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Sky News Journo Dragged For Saying Reject Shop Isn't An Essential Store junkee.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from junkee.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Published August 4, 2021 If there’s one thing COVID-19 has exposed in our society, it’s that some people just have no idea what it’s like to be broke and struggling to get your pay through the week. NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian was answering questions in the daily presser today (which saw 233 new cases and 174 places exposure sites added to alert lists) when a journo asked why places like Bunnings or The Reject Shop are still open. “Obviously the lockdown rules we have in NSW are some of the harshest our nation has seen,” Gladys said. “We need people to remember every time they leave the house that they could have the virus or someone they come into contact with could have the virus.”
Advertisement Womenâs advocacy groups fear a lack of transparency in the review of a federal government respectful relationships website means it will continue to promote harmful or misleading messages around sexual violence to young people. The federal Education Department said there have been more than 298,000 visits to The Good Society website since the $3.8 million resource launched in April as part of the Respect Matters program addressing violence against women. Womenâs safety advocates pointed to a video still on The Good Society, featuring the same couple from the milkshake video, in which the woman pressures the man to watch a horror movie about clowns murdering children despite him being visibly uncomfortable.
Last week, after two years of planning and preparation, the Liberal government released The Good Society website with 350 videos and many written resources for…
The campaign, called The Good Society, was heavily criticised on Monday for the âconfusingâ video, where a young woman smears a milkshake over a young manâs face while telling him to âdrink it allâ. The video, which aims to teach school children about sex consent, also draws comparisons between âgetting pizzaâ and âcan I touch your butt?â âWhen a person imposes their will on you, itâs as if they were moving the âYes lineâ over the âMaybe zoneâ or the âEnd zoneâ, ignoring your rich inner world,â the video voiceover says. âAnd thatâs not good.â This is the government's new video to educate teenagers on consent... and honestly, I think I actually know less about the issue after watching this. What's going on?
'Confusing' milkshake sexual consent education campaign cost Australian government $3.8m msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Government’s Terrible Milkshake Ad Misses The Point Of Consent Education Young people in Australia right now are looking for a comprehensive understanding of consent and sexual assault. These videos do not provide that. We missed you too. Sign up to our newsletter, and follow us on Instagram and Twitter, so you always know where to find us. When a government authority shares information, it should be appropriate, tested and reliable. However, as we’ve seen in recent years, the Australian government has a poor track record regarding resourcing information about consent and respectful relationships. We’ve seen un-actioned national plans, gutted community services to provide consent teaching and training, and a very haphazard promotion of primary prevention materials. There have been endless promotional materials. While we’ve had the answers for a long time, the series of sexual assault allegations within parliament have renewed a focus on conversations around gender equality and consent. These events have brought heightened attention and protest from those who see sexual violence and harassment as preventable.
Rape prevention campaigners have slammed the government’s new education campaign, which uses tacos and milkshakes to teach school students about consent.
Rape prevention campaigners have slammed the Morrison government's "confusing" new consent education campaign for schools featuring bizarre videos of a woman smearing a man's face with a milkshake. Warning the videos fail to meet the National Standards for the prevention of sexual assault through education, advocates say expert revision of all of the current content is needed to ensure it actually works, and isn't harmful. The consent videos include "examples" of a woman being concerned about swimming in a beach because of sharks and a man with a spear gun trying to convince her to get in the water, and in another using an example of a man eating a tacos to explain sexual assault.
Last modified on Mon 19 Apr 2021 05.20 EDT Rape prevention and sexual education experts have criticised the federal governmentâs new consent education campaign, accusing it of creating âbizarreâ videos and spreading misinformation about sex and consent. The Good Society website, launched as part of the Department of Educationâs Respect Matters program, contains more than 350 videos, digital stories, podcasts and teaching materials to help teach sex and consent to school-age children. None of the videos aimed at students in years 10-12 use the words sex, rape, or assault. Instead, they employ confusing metaphors. In one video, a girl being scared to swim at the beach because of sharks is supposed to represent her being afraid to have sex because of STDs and pregnancy. In another, a girl smearing her milkshake in her boyfriendâs face has been taken by some to represent sexual assault or rape.