this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2026
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So I listened to Ette Media's interview with J.Gilham he says in that interview the 3 complaints were from the same group. One complaint on the day, and two subsequent emails/communications later.
I took a look at the Summary Judgement found here. I've got questions regarding how the two acts in question interact and the difference in the judge's interpretation of their interaction compared to the plaintiff's interpretation. I think i'd have to look at the full judgement to understand that but haven't had time.
From reading the summary it seems a fairly tenuous legislative path that Gilham and his team were making their claim based on.
Big picture? Yet again, it seems the outsourcing of the employee-employer relationship to be one of contractor has undermined any claim that could be made like this. No wonder employers live to have so many contractors instead of employees.
But here is where I totally agree with you.
Possible avenues of appeal aside. While there may be no legal pathway to hold MSO to account for their actions in this case or for their reprehensible stance not standing against a genocide, (see quote from judgement below), they have acted with no regard to the moral imperative to stand against crimes against humanity and war crimes. The general public, and more importantly patrons must remind and when opportunity arises hold the people now leading the MSO and the organisation itself to account for their cowardly action in this case and for their cowarsly inaction in the broader issue.
We are a nation of cowards if we are collectively too scared or lazy to stand against the murder and starvation of children.