Call to probe White Supremacist Creativity Movement
The US-based Creativity Movement’s members believe the white race is their religion and they are opposed to immigration.
Mr O’Sullivan, who lives in Melbourne, said that parts of the city had been “taken over by non-whites” and that “something has to be done to protect the white race”.
He has refused to say how many people follow the Creativity Movement, but posted on the Geelong Advertiser’s website yesterday that it “certainly has more than 12 and is growing”.
Mr O’Sullivan said the minister would be wasting his time and taxpayers’ money investigating the group.
“It looks like he’s taking an opportunity to grandstand. We have every right to propagate our religion,” he said.
The Racial and Religious Tolerance Act defines vilification as “public behaviour that incites hatred against, serious contempt for, or revulsion or severe ridicule of another person or group of people because of their race or religion”.
“The Act sets a high standard for determining vilification, and it is only in extreme and serious cases that vilification will be found to have occurred.”