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Lies, bribes and prostitutes: The recruitment of the Australian meat industry s foreign workforce
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Lies, bribes and prostitutes: The recruitment of the Australian meat industry s foreign workforce
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Lies, bribes and prostitutes: The recruitment of the Australian meat industry s foreign workforce
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The News Corp journalist, who has a platform on Sky News’ After Dark, as well as in the Murdoch tabloids around the country, blamed six “poor, outer-suburban areas in Melbourne’s north and south-east where more than a third of residents were born overseas, in countries such as India, Sri Lanka, Iraq, China and Vietnam” and said “many of the sick are probably from immigrant families”.
“Just what kind of families are involved, neither the government nor the Ethnic Communities Council will say,” he wrote.
In June he followed it up with more on the theme in pieces headlined “Multiculturalism made Victoria vulnerable to coronavirus” and “Virus thrives in multiculturalism” – which some readers complained were not only inaccurate and unfair, but offensive and prejudicial to those who are from diverse backgrounds, the press council adjudication said.
When Michael Marom steers his Telstra-branded company car past the site of a planned 5G tower on the streets of Mullumbimby, it draws a now predictable response. Someone is watching, always, and news of his presence quickly ripples through the faithful. “They call themselves the protectors of the tower,” Marom says. “They have someone there all the time, so what happens is that as soon as you drive past in a Telstra vehicle, within about 15.