Protests Erupt in Melbourne to Oppose Government’s Emergency Powers

Thousands of protesters have taken to the streets of Melbourne, the capital of Victoria, to oppose the unprecedented emergency powers the Victorian Government is trying to grant itself. 7news has more.

Thousands of people gathered in Melbourne’s CBD on Saturday to rally against the State Government’s new emergency powers and vaccine mandates.

Protesters blocked tram lines as they marched from the State Library to Parliament. One man was seen carrying a homemade gallows with three nooses but there were no reports of unrest.

Former Liberal MP turned United Australia Party leader Craig Kelly addressed the protest, saying mandatory vaccinations were an “abuse of human rights”.

“We are being governed by medical bureaucrats that are part of a mad, insane cult of vaccinists,” he told the rally.

As of Friday, just under 93% of Victorians aged 12 years-old and over had received at least one vaccine dose and 86% both.

The deadline for construction workers to be fully vaccinated to continue working on site has been reached.

The controversial mandate, which sparked violent protests across Melbourne in September, requires all tradies to have had two vaccine doses by Saturday.

Victorian aged care workers must be fully vaccinated by Monday and about one million of the state’s essential workers in total will be required to be double-jabbed by November 26th.

Worth reading in full.

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Lister of Smeg
Lister of Smeg
4 years ago

Notice how the MSM ‘reporting’ never gives a proper estimate of the true scale of the protest – unlike BLM etc where they always over-estimate the numbers. No conspiracy there then.

I saw photos and video from anti-lockdown protests in London and they appeared to number in (my guess) the high tens of thousands to 200k, but they didn’t show everyone at the same time, so it was likely much larger.

Hardly a peep in the British media, except where people got arrested. Funny how the normally ‘over-the-top’ heavy handed policing that they always report never is mentioned on such protests.

Still, compared to the Aussie Police, ours are like pootie-tats. Some of the things the former get up to to ‘quell’ protests or (in their eyes) law-breakers (most aren’t) resemble something out of the Soviet Union, China or some other totalitarian state.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  Lister of Smeg

And within an authoritarian country, Victoria stands out as being quite wicked. Their police are particularly nasty. Great to see people protesting against the oppressive regime.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

Fuck off you dim wit bot

Anonymous
Anonymous
4 years ago
Reply to  Lister of Smeg

I know this is an unpopular thing to point out on this forum, so I am preparing myself for a lot of thumbs downs and verbal ripping to pieces, lol, but the media did the same with the anti-Brexit demonstrations…

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
4 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

But we had a vote on that.

milesahead
milesahead
4 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

I remember the BBC (in particular) giving a lot of coverage to the anti-Brexit marches – and regularly reporting the organisers’ exaggerated estimates of participant numbers!

Phil Shannon
4 years ago
Reply to  Lister of Smeg

How will the MSM spin this massive protest? Well, none of them – and that includes the ABC (the Antipodean clone of your BBC) and all the corporate media – went anywhere near citing the 40,000 to 50,000 estimates of rally organisers and supporters. They all, uniformly, went with the vague, and much safer, “large crowd” or the diluted “thousands” rather than “tens of thousands” which would have been more accurate ball-park, before reverting to their Covid porn staple diet of ‘Covid “death toll”, “cases”, ‘outbreaks’, intensive care and ventilators, and the gripping drama of rising vaxx rates.  It’s almost as if the MSM are loyally parroting the propaganda media releases from Dan’s bunker. There was a brief play with with the massive protest being run by “Qanon” but, thankfully the attempt to smear the protest as that of “far-right conspiracy theorists and anti-vaxxers” was largely absent (even the MSM don’t believe there could be 50,000 of those). From the relative haven of South Australia, across the border with Victoria, the sights and sounds of the protest were heartening, especially to this old leftie veteran of more protests than you’ve had hot dinners. I can assure you that, if the media… Read more »

Gregoryno6
4 years ago
Reply to  Phil Shannon

‘Relative haven’ seems a fair description, Phil. SA has dropped off the radar since Nicola made that idiotic ‘don’t catch the ball’ announcement.

Phil Shannon
4 years ago
Reply to  Gregoryno6

But the sainted Nicola is hanging on grimly with her mask mandate. It’s due to be lifted on Nov 23rd, so she may have to go back to her boring old desk job as an innocuous public servant soon. And she’s got some unused vaxx stocks to flog. She won’t be missed when this is all over.

Smelly Melly
4 years ago

Violence is the answer. Power is not handed back it has to be taken, at the point of a gun if necessary.

You’ve all heard of the Suffragettes but have you heard of the Suffragists (the women who wanted Votes for Women but through peaceful protest).

The IRA won in Ireland, they are exempt from prosecution but our soldier aren’t.

Nelson Mandela was a terrorist but he won in the end.

The post war Israel government were all members of terrorist (freedom fighter) organisations.

The politicians have awarded themselves powers they shouldn’t have and the only way to get those powers back is by violence.

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

It is in the end, I fear. The trouble is the covidian dictators are selling people soft toys and security, meaning the people will never rise. Things are not bad enough yet. They may never be, for the boiled frogs. Our resistance is limited to a handful of websites, hushed conversations, ultimately meaningless protests, and ‘personal salvation’ through loopholes in covid measures, as well as calling authorities’ bluff over masks and vaccines. The majority do not and may never support out views, unless leadership emerges (as I have said several times on this site before). All we can do (for now) is win our own war: survive on our own terms. I wish it weren’t true, but it is.

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

I don’t think we will remain a small minority, I don’t think that’s the intention. A large number of compliant people recently became dissidents by turning down their ‘booster’ shot. I know several. By round four or five, a few million more will have joined the ranks. I think the intention is to get to roughly half not on board. Then we’re in civil war territory.

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

Our support will grow, but the authorities can skillfully defuse any civil war before it starts. Perhaps we need to embrace the ‘antivaxxer’ tag, and do more like radical climateer activism, short of AK-47s, first?

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Skilfully defuse a civil war?
Tell that to King Charles I’s head.

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

They can end this any time they choose. But in the future, it will be too late….

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

We need some kind of more-or-less unifying tag, for sure. And if there’s a suitable one appropriable from the enemy (cf. “suffragette”), then great, but I don’t think “anti-vaxxer” is it. The tetanus vaccine is OK.

isobar
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

I think that the key thing is to create and perpetuate outrage amongst stakeholder groups. We should also seek to poor scorn on ‘Building back better’. With all the damage caused by lockdowns it should be ‘Building back bitter’

Anonymous
Anonymous
4 years ago
Reply to  isobar

Someone here spelled it like this last week: 6uild 6ack 6etter. That made me think…

isobar
4 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Nice one! Am sick and tired of Western democracy (once were) leaders all using the same WEF catch phrase.

Banjones
Banjones
4 years ago
Reply to  isobar

Here’s one compilation. I think there’s another from Pandata.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YkcaeaD45MY

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Yeah. I’ve had to completely rethink my attitude towards evil. Up until 2 years ago, I was complacent enough to think it didn’t really exist. Now I’m not so sure.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  isobar

“Stakeholder”🤮

John Dee
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

A good thing to be if you’re dispatching vampires.

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Maybe not the antivaxxer tag (although there is some logic in this) but some kind of organised movement, and it needs to be worldwide. It’s far too fragmented at the moment. It feels to me like we need to abandon the old political categories and create something completely new.

Banjones
Banjones
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

You mean like ‘building back better’?!

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

The rulers push the envelope. And one way they do this to is create a distribution of opinions, not necessarily strongly held ones but opinions nonetheless, which is more or less 50-50. Then they push or entice those on one side over to the other side.

Right now, this obviously won’t be something like “anti-Covid vaccines good vs anti-Covid vaccines bad”.

It might be something more like “allow unvaccinated 12-16 year-olds to attend school, or ban them?”

Or “allow unvaccinated footballers to play in Premier League teams, or stop them?”

Then eventually – and this may not be too far in the future – it could be “allow unvaccinated people to receive emergency treatment in hospital, or don’t even let anyone be taken into an ambulance unless the paramedics have checked their helpy pass?”

That’s how envelopes get pushed.

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

No, but without leadership and organisation, all we are doing is debating stuff on this site. There is no progress because there is no strategy from our side. Is there even a ‘side’ or just random people identifying with one?

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Agreed. OK so what are the tasks that need organising? Let me offer

  • documents
  • communications
  • unity themes (thus certain matters on which opinions differ a lot among resisters really must be put aside)
  • basic security training (e.g. on surveillance, infiltration, penetration)
BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

That’s all needed. There would need to be in-person meetings with anyone willing to participate, plus a way of forming a leadership and organised network. Most of this can be done via sites like this.

No need to avoid the spooks, since whatever was done would eventually be discovered…

The big question is: who is motivated and/or can spare the energy and time to do it?

There would be reluctance to take part in ‘covert’ activities, too. All slightly barmy.

Personally, I have my own constraints and limitations.

A pity that the likes of Lawrence Fox or David Kurten can’t be coopted to lead this cause.

isobar
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Neil Oliver would be good!

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

I also agree and would be very willing to contribute. For my part, I am not holding back any longer around hypnotised and brainwashed people. I do not want to keep my head down any more and don’t think this is a sensible strategy. I’m starting to believe this is existential and is the struggle that will define the rest of our lives.

Banjones
Banjones
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

Let’s ask one of the 77th who is monitoring this what he/she thinks would be a good plan…..

Anonymous
Anonymous
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

I’m not sure. The aim is definitely control over our bodies and the setting up of a new financial system linked to this, but I think they want us all compliant. I think things have already gone very wrong and there is panic in the upper echelons. If they are getting Hancock to publish ridiculous articles in the DT as a strategy, things must be pretty desperate!

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

It’s true the wheels are falling off all over the place but there’s just a bit of me that wonders if this is simply designed to create absolute chaos. Shock doctrine, described as:
‘the exploitation of national crises (disasters or upheavals) to establish controversial and questionable policies, while citizens are too distracted (emotionally and physically) to engage and develop an adequate response, and resist effectively.’

Bafflingly though, Naomi Klein is on the covid bandwagon. 🤷‍♂️

imp66
imp66
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

Let’s hope the shots the initially compliant accepted haven’t wiped hundreds of thousands of them out by then.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

‘Hushed conversations’. I well recall numerous lively, one on one, conversations in which my interlocutor was quite willing to agree that lockdown was mostly bollocks before doning their mask and heading for the sanitizer.

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Yes but we need a network because otherwise we can be picked up one by one, and that’s the end.
The backbone of that network MUST BE OFFLINE. That is fundamental.

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

Ultimately it will be offline, because we’ll have to ‘know people’ to support us as disappeared vagabonds in society as it were…

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

I agree and I think that’s exactly what we’ll see gradually consume the west over the next year. I also think this was and is the intention. We’ve been destabilised (a la CIA) and politically weakened and disenfranchised, then turned against each other. Civil war is where this leads, I’m sure of it.

mishmash
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

All part of the Reset agenda.
Out of the ashes and all that…..

caipirinha17
caipirinha17
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

I think this is all distraction from the real agenda, which is the climate change rubbish. I’m expecting a war alright, but not internal to the UK – it’ll be the USA (plus Europe) vs China (supported by Russia and Australasia) over who has reneged on their COP26 ‘agreement’. The UK will be flattened in the process allowing the PM to deliver Carrie’s ridiculous projects.

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  caipirinha17

China and the US cooperated in Wuhan. Do you have any examples of China and Russia, or China and the West, cooperating on similar biowar efforts?

crisisgarden
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

To me it feels more like an accepted understanding amongst all governments that the West, particularly the US, is going to collapse economically and the covid scam is a way of managing this, providing plausible deniability, and retaining power. Totalitarianism seems to be an emergent property of these kinds of scenarios, it’s just that we’ve never seen a global collapse before.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  caipirinha17

Oceania will be at war with Eurasia?

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  caipirinha17

I think Climate is just another smokescreen. They all know it is balls.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

As was Archbishop Makarios in Cyprus, gaoled as a terrorist, later hailed as National Hero.

But I disagree with your general point until the democratic process has been exhausted.

Barbara Baker
Barbara Baker
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Sadly the democratic process has been abandoned, you cannot exhaust what does not exist. Short of severe near total non compliance, the frustration will boil over eventually

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Barbara Baker

Suspended certainly in the case of the Mayor of London, I’m not sure whether that would be the best place to test from our point of view since Khan has such a large embedded support base.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

The Guardian is the propaganda organ of his power base. The Metropolitan Police, extraordinarily, is well on the way to being his military wing. He is an ambitious and potentially dangerous man.

stewart
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus
  1. Our democracy is a sham. It was an elegant sham when those in power acted responsibly and with restraint. The moment they stopped doing so, it has become an ugly sham. The majority don’t really get to chose anything except which out of two groups of elites are going to rule over us.
  2. What is so great about democracy anyway? if the majority of the population agree that a minority that refuses to take a medical treatment must be put under house arrest, deprived of a living and generally discriminated against, then democracy is a piece of shit.
Anti_socialist
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

And it’s not even a majority is it, few elections are won with much more than a 35% share of the vote, where only 65% of the electorate voted!

The majority never actually get what they vote for! Democracy is a fraud, a mindfuck of the highest order. We are were just free-range slaves, held hostage now by frightened socialists, the irony is socialism is one of the most selfish acts of a society.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Democracy can’t be blamed if a third or more of the electorate aren’t arsed to take part.
My Socialist MP always gets a thumping majority, dunno why as this is hardly a hotbed of urban militancy. Should I therefore claim that my vote is wasted/stolen?

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

All political forms are arbitrary and contingent historically. Democracy is a means to an end; it is just what we are used to as a concept. What matters is the correct principles animating the political form. These must be upheld. So when, and how, do we uphold them?

Anti_socialist
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Only recently I was made aware many European countries are really quite young, Germany (the country) for example barely more than 150 years old. The world is in constant transition, it’s our job to see it changes for the better.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

At the apogee of Prussian militarism ‘Germany’ was, in many respects, more socially liberal than Britain at the time.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

An election is like choosing whether you pay your protection money to the Krays or to the Richardson gang. Either way you get your windows broken if you don’t pay. And probably even if you do.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Such such a question has yet to be put to any democratic body.

stewart
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

The German and Austrian parliaments?
And then there is the tacit agreement of the population that complies and stands by as others are kicked out of jobs, shut out of public venues and soon placed under house arrest.

Leo Albert
Leo Albert
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Once the lockdowns started and MPs stopped seeing constituents, it cemented their tendency mainly to represent their own social grade i.e. the 4% of the population whose earnings are the highest in the country, and who have access to private health and education. This class tends to be Globalist or Remainer in outlook, soft-leftist or Blairite, Green and often sympathetic to Wokery, irrespective of political party. You can see the sympathies of this class represented for example in those who are chosen to be heads of Oxbridge Colleges. They do not represent the broad mass of middle or working class England, and a good many of their consensual opinions eg about Covid, Greenery and international relations, are pretty much deluded.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

I think it was Churchill who said, roughly, that democracy was the least bad of the options available.
While Starmer has indeed turned the role of Opposition into a sham I can’t think of a better bad option than a functioning democracy.

As for your second point, it has yet to be tested.

Encierro
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

Violence will win……… in the cases of Lenin, Hitler,Mussolini, Franco, Mao plus too many numerous dictators in Africa.

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

And do we want to be like them? Are we prepared to fight a just war based on correct methods ands principles, as opposed to one leading to self-contradiction through pride and insanity?

Encierro
4 years ago
Reply to  BS665

that is my whole point the pride ofall of those followers likes of those who I gave an example of thought that they were working for the good. Most violent struggles end with a crap result.

stewart
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

The French Revoluation, the American War of Independence,

Encierro
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

With the way things are going they are not great examples.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

The French revolution ended up with (exiled) Emperor Napoleon and France being invaded and raped by Germans four times.

The American revolution was simply an extension of the English civil war which led to them fighting our battles for the next two hundred years. Not a bad deal all told

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

All of whom, or their successors, came to a sticky end, bar Franco who finally conceded.

martinbritnell83
martinbritnell83
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

Exactly right. Peaceful protests have achieved nothing. Police shoot rubber bullets at their own people. I wouldn’t want to be Dan Andrews when someone gets hold of him… dead man walking.

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

Good that you mentioned the suffragettes and also that you bring up the terminology. “Suffragette” was a term of derision first used in the Daily Mail, and it was adopted by certain among the suffragists with an attitude of “Damned right – that’s what we are – suffragettes – and we’ll be right in your faces too – until we win”. See in particular the strategic brilliance of Sylvia Pankhurst. I really do not know of any other movement leader in the whole history of these islands who showed such brilliance. Anyone interested in the guerrilla war that the suffragettes fought should consider starting with the severe beatings meted out by the police on Black Friday on government instructions outside the Houses of Parliament. The derision and hatred against them was not just from the Daily Mail. It also came from the medical fraternity, including from the British Medical Association in its publications, which mocked the women who were being beaten and humiliated, and who committed what in the eyes of most medics was the cardinal sin of sins – they wouldn’t accept it, they fought the hell back with the intention of winning. There’s much more than this. The… Read more »

BS665
BS665
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

It may well come to this. Signs and banners, symbols and creeds. Because democracy is dying. Yet, people would fear to take the ultimate step into civil strife and identify with a cause unless utter chaos or existential threat descends. Can any group of rebels out-whit the techno-state and stand a chance of winning? Or is ‘the West’ descending into Hell all on its own?

TC
TC
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

I like what you say.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

I agree with much of what you say but not with your choice of symbol. There are many who have chosen, rightly or wrongly, to be vaccinated but are very much opposed to lockdowns, vaccine passports, mask mandates, and so on. We should keep them on board, not alienate them.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

I like that badge though could not in honesty wear it myself unless perhaps with a ‘3’ overprinted on it

Remind me please, who were the more militant, the Suffragettes or Suffragists?

I am Spartacas
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

I hate to admit it but I sometimes think that this government and the whole political establishment are only going to sit up and listen when their backs are against the wall.

Anti_socialist
4 years ago
Reply to  Smelly Melly

I was loving your comment to this point,

The post war Israel government were all members of terrorist…

that’s part of the problem.

The politicians have awarded themselves powers they shouldn’t have and the only way to get those powers back is by violence.

Sadly that’s looking increasingly true.

karenovirus
4 years ago

Before midday today reader Gregory06 posted a link, in Roundup comments, to his wordpress account with a homemade bitchute vid of this protest suggesting 50k attending.
Pro rata 200k for UK population

He later replies to Mark that attendance was greater than demos in 1975 during the ousting of Gough Whitlam as Aus PM by the Governor General, (a decision supported by the electorate in the ensuing General Election)

stewart
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

The world has changed a lot since 1975.

2003 and the anti Iraq was protests were a big turning point. It was the moment the establishment realised that if it ignores the masses and stays the course it can do and get away with whatever it wants.

Very importantly also, the media was not as corporatised as it is now. There is no independent press. The closest thing is the internet and social media which is ruthlessly censored.

Gregoryno6
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Thanks for the nod, karenovirus and Mark.
I’m watching Melbourne from the far side of the continent, but my impression is that the police are applying a lighter touch than they were two months ago. The numbers of citizens out in the streets have grown phenomenally. This isn’t just a few workers outside their union’s offices any more.
At the basic level the cops are exercising restraint on a simple self-preservation response. It’s also likely that the public statements by ex-Vicpol Krystle Mitchell and others have got remaining cops thinking about their role, and how far they’re willing to go for Chairman Dan.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Gregoryno6

Remarkable interview with Acting Senior Sergeant Krystle Mitchell i/c Gender Equality & Inclusion Command.

It’s not often I listen to a 1.5 hour interview but came across it at 2am on a Sunday morning.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Dramatic change in gear during this interview at 13 minutes in.

Krystle expects to lose her job of 16 years because of it, I would happily share a barricade with her, or an internment camp if needs be.

Gregoryno6
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

I won’t bury you with links, but search on ‘Alex Cooney’ and ‘Craig Backman’. Alex was the author of the letter last year that led to the formation of Cops For Covid Truth. Craig is another former Vicpol officer who couldn’t stomach the directives.

Encierro
4 years ago

There were also protests in The Netherlands after Rutte done his announcement of why he is shutting down the country again. Unfortunately these were violent, throwing fireworks and stones.This lets those who want to early make criticism of the protesters.
In the mean time it is the arrival day of the Dutch Sinterklaas. Some areas cancelled the celebrations those that did had areas ready for the vaxxed whilst all the non-vaxxed gathered in undefined areas. The crowds were large and we can expect an outbreak because of this this, I write sarcastically.

karenovirus
4 years ago

Flagged as Spam, again. Different messenger, same old message. I would urge fellow readers not to click that link.
Red flag top right of message box.

Mike Oxlong
4 years ago

Make a well known phrase or saying out of these two words: off, fuck

karenovirus
4 years ago

Congratulations to the DS editorial Team, within minutes of flagging the same old spam message that appeared early on this thread it had been deleted.
👏 🙌 👍

mishmash
4 years ago

“We are being governed by medical bureaucrats that are part of a mad, insane cult of vaccinists”

Nicely succinct want of describing it.

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

Austria “Just Days Away” From Unleashing Lockdown On The “Shameful” Unvaccinated

This would mean people without proof of 2G (full vaccination or recovery from Covid-19) would be unable to leave their homes except for essential reasons.

All Logic has been thrown out, The healthy (naturally immune) are now being quarantined to protect the health service from a disease so difficult to contract it still hasn’t passed through half the population. Whilst those proven to be infected & those who have no protection (vaccinated) from transmission are allowed to walk free. Special police asking for your papers worked out so well last time didn’t it.

How do you section politicians? There must be a process.

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Shoot them?

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Tempt them with a big wodge of £50 notes or some youthful thigh or something, and then have someone waiting around the corner with a baseball bat.

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

So the Austrian prime minister is calling 35% of the population “shameful”…from the safety of a press conference.

The Austrian state does have various badged premises in many countries… Just saying.

isobar
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Catch them with their pants down, seems to be a predilection with politicians and Gates lapdogs like Ferguson

Gregoryno6
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

If, a year or so from now, the vaccinated are being wiped out by ‘extremely rare’ adverse reactions, you can expect the Austrian government to demand a thank you from the unvaccinated.
‘Ungrateful swine! We SAVED you!’

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

Toxic smog in New Delhi way worse than previously thought

The Indian Supreme Court has demanded urgent measures to tackle the thick toxic smog that has been covering New Delhi for over a week. It even suggested imposing a brief lockdown. 

LOCKDOWNS the new normal!

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Thanks for posting this. RT call it a toxic smog. What exactly is the toxin?
Expect similar events in many countries…

kate
kate
4 years ago

https://childrenshealthdefense.eu/live-stream/

THE CIA DOES NOT DO PUBLIC HEALTH, THE CIA DOES COUP D’ÈTATS – KENNEDY THE CIA WROTE THE PANDEMIC SCRIPT” – ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR IN MILAN, ITALY, 13TH NOVEMBER 2021.
ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR IN MILAN NAMED AVRIL HAINES ASTHE CIA OFFICER IN CHARGE OF THE PANDEMIC GLOBAL COUP D’ETAT.

Encierro
4 years ago

This is on Farcebook at the moment. An Australian Dr Mark Hobart raided by government. It would seem that his patients say he is innocent.
I do not use FB so it asks me to long on after a few minutes. I cannot watch it all.
https://www.facebook.com/morgancjonas/videos/480340486546206/

Anti_socialist
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

What’s he accused of?

I don’t do FB out of principal, it’s one of many on my shit list, in fact almost all MSM outlets are on my shit list.

Dodderydude
Dodderydude
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

I have just watched the video. It would appear that Dr Hobart had been asked to provide the Dept of Health with patient records and he had refused on the grounds of patient confidentiality. The video picks up on an enforcement visit by seven ‘authorised officers’ (bearing jackets strangely embroidered with that title) who all arrived in separate cars (so much for climate change concerns!). After the ‘authorised officers’ depart, the people filming the incident get an interview with Dr Hobart which begins at 11 minutes and extends to the end at 19 minutes. He explains that the ‘officers’ took hold of private medical records of patients, seemingly at random, and his appointment book. They said they would provide him with an inventory of what they had taken in due course. In the meantime he was forbidden from providing any medical support other than by telephone and wasn’t allowed to charge for his services – presumably because of his refusal to comply with the records request. Dr Hobart didn’t have any idea of which patient records they had taken or, more fundamentally, WHY they had taken them; he wasn’t given any information. When he challenged them on the grounds of… Read more »

Anti_socialist
4 years ago
Reply to  Dodderydude

Thanks for time & explanation.

WoW, it’s really getting dark in Australia & what’s even more concerning is the apathy of world leaders!

It really shows the mentality of people that choose a career in public service control.

Common purpose/lock step? You have to wonder if the isolation of Australia makes it the perfect experimental grounds for the start of the

new world order” – George H. W. Bush

Dodderydude
Dodderydude
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Glad to help. You may have seen this already, but there is in this article (section 2) an interview with Bill Gates in which he cites Australia and New Zealand as the two countries who have demonstrated that “competent management could keep the death rate down pretty dramatically”. That doesn’t bode well. I should say it isn’t evident to me why the interview needs subtitles in English!

https://off-guardian.org/2021/11/07/this-week-in-the-new-normal-10/

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Dodderydude

Why is Gates even being asked for an opinion? Realistically he is nothing but a murderous, wealthy gangster but certainly not worthy of an opinion that we need to hear.

FFS.

Gregoryno6
4 years ago
Reply to  Dodderydude

Billy boy calls THIS ‘competent management’???

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

There are 20 million of them.

Encierro
4 years ago
Reply to  Dodderydude

thank you for that. I read some MSN, but to be honest I was none the wiser about what actually was going on. Hence why I did not post more. It is an important event though

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

Can someone who has an account with the CIA’s “Facebook” front or who is prepared to open one maybe copy the video and put it somewhere the rest of us can watch it?

bringbacksanity
bringbacksanity
4 years ago

Does not matter. If 5 million Melbourne citizens say no. And one nut case in charge says yes. The nut case wins. It’s the same the world over. What is the fight when the war is lost ? The fight for a better tomorrow I guess. But what we knew is gone.

HoMojo
4 years ago

Don’t be daft. Ever heard of the French Revolution? And what we knew wasn’t that great for most. Corrupt institutions everywhere. Why are people assuming a conflict will end up bad for the dissaffected protesters? Why can’t we win? I think we will. Astounded at the negativity and fear on this site. Half of you might as well be working for the government mofos

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  HoMojo

On Reddit we call these people ‘disasterbators’. Always slurping up the fear porn, always taking the most pessimistic view, never anything positive to say.

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

You have to be an optimist (and that’s hard for me) but if not you’ll drive yourself to despair.

The positive way to look at this is by looking at how repressive they are becoming, that at some point real pushback will begin. History shows these kinds of dictators don’t survive, these types of regimes don’t prevail, I don’t know where from or who buy, but I do have faith humanity won’t accept this happening.

On the bright side (if there is one) they have shown their true colours & intent now, the resistance & dissent can only grow, whilst i’m sceptical of the accuracy of the history books, as a good example look at the rise of America, they won their independence against the odds.

Keeping your freedom is a constant, fight, we looked away & nefarious dark forces are trying to grab it from us, we just have to keep fighting.

George L
4 years ago

Grow a pair FFS..

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

The War Against Children Brought to you by Pfizer
Anyone qualified to comment on Tromethamine (if true) in covid vaccines?

thinkcriticall
4 years ago

Hitting the streets every weekend is just not cutting it. Eventually people are going to have to down tools and bring their respective countries to a total stop! Unfortunately, the restrictions on our freedoms will have to get a lot more draconian before those that are currently comfortable feel the oppression and decide enough is enough!

isobar
4 years ago

Risky but might work: refuse to pay income and council taxes on principle. .

bringbacksanity
bringbacksanity
4 years ago
Reply to  isobar

I wonder if there is a legal foundation for that approach. It would at least be fun to argue in court. Although the PAYE system again gives the bastards the whip hand.

isobar
4 years ago

Agree, can’t help but wonder if there might a legal avenue and will investigate and revert, But you are right about the PAYE system giving the bastards the whip hand.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago

Just twenty months of emergency powers.

They will never end.

isobar
4 years ago

Yes, 3 weeks to flatten the curve, 18 months to crush the spirit, bastards! They won’t crush mine, nor I imagine that of fellow travellers on this site. BE OUTRAGED – FIGHT BACK, Spreading the word is key!

grob1234
grob1234
4 years ago
Reply to  isobar

Had a great conversation last night with my wife’s friends. One of them was almost as sceptical as me. There is hope!

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

LOL, 20 months, more like 500 years of Stockholm syndrome, which is an accomplishment since it’s only officially existed since 1973.

mwhite
4 years ago

Sports men and women seem to be dropping like flies.

What’s Going On? (odysee.com)

and

“Just One Of Those Tragedies” (odysee.com)

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

Vaggzine in Belgium – 100 per cent of ICU?
But is it break through infection or is it vaccination induced covid (not viral infection) disease!

I guess that’s the beauty of not isolating a real-world virus & using a fraudulent diagnostic test.

MikeAustin
4 years ago

Thanks for reporting this Australian protest. Could we have some reporting of protests in the UK as well, please? They have been going on in London since at least March – 100,000s in attendance.

john ball
john ball
4 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

my first demo was in March, and having been brought up in Wembley close to the stadium, often gone to matches, I estimated the numbers as at least that so in excess of 100,000. Since then the numbers increased every time until in June between half a million and a million.after the end of lockdown numbers decreased (maybe because a lot of participants had to go back to their jobs in hospitality) but last march on 30 October was very well attended (talked to new participants who found it exhilarating to be part of it) and I felt larger than both the previous marches in September. so hopefully this will be kept up next time next Saturday, 20 November

MikeAustin
4 years ago
Reply to  john ball

I missed the March demo, but I have been to all of the monthly marches since. The marches in Shepherd’s Bush and Brixton got out and about among people, which was good. Since June, I think numbers have been decreasing. The last march on 30th October was not so numerous but it was full of informed and determined people. Protesting outside the Canadian and Australian embassies was a nice touch.
Unfortunately, I will not be able to make the 20 November because I am attending a New World Alliance event in Devon with Professor Dolores Cahill and others. The event was booked in Totnes Town Hall, but a small group of misinformed bigots managed to persuade the Council to cancel it by totally misrepresenting the organisers and attendees. The alternative venue is being kept secret.

I am Spartacas
4 years ago

One man was seen carrying a homemade gallows with three nooses …

I can’t say as I blame him – it must made clear to those in power that they will face justice for their crimes – that is absolutely certain. It sends a powerful reminder to those in power as to what happens to those who abuse the power entrusted in them by the people – the ultimate penalty for those who abuse power for evil purposes … the despotic criminals who impose their divisive and cruel rules will eventually face justice and receive the severest punishment for their crimes … ‘ I was just following orders‘ is no longer a defence for crimes against humanity – when situations are as desperate as they are in Australia and New Zealand maybe its time people there began to emphasize just how serious many ordinary people are taking this malicious abuse by supposedly liberal western governments who seem to have developed a very unhealthy taste for authoritarianism and imposed the kind of dictatorial rule not seen since the Nazi regime and communist Russia..

John Drake
John Drake
4 years ago

This article and the two follow-on articles are excellent summaries of the present position:-

https://leftlockdownsceptics.com/2021/11/open-letter-to-those-not-yet-opposed-to-vaccine-passports-part-1-totalitarianism-here-we-come

On a positive note, what has happened has made I think many people leave the narrow perspective of right and left and find common ground in a perspective focused on the liberty of each individual human being.

I think we need to group together and support each other, as it can be lonely in the face of what is happening.

karenovirus
4 years ago
Reply to  John Drake

Time was when this site was much more represented with those of the Left, tree huggers, Remainers and self declared BAME readers. Also Americans and Canadians who kept the place a bit lively in UKs wee small hours.
Not so much these days, sadly.

Backlash
Backlash
4 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

They’ve got the rest of the world’s media to spout their drivel on, this is a better place without them.

Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago

Aus is a failed state

Anti_socialist
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

It may require UN intervention/occupation, though that maybe their objective.

thinkcriticall
4 years ago

An injectable has never been efficacious against a respitory virus!!
I’ll leave that here. If only journalism still existed!

coppelledstreets
coppelledstreets
4 years ago

I a fed up with the posters on here, articulate and many up votes.

When was the last time you went outdoors, almost all of you protest from an armchair.

I have been to Bracknell, Reading & Slough to join a group but live in Newbury.

State your stance.

x

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

All the best leaders delegate.

Personally, my location makes protest almost impossible, certainly impractical. Everyone has their own strengths, anyway this is just a place to vent.

thinkcriticall
4 years ago

The People have the power. If only they understood this. They will, but at the eleventh hour!!

Anti_socialist
4 years ago

wrong article

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RTSC
RTSC
4 years ago

Good to see so many Aussies finally fighting back against the tyranny.

They must never forget and never forgive the Dictators who ruined their country.

imp66
imp66
4 years ago

And the walls come tumbling down (hopefully). FIGHT THE POWER, people!