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BREAKING: PRO-PALESTINE GUNMEN KILL 10+ PEOPLE AT BONDI BEACH JEWISH FESTIVAL (2 Viewers)

SylviaB

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again no one mentioned religion here lmfaoooooo atheists are always the ones who are more obsessed with religion than religious people are themselves LIKE can it not leave yalls mind i dont get it
Militant islamists: Murder people

Muslims: "Why are you possibly bringing RELIGION into this????"
 

SylviaB

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funny how china cracked down hard on muslims following terrorist attacks and none of these western zoomer dummies gives half a shit about it

its almost like their entire essence is consumed by an anti-white resentment which dictates how they judge and react to everything in the world
 

anonymous1111

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can we like, create a really big mechanical hand that will scoop up izreal and palpatine then chuck them into outer space
 

SylviaB

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ASIO failed to stop this attack because they were too focused on the "far right" instead of islamic extremists


And what does Albo do? Blames the attack on the "far right" and literally fails to even mention "Islamic extremism"



Could the Bondi Beach massacre in Sydney on Saturday, December 13th, have been prevented? The roots of this attack are long-standing and well-known in Australia, a country that has allowed fundamentalist places of worship to proliferate. The intelligence services, however, missed the killers, one of whom was known to them.

The antisemitic attack at Bondi Beach in Sydney had been looming over Australia for a long time. Since October 7, 2023, in particular, leaders of the Jewish community had been warning federal authorities and those of the states of New South Wales and Victoria about the virtually inevitable nature of such an attack. They were right. How did we get to this point? As early as the beginning of the 2000s, the Jewish community was already worried. After 9/11, in a country allied with the United States and militarily engaged in Afghanistan until 2021, the awareness of a terrorist threat was already clear. This threat naturally stemmed from radical Islam. Not the kind we know in Europe, but—the map of Oceania is telling in this regard—the kind coming from Southeast Asia (Indonesia or Malaysia) where powerful armed groups affiliated with al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (ISIS) exist. On October 12, 2002, 88 Australians were killed in the Bali bombings, perpetrated by Jemaah Islamiyah, an Indonesian terrorist group. Australia also allowed the proliferation of Salafist mosques, sometimes gigantic, like the one in Melbourne, in the name of a very Anglo-Saxon conception of religious and expressive freedom.
https://charliehebdo.fr/2025/11/soc...ns-le-dos-des-journalistes-d-ecran-de-veille/
The presence of radical Islam was therefore well-known. Its link to immigration was obvious: Australia is a country built on immigration, and its close neighbors, particularly Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent, already constituted the bulk of the new arrivals. Today, there are nearly a million Indians in the country: 183,000 Malaysians, slightly fewer Sri Lankans, over 100,000 Pakistanis and Iraqis, and refugees from Afghanistan, Syria, and elsewhere. Not all of them are Muslim, and certainly not all are Islamists. John Howard's Conservative government (1996-2007) had put in place a drastic anti-immigration policy, with the slogan "The boat is full," which had earned him a reputation as a man of the near extreme right, concerned with keeping Australia white in the face of the wave of Muslim and Asian migration – 700,000 Chinese, 400,000 Filipinos and a little less Vietnamese.
John Howard, who opposed the wearing of the burqa, was accused by the Muslim community of promoting Islamophobia. The same thing happened in 2009 when he stated that a "small segment of the Muslim population in Australia" held "extremist views" on women's rights and relations with non-Muslims. He was right; we have the figures: more than a hundred Australians fought in Iraq and Syria alongside ISIS. For a population of 28 million, of which 2.2% are Muslim, that's a significant number.

An error in judgment
Furthermore, antisemitic incidents targeting the country's 117,000 Jews have proliferated since October 7. The Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) has established that, between 2014 and 2023, there were an average of 342 such incidents per year. This number rose to 1,654 between October 2024 and September 2025. In August 2025, the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO) confirmed the involvement of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps in attacks on buildings in Sydney and Melbourne. Its director, Mike Burgess, then issued a statement asserting that combating antisemitism was his agency's priority, but his discourse was primarily directed against Iran, largely neglecting other issues. Regarding the Bondi Beach attack that occurred on Saturday, December 13, the two perpetrators of the attack are of a different persuasion: of Pakistani origin, they had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State.


Did Australian intelligence fail? At least partially. It had indeed identified one of the two terrorists in 2019, but as an accomplice or "fellow traveler" of several radicals. His carrying out the attack was deemed unlikely. And then there was the "Tarant effect," named after Brendon Tarrant, the Australian living in New Zealand who, in the name of white supremacy, attacked two mosques in Christchurch in 2019, killing 51 people. ASIO was blinded by the fact that a small neo-Nazi movement, the National Socialist Network (NSN), had been holding numerous demonstrations hostile to Jews and Israel. Its leaders, Thomas Sewell and Jacob Hersant, were convicted. A South African member of the NSN, Matthew Gruter, had his residency visa revoked by ministerial decree last month because he had participated in a demonstration organized by the movement under the banner "The Jewish lobby must be abolished." The NSN has fewer than one hundred activists, detestable of course, but they led the head of ASIO to make an error in judgment. According to him, while ten years ago only one in ten cases handled by his agency concerned the far right, this year it is involved in one out of every two. True enough, but did the NSN have a terrorist capacity equal to that of the Bondi killers? Did the terrorists, a father and son, act on their own initiative or on orders from ISIS networks? How were they able to obtain a permit to possess six automatic weapons?The Labour (social-democratic) government of Anthony Albanese, under direct attack from leaders of the Jewish community—and from Netanyahu, who criticizes it for recognizing a Palestinian state—is now on the defensive against the right wing. For the past three days, it has also been the champion of empty phrases: "horrific act , " "total condemnation , " "support for the Jewish community" ... In short, the usual litany of empathy, which only comes after Jews have died, and not before, when the danger has been identified.
 

enoilgam

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can we like, create a really big mechanical hand that will scoop up izreal and palpatine then chuck them into outer space
I just dont get why they both bother fighting over it - like it is really worth fighting over a 3rd world war torn piece of land? It's even worse when you leave and continue carrying on. Like, if I was Palestinian or Israeli and I left for Australia, Canada etc, like I might harbour some animosity towards the other side, but Id be glad to move on with my life in a nice, stable country.

Same thing, if I hate my current job, quit and move to a new one, Im not going to bitch to my new colleagues about how shit my old job was for years on end. Im going to move on and enjoy the change...
 
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i think that responding to (what seems to be) a racially motivated attack with different racism is counterproductive and will only escalate things further. not to mention just disrespectful to the victims
 

enoilgam

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i think that responding to (what seems to be) a racially motivated attack with different racism is counterproductive and will only escalate things further. not to mention just disrespectful to the victims
Criticising a culture for certain behaviours shouldn't be considered racism. White Anglo-Saxon culture is frequently criticised for a range of things (such as colonialism) and it isnt called racism. So for example, if I criticise a non-white culture for having backwards views towards women, why is this "racism".

That is the whole problem with this argument. Criticising Israel is somehow seen as "anti-semitic" and critcising Palestine is similarly Islamophobic. Stops people from having honest, hard conversations about complex issues.
 
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Criticising a culture for certain behaviours shouldn't be considered racism. White Anglo-Saxon culture is frequently criticised for a range of things (such as colonialism) and it isnt called racism. So for example, if I criticise a non-white culture for having backwards views towards women, why is this "racism".
i think the vagueness (my mistake i apologise) is causing confusion here. it is not inherently wrong to point out flaws in any religion or culture. the issue is when harmful generalisations are made of large groups of people. i can accept discussion regarding islam and its relationship with violence, but the idea that all, or even a majority of muslims are violent is dangerous and untrue.
 

SylviaB

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i think the vagueness (my mistake i apologise) is causing confusion here. it is not inherently wrong to point out flaws in any religion or culture. the issue is when harmful generalisations are made of large groups of people. i can accept discussion regarding islam and its relationship with violence, but the idea that all, or even a majority of muslims are violent is dangerous and untrue.
Said by people who are fine with all men being treated as violent and dangerous
 

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