Australian lawmakers have banned the performance of the Nazi salute in public and outlawed the display or sale of Nazi hate symbols such as the swastika in landmark legislation that went into effect in the country Monday. The new laws also make the act of glorifying OR praising acts of terrorism a criminal offense.

The crime of publicly performing the Nazi salute or displaying the Nazi swastika is punishable by up to 12 months in prison, according to the Reuters news agency.

Mark Dreyfus, Australia’s Attorney-General, said in a press release Monday that the laws — the first of their kind in the country — sent “a clear message: there is no place in Australia for acts and symbols that glorify the horrors of the Holocaust and terrorist acts.”

  • @soda3x
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    1 year ago

    What implications does this have on media using the swastika? I know that for games like Wolfenstein the swastika is everywhere and while it doesn’t really retract from the experience by being absent, it would be really strange for that to suddenly not be OK, especially in the context of Wolfenstein where you’re tearing the Nazis a new one

    • @ours
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      211 year ago

      German and Austrian versions of the new Wolfenstein games have swastikas and such removed/replaced.

      I remember being pissed off the version sold on Steam to Switzerland was the censored version for no reason other than Switzerland is often stuffed with German and Austrian markets. When I blast sci-fi Nazis to bits, I prefer they look authentic.

        • @ours
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          31 year ago

          I recall that even after the ban was lifted, most companies preferred to continue self-censoring.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        I find it even more irritating that it is banned in the German version of Bollywood movies. It looks different and more importantly has a different meaning.

        • @ours
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          21 year ago

          That’s so silly. Not that censoring a game based entirely on brutalizing Nazis makes sense.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        German laws allow swastikas in media under freedom of art and/or education. So depending on the context, it is legal in games. Foreign video game companies just don’t want to take any risk and have their game blocked because of nazi symbolism so they rather just remove it than hope the courts see their game for the form if art it may be.

    • @DillyDaily
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      161 year ago

      The actual law bans using the swastika to “glorify or profit from Nazi idiology”.

      Wolfenstein would not be impacted by the ban because at the core of the gameplay, the Nazis are the bad guys. It does not glorify the Nazis or celebrate them.

      Sure Bathesda is profiting from the game, but they aren’t profiting from the glorification of Nazi idiology, they’re profiting from people’s desire to shoot zombie Nazis in the face.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      I can’t imagine any offensive way of publicly displaying or glorifying an instance of it in a game

      • @StorminNorman
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        211 year ago

        Nah, it’s easy to imagine that. Multiplayer. The Nazi team wins. Swastikas everywhere. Pretty sure it’s why cod no longer has swastikas in multiplayer anymore (and if I’m remembering rightly, they kept it in the single player as they felt it wasn’t offensive as it is given with a hell of a lot of context that multiplayer rounds simply don’t have).

      • Schadrach
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        11 year ago

        Does it require the public display be offensive, or just that it be a public display? If the latter, then playing Wolfenstein on your laptop anywhere but a private residence is punishable by up to a year in prison.