Senator HINCH (Victoria) (16:29): I stand today as a person who has broken the law, and I am proud of it. I support Senator Di Natale in what he has said. I will not invoke Rosa Parks and Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King Junior—even though I went to his funeral. Senator Abetz obviously did not hear me when he said, 'Does anybody disagree with me?' I shouted yes, but it did not suit his rhetoric. The thing here is that you are entitled to break a bad law, but there is a proviso: you must be prepared to take the consequences and possibly be fined and possibly go to jail. I have been to jail and I have been fined $100,000 and I chose to go to jail again. I broke suppression orders that protected some of the worst sex offenders, child molesters, in this country. I said their names on the steps of parliament house, the house of democracy. Honourable senators interjecting— Senator HINCH: I am a law-breaker and I shouted those names— Senator O'Sullivan: Do you know how nasty you look, Sarah, when you get going? Senator Hanson-Young: Do you know how nasty you look when you are smiling? The ACTING DEPUTY PRESIDENT ( Senator Marshall ): Order! Stop the clock. Senator HINCH: Is this out of my time? The ACTING DEPUTY PRESIDENT: Senator Hinch. Senator HINCH: I shouted the names of those sex offenders on the steps of parliament house, a democratic place, and 4,000 other people shouted it too. There were 4,000 other law-breakers there too. They chose to prosecute one, and I was the one they got in jail for it. As I said, you can break a bad law, pay the fine, take the consequences and stand up to it. I am not saying I endorse everything the Greens do or that the Labor Party does, but on this issue they are right to have that opinion.