 Our second to final speaker is somebody who probably doesn't need a lengthy introduction at an event like this. It's somebody who if you've seen the Ithaca film you will know just how tireless this gentleman is. You will know how many time zones he's crossed, how many countries he's been to, how he doesn't need notes for his speech I'm informed because it's all up here now. He happens to be Julian Assange's father. Please welcome John Shipton. He's a mighty man that played with McBride a treasure. I think we ought to start that thing where we have people's national treasures certainly dated McBride, Julian Assange. The dear friend of mine here in her wheelchairs come down from Brisbane Jenny. I'll say hello to Jenny. Brown University last week published a paper 4.5 million deaths in the Middle East since the invasion of Iraq. Previously they published a paper 38 million refugees. What is a refugee? It's a person whose community has been destroyed, wrecked, looking for sakura. We welcome many here to Australia. Many of the people who are our supporters that I meet today are ones refugees from Chile or from Greece or Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, Iran, to those people who organize the shattering of nation after nation, Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, Sudan, Libya, Syria, now Ukraine. Do those people think that somehow the flux of life, the urge to justice which is in every human heart? Do they somehow imagine in their dreams that this will lead to world domination that they can be hegemony standing in a river of blood? Do they imagine that we, with our underlying yearning to see justice done, do they imagine somehow that this will succeed? It's impossible. Julian brought to us the means whereby we can involve ourselves in the formulation of policy through the accumulation of knowledge within ourselves, our families, our friends, our communities and our nations, a great gift that they want for some reason or other. They do not understand one the yearning for justice in our hearts and the other essence of being that all genius arises from the people. It doesn't come down like rain from the sky. It arises out of the hearts and culture of the us. And if I could nominate some great Australians for you, have you heard of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights? Herbert Vair Ebert, the author, 1948, third president of the United Nations. Have you heard of the conventions of asylum taken to the United Nations General Assembly, accepted with only 16 extensions out of 184 nations, taken and put into law by, I guess, who? Australia undergoth with us. We have a fine tradition which we place on the shoulders of the current government and remind them that they represent us and without the genius of the populace, they can do nothing but fail. They can do nothing but reap obliquely and indifference and apathy, which means, of course, that institution of policy will fail because we don't support those policies. Really important thanks. Thanks for coming. We'll all bring Julianne home together.