THE WAGES OF SIN - BRITTANY HIGGINS AND HER $2.3 MILLION PAYOUT
Champion Australian Wallabies rugby player Israel Folau lost his job for quoting 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 on his Instagram account.
Whether you like it or not, Christianity teaches that adultery, fornication, homosexual acts, bisexual acts, bestiality, incest, paedophilia & pornography are "sinful" behaviours.
LGBTQ+ activists in Australia say this attitude, if publicly expressed, is "vilification" of them. They can, in many cases, get paid large sums of money by Australian civil law tribunals for hurt feelings, if you say their behaviour is sinful, publicly, and they read it on the internet, then complain about it, claiming you inflicted harm on them in the form of psychological damage.
In 2022, MeToo political activists in Australia can get a women victim of sexual shame paid millions of dollars for engaging in fornication while drunk out of her mind.
Of course the issue of "consent" arises, but where there are no witnesses, then a jury cannot decide. Further, being blind drunk can interfere with consent. Of course there is deep shame in doing something stupid while drunk and then waking up in the morning and saying to oneself "Christ, what the fuck did I do last night!"
This was the case of a young Australian woman, Brittany Higgins.
Here's the controversial passage from the New Testament that suggests Brittany should repent for her sin, in a society that generally upholds the Christian values. But instead of repenting, she is held up as the perennial victim of sexual harrassment at the hands of a male predator. There is absolutely no responsibility taken for her own part in the transgressive behaviour.
Instead of shutting up out of her shame and paying the price for her drunken stupidity, she's spurred on by the MeToo movement. She claims innocence and rape, then wears this as a badge of honour and fame. She becomes the darling of the #MeToo movement, as a tool to discredit the toxic masculinity that grips the Liberal Party of Australia. She's rewarded by the Labor government, using taxpayer's dollars to the tune of $2.3 million - as "wages of sin" provided as compensation for the psychological hurt her shame inflicted on her.
Here's that controversial passage from the Christian bible, New Testament. It's from the Easy-to-Read Version, Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International
Surely you know that people who do wrong will not get to enjoy God’s kingdom. Don’t be fooled. These are the people who will not get to enjoy his kingdom: those who sin sexually, those who worship idols, those who commit adultery, men who let other men use them for sex or who have sex with other men, those who steal, those who are greedy, those who drink too much, those who abuse others with insults, and those who cheat.
So there you go! Brttany Higgins sinned, and was rewarded with taxpayer-funded wages of sin, calculated as 40 years loss of income as a government apparatchik. God only knows why she was deemed incapable of working for 40 years after that one-night stand.
Putting aside the above paltry comments, what actually is the meaning of the wages of sin, as told in the New Testament of the Christian bible?
Here's what A.I. comes up with.
The phrase "the wages of sin" is a biblical expression that means the consequences or the penalty of sin. Sin is the violation of God's moral law or the rebellion against God's will. The Bible teaches that sin has a serious and fatal impact on human beings and their relationship with God. The phrase "the wages of sin" is found in the New Testament, in the book of Romans, chapter 6, verse 23, which says: "For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."
This verse contrasts the two outcomes of sin and faith. On one hand, sin leads to death, which is not only physical death, but also spiritual death, which is the separation from God and his presence. This is the ultimate and final destiny of those who reject God and his grace. On the other hand, faith leads to eternal life, which is not only endless life, but also abundant life, which is the fellowship with God and his glory. This is the undeserved and unearned gift of God to those who accept God and his grace through Jesus Christ, who died for their sins and rose again for their justification.
Therefore, the meaning of "the wages of sin" is that sin has a cost and a consequence that is unavoidable and irreversible, unless one receives the forgiveness and the salvation that God offers through Jesus Christ. The phrase "the wages of sin" is a warning and a reminder of the seriousness and the danger of sin, and also an invitation and a motivation to repent and to believe in the gospel.
With that aside, here's the article that trigerred those unbridled thoughts.
I read it in today's Australian newspaper (front page story), Wednesday, 6 December, 2023.
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Higgins reveals $2.3m 'duty of care' compo payment from commonwealth
ELLIE DUDLEY - LEGAL AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT
Brittany Higgins has revealed she was paid about $2.3m in taxpayer funds by the Albanese government for failing in its "duty of care" after she was allegedly raped by Bruce Lehrmann in Parliament House, saying the compensation claim was to make up for 40 years of economic loss due to her inability to work.
The revelation comes as the former Liberal staffer denies attempting to "blow up" Mr Lehrmann's retrial by making an impassioned speech outside the ACT Supreme Court after his criminal trial was aborted, and defended her decision to be a witness in his defamation proceedings, saying: "I would not let my rapist become a millionaire for being a rapist."
Mr Lehrmann is suing Network 10 and presenter Lisa Wilkinson over her interview with Ms Higgins on The Project in 2021, detailing accusations that Mr Lehrmann had raped Ms Higgins on March 23, 2019, but not naming him as the alleged attacker. Mr Lehrmann has consistently denied raping Ms Higgins.
Ms Higgins on Tuesday endured her final day of gruelling cross-examination from Mr Lehrmann's barrister, Steven Whybrow SC, and was grilled over a rumoured multimillion-dollar compensation payout given to her by Labor soon after the party entered government in May last year.
"They came to an agreement that a failure of a duty of care was made, and they did pay me," she told the court, saying the settlement followed a period of mediation.
Ms Higgins said the gross payment to prevent her bringing a claim for personal injuries was $2.3m but, after taxes and lawyers' fees, she received $1.9m. "I think it was around 2.3," she said.
"I think that was the amount and then ... taxes, and then the lawyer took some, but I'm not sure what that fee was. I was never focused on that fee, it was only what I received that I cared about."
Mr Whybrow put to Ms Higgins that she had "made money off being a person who made an allegation of sexual assault". "That's true," she replied.
Mr Whybrow: "And, as you sit there today, there's never been any finding as to whether or not your allegations are true or not?"
Ms Higgins said the Commonwealth had admitted to breaching its duty of care and failing to "go through proper processes".
"That's actually why they settled with me," she said.
Asked whether the payment was made based on her inability to not work for the rest of her life, Ms Higgins responded: "I believe it was 40 years."
The Federal Court on Tuesday was played, in full, the speech Ms Higgins gave on the steps of the ACT Supreme Court in October last year after Mr Lehrmann's criminal trial had been aborted due to juror misconduct and a retrial had been ordered for February.
In the speech, Ms Higgins gave her reasons for coming forward with her rape allegations, and spoke to the challenges she faced during the trial.
Mr Whybrow said Ms Higgins did not believe Mr Lehrmann deserved the presumption of innocence or the right to remain silent in his criminal trial, and suggested her speech was "designed to blow up a retrial".
"That was because you did not want to risk a jury finding Mr Lehrmann not guilty," Mr Whybrow said.
Ms Higgins denied his accusations, and said: "I had just gone through a criminal trial. I wasn't hiding from anyone."
On December 1 last year, former ACT Director of Public Prosecutions Shane Drumgold called off Mr Lehrmann's retrial due to Ms Higgins' fragile mental health, saying: "Ms Higgins has faced a level of personal attack that I have not seen in over 20 years of doing this work."
Six days later, Ms Higgins tweeted from her hospital bed that she was willing to testify in defamation proceedings brought by Mr Lehrmann.
She replied to the tweet a few months later, saying any further proceedings would be held "in a slightly more favourable court", which Mr Whybrow inferred was a reference to the lower standard of proof required in civil cases.
Ms Higgins denied assertions that her willingness to testify in Mr Lehrmann's defamation case was at odds with his criminal retrial being called off due to her poor mental state.
"Even though I was in hospital, the decision not to go ahead wasn't mine to make," she said.
"It was the doctors and the DPPs, and I wasn't in well health and so I had to accept that decision. But I wanted him to know that I would not let my rapist become a millionaire for being a rapist, so I said I would do it, and now I'm here."
Mr Whybrow questioned why, within three months of the retrial being called off due to her poor mental health, Ms Higgins indicated "a willingness to give evidence in what you call a more favourable court".
Ms Higgins again said it was not her decision to discontinue the criminal proceedings.
"I put myself through the criminal court once, I was going to keep going," she said. "Then, when it looked like he wanted to make money off being a rapist, I of course put my hand up and said 'please put me back in', and here I am."
Earlier in her cross-examination on Tuesday, Ms Higgins told the court her fiance, David Sharaz, who was instrumental in landing her interview with The Project, was "holding a grudge" against the Liberal Party at the time she publicly disclosed her alleged rape.
Mr Sharaz was the person who brought Ms Higgins' story to Ms Wilkinson, and was present for the four hour pre-interview meeting at The Star in Sydney.
When asked by Mr Whybrow whether Mr Sharaz disliked the Coalition in the lead-up to her story going live in the media, Ms Higgins said "yes".
"He was holding a grudge by that point," she said.
Ms Higgins explained the grudge was Mr Sharaz being "protective" of her after the alleged rape and confirmed that prior to being told about the alleged incident, Mr Sharaz was politically neutral.
Ms Higgins accepted she was unable to recall how her dress was taken off the night of the alleged rape, and could not conclusively deny she removed it herself.
When Mr Whybrow suggested it was a "possibility" she was the one to take off the garment, Ms Higgins replied: "It's not something that would ever happen. I don't know that that's not true, but I don't recall, and it just seems ... I don't recall."
Ms Higgins' time in the witness box concluded on Tuesday afternoon. Network 10's truth witnesses are expected to be called throughout the rest
The trial continues.
--ooOoo--
Referring to "Champion Australian Wallabies rugby player Israel Folau . . . . . "
You can read more here to go down that particular rabbit hole.

HATE SPEECH: the case of Israel Folau
But first, who is Israel Folau? The above hero video tells it all. He’s a Polynesian Australian. He’s a member of “Pasifika” and “Pasifika peoples” - terms used to describe a minority community of people living in Australia and New Zealand who have migrated from the Pacific Islands or who identify w…
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