Don't believe me? Consider this statement:
The Justice and Electoral Committee are fuckwitsIf I say that to their faces, in a select committee hearing, say, I am likely to be charged, at worst, with offensive behaviour and would face a fine of $500. However, I've said it online, in a deliberate attempt to upset them. Which puts me on the hook for two year's imprisonment if this atrocity passes.
Two years, vs $500 - because its on the internet and the sad old fuckwits in Parliament are scared of us and scared of our future.
(Oh, and thanks to sloppy drafting I can now be dragged off to the Orwellian "Approved Agency" and thence to court if I merely threaten to call someone a fuckwit. Again, they're fuckwits).
It gets worse, because its not only outright insults which are covered. As TechLiberty has pointed out, the law covers publicising evidence of outright corruption by MPs - something which undoubtedly causes "serious emotional harm" to the exposed MP. There's no public interest defence, and there's not even a freedom of expression clause for the avoidance of doubt - unlike the non-criminal sections.
This bill is simply one long exercise in fuckwittery, which will chill our online conversation - which, given that that's where our conversation happens now, imperils our democracy. It cannot be allowed to pass.