谢谢大家给的意见。自从毛利人那天帮我挺身而出,唬住了那个垃圾之后,好了2天,一切风平浪静,直到第4天,他又开始犯贱。我们一直轮流岗位分拣东西,今天站我对面分拣,开始找我茬,说我这里做得不对那里不对,我当他放屁,看都不看他一眼,继续干活。过了几个小时他忍不住了,开始叫,你到边上做去,消失在我眼前。我就吼:why? 他回答:you make me sick。 我一听怒了,直接吼回去:You are racist. I am gonna complain to tonny( supervisor), fuck you! 那个家伙回答:Just go. 我还等着他动手呢,在身边藏了根铁棍, 不知道是他看到了,还是忌惮我有毛利人撑腰,或者看到我搬几十千克的石头也很轻松。。。后来我就去告状了。事后supervisor 立马让我休息了会,并把我的岗位调到离他最远比较轻松的岗位,而且毛利人和新西兰人都来安慰我,澳洲大部分白痴都没什么动静。有一些毛利同事告诉我,那个家伙有吸毒,怪不得脑子不正常,看起来行为也稍不对劲。
啥也不需要做,楼主只需要背会以下两句英语,下次小声该诉他:
1. I don't like arguing.
2. If I must do something, I do it without notification, but knife.作者: 深海2010 时间: 24-3-2014 21:55 本帖最后由 深海2010 于 24-3-2014 21:59 编辑
对的,有些洋人就这德行。我老公以前在马自达上班的时候,有一个鬼佬整天 f word 不离口,口头警告不太管用,终于有一天忍无可忍,我老公把他按在地上揍了一顿,被同事拉开了。从那以后他老实了一段时间,不但不f**了,还讨好我老公,我老公干活的时候他过来给递工具。时间长了他又恢复了本性,这次我老公狠狠教训了他一顿,从此井水不犯河水。我老公说就是PR不要了也不能受这种气,咱不惹事,但事儿来了也不能怕事儿。不过他也说也就是那小子块头儿不大,不然也得掂量掂量。作者: 老鼠爱上猫 时间: 25-3-2014 00:04
George Brandis releases planned sweeping changes to race hate laws
Political News
Date
March 25, 2014 - 11:45AM
Attorney-General Senator George Brandis has announced the government's proposed changes to the Racial Discrimination Act. Photo: Andrew Meares
The Abbott government is proposing sweeping and controversial changes to the Racial Discrimination Act, with an exposure draft approved by the Coalition partyroom on Tuesday morning.
A day after defending the right of Australians to be "bigots", Attorney-General George Brandis has proposed repealing section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act.
Section 18C, in its current form, makes it unlawful for someone to do an act that is reasonably likely to "offend, insult, humiliate or intimidate" someone because of their race or ethnicity.
Senator Brandis wants to remove the words "offend, insult and humiliate" but to leave intimidate, which he said provoked fear.
"Those three words [being removed] describe . . . hurt feelings," Senator Brandis said.
These proposed changes would be discussed and consulted with the community in coming weeks, Senator Brandis said.
Senator Brandis has also proposed repealing section 18D of the Act, which provides exemptions that protect freedom of speech. These ensure that artistic works, scientific debate and fair comment on matters of public interest are exempt, providing they are said or done reasonably and in good faith.
A new section will be inserted into the Act, which will preserve the existing protection against intimidation and create a new protection from racial vilification.
"This will be the first time that racial vilification is proscribed in Commonwealth legislation," Senator Brandis said in a statement.
The Abbott government's proposed changes to the Racial Discrimination Act come after months of speculation, during which time a coalition of ethnic and religious groups made it known that they "vehemently opposed" any weakening of current protections against race hate speech.
Senator Brandis' motivation to make changes to the race hate laws was a 2011 case involving News Corp columnist Andrew Bolt.
The Attorney-General and Prime Minister Tony Abbott have close relationships with Bolt, and believe he was mistreated by the courts when he was found to have breached section 18C for an article he wrote about light-skinned Aborigines.
Justice Mordecai Bromberg ruled "that fair-skinned Aboriginal people (or some of them) were reasonably likely, in all the circumstances, to have been offended, insulted, humiliated or intimidated by the imputations conveyed by [Bolt's] newspaper articles".
It's not only ethnic and religious groups who have opposed the changes to the race hate laws. Senator Brandis has also faced opposition from within his own partyroom.
Liberal MPs including NSW MPs Craig Laundy and David Coleman, who represent electorates with a high proportion of multicultural constituents, have urged Senator Brandis to keep the legal "safety net" protecting racial minorities against hate speech.
Indigenous Liberal MP Ken Wyatt has threatened to cross the floor to oppose the change, and Jewish MP Josh Frydenberg is understood to have expressed reservations about weakening the protections.
Senator Brandis released the proposed changes in the Coalition partyroom early on Tuesday. He received a number of questions from concerned MPs about the implications of the legislation for minority groups.
Representatives from the Aboriginal, Greek, Jewish, Chinese, Arab, Armenian and Korean communities have been visiting Parliament House for months and lobbying MPs from all parties to oppose the changes.
It is not certain that the Attorney-General will get his proposed changes through the Senate, even when the new Senate convenes on July 1. The Greens and Labor oppose changing the laws, as does independent Senator Nick Xenophon. The success of Senator Brandis' legislation may hinge on the Palmer United Party senators, who have not publicly declared their position.
Executive Council of Australian Jewry executive director Peter Wertheim said he could not recall ''any other issue on which there has been such unity of purpose and strength of feeling across such a diverse group of communities''.
Senator Brandis said on Monday that the problem with the current law was that it dealt with racial vilification in "the wrong way" by "political censorship".
"People do have a right to be bigots, you know,'' Senator Brandis said.
With Lisa Visentin, Dan Harrison