Zahra Stardust is a human rights lawyer, Miss Nude Australia Pole Dance Champion 2012 and a porn actress, but come Saturday she hopes to also be lord mayor of the City of Sydney.
A so-called sex-positive feminist, Ms Stardust is using her experience in the adult entertainment industry to further her passions in politics - as you do.
"At a local government level, I'm particularly passionate about anti-discrimination against the sex business," Ms Stardust told The Diary's I've-seen-it-all-now correspondent, Dominic Bossi.
"Our policies translate to things like the extension of legal injecting rooms beyond Kings Cross, [abolishing] sniffer dogs on public streets.''
Ms Stardust will hit the streets in the coming days to ensure voters are fully aware of the party's policies: ''Sexual education curriculum, ensuring that there are anti-discrimination protections based on people on the basis of occupation, removing the GST tax on tampons and, at a state level, protecting decriminalisation of sex workers in NSW."
Her campaign for lord mayor of Sydney will be her second election campaign. She ran as a candidate in the seat of Bradfield in the 2009 federal byelection.
Ms Stardust will be joined on the Australian Sex Party's ticket by a former policeman, Andrew Patterson, along with Graeme Dunne, Geoffrey Thomas and Robyn Trigg, as the party's candidates for the City of Sydney.
I'd give her one....
I'd give her one....
...a vote that is....
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: I'd give her one....
When my thoughts turn to luxury, surprisingly none of them involves tampons.
The luxury tax should be immediately removed from tampons, even if I don't have to buy any anymore.
Why a candidate has to highlight such a ludicrous tax is beyond me. Get your act together Government. Remove the GST component from all sanitary products.
The luxury tax should be immediately removed from tampons, even if I don't have to buy any anymore.
Why a candidate has to highlight such a ludicrous tax is beyond me. Get your act together Government. Remove the GST component from all sanitary products.
Bah!


- MajGenl.Meade
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Re: I'd give her one....
Who will speak for the dogs? Must this woman insist upon discriminating against their sexual proclivities?"I'm particularly passionate about anti-discrimination against the sex business," Ms Stardust (said). "Our policies translate to things like . . . [abolishing] sniffer dogs on public streets.''
Meade
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
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oldr_n_wsr
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Re: I'd give her one....
A luzxury tax on tampons????
Do not let the US government hear about this.
Do not let the US government hear about this.
Re: I'd give her one....
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: I'd give her one....
And all sluts are women, and nearly every woman for a span of approximately 30 - 50 years will require a product to deal with her menstral cycle. What's more, she will need that product for approximately three to seven days every twenty-eight days more or less. (Though average cycles for each woman can vary dramatically from that.)
There should be no tax placed on the 'most' desired method for dealing with a period.
There should be no tax placed on the 'most' desired method for dealing with a period.
Bah!


- Sue U
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Re: I'd give her one....
You have to admit, it's one helluva business model.The Hen wrote: ... nearly every woman for a span of approximately 30 - 50 years will require a product to deal with her menstral cycle. What's more, she will need that product for approximately three to seven days every twenty-eight days more or less.
GAH!
Re: I'd give her one....
Heh. I had to consider women such as myself who never fell in the 'average' bucket.
Seven days, every fourteen days.
What's more, it was more like a tsunami which saw me disposing of 50 tampons and 14 sanitary napkins for each occurrence.
You can understand why I deeply resented paying a luxury tax.
Glad I found myself a suitable tax haven.
Seven days, every fourteen days.
What's more, it was more like a tsunami which saw me disposing of 50 tampons and 14 sanitary napkins for each occurrence.
You can understand why I deeply resented paying a luxury tax.
Glad I found myself a suitable tax haven.
Bah!


Re: I'd give her one....
Is that what you're calling Gob these days.Glad I found myself a suitable tax haven
Re: I'd give her one....
Sue U wrote:You have to admit, it's one helluva business model.The Hen wrote: ... nearly every woman for a span of approximately 30 - 50 years will require a product to deal with her menstral cycle. What's more, she will need that product for approximately three to seven days every twenty-eight days more or less.
And the reason that pharma focuses on treating chronic conditions rather than curing them. More money in selling people a pill a day forever* then 1 course of treatment.
yrs,
rubato
Which makes pharma sort of an external parasitic symbiont.
