighty Morphin
Power Rangers". Now we have adult versions
of these types of shows, such as "Gladiators",
which would seem to be aimed at a somewhat
older (at least chronologically) age group.
Some
of the most telling research on the effects
of TV violence and adolescent behaviour
has been conducted over the last 30 years
by University of Illinois psychologists
Leonard Eron and Rowell Huesmann. The New
York Academy of Sciences published some
of their research which proved that "continued
viewing of television violence by children
can have a lasting effect on their character
and personality. leading to serious criminal
behaviour and antisocial violence of all
types."
Eron
and Huesmann document the fact that "the
single best predictor we have as to how
aggressive a young person would be at age
19 is the violence of the television programmes
he preferred when he was eight years old."
In
his opening address to the Symposium on
Media Violence and Pornography in Toronto
Canada, University of Pennsylvania's Dr.
George Gerbner stated that the more time
a child spends in the television world,
the more he or she tends to give a distorted
"television answer" in response to questions
about real-life situations. By bombarding
viewers with images of mistrust, apprehension,
sexual promiscuity and danger, the broadcasting
industry has tended to cultivate in many
viewers an exaggerated sense of the world
as a more dangerous and sexually permissive
place in which to live. Young people especially
are more vulnerable to this sensory suggestibility.
Author
David Pearl illustrates the powerful impact
of this "television answer" in his "The
Social Impact of Television Violence". He
writes, "Adolescents in Vancouver were asked
about police behaviour. They were divided
into heavy, medium and light viewers of
television. The adolescents studied were
asked how violent the police were in Vancouver.
The Vancouver Police department, parenthetically,
is one of the least violent in the world
and did not fire a single shot at, much
less wound or kill anyone during the time
period. The heaviest adolescent viewers
reported the Vancouver Police to have killed
and wounded numerous people, innocent bystanders
as well as criminals." This study gives
us a powerful illustration of what is known
as the "television answer".
Similarly,
research carried out by Professor Dolf Zillman
has found that heavy consumers of pornography,
when asked about their perceptions of sexuality
and dispositions about sexual behaviour,
are the most likely to give a "pornography
answer". They report perceptions of sexuality
and sexual behaviour congruent with the
'hypersexualised', shallow, callous and
deviant depictions of pornographers.
Zillman
notes that many people, children especially,
are immensely vulnerable in the area of
sexual information and are prone to adopt
an unexamined "pornography answer". That
may help explain why Australian Police are
increasingly having to deal with more and
more cases of young children from 7 to 12
years of age violently and sexually assaulting
younger playmates, neighbours and siblings.
Children are taught from birth to imitate
adult behaviour and TV is teaching them
that violence is an acceptable means of
settling disputes and that deviant, promiscuous
sexual activity is normal.
The
proliferation of sexual and violent images
in the Australian media has contributed
greatly toward confusing our children. During
a recent Sydney conference attended by international
experts on children's television it was
revealed that research confirms that children
are developing "distorted perceptions of
reality" as a result of being unable to
distinguish between real and fictitious
violence on the screen.
Professor Kenneth Hirsch from California
State University has compiled information
on screen violence since 1968. He told the
conference that his studies had found that
children who took a long time to distinguish
between real and make believe television
images would often "end up in institutions".
Children who have difficulty distinguishing
fantasy and reality are the most vulnerable
to the mental aberrations caused by 'toxic
media'.
Professor
Hirsch has identified "at least three consequences
empirically linked to viewing media violence."
They are "1) violent behaviour, 2) distorted
perceptions of reality and 3) a tolerance
of real-life aggressive behaviour."
The
conference was also addressed by Professor
Anne Allbright from the University of Pennsylvania.
She warned that children are not capable
of understanding the content of many programmes
to which they have unrestricted access in
Australia. She says, "Research proves that
children who watch a lot of violence on
television were more likely to become criminals
than those who were protected from violent
images on the screen."
The
explosive research findings of 24 top media
researchers and policy makers has been documented
in "Don't Touch That Dial: The Impact of
the Media on Children and the Family". "Given
the diversity of participants, they reached
a surprising consensus that values in much
of the mass media, especially in violent
and sexually explicit materials, are on
a collision course with traditional family
values and the protection of children. Graphic
violence and explicit sexual depictions
are extremely harmful to children and adults."
"Don't
Touch That Dial" also documents "1) violent
depictions increase the amount of aggressive
tendency and produce fear and anxiety for
certain viewers: 2) sexually explicit material
dramatically changes attitudes about normal
sexuality, gender roles, marriage relationships
and effective child rearing. If viewed over
time it will affect behaviour and may eventually
lead to sexual deviance. In fact, clinical
data demonstrates that early [sexual] exposure
(before age 12) and sexual experience are
the best single indicators of later sexual
deviant, addiction, and antisocial behaviour."
In
"Primal Screen, Kids: TV Violence and Real
Life Behaviour" the Washington Post of 7
April 1992 reports that "Television can
cause aggressive behaviour and can cultivate
values favouring the use of aggression."
Researching
TV violence for the last 30 years, George
Gerbner of the University of Pennsylvania
has documented that "exposure to TV violence
desensitises viewers to acts of violence
and sometimes incites viewers to violence."
Reporting
on 5 volumes of research by the US National
Institute of Mental Health, the US Surgeon
General released "Television and Growing
Up: the Impact of Television Violence".
The report concluded that there is a "causal
relationship between children's viewing
of violent programmes and subsequent behaviour."
Recognising
that existing measures are inadequate, experts
in London admitted they had seriously underestimated
the effects of screen violence on children.
Professor Elizabeth Newson, head of Nottingham
University Child Psychology Unit, says a
recent paper documenting hundreds of research
studies and endorsed by 25 other psychologists,
psychiatrists and education specialists
"shows new evidence of links between violent
entertainment and aggressive behaviour among
children."
Newson
mentions one British study of "40 adolescent
murders and 200 young sex offenders showed
repeated viewing of violent and pornographic
videos were a significant causal factor."
One
of Professor Newson's supporters is Professor
Andrew Simms, head of Psychiatry at Leeds
University and past president of the Royal
College of Psychiatrists. He says, "Some
of those people who denied the link back
in the 1970's would find incredible the
torrent of media violence now available.
Watching specific acts of violence has resulted
in mimicry by children and adolescents of
behaviour they would have otherwise, literally,
have found unimaginable."
The
American Psychological Association, according
to US Senator Paul Simon, has joined "The
American Medical Association, The American
Academy of Pediatrics and the US Surgeon
General" who all "agree that TV violence
is harming children and causing violence
in society."
Serious
researchers, medical professionals, scientists
and top media professionals across the world
have been in agreement for some time concerning
the harmful impact of the mass media in
society today, especially in relationship
to children.
Although
there are 'experts' who deny that people,
even children, are influenced by what they
see, these 'experts' have been likened to
the so-called 'experts' used by the tobacco
industry to insist that tobacco smoke contains
nothing harmful. The television, film and
video industry, driven by the dollar, must
be called upon to act responsibly. How can
they expect anyone to believe that 2 hours
of violent and pornographic imagery will
have no causal impact on someone's attitude
and behaviour while they charge many thousands
of dollars for an advertising spot of only
a few seconds?
According
to the evidence concerning harm, films,
videotapes, movies and television broadcasting
is irresponsible in Australia. Similar to
the OFLC's failure to classify pornographic
magazines like Penthouse and Picture in
an "Adult Only" category thereby giving
their seal of approval to the sale, access
and display of pornography to children,
is the failure of the OFLC to recognise
the harmful effects of violent and pornographic
programming on children in Australia.
Is
the failure of the OFLC to protect Australian
children from dangerous pornographic imagery
due to unprofessionalism and desensitisation?
John Dickie, Australia's Chief Film Censor,
says that children do not get four letter
words from television, they pick up bad
language from within the family and that
the biggest cause of violence was family
upbringing with media influence at the bottom
of the list. What does that statement say
about Dickie's opinion of Australian families
but more importantly where is his mass of
evidence that contradicts all of the scientific
documentation that proves otherwise?
The
above paragraph was taken from an article
in the national media concerning the beginning
of Mr. Dickie's second 5 year term as our
chief film censor. The article outlines
nothing indicating that the head of the
OFLC has any type of professional qualification
for such an important task as determining
what all of us can read, see and hear. In
fact, according to the article, Dickie has
previous experience as a newspaper reporter
and a press officer and would now be well
into his 7th year of looking at pornographic
and violent imagery, presumably on a daily
basis.
Psychological
desensitising occurs in those who are "massively"
exposed to pornographic and violent imagery
rendering them dysfunctional in regards
to determining what is right or wrong. Well
respected, international science magazine,
The New Scientist, dramatically illustrates
the effects of "massive exposure" to pornographic
imagery with a cover story entitled, "The
Power Of Pornography".
The
University of Canada at Manitoba conducted
a study and exposed groups of students to
greater and lesser amounts of pornographic
imagery. These students were then shown
a rape trial where the rapist admitted guilt
and were then asked to hand down a sentence.
The groups who were massively exposed to
pornography handed down 1/2 the rape sentence
of the other groups. This study has been
replicated and presents what is known as
the "trivialisation of rape". According
to The New Scientist this 'trivialisation'
occurs in all viewers, male and female,
after being massively exposed to pornographic
imagery with massive exposure being less
than 5 hours over 6 weeks!
Mr
Dickie is also quoted as saying, "While
sex and coarse language fade quickly from
memory, violence lingers." This ridiculous
remark gives us a graphic example of what
would appear to be serious desensitisation
or just gross ignorance. Whatever the reason,
his comment prompted the following statement
from prominent media analyst Dr. Judith
Reisman, Director of The Institute for Media
Education in the United States:
"Such
a remark, representing the [Censorship]
Board or its leadership, is manifestly unscientific,
unprofessional and dangerous, considering
the knowledge required by those censoring
the nation's media. FACT: sex and coarse
language do not 'fade quickly' from memory.
On the contrary, memory is coarsened by
continued exposure to coarse language and
sexual stimuli. Barring neurological impairment,
sex is a high stimuli experience. It is
precisely the memory acquisition process
which eventually desensitises receivers
regarding what is coarse or sexual. By definition,
Mr. Dickie and the board are desensitised
to sexual or coarse stimuli due to exposure."
Popular
folklore has it that television violence
and pornography are more pervasive in the
US than in Australia. However, like so much
of popular folklore, this widely accepted
belief is simply not true. The violent and
pornographic imagery permeating the Australian
broadcast medium is much more objectionable
than what is allowed to be broadcast over
the public airwaves in the US.
Sent
to Australia to report on the sleaze standard
of Aussie TV, American television reporter
Rick Kirkham for INSIDE EDITION, says that
"Your exposure of sex and permissiveness
is much more liberal (than in the US). There's
no nudity on network TV in the US... I've
seen things here I couldn't believe. I would
go to jail for putting the same stuff on
TV at home." Kirkham reports that "There
are seven words banned on US television
and in the few days I've been here I've
heard four of them on your daytime TV."
Sydney's
Sunday Telegraph published an unbelievable
interview with Dr. Patricia Edgar, the Director
of the Australian Children's Television
Foundation. Calling children's television
"too sanitised" in Australia and in direct
contradiction to the overwhelming bulk of
scientific evidence, the article quotes
Dr. Edgar as saying, "I fear there is a
perception that television violence causes
violence in the community..." Which is,
of course, like saying "I fear there is
a perception that I will fall to the ground
if I step out of an airplane in flight"!
Uninformed
and uneducated 'leaders' have little of
significance to add to the debate about
film and video classification. For the sake
of the next generation, the disastrous effect
of what has been termed 'toxic media' in
Australia must be addressed and solutions
to the problems must be found.
Restrictive measures have been put in place
to protect Australian children from the
destructive influence of gambling, alcohol
and nicotine addiction. We also have 'child
proof' caps on certain medicines to hinder
children's access, protective helmets for
bicycle riders and minimum age laws for
driving and other "Adult" activities. What
a shame the OFLC has not recognised the
need for children to also be protected from
unrestricted exposure to dangerously addictive
pornographic imagery by refusing to restrict
children's access to magazines like Playboy,
Penthouse, People and Picture, just to name
a few.
One
particular problem in Australia caused by
premature exposure to pornographic and violent
imagery is children raping children. Why
should any of the following newspaper reports
surprise us? The following is learned behaviour
and the children are only imitating adults,
which is what they are trained from birth
to do.
*BOY
CHARGED WITH RAPING GIRL 6 - Perth - "A
13 year old Perth schoolboy has been charged
with raping his 6 year old neighbour while
she was visiting his home..." (Examiner
7 April 95)
*YOUTH CHARGED OVER RAPE OF GIRL 6 - Melbourne
- "A 16 year old charged with the rape of
a 6 year old girl in a primary school toilet
block last week..." (Examiner 4 April 1995)
*TAPES
'TAUGHT BOY TO RAPE' - "A 12 year old boy
accused along with a 10 year old girl of
raping a 7 year old girl may have learned
some of the behaviour by watching pornographic
videos..." (Sunday Examiner 5 Dec 1993)
These
are just a few examples. Sadly, this list
goes on and on and on...
Not
only do we have a problem of children raping
children in Australia, according to reputable
international studies and police agencies
such as Interpol, we have a big problem
with rape in general. In fact, any number
of studies show that women in Australia
are raped more than anywhere else in the
world. Studies such as:
*Criminal
Victimisation in the Industrialised World,
by the Dutch Ministry of Justice in the
Hague in 1993, found that "Australia had
the highest levels of sex attacks in the
industrialised world."
*Without
Consent, a European Community survey screened
on ABC television on 16 & 23 September 1992
and reported in Sydney's Sun Herald of 30
August 92, pointed out that "Australia was
the highest country in the world for rape,
indecent assault and indecent exposure."
*International
Crime Survey, by the Home Office in London
in April 94 documents that "Australians
are at a greater risk of sexual assault
than people in any other developed country."
*A
Comparison of Crime in Australia and Other
Countries, Trends and Issues paper no. 23,
published by our own Institute of Criminology
found that Australia leads the world in
"assaults involving force" and "sexual incidents
against women."
JAPANESE
WARNED OF RAPE IN AUSTRALIA headlined an
article in the Australian. Our national
newspaper reports that the Foreign Ministry
in Japan issues a rape warning to Japanese
women who apply for a tourist visa and says,
"Australia, along with New Zealand and Peru,
has been ranked in an official Japanese
Government survey as having the highest
rate of rape in the world."
Clearly,
something different must be done. The violent
and pornographic imagery that abounds in
Australia is most certainly playing a decisive
role in the shocking increase of the sexual
assault rate Down Under.
Northern
Territory Supreme Court Justice, Sir William
Kearney, sentencing a 22 year old man found
guilty of attempting to sexually assault
a woman in public, blames the "widespread
availability of porn movies" for the increase
in crimes of rape and attempted sexual assault.
He says, "Society needs protecting from
such stimulants.
People
who think there is no connection between
pornography and the violent and bizarre
crimes that come before the courts, ought
to do the case studies."
The
Sun Herald begins an article linking media
pornography and violence with real-life
"copy cat" crimes by saying, "NSW Coroner
Kevin Waller is not the first Australian
legal officer to lash out against the ready
availability of hard-core pornography and
graphic depictions of extreme violence."
Melbourne
County Judge Hart says that "the community
was apparently encouraging and condoning,
if not promoting the production and distribution
of pornographic videos - and that such videos
could clearly be expected to influence the
sexual behaviour of 'susceptible' people."
Judge Hart warns that because of the "unrestricted
rights of so-called adults to watch X-Rated
videos, the community will have to tolerate
the terrible effects."
Mr.
Justice O'Brien in Melbourne Central Criminal
Court says, "Despite what some psychiatrists
and others say, the danger of pornographic
material becomes more apparent to those
of us who have to deal with these crimes."
In
sentencing a youth in Burnie Criminal Court,
Mr. Justice Cosgrove said "he hoped the
case would stand as an example to those
people who claimed there was no connection
between pornography and rape."
Despite
these, and many other, authoritative international
studies; despite the national surveys conducted
by such groups as the Australian Bureau
of Statistics; despite the opinions of the
most prominent legal minds in Australia
and despite the united voices of such groups
as the American Medical, Pediatric, Psychological
and Psychiatric Associations, there are
still groups of people who continue to spread
the dangerous lie that there is no link
between media presentation and public behaviour.
Such groups should be treated with nothing
more than contempt.
After
viewing all the damning evidence and hearing
testimony from authentic experts in the
field of communications, the official government
committee set up to establish the standards
for Australian Pay TV voted, against the
reported objections of the Australian Broadcasting
Authority, to ban all X Rated material form
Pay TV in Australia. After looking at the
harmful effects they also voted to ban R
Rated sexual and violent material until
further research can be produced negating
the harm factor.
Dr.
Judith Reisman was called upon to give testimony
before this committee and was instrumental
in the decision to ban X and R Rated visual
material. She had this to say, "... concern
about the role of media in increasing violence
is implicit in the American Psychiatric
Association's 1986 endorsement of the brain
and aggression scholar's Seville Statement
on Violence. Here the scholars certified
that increased violence and brutality largely
reflects environmental training and not
a genetic fact."
Signed
by 20 of the world's foremost scholars at
the "International Colloquium on Brain and
Aggression" the Seville Statement on Violence
is quoted by Dr Reisman as saying "It is
scientifically incorrect to say we have
inherited a tendency to make war from our
animal ancestors... It is scientifically
incorrect to say that violent behaviour
is genetically programmed into our human
nature... It is scientifically incorrect
to say that humans have a violent brain."
Dr Reisman has thoroughly documented the
conditioning role played by 'toxic' media
in Australia and authoritatively insists
that "The claim for a 'natural' male rape
is not only thwarted by cross cultural epidemiological
data, but more recently by the brain sciences."
'Toxic'
media in Australia is causing an immense
amount of harm.
The
recent unanimous decision by the Canadian
Supreme Court to proscribe pornography as
harmful to women suggests a new view of
balancing women's civil rights to equality
against the rights of pornographers to continue
to denigrate and dehumanise women. In effect,
the Canadian Supreme Court decided that
the women of Canada deserved more rights
that the pornographers of Canada. Certainly
the women, and I would add the children,
of Australia deserve similar rights.
Survey data prove Americans to believe that
if media really causes sexual violence,
which has certainly been proven beyond any
reasonable doubt, that it should be strictly
controlled - even banned! The US Congress
has before it the Pornography Victim's Compensation
Act which is only one of a series of legislative
measures designed to better protect women
and children in the United States from the
harm caused by certain visual imagery.
Judith
Reisman quotes author John Berger who says,
in "Ways of Seeing" (1977) that we now live
in a "language of images" rather than one
of speech. He warns "what matters now is
who uses that language for what purpose."
Violent
and pornographic imagery teaches "fear,
shame and violence towards the opposite
sex, undermining love, family and the physical
safety of women and children." Dehumanisation,
which is the pornographer's standard, impacts
upon hate crimes against women and children
(often recorded as sexual or simple assaults).
Pornography,
as it mitigates against women's ability
to pursue their equal right to safety, to
work free of harassment, to live in a secure
environment, to be "adequately protected
from material likely to harm or disturb
them" (OFLC Guidelines), as it violates
women's and children's self esteem and is
unequally and differentially harmful to
the entire class of 'women' and 'children',
should thus be in violation of the laws
of any civil society.
Attached
to this submission are some recommendations
from of the Australian Federation for the
Family. If the OFLC wishes to protect children
from the destructive influence of some elements
of the media, we suggest that serious consideration
be given to the immediate implementation
of these sensible recommendations.
The
facts speak for themselves, we hope the
OFLC will speak for the facts.
prepared
by: Jack Sonnemann for :
The Australian Federation for the Family
PO Box 106 Canterbury
Victoria 3126
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Link:
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