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"Personally I think it's pretty stupid really. It's the Australian national anthem, it's a part of our sport, our history."[/color]
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Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has described the campaign as "divisive".[/color]
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"This is a weekend where everyone comes together," he told 3AW Radio.[/color]
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"The two big codes, the NRL and AFL, work hard to be inclusive and embrace modern Australia and all of its diversity.[/color]
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"Sport is a really wonderful inclusive institution in Australia. It divides us in the sense that we support different teams, but only in a pretty good-natured way, but above all it pulls us together. That's why we should all sing."[/color][color=rgb(64, 64, 64)]Former rugby league player Joe Williams has been one of the loudest voices backing the campaign[/color][color=rgb(64, 64, 64)]Williams, who is Aboriginal, has attracted controversy before for [/color][color=rgb(34, 34, 34)]
remaining seated during the anthem
[/color][color=rgb(64, 64, 64)], during an Australia Day ceremony recognising his community work.[/color]
[color=rgb(64, 64, 64)]"Why should we sing something that doesn't represent us?" he told the BBC.[/color][color=rgb(64, 64, 64)]"Would Malcolm Turnbull feel comfortable if he was made to sing God Save the Queen?"[/color][color=rgb(64, 64, 64)] dismissed suggestions that the country's biggest sporting events were inappropriate venues to make a political statement.[/color][color=rgb(64, 64, 64)]"You're a black man until the day you die," he said.[/color]
[color=rgb(64, 64, 64)]"You're only a footballer for a short amount of time."[/color]