Episode Transcript
These ears.
Speaker 2The world according to Rowanding.
Speaker 3Good evening and welcome to the world according to Rowan Deane, a world which was shattered by the horrific events of last Sunday Night at Bondai Beach.
I want to dedicate tonight's show to the memory of all who died in this tragic and horrific religious inspired killing spree.
Unlike the ABC, I do not shy away from the truth.
We've got a huge show coming up this evening, including I'll look back at the history of Bondai Beach and what it means to all Australians.
Plus I'll chat to Alexandik and Barnaby Joyce, Bronman Holly and others about what on earth we can do to return us to the Australia we all once knew and loved.
And of course I'll check in on those hilarious predictions about melting ice caps and climate change.
Speaker 1But first.
Speaker 3Now is a time for anger.
Anger at what is become of Australia.
Fury at the cowards who have ignored every warning, rage at the sheer stupidity of our political leaders, and anger at the viciousness and vile orthodoxes that led to the pogram last Sunday nights on Bondai Beach.
Speaker 1I am angry and I'm furious.
Speaker 3The night of the October seventh atrocities two years ago, when twelve hundred, mainly young Jewish men and women and families were butchered, rape abducted and mutilated in cold blood, there were sickeningly people actually dancing and celebrating in the western suburbs of Sydney.
I'm smiling and I'm happy.
Speaker 1I'm exted.
That's a day of courage.
Speaker 3I am angry because that man was not arrested or locked up or deported.
In fact, hardly anybody cared or paid much attention.
Not a single member of the government, let alone the Prime Minister, took action.
The following night, a huge crowd descended on our beloved Sydney Opera House in what was supposed to be memorial for those slain and murdered Jews.
Instead, it became an absolute obscenity, with vile individuals screaming what can only be construed as death threats to Jewish people.
Not a single member of the government, let alone the Prime Minister, took action.
Speaker 1I am angry because for the last.
Speaker 3Two years Australian city life has been disrupted and violated weekend after weekend by repulsive marchers proclaiming to be about support for Palestine, but in reality simply fueling hatred of Jews.
Not a single member of the government, let alone the Prime Minister, took action.
I am furious because that hatred of Jews manifested itself into torched synagogues, painted walls, graffited cars, vandalism at childcare centers and violence against all manner of Jewish Australian people and places.
For two years, not a single member of the government, let alone the Prime Minister, took serious or decisive action.
Indeed, they did worse than not take any action.
They attended this network's anti Semitism summit and then did nothing.
They commissioned an anti Semitism envoy, and when she made her recommendations, they then did nothing.
Worse, they immediately played the moral equivalence card, banging on.
Speaker 1About whose lomophobia.
Speaker 3And at the same time this government openly brings in more and more people from nations antipathetic towards Israel.
Loh what.
Speaker 1Pray pray paraphie bra.
Speaker 3I am enraged because when Israel, after years of living under near constant attack or the threat of missile attacks from Gaza, Hezbollah and Iran.
Finally, after October seventh struck back.
Speaker 1What happened.
The morons of.
Speaker 3The Australian mainstream media, of social media, of the chattering classes of the progressive left gleefully joined in the anti Semitic spree that had already been ignited, peddling.
Speaker 1Lie after lie after lie.
Speaker 3About dead babies and starvation and famine emanating from the propagandis of Hamas with Endler's death, chants about the idf or from the river to the sea, or blood curdling cries to globalize the inter farder and I am white hot angry that Australian politicians and citizens defiled our harbor bridge in in my opinion, a march of inhumanity, of opportunists, fools, frauds and jew haters, where almost certainly the murderers of Bondai would have been gleefully marching in the crowds, already plotting their evil actions.
Prime ministra Albnizi praised that march, Yes praised it.
Members of his own government marched in it.
It was, in my opinion, Australia's greatest day of shame.
And I am beyond furious that our craven politicians, at such a sensitive time fueled the demonizing of Jews and Israel by against the advice of our closest ally America, recognizing the non existent potential terrorist state of Palestine.
How those jihadists applauded.
And now we reap the whirlwind.
And I am beyond angry.
I am beyond furious, I am beyond enraged.
Words cannot describe my despair at the death of fifteen beautiful Australian people enjoying an evening of celebration at our most famous beach.
I despair at the death of ten year old Matilda.
I despair at the death of those who so bravely gave their lives to try and save others.
And sadly, I despair at the death of Australia.
Every day, more and more people pour onto this island from some of the worst terror and Jew hating hotspots on Earth.
Without a government determined and dedicated to preventing Jew hatred, or stopping or deporting Jew haters from living here, Bond I will in all likelihood only be the first of such deadly attacks, but instead of decisive action, we get this nonsense.
Speaker 4Well hurt, they're angry, they're upset, they're confused.
What is your message to the people watching out at home.
Speaker 5I think, first of all, don't get disinformation and misinformation ever all the day.
Listen to sources of truth, Listen to the information, don't jump, don't circulate things that exacerbate and take us down an even darker path.
Speaker 6The Director General of Asia has warned about a range of threats, be it any Semitism, the rise of right wing extremist groups as well.
Speaker 7Do you feel like there needs to be and should there be a greater emphasis on hate speech from Muslim clerics in the western part of Sydney.
Speaker 4I think, Look, I think, as I said earlier, what we've done is criminalized more forms of hate speech.
And you know, we criminize carolass the Nazi salute.
Speaker 1Obviously that's.
Speaker 4In its own context.
Speaker 3No mention of Islamic fanatics, no mention of Islamic scriptures, no mention of Jew hatred, no mention of those elated Western suburb residents merely letting off.
Speaker 1Fireworks to celebrate dead Jews.
Speaker 3Here are a few words from Sharry Markson's exclusive interview with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Nettan Yahoo.
Speaker 8I say now to the Australian government, damn it, wake up.
You don't need any more warnings.
Speaker 3You've already received enough.
You can trace a direct line from this government's inaction over the opera house steps.
Where's the Jews, gas the jes whatever it was riot, to the vile march over the Sydney Harbor Bridge under the banners of the Ayah.
Tolerant isis to the blood stain in Sans of Bondai.
To paraphrase William hughes Min's in a poem that could have been written about Anthony Albanezi, once upon the opera house stairs, I met a man who wasn't there.
He wasn't there again today, how I wish Albo would go away.
The time for stupidity, ignorance and tolerating the intolerable is over.
Australia must rid itself of the Islamist hate preachers, stop any further immigration from anti Semitic hotspots, ban pro Palestinian marches, and criminalize phrases like globalize, the Interfada and all other such overt calls to terrorism.
In my opinion, the senior members of this government are culpable for this unspeakable tragedy.
As a poster now popping up all over Sydney declares, yes, they have blood on their hands, and to quote Shakespeare, all the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten them, nor all the belated frantic attempts to avoid their craven cowardice and culpability.
And joining me to discuss all of this to do with Bondai and much more.
Former Speaker of the House Bronwyn Bishop and former New South Wales Senator Holly Hughes now first up Opposition leader Peter Dutton has come out swinging today saying that we need a war on anti Semitism, a kind of operation Sovereign Borders to rid this nation of Jew hatred.
And I would argue to rid the nation of the Jew haters.
Speaker 1It's a shame he's not Prime Minister Bromwyin, isn't it?
Speaker 2It is indeed, And I must say, when I watch the way the Prime Minister has responded, I think, what a sniveling little coward and what a clever little one, clever that he doesn't go and face the people at Bondi and have vision of how they feel about him.
That'll come back to haunt him.
How clever it is to say, oh, let's all go for the gun laws because make them just too much, so the debate will be about whether they're fair or not fair, and not go to what is the real essence of the question.
The points made by Peter Dutton in his article today are spot on.
It does need to be ripped out.
The problem is that there is a cell in this country somewhere of Isis supporters, and we don't want weasel words about unity and everybody coming together.
We cannot come together with people who are hate preachers in that college out in Bankstown.
It is not possible for us to have a solution to anti Semitism until we actually reveal the problem, and it is in within our midst we have people who hate Australia, hate Jews, and want to destroy everything we're about.
Speaker 3Isn't this the point, Holly, that all the politicians appear to be hiding behind what I would call weasel words.
It's neo nah nancies, or it's misinformation, or it's a gun control We've had all even I would argue anti Semitism because that allows people not to say what they're really talking about.
In my opinion, is Islamic militant, radical islaming, hatred and militancy.
Isn't that the words we want to hear?
Speaker 1Radical Islam?
Speaker 9Radical Islam is the greatest threat to Australian life at this current point in time and this current temperature, and the fact that our Prime Minister cannot acknowledge that, has no idea how to address it, has no idea how to address the festering anti Semitism in this country that has been allowed to grow and grow and grow over the past couple of years.
I know there's a petition circulating with regards to the Prime Minister should resign.
I think someone with some guts needs to put a motion up when they get back to Parliament calling for no confidence motion in this prime minister.
I think many Australians have lost confidence in this Prime minister.
But let's say who backs it and who doesn't, Because I can tell you some of the tels you know falling over themselves to support this prime minister, and let's say they're true colors.
Speaker 1Absolutely well, I'd say the rumors of that there could be a class action against isn't that glorious?
Which is deserved?
Isn't it Roman?
Speaker 3Yes?
Speaker 5Indeed it is.
Speaker 2Look that the thing is that you're right about the words that are using woods matter.
It is the words that have been filling our streets week after week about hatred for the Jews, flying the Isis flag, flying the Hamma's flag, and the chants are from the river to the sea.
Are the chants about our words that are there to say, whip up hatred against the Jews?
That has led to the three steps, one the Opera House and its demonstration where no police took any action to stop it, to the Harbor Bridge where the question that went to the Supreme Court to stop it were not strong enough.
There were other things they could have used and did not.
And is shooting at Bondi our three most iconic places, and this militant Islam has taken away from us the iconic glory of those three places and turn them into infamy.
Speaker 1I agree, And I just want to play you.
Speaker 3Victoria Toplitzki, who's the daughter of the eighty six year old Holocaust survivor who was shot trying who'd have thought shot in Australia trying to escape an alleged gun man, calling out Albanzi for his inaction.
Speaker 1Have listened to Victoria Toplitzky?
Speaker 3Is this what she wanted?
Speaker 5Is this enough?
Speaker 1Now?
Speaker 5Will you listen to us?
Speaker 7Alban Easy Wong?
Speaker 5Will you listen to us?
Will you actually do something?
Speaker 1Will you actually don't have.
Speaker 3To stand up and say anything because we don't believe you anyway?
And ABC, I've got to say, will you cut out the bias reporting?
So Holly, she seems to nail it pretty back there.
I mean, I know, certainly on this show and on Outsiders, I've been calling out repeatedly since October seventh, saying we are headed for a repeat of this sort of horror, this sort of violence and bloodshed, when we have a government that keeps throwing its support behind the enemies of Israel.
Yeah, recognizing Palusine, the things that Bromman talked about, you know, words to do with the embassy and East Jerusalem and sign it every single stage Wong in her speech at the United Nations.
It makes me so angry because so many of us said this has got to stop or it will end in tragedy.
Speaker 1It's ended in tragedy, Holly.
Speaker 9If we haven't needed to defund the ABC, I think their behavior over Israel has absolutely demonstrated that's where we should be looking.
Because it was actually said to me last night when I got to Sydney, I bumped into someone who said, if Sky does not receive a Goldwalkley for its coverage of the Bondai massacre, and I mean Shari in particular has been outstanding, but so many contributions have been fantastic, whereas the ABC couldn't even bring themselves to cover it for such a period of time.
And when you see the despicable questions and comments us by Sarah Ferguson and Laura Tingle, is just absolutely disgraceful and it just shows exactly where they are.
And then we learn that the Wentworth FC of the Labor Party, with Kim William's chair of the ABC, his wife seconding the motion, who's GoF Whitlam's daughter to not support any of Jillian's seagels to reject Gillian Seagulls report into anti Semitism.
It really just sums it all up and it just shows the despicable nature of the people we're dealing with and the level of hatred they have for israel Is.
It's actually unhinged and it's bizarre, and I really would urge some of these people, clearly they live in the Eastern suburbs, to actually speak to some of their Jewish neighbors around them and they're fine.
They're just really great, normal people and they're not deserving of this level of hatred.
Speaker 3For over ten years, Holly, I've been speaking at Jewish events about how the left, labor, the left and the Teals, and the Teals are the enemy of the Jewish people in Australia in my opinion, and what you've just said, Holly would tend to support that Romwin.
Speaker 1What should the Liberal Party?
Speaker 3What should Susan Lee now be committing the Liberal Party a coalition government to doing well.
Speaker 2I think she's been pretty good what she's been demanding.
There does need to be an inquiry, and I thought the suggestion that it be a commission of inquiry, which is quicker than a royal commission, is a good idea.
There has to be an examination of the way in which to close down that place of hate, which you remember after the ghastly seventh of October.
I am happy, I'm joys and the people cheering in the background.
We can't have that in this country.
That's got to be taken care of.
We have to have a commitment to having the truth told and right now we're being led by a triumphant of deceivers Albanezi, Wong and Burke.
Speaker 1They should all go.
I can't agree more and let me just reiterate what Holly just said.
Speaker 3Personally, I think Sky's coverage has been superb of the last week and Sharry Markson in particular far too good for a Walkley.
Speaker 1I'm sorry.
Speaker 3Anyway, exactly, Thank you both ron Win and Holly, and now it's time for appropriately the world's gone mad.
Yes, sadly, it truly is a world gone mad, especially this week on the once glorious golden sands of Australia's most famous beach, Bondai Beach, which looked like this.
Speaker 1That was Bondai Beach.
Speaker 3Last Sunday night and an evening that will live forever in infamy.
Speaker 1But this is what Bondi Beach used to look like.
Speaker 3Bondai Beach first became a popular recreational spot for Australians over one hundred and twenty five years ago at the dawn of the twentieth century, an era of optimism, of hope, of pride, of excitement, of innovation and exploration.
On public holidays, these young Australians, dressed in their Edwardian beach garb would flock to Bondi Beach.
Their parents had come to these shores, traveled halfway around the world to build a better future, to escape the poverty and slums of Victorian Britain.
With them, they brought hope, optimism, pride in the Empire, and a passion for hard work and daring.
But they also were fully aware of the dangers, the droughts, the floods, even the sharks.
Not many ventured far out into that Bondai surf.
By the end of the First World War the motor cars that are and on a busy public holiday Bondai Beach looked much as it does today.
This was the era when the Bondi Pavilion opened and Percy Tromph designed his famous poster, making Bondai Beach an iconic Australian destination.
After the Second World War, surfing and the Bondai Beach lifestyle had become a major attraction, along with the beach umbrellas, the cars, the cafes and of course the girls.
It was Barry Humphreys, Dame Edna, who, despite being from Melbourne, popularized not only the Sydney Opera House, but also the phrase to shoot through like a Bondi tram, back when the trams still ran before they were idiotically ripped out in the early nineteen sixties, by which time, with the surfing boom of California and the beach Boys, Bondi was now the surfing capital of Australia.
Speaker 1This was the Australia of.
Speaker 3The nineteen sixth is that so many of us were born into, grew up in a land of freedom, makeship Alaricanism, individuality and boundless.
Speaker 1Optimism for a very very bright future.
Speaker 3Nowadays, apart from the sharks, of course, or the stingers, most people who brave the waters of Bondi Beach are more afraid of being hit on the head by a wayward surfboard or a floundering tourist on a boogie board.
Until last week.
Now forever, Bondai Beach will be remembered as the scene of Australia's worst ever alleged terrorist attack, and indeed one of the world's worst mass murders of innocent Jews.
Now I need to warn you that the vision I'm about to show you is distressing.
Speaker 10It's now a gun battle.
As the police move in, there's an exchange of shots.
The older man is hit.
His son keeps firing for more than a minute.
He blasts away at police.
Speaker 1We have our reporter, Zach Bailey, at Bondi Beach for us.
Speaker 3Now, Zach, this appears to have unfolded just after six thirty this evening.
We're hearing that multiple people have been shot.
Bondai Beach is now blood Beach, forever stained by evil, by hatred, by ignorance.
During the last two years we've seen any number of protests or swarms of cars waving Palestinian flags, terrorizing the residents of Bondai, many of whom are Jewish, including this lunatic charging up and down the beach on a horse waving a Palestinian flag only a few months ago.
We have lost the Australia that we all grew up in.
Speaker 1It has gone.
Speaker 3It was destroyed with determination and with vigor by the modern left, starting with the Whitlam government and every government since when they wilfully abandoned.
Speaker 1The policy of immigration with assimilation.
Speaker 3Assimilation meant those coming to Australia were expected to become new Australians, as satirized in the film They're a Weird Mob.
The Left made assimilation a dirty word and destroyed the policy which gave us at least two amazing generations of wonderful new Australians.
People who had escaped wore ravaged Europe and embraced the Australian culture and Australian way of life like a tourist clutching onto a lifeguard in a bondaie rip.
Australia became to many post war migrants not only a home but a paradise.
But today, instead of insisting migrants adapt to our way of life, our values, our beliefs, Australians were now told to adapt to their culture and to adapt to their way of life.
At the same time, everything about our extraordinary colonial Anglo Celtic culture was demeaned, has been demeaned, denigrated, ultimately decimated.
Out with our national day, out with our flag, out with Alaric and streak, out with our robust freedoms and freedom of expression.
Instead, in came a wave of migrants from around countries around the world who were told you.
Speaker 1Don't have to be like us.
In fact, you don't even have to like us.
Speaker 3Be yourselves, be exactly who you were back in the countries you fled from.
Bring all your traits, even your very worst ones, and don't mind us because we love your multiculturalism.
In the nineteen nineties, the Choir Boys, a band from a Voca Beach, had a hit single in which they sang good times, Why'd I let them slip away?
Why'd I let them slip away?
Because I lived in paradise.
We all lived in paradise, every Australian, but instead of protecting it nurturing it, we handed it over to the idiots, the cowards, the hypocrites and the smug elitas also known as the.
Speaker 1Modern progressive left.
Speaker 3This week we paid the price, and now Bondai Beach becomes another dark memory, remembered as a place of horror, bloodshed and violence.
Speaker 1Or does it.
Speaker 3Let us instead remember in honor of the memories of the beautiful, young t ten year old Matilda, the migrant child whose Ukrainian parents were so keen to assimilate that they named her after Australia's most famous song, Waltzing Matilda.
Let her name be commemorated for all time on Bondai Beach, and let her name forever be remembered with that song.
Let us remember the gallant bravery of the new Australian who fled war torn Syria, Ahmed al Ahmed, and who risked his own life to take down the gunman.
Let us praise the astonishing courage of so many Aussies, including jack O the lifeguard who sprinted from Tamarama, the policeman who took shrapnel to the eye.
Speaker 1Let us honor the amazing.
Speaker 3Bravery of Boris and Sophia German originally from Russia, who lost their lives in trying to prevent the horror.
Of Reuben Morrison who held a brick to try and stop the murderers and lost his life.
In Rabbi el Ai Schlanger, who advanced on the gunman pleading him to stop and lost his life, And above all, the superhero courage of the extraordinary fourteen year old girl Chaya Dadon, who took a bullet as she frantically shielded other young children.
Let Bondai Beach forever be remembered as the home of heroes, true blue ossy heroes who will forever stand out like beacons on this beautiful beach in this.
Speaker 1All too often mad and crazy world.
Speaker 3After the Break, Barnaby Joyce joins me for his take on this horrific and extraordinary week.
Speaker 1Welcome back.
Speaker 3I'm joined now by One Nation MP and Man on the Land, Barnaby Joyce.
Great to see you, Barnaby.
Now, I want to get your reaction on alban EASi announcing a national buyback scheme for firearms following the Bondai Beach terrorist attack.
Barnaby, is this the best way to kind of prevent radical Islam, terrorist fanatics or whatever by taking weapons from farmers?
Speaker 1Is that what's happening.
Speaker 8No, it's exactly the opposite of what you want to be doing.
Speaker 7What you're doing is you're going out because of cowardice, because you don't want to deal with radical Islam, with Wassom Hadad and all these others in the western suburbs of Sydney who preach hate, who are fundamentally behind a view of a religion that allows the murder of other people.
It was a mass murder committed at Bondai and it was not committed by farmers or recreational shooters with licenses.
Now what we are seeing now today is when we had unity of purpose.
You've now opened the door where every person who owns a firearm, and that includes me, where somehow, by proxy, I'm somehow involved in this.
Is you about radical Islam?
I'm not a radical Islamist.
I did not murder anybody.
Neither did any of my other farmers out here, neither the other people who go out here pig shooting.
Speaker 8We didn't.
We didn't kill anybody.
Speaker 7And now it's when we could have had a unity of purpose and saying, well, you know, it's too scary to take on the radical Islamist because oh you know they're Terroristsy're terrifying.
Speaker 8They they'll fight back.
Speaker 7So who do we attack they won't fight back, Well, Laura, abiding Australians who love Australia, that's who will take on.
We'll take on the recreational shooters and we'll say to farmers, you're only allowed so many firearms, which means you know you've.
Speaker 8Got a for us.
They're like heirlooms.
Speaker 7They come from your grandfather, from your father.
Were you going to hand one back or you going to keep the one that you mean.
It's why this is so infuriating about them.
This what a noisy, them being labor politicians.
And I don't know, Let's see how the others go, because they're all going to go down and vote.
Let's let's see how that one works out.
But no, this is this has not helped at all because we know what the problem is.
It's radical Islam.
It's radical Islamic mosques, it's schools of radical Islamic thought.
Speaker 8That's what needs to be shut down.
Yeah, really tough, isn't it.
Speaker 7And while they're talking about closing taking firearms off farmers, and you know out here in the countryside, this is where we live, is to who is back to r Rea is still legal.
Speaker 8The Islamic Brotherhood is still legal.
I didn't hear anything in their press confidence about what they're going to do about that.
No, No, that's too scary.
Go for the easy target, Go for the farmers and recreational shooters.
Speaker 3Could Anthony Albanezi resign?
Will you move a motion in parliament to a no confidence motion?
Speaker 7Well, we've got no confidence in him, and that's a that's a terrible thing for Australia.
We've got no confidence in the Prime minister and the whole thing is coming apart of the scenes, isn't it.
And we've you know, and to be honest, I want to have confidence in the Prime Minister.
Speaker 1I do.
Speaker 8It's not a personal issue against miss alban.
Speaker 7Easy, but his capacity to carry carry his office a prime minister has been found massively wanting and huge and leaving a huge gap in the security of our nation because his judgment, his judgment at the start of backing the creation of the Palestinian state, and then you know, ipso facto week not note, I'm kind of on the bridge marching with you, and on the bridge where people with Isis flags and her Musk flags and has Bla flags and pictures of the Eyetola, hermini with an AK forty seven.
Speaker 8I mean, when did he go out and say, but guys, that's outrageous.
We can't ever do that again.
Didn't hear it?
Speaker 7But today, you know, all of a sudden, well, and then today even to day, when we're waiting for something, when we're waiting for that epiphany, how far do you get to recreational shooters in the country and farmers, and what are you actually going to do with the family businesses that are involved in this?
I hear about your gun buy back.
Are you going to buy them out?
Because we've got people there and I know them.
Oh their business is broke, they're finished.
You're going to pay them out?
Speaker 3Binnaby Joyce, always great to chat to you.
Words of wisdom there and thank you so much for coming on.
Now it's time for doomsday.
Speaker 1Alarmism, whether or not.
Yes.
Speaker 3Around the world, lovers of a traditional Christmas must ask themselves whether or not.
The writers at Time magazine are having a bet each way with their conclusion that this Christmas will have both less snow and more snow thanks to altogether.
Speaker 1Now climate change.
Yes.
Speaker 3In their article this week headlined what climate change means for white Christmases, Their reporter Simone Shah says, if you've been dreaming of a white Christmas, be warned that it might not become a reality because data shows that across the country, a white Christmas occurs less frequently than you might think.
She then quotes an expert who says, so there is at least some truth to the anecdote that we're seeing less white Christmases.
I think they mean fewer across a lot of the country end of quote.
But then ha ha, in the next paragraph we learn that quote climate change is also causing shorter, warmer winters.
But that doesn't mean that a white Christmas will become a thing of the past.
Some areas that often see snow might see more intense snow storms due to climate change, as a warmer atmosphere is able to hold more moisture end of quote.
All of which led the brilliant What's up with that website to observe.
So let's see if I got this right, you probably won't see snow this Christmas because of global warming, but if you do see snow, that will be because of global warming.
Of course, this is just the latest version of that old favorite stick from the climate cult, global warming makes the world colder.
In fact, they were peddling this line only the other day.
Speaker 11Okay, when we were talking about all this cold air, and you say, well, if the planet's warming, how come it's so cold.
Speaker 8So we thought we would answer that for you.
Speaker 11So Arctic air is contained by this polar vortex.
It keeps it up there in the Arctic.
However, as the planet is warming.
Climate change has actually caused significant warming up into the Arctic.
So as that warm air comes up into the Arctic, that weakens the polar vortex, that boundary, and it allows that cold air to move south.
And that is why climate change, global planet warming, actually allows some parts of the country to be colder than usual.
Speaker 3Ah.
Yes, And if you believe all that, Malachi, I've got a bridge across the high I can sell you at a bargain basement price.
But of course, at the end of the day, you can't really blame the climate clowns for making their predictions a little shall we say, vaguer than they used to.
Little wonder after how many predictions the climate mob have got spectacularly wrong for the last well.
Speaker 1Fifty odd years.
Speaker 3As far back as nineteen seventy, the Boston Globe predicted a new ice age by the year two thousand.
Speaker 1Spoiler alert missed it by that much.
Speaker 3So too, the Washington Post in July nineteen seventy one were excitedly predicting that very same ice age.
The Guardian was still pushing the new ice age line as late as nineteen seventy four, only now it was coming fast.
Speaker 1Spoiler alert it wasn't perpetual.
Speaker 3Doom Monger's Time magazine got in that same year claiming another ice age was coming because quote, telltale signs are everywhere spoiler alert.
Speaker 1They weren't.
Speaker 3Even as late as nineteen seventy eight, The New York Times was still breathlessly proclaiming that quote, there is a thirty year cooling trend with no end in sight.
Spoiler alert.
The end of the cooling alarmism was in fact very much in sight.
It was only a few years later when Whoops a daisy cooling had been replaced by warming.
Speaker 1Yep.
Speaker 3By nineteen eighty eight, global warming had arrived and the fun really began.
Speaker 1Eighty eight on way to be hottest.
Speaker 3Ever, as world temperatures up sharply, that was the Miami News.
No less, prepare for long hot summers.
If you like last summer's record temperatures, you're gonna love the nineteen nineties, proclaimed James Hansen in the Lansing State Journal.
This was the same year our own beloved Canberra Time decided to get in on the doomsday act, predicting the end of the Maldives, which would be completely covered by the Indian Ocean within thirty years.
Spoiler alert, it wasn't, and an entire nation would be wiped off the face of the earth if the global warming trend wasn't reversed by the year two thousand.
Spoiler alert, It wasn't and they weren't.
And speaking of the year two thousand, that's when the UK Independent assured us that snowfalls are now just a thing of the past and quote snow is starting to disappear from our lives.
Spoiler alert, they aren't, and it wasn't.
That was the same time we are told by the experts that quote, within a few years, children just aren't going to know what snow is.
Spoiler alert, It didn't, and they do.
But it wasn't just the newspapers.
The man who is now King of Australia claimed in two thousand and nine.
Two thousand and nine that we had just ninety six months, in other words, by twenty seventeen to save the world, because capitalism and consumerism is just.
Speaker 1Too high, said Charles.
Speaker 3And not to be outdone, the then Prime Minister of Great Britain, Gordon Brown, claimed there were fewer than fifty days to save the planet from catastrophe, and even the US Navy predicted the Arctic would be ice free in summer by twenty sixteen.
Speaker 1Spoiler alert, it wasn't and it isn't.
Speaker 3But fast forward to today and I'll tell you what is a catastrophe brought on by climate change activists.
This is Newcastle in Australia's in Australia, Newcastle's Horseshoe Beach pictured after a bunch of so called environmentalists despoiled it protesting about coal ships going to Newcastle unbelievable, whereas the pippies on Horseshoe Beach like to say climate schmimat skill to come in the wake of Bondai.
Are our security agencies up to the task?
Speaker 1More on that in a tick.
Speaker 3And joining me now, I'm delighted to say is one of my very very favorite politicians in Australia, Liberal Senator Alex Antik.
Speaker 1Great to see you, Alex.
Now.
Speaker 3The Australian is reporting that Anthony Albanizi has refused to allow Parliament's powerful Intelligence Committee to operate at full capacity since twenty twenty three, leaving a position vacant on this critical body.
The Committee report struggles regularly to reach enough members to even hold a meeting.
This is pretty worrying and damning in light of the horror of Bondai this week, isn't it.
Speaker 1Alex Yeah, Roan.
Speaker 4Well, I read that report too, and it is concerning, and I mean the purpose of that committee is to be briefed on these sorts of matters and to be told about them.
And it strikes me that this is part of a bigger piece of the pie for this government, though in terms in terms of how seriously this issue has been taken.
I mean, let's cast our mind back several months to the news that Azio Andasis had been effectively removed from the National Cabinet Committee on Security with no real explanation.
I don't think we've ever still had an explanation for why that is so.
What is the issue here?
What is the information that this government is labor government doesn't want to hear.
I mean, it's almost like the Three monkeys, but here no evil see, no evil, speak no evil.
We've got to know what the politics, I should say.
The parliamentarians who sit on that committee need to understand the nature of the threat so that they can respond.
Now I would say that, I mean, that is obviously not the cause of this, But that is the whole purpose of that building sitting on Cameber.
It's not just so people can drive around with a car with the flag on it and have a great time and live at the lodge.
We've got to know what the threats are and people have got to know them in a judicious and prompt manner.
And it would seem that this Labor government doesn't take the same view.
Speaker 3Now, Alex, I'm a big fan of Senate estimates and I think you do an amazing job there.
Speaker 1So I hope next year that you guys will.
Speaker 3Be looking very closely at what the bureaucracy is doing about the threat to us from radical Islam.
The Prime Minister can't even mention the words radical Islam.
The closest we got was a reference to isis, but that was it.
Other than that, it's all weasel words.
It's this and that and da da da.
If the Prime Minister can't mention the words radical Islam, then clearly none of the bures are even going to have it on their memos, are they.
Speaker 4Yeah, Look, I think it's very unlikely, I mean even and I think that process is really important and it's going to be a very interesting one next year.
But I've asked these questions many many times.
I mean, one of the points that I've made for a long period of time is that many of our agencies are security agencies, want to talk about the threat of right wing Christian nationalists, you know, and we hear all about it.
And in fact, Asio's annual report is just listed with references to right wing Christian nationalism.
And yet the only times that we see these events rolling out on our streets through what would be described as radical Islamic terror, and that is just a demonstrable fact.
And yet it seems that the only way it can be spoken about in those chambers in the halls of Parliament is to use the phrase religiously motivated extremism.
Now that may well be accurate, but you're right that we have to start calling this what it is.
It is absolutely critical because if we don't know what we're dealing with, then how do we know what we can do to fix it, and how do we know whether or not the problem is already too far advanced.
That's the thing that bothers me.
Speaker 3And it's not only the bureaucrats and the government, it's the ABC who deny the religious component component of all of this radical Islamic terrorism.
Have a listened to Laura Tingle the most disgraceful comment earlier in the week.
Speaker 9We've got nothing to do with religion and absolutely a radicalized these WORKO targeting Jews is anti Semitic, But we are ascribing all sorts of things right.
Speaker 2Their actions are not based on their religion, Alex.
Speaker 3This is the billion dollar ABC that every Australian taxpayer funds supposed to be the font of all knowledge.
There, the great leveler, the greater reporter on what's really happening in the world, and they refuse to accept or Laura Tingle does that Islamic radical terrorism is based on religious teachings.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean it's a a very very fine point, if it's one at all.
I mean, I suspect the point that was trying to be made there was that the Koran doesn't teach this, which you know is ostensibly right, But that's not the point.
We don't need our broadcasters trying to find ways around saying what we're all we need to say, and that is the fact that there can be no other way of looking at this, that it was a form of radical Islamic terror, you know, and allegedly as you say, but I mean, the fact here is that where we are up to now is not going to be solved by clever wordplays, by dancing around the mulberry bush.
It's not going to be saved by introducing new laws which impinge on free speech.
I mean, I note that we have already had a raft of those, and it doesn't seem like any of the banning of symbols and gestures had much of an impact on there.
Doesn't seem like any of the incessant discrimination laws that we've had have had an impact on the event in Bondai, sadly, and we certainly don't need to be making more laws impinging on the right of lawful firearm ownership in this country.
I mean, these are not the things that are going to help.
We've got to be clear, We've got to be frank, We've got to be honest about what happened, and that means that we've got to look to the future in terms of how we have imported this problem and leaving law abiding Australians and those that want to speak their mind on legitimate political issues alone.
Speaker 3And mentioning that Alex the Governor General blamed misinformation and disinformation.
Speaker 1Can you believe it?
Speaker 3Richard Marles blamed Nazis and so on and so on.
But let me ask you, as the son, a very proud son of proud immigrants into this country, what do you think the immigration policy you would like to see under a coalition government should be?
Speaker 4Well, I mean the flow.
I mean there are two issues here.
The first is the overall number, of course, and I mean I think we can all safely say that the numbers that are coming in are alarming and they are not in the interests of this country at the moment.
One of the problems I think we've got is that too long politics has dealt with international obligations used as a sort of a metaphor for doing what they like when they don't actually serve Australian So I think the numbers have to be stopped.
I mean I would like to see them ceased.
Obviously there are areas where we do need niche migration and whatever, but I think that tap has got to be turned off.
And in fact, you know, I think that we need to talk about that quickly because it may well be that there are as many as one point five million new entrants into this country since the last twenty twenty two election.
This is not a question now of nuance.
It's a question of taking firm action and actually getting to the bottom of turning off the tap.
It's just not sustainable.
And of course we should say the events of Bondai aren't related to that issue.
Speaker 1They're related to you know.
Speaker 4Decades ago.
But you know, the overall push here has got us stop.
Australians are struggling.
We have to be Australia first.
We have to look to what's in the best interests of Australia and that is turning off that tap.
Speaker 3And I would add to that, Alex, the failure of assimilation.
As I said, your parents came here and look at you great Ozzie success story, but it's the idea of assimilation that we have sadly allowed to disappear.
Speaker 1That's it.
Speaker 3Thanks so much, Alex Antik.
I'll speak to you again in the new year.
Have a great Christmas and after the break, final words of wisdom for the year.
Well, I just want to say a big thank you to all the people here at Sky, my producers, the management team, all those behind the scenes, people who have made this show such a success this year, and of course all the politicians and commentators who have livened up our panels and our chats.
Rich O was of course a great part of the show this year and we all miss him.
We all wanted to give you an insightful and informative opinion show with plenty of huge and lots of quirkiness.
And I am pleased to say we have been the Friday night number one show pretty much all year.
So that's a very big thank you to all of you, my loyal viewers.
You have been wonderful.
The year ended in the horrific tragedy of the Bonda massacre.
Our thoughts and prayers go to the loved ones, friends and relatives those who were slain, especially the family of dear young Matilda, named because her parents wanted a genuine Aussie name.
Our thoughts also with those brave heroes who risk their lives to stop the butchery.
Australians deserve to be angry this Christmas, Angry that our way of life, our waltson matilda heritage, our proud colonial history, our proud migrant history of assimilation and integration was so totally and fundamentally betrayed by the political.
Speaker 1Classes, especially those of the left.
Speaker 3Australians need to reflect a Christmas on what politicians deserve.
Speaker 1Our respect Sadly, the majority you do not.
Speaker 3On a cheerier note, if you want some insightful, provocative and entertaining reading over Christmases, you may know I am the editor of The Spectator Australia and our bumper Summer's special issue is out in the shops now, packed full of great writing and insights from everyone from Andrew Bolt and Matt Canavan to Nigel Farrage, Bruce Berrismon, the Queen, Joan Collins, Ben Shapiro and even me.
Have a wonderful, wonderful Christmas and enjoy your family and friends, and I'll see you in the new year.
Stay tuned now for James Morrow, followed by Rita Paney Merry Christmas,
