Monday, April 30, 2018
Inside Australia's growing neo-Nazi youth movement
Leftist anti-white discrimination has bred its reply
Around the nation a secretive group of white supremacists who salute Hitler and call for a white revolution are plastering hate speech across cities and universities.
The Antipodean Resistance are a group of radicalised neo-Nazis who describe themselves as 'the Hitlers you've been waiting for'.
To join the men's chapter, you have to be white, straight, young, monogamous and only interested in dating other white people. 'Racial treason is not tolerated,' members told Daily Mail Australia.
The group, which began in Melbourne in 2016, is spreading to cities and towns across the country. They recently opened a women's chapter to give women 'a choice to live their lives in accordance to their natural roles'.
Over email an anonymous representative for the group told Daily Mail Australia that their 'activists come from all walks of life'. 'Our ranks are made up by men and women from every corner of the workforce. Our members have families. Some have wives and children that they seek to protect,' they said.
'We are telling you that we are all around you. We build your houses, we cook your meals, and we keep your shelves stocked.'
The groups main targets are Jewish people, homosexuals and non-white immigrants. 'We oppose substance abuse, homosexuality, and all other rotten, irresponsible distractions laid before us by Jews and globalist elites.'
They accuse homosexuals of being 'defined by their own hedonism, and by virtue of their own perversions deprived of the natural capacity to reproduce'.
They also refer to Jewish people as 'social parasites'.
'We recognise that there is a fundamental truth to all of reality and that reality is governed by this natural law, whether human beings acknowledge it or not,' the representative says.
The group, which claims to have 300 members, first emerged in 2016 when they put up posters in Melbourne showing the shooting of a gay man, and the text 'Get the Sodomite filth off our streets'.
Since then they've carried out over 40 'hits' as they call them, with their propaganda appearing across the country. Usually conducted in the dead of night they'll plaster streets and universities with hate speech. 'Stop the hordes, N*****s, Ch***s, Dunec***s,' one poster reads. Others call for the murder of Jewish people.
Last year they put up flyers at Melbourne university which were written in simplified Chinese characters. They said Chinese people were not allowed into the building, otherwise they would be deported.
Posters bearing the name of a notorious neo-Nazi group which claim to be 'the Hitlers you've been waiting for' were plastered over the walls of Sydney University in 2017
'The policy of anonymity within the organisation is a pragmatic choice, as it is the most effective way to establish a political movement in the current climate,' their representative says.
'We also have no need to stroke our egos by putting our identities out on record for the world to see. We stand by our principles regardless of whether our identity is known or unknown.'
Not much is known about the group but researchers and left activists have been monitoring their actions.
Julie Nathan, a researcher at the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, has been investigating the group since they first emerged.
'The typical profile of a member is male, of white European background, aged from late teens to late twenties,' she tells Daily Mail Australia. 'Members are secretive about their identities, concealing both names and face'
'Some of them are stereotypical Hitler-saluting neo-Nazi thick-heads. But a small number of them appear to be tertiary-educated and the dominant figures.'
The neo-Nazi's have also been monitored by ASIO, out of fear the extremist group could turn violent.
'Members of these groups are diverse and have different agendas, including extreme right-wing and extreme left-wing ideologies,' ASIO said to a parliamentary review into the expenditure of security agencies.
'A few small subsets of these groups are willing to use violence to further their own interests.'
When asked if the group was was willing to use violence the group denied it.
'Antipodean Resistance does not believe that violence is the correct path to achieving victory,' they said.
But authorities aren't convinced. Ms Nathan says her research has shown the group has a connection to overseas terrorists organisations.
'Antipodean Resistance was one of several neo-Nazi groups which were incubated via the Iron March website (a notorious far right website shut down in 2017). The groups have maintained contact with each other.'
She says they are inspired by National Action in the UK, a white supremacists group, which was listed as a terrorist organisation in December 2016.
The group denied any affiliation with terrorists. They say their fight is about creating a society based on 'natural law.'
'When we preach our ideal future, we speak not of some Utopian post-scarcity society. We strive for something far purer, and far more realistic.'
'We strive not for an equal society, but for a one that exists in harmony with natural law, rather than in conflict.'
Ms Nathan says their end game is total domination and their membership is growing. 'The group has been able to distribute its hate propaganda across cities and towns across Australia, and organise martial arts training in remote regional areas,' she said.
'The group’s leaders have no illusions about AR becoming a popular mass-based organisation. Their dream is to impose their own Nazi dictatorship on Australia.
'Even a small group of brainwashed fanatics who co-ordinate their actions and have no moral compass whatsoever can cause immense harm.'
SOURCE
Channel Nine faces $50,000 fine for using 'Anzac' as code word in Today Show cash giveaway
Channel Nine has breached a law that protects the word 'ANZAC' from inappropriate commercial use when it used it in one of it's cash giveaways.
The Today show used the word ANZAC as a code in it's daily cash give away, which is a breach of the law and carries a penalty of up to $51,000.
The popular morning show runs daily $10,000 cash giveaways where audiences text in code words advertised on the previous day to enter.
For the commemorative public holiday, the code word was ANZAC.
The minister for veterans affairs administers the protection of the word and have said they were not approached by the show.
Their approval is needed for it's use in connection with 'any trade, business, calling or profession or in connection with any entertainment or any lottery or art union or as the name or part of a name of any private residence, boat, vehicle of charitable or other institution, or other institution, or any building.'
Even the biscuits are monitored and can only have the word ANZAC attached to them if they are the traditional recipe and shape.
A spokeswoman for the Department of Veterans Affairs told Fairfax media that the use of the word was not approved by Minister Darren Chester.
'Even if they had approached us, we wouldn't normally grant them the use of the word Anzac in this manner,' she said.
While the spokesperson said 'no decision had been made' as to if they would escalate she stressed that there were significant penalties for breaching the law. Under the Crimes Act of 1914, a penalty of up to $51,000 may be imposed
When deciding on the appropriateness of attaching the word to a commercial context the Minister considers the views of the ex-service community, the intent of the legislation and any commemorative links.
The controversy came just after the show's host Karl Stefanovic blasted cinemas for releasing the film Avengers: Infinity War on ANZAC day. In an impassioned speech he argued that it was 'a grubby cash grab' and questioned what it taught children.
'There might be some legitimate reason why the Avengers is opening on ANZAC day but I haven't seen it...how on earth are our kids supposed to breathe in the significance of ANZAC day?' he said.
Channel Nine acknowledged its use of a word in a giveaway was a poor choice
SOURCE
Must not notice that Aborigines have dark skin
IT WAS supposed to be a nice way to bid farewell to their friends, family and followers on social media, but one comment in a video message has landed Married at First Sight’s Troy Delmege in trouble.
The reality TV star took the controversial clip with his lover Carly Bowyer before leaving Melbourne International Airport to jet off to Bali yesterday.
Uploaded to Instagram stories, the surprise couple known on the show for their goofy antics revealed how excited they were about their getaway.
However, giddy Delmege started talking about how tanned they planned on becoming when he made a strange comment about indigenous Australians.
“Couldn’t be more excited,” he said in the video. “Can’t wait to get the tan on, get some heat on me after being in Melbourne for a few weeks.” He then pointed at his Bowyer before adding: “I’m going to be dark, (but) she’ll be darker, like an Aborigine!”
The video then abruptly ends and it appears that Bowyer quickly cut the clip.
Indigenous activist Tarneen Onus-Williams, shared the video on Twitter and branded Delmege’s comments “disgusting”.
SOURCE
Australian jihadi's Sydney high school was a 'religious hothouse that made him ashamed of his heritage' - before he fled to Syria to join a terror group
An Australian government school is a hothouse of Sunni Muslim preaching???
The father of an Australian jihadist jailed for travelling to Syria to join an Islamist terror group says his son's secular high school was a 'religious hothouse' that made him ashamed of his heritage.
Mehmet Biber, 25, who flew from Sydney to the Middle East in 2013 to join Jabha al-Nusra, was sentenced on Friday to at least two-and-a-half years jail after pleading guilty to entering a foreign state intending hostile activity.
During sentencing, the court heard of his father's concerns about Parramatta High School in Sydney's west, where his jailed son was a student.
'We were very happy Australian public schools were totally secular and glad we sent Mehmet to one. We were misinformed... We came to learn it was a religious hothouse,' the court heard, according to The Daily Telegraph.
The court heard Biber's father, Gaven, believed religious practices were 'a constant feature' of education at the school, and that teachers thought they were being were being 'culturally sensitive' by encouraging it.
The court heard the father believed Biber was made to feel ashamed of his Alawite heritage, a branch of Shia Islam.
'Visiting mullahs and prayer groups and school employed emirs were a constant feature of education there. All of them it seemed legitimising a strain of Sunni fundamentalism,' the court heard.
The father tried four times to alert authorities before his son travelled to Syria. He later went to Turkey himself to persuade him to come home.
Outside court on Friday, Mr Biber said Mehmet posed no risk to the community and just wanted to get on with his life.
'We did everything in our power to stop him but, unfortunately, the authorities gave us no assistance whatsoever,' he said. 'Any parent would have done the same thing that I did.'
Justice Christine Adamson on Friday jailed Biber for four years and nine months with a non-parole period of two and a half years.
During a NSW Supreme Court hearing last week, Biber insisted he never went near the front line because his hosts - from the moderate Ahrar al-Sham group - were protective of Australians.
However, he conceded he would have tried if allowed. Justice Adamson accepted part but not all of his evidence.
She considered his offending 'well below the mid-range of seriousness' for the charge which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years. Biber's youth and naivety at the time of the trip were mitigating factors, the judge said.
His decision to leave behind his pregnant wife in Australia and pose for photos during the trip with a group of men holding assault rifles were indicative of his immaturity.
SOURCE
Posted by John J. Ray (M.A.; Ph.D.). For a daily critique of Leftist activities, see DISSECTING LEFTISM. To keep up with attacks on free speech see Tongue Tied. Also, don't forget your daily roundup of pro-environment but anti-Greenie news and commentary at GREENIE WATCH . Email me here
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