For Gorsake, Stop Laughing
![A judge dangles precariously from high up on a construction site, and says, 'For gorsake stop laughing, this is serious.' A CFMEU worker holds the judge's legs and says, 'Who's laughing?' A judge dangles precariously from high up on a construction site, and says, 'For gorsake stop laughing, this is serious.' A CFMEU worker holds the judge's legs and says, 'Who's laughing?'](/sites/default/files/2024-11/2024_th09_10_for-gorsake-stop-laughing_alston.jpg)
Dean Alston
In the middle of the year an investigation by Nine Papers alleged that bikies and criminals acting as union delegates were employed on state government-funded projects. Dean Alston addresses the story by alluding to one of the most famous images in Australian history, Stan Cross’s 1933 cartoon ‘For gorsake, stop laughing: this is serious!’, which featured two men involved in a dangerous mishap while working high up on a skyscraper construction site. The original cartoon depicted the kind of accident that unions such the CFMEU were initially formed to protect workers from.