Tag Archives: Hezbollah

Uncorrectable barbarism in the Muslim world

The young woman in the photo below – the one bleeding from multiple rapes and dragged around by her hair by her less-than-human captors – was the one image of 7 October I can’t forget. On this animalistic photo alone – with all its implications of what the Muslim world is like – the Israelis are justified in bombing the shit out of them.

Multiple terrorist actions by Muslims through fifty years have shown they would do the same to any non-Muslim if they had a chance.

To ignore this unalterable fact, the properly constituted authorities of the nation of Australia would be guilty of the most heinous betrayal.

Remember this at the coming Federal Election early in 2025

Muslim fanatics scorn Australia’s laws

AAP reports below that Muslim fanatics under the banner of the barbaric terrorist groups Hamas and Hezbollah will conduct their obscene protests no matter what.

Of course, they will.

These Muslims have contempt for Australia’s laws. Indeed, they have contempt for anything which does not suit their hellish ideology.

Will Australia’s legitimate authorities do anything about their hateful behavior? Probably not. Not only have they not done anything about it, but they have made it worse by opening Australia’s borders to these lawless people.

Will nobody do anything? Must we sit by steaming with fury while watching people who hate Australia and Australians occupy our city streets?

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Palestine rally organisers vow to ignore court ruling

AAP Story by Jack Gramenz and Callum Godde

 A pending court case will not stop pro-Palestine rallies and vigils around the anniversary of the Hamas terror attack on Israel, as one premier says her state is powerless to halt them.

Evidence will be filed on Thursday before a hearing in the NSW Supreme Court to decide on a police push to declare that scheduled rallies in Sydney should not go ahead on Sunday and Monday.

A snap protest has been organised, with the Palestine Action Group Sydney calling on supporters to gather in the court precinct prior to the hearing.

“The application to ban demonstrations commemorating and mourning one year of Israel’s genocide in Gaza and now invasion of Lebanon is an attack on fundamental democratic rights,” the group said.

Organiser Josh Lees said demonstrators needed to protest “more than ever to stop this war and madness that is going on”.

“We’ll be going ahead with our protest on Sunday … regardless of what happens in the court,” he told ABC Radio on Thursday.

NSW has a permit system that allows participants to disobey laws against blocking transport routes, but police can go to court to deny protest permission.

A small number of flags for militant group Hezbollah were flown at a recent rally in Melbourne. (James Ross/AAP PHOTOS)

Read the rest here . . .

Who would have thought that a Muslim terrorist flag would adorn our city streets?

Australians – be angry, be very angry.

Remember this at the coming Federal Election early in 2025

The Muslim fanatic is well established in Australia

If you want any proof of the deep roots fanatical Islam has struck in Australia, this video will give it. The Muslim coverage begins at 1 min 12 secs.

These people are our enemies. They say it themselves. For them Australia is a ‘shithole, racist, settler colony’. They don’t recognize our long legally constituted country. Yet some of these fanatics sit treacherously on seats in our parliament.

Do we have to wait for a couple Muslim fanatics to step from the train at Wynyard Station and pump bullets into the white people they can see in the crowd?

Multiculturalism has been a criminally conceived disaster for the people who built the Australian nation.

Remember this at the coming Federal Election in 2025

Peter Dutton speaks the truth

The left-wing, woke Guardian provided a lengthy report (below) on the Hezbollah flags in which it couldn’t help showing its mindless left-wing bias for the woke community who can’t think for themselves. An example was their inclusion of Peter Dutton’s comments on the incident:

Peter Dutton suggested protesters were praising Hezbollah leader Nasrallah and that some were visa-holders. The opposition leader did not provide any evidence to support the allegation.

(And the Guardian did not provide any evidence against Dutton’s ‘suggestion’ – a suggestion that has reasonable grounds.)

“There are people who are living in the Jewish community in fear and there is an absolute outrage in relation to the glorification of a terrorist leader, which surely must be against the Australian law,” Dutton – a former home affairs minister – told Brisbane radio 4BC. “And if it’s not, the parliament should be recalled to pass a law that prohibits that from happening.”

Dutton said existing laws should be enforced.

“I find it completely unacceptable that the government wouldn’t be arresting people already or cancelling visas of people who are glorifying Hezbollah and Hamas and others. They have no place in our country.”

Bravo! Peter Dutton for saying what most Australians are thinking: such people ‘have no place in our country.’

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Victoria police identify six possible criminal incidents after Hezbollah flags seen at weekend protests

Story by Karen Middleton and Adeshola Ore

Melbourne protest on 29 September against Israeli strikes in Gaza and Lebanon. Some marchers carried Hezbollah flags. Photograph: James Ross/AAP

Melbourne protest on 29 September against Israeli strikes in Gaza and Lebanon. Some marchers carried Hezbollah flags. Photograph: James Ross/AAP© Photograph: James Ross/AAP

Victoria police say they have identified six possible criminal incidents relating to weekend protests in Melbourne against Israel’s attacks on Lebanon, after initial suggestions that no offences had been committed.

The AFP confirmed on Monday that it was expecting at least six reports of alleged crimes from their Victorian counterparts involving symbols and chants which are prohibited under federal hate speech law. It also said it would be writing to major news outlets asking for video footage of the protests which could assist in investigations.

Some marchers at capital-city protests over the weekend carried Hezbollah flags and portraits of leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli attack. Those marchers have drawn criticism from the federal government, which has threatened to cancel the visa of anyone inciting “discord” in Australia and has warned against importing “radical ideologies of conflict”.

The Hezbollah flag is considered a prohibited symbol as Australia has designated the group a terrorist organisation.

The Victorian premier, Jacinta Allan, said she expected police to take action over the “utterly unacceptable” display of Hezbollah flags at weekend protests in Melbourne.

“This is driving deep grief and division here on the streets of Melbourne,” she said. “I expect the police agencies to pursue this.”

“Bringing grief and pain and division to the streets of Melbourne by displaying these prohibited symbols, is utterly unacceptable.”

Read the rest here . . .

Remember this at the coming Federal Election in 2025

The Muslim community mourns a Muslim monster

Will the above heading earn me a knock on the door for contravening the absurd legislation that allows the arrest of someone for telling the truth?

Aha, but the truth in this matter is too repugnant and wounding to a particular community in Australia to be allowed. Will the Labor Government’s new Commissar for Islamophobia also come knocking?

The report below demonstrates what surveys have shown time again; the majority in Muslim communities in the West support groups like Hezbollah and Hamas and their actions; and a sizable minority support the barbarism of actions like the Hamas action on 7 October 2023.

What is it about the Labor Party that motivates them to form policy that allows cultural groups into Australia that are – to put it mildly – incompatible with Australian values and traditions?

Where did the insanity come from?

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Victoria police identify six possible criminal incidents after Hezbollah flags seen at weekend protests

Crowds have gathered at Sydney mosques to hold vigils for Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in scenes that have been labelled ‘deeply disturbing’.

news.com.au September 30, 2024

Crowds have gathered outside mosques in Sydney to mourn Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

Nasrallah has been called a “terrorist” with “blood on his hands” after leading the group for four decades.

His death by air strike on Friday was welcomed by the US who said he was responsible for killing hundreds of Americans.

Police in Sydney and Melbourne have said they will investigate after people were seen flying the Hezbollah flag at pro-Palestine protests over the weekend.

Mourners gather at Al Rahman mosque in Kingsgrove after the death of Hezbollah leader. Photo Jeremy Piper

Mourners gather at Al Rahman mosque in Kingsgrove after the death of Hezbollah leader. Photo Jeremy Piper

NSW Police referred to the flags as a symbol of a “terrorist organisation”.

“People have to know that they are carrying a symbol that is prohibited,” NSW Assistant Commissioner for Central Metropolitan Region Peter McKenna said.

“Generally speaking, we give them the opportunity to remove that symbol, and if they don’t, and they continue presenting that symbol in a public place, then they may have committed that offence.”

On Monday evening hundreds of people attended vigils at three mosques in Sydney to pay tribute to Nasrallah.

People hold up the yellow Hezbollah flag at a protest at Town Hall in Sydney Picture: NewsWire / Damian Shaw

Crowds spilt out onto the street at the Al Rahman Mosque in Kingsgrove at around 7pm as the vigil got underway.

Meanwhile the , in Banksia, has commenced a three-day vigil to remember Nasrallah, posting on Facebook that it would be holding mourning councils from Sunday to Tuesday, The Daily Telegraph reports.

Read the rest here . . .

Remember this at the coming Federal Election in 2025

Why are they here in the first place?

The report below is from the government’s multicultural broadcaster SBS – Australia’s anti-white central. The report is surprisingly neutral for SBS who puts the boot into Australia’s white Anglo population (the majority) whenever it can. The trouble is they were cornered. They couldn’t openly justify the barbaric fanatics who adhere to Islamic groups like Hezbollah.

The same restrictions apply to the Labor Party spokesman Tony Burke. He could hardly minimize the seriousness of such blatant support for barbarism. But why, Tony Burke, are these Muslim fanatics in Australia, anyhow?

Why did your political party concoct the multicultural policies that are now threatening to tear Australia apart?

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Tony Burke warns of visa cancellations after Hezbollah flags waved at Melbourne protest

Politicians have condemned the presence of Hezbollah flags at a pro-Palestinian rally in Melbourne, which could also prompt referrals to federal police.

A man in a suit speaks at a lectern.

Federal Liberal frontbencher James Paterson said the presence of Hezbollah flags at a pro-Palestinian protest was “disturbing” as the home affairs minister warned of visa cancellations for anyone seeking to incite “discord” in Australia.

The rally in Melbourne formed part of a national day of action for Gaza, with thousands of people also taking to the streets in Sydney and other cities.

A small group with Hezbollah flags — some holding what appeared to be framed photographs of the Lebanese militant group’s slain leader, Hassan Nasrallah — joined the Melbourne event as speeches ended and people began to march.

Nasrallah was killed by an Israeli airstrike on Friday amid escalating tensions in the region.

Paterson said the presence of Hezbollah flags at the rally was “disturbing” given it is designated by Australia as a terrorist organisation and called for police to enforce the law.

Victoria Police said the display of terrorist symbols was a Commonwealth offence.

“[We] support the right to protest peacefully and had a visible presence at the protest to ensure public safety,” it said in a statement.

“Appropriate referrals will be made to the Australian Federal Police as the lead agency concerning prohibited symbols.”

Minister for Home Affairs Tony Burke said: “Any indication of support for a terrorist organisation is unequivocally condemned.”

“It draws the immediate attention of our security agencies. There is a higher level of scrutiny if anyone is on a visa. I have made clear from day one that I will consider refusing and cancelling visas for anyone who seeks to incite discord in Australia.”

Organisers of the rally told AAP the group was not affiliated with those running the demonstration.

Read the rest here . . .

Remember this at the coming Federal Election in 2025

People who don’t belong in Australia – but they’re here courtesy of the Labor Party

‘Australia and Israel share two things in common … being a shithole, racist, settler colony …’ Nasser Mashni, president of the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network (APAN)

Fanatical Nasser Mashni and his Labor Party sponsor

Australia’s #1 Hamas Fan

Timothy Cootes, QUADRANT, Sep 11 2024

Nasser Mashni, president of the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network (APAN), has been impossible to avoid of late. His irruption into public debate began at about the same time as Hamas’ pogrom, when many journalists got into the habit of including a comment from Mashni in their copy. Since then, he’s become a regular interviewee on the national broadcaster and a talented demagogue at the podium at the weekly pro-Palestine rallies across our capital cities.

Unsurprisingly, he was quoted just about everywhere in the wash-up from Opposition Leader Peter Dutton’s call for a pause on Gazan refugees. Words like “shameful” and “racist” have received quite a workout in APAN’s press releases in the last week or so, though it should be noted that those were some of the milder rebukes.

Before Mashni made his acquaintance with the broader Australian public, he was better known to the Victorian justice system. In 1991, a 22-year-old Mashni was convicted for kidnapping a child, whom he beat and locked in the boot of a car. According to the Herald Sun, he then drove his victim to an empty paddock, where he expressed a keen interest in breaking the child’s legs. Since that day out and his subsequent conviction, Nasser Mashni’s moral outlook, I would argue, hasn’t really improved all that much. On October 7, he was busy ‘liking’ social media posts that praised and justified the massacre, though, to be fair, that was hardly unusual among the activist and intellectual Left.

Mashni has distinguished himself from his co-thinkers, however, in a number of ways. His anti-Israel fulminations, for example, could rival in intensity those of just about any Hamas spokesperson, I suspect. “Israel has to cease to exist,” he told one interviewer recently. On his own radio show, he wobbled into conspiracy theory, railing against the world’s “power structures that all focus upon Zionism”. The solution, as usual, came in his demand for “the decolonisation of Palestine and the ending of Zionism.” He avoided specifics as to what that process might look like for Israelis, though his listeners probably didn’t have to think about it for very long.

After all, his preferred strategies aren’t exactly difficult to glean. Mashni and APAN are unconvinced of the prevailing view that Hamas is a terrorist organisation in the first place. He gets particularly huffy when his media interlocutors inquire as to whether he has a stern word to say about the terror army at all. Journalists really should resile from such a line of inquiry, as Mashni has always been rather ecumenical in his admiration for different factions of Islamists. When terrorists of Islamic Jihad and Al-Aqsa Brigades escaped from an Israeli prison in 2022, Mashni was quick to glorify them as “heroes”.

Read the rest here . . .