Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,483
The short answer is don't fly RBA and don't go to Brunei if their laws will adversely affect you or you simply don't want to support their economy as such. Noteworthy that the Sharia lobby in Australia is treated as a sacred cow though and celebrated for contributing to 'multiculturalism' and 'diversity'!
Good advice: I'll no longer do either.
Multiculturalism is egregious if it means 'don't put Australia first.' We've benefited hugely from migration but sadly today we have a group of people in favour of Sharia law who don't accept our social mores and customs.
But the News Corp online article is typical of the rubbish seen on its website. (Its printed media: not nearly as bad).
The couple who rang Smart Traveller ought to have the intelligence to know to refrain from any public displays of affection, or if staying overnight (they are not) to not make a fuss when they receive a twin bedded hotel room. Hardly difficult to abide by. Commonsense (and some might say 'common decency').
Although politically incorrect to say so, millions of Australians (and arguably a large majority in many Asian nations) oppose homosexuality and lesbianism for many and varied reasons. Very few of us - hopefully no one - would agree that stoning to death is acceptable. These activities are legal in Australia, even though many say they are morally wrong.
My biggest objection - because it may eventually be more likely to occur in Brunei than any stoning, although so far the initial introduction of Sharia law seems to have been all talk and little action - is that someone may lose a right hand for an initial proven charge of theft. That's way disproportionate, and harking back to 1380.
DFAT and others assert that these Sharia laws apply to non Muslims but elsewhere I have continually read that in other nations (like Indonesia's Aceh province) that's not necessarily so. Quite confusing.