Video wird geladen...

Video konnte nicht geladen werden

Zur Startseite

Changing Australia Day isn’t about compassion. It’s a communist idea. This movement didn’t arise organically it comes from a Marxist ideology that teaches people to hate their own country, dismantle its symbols, and divide the nation from within. To these activists, every day is “Invasion Day.” January 26 is...

16,785 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

0 Kommentare

Keine Kommentare verfügbar

Kommentare vom Original-Post werden hier angezeigt

Ähnliche Videos

Australia Day did not disappear; it was taken from us. For many of us, Australia Day is about celebration. Yet there are those who believe there should be no date, no nation, and no Australia. For a long time, these people have been winning. The location of the first Melbourne March for Australia on August 31 was home to so-called “Invasion Day” protests just months prior. At those protests, they gloated about having “abolished” our celebrations — a scene repeated across the country. These anti-Australian radicals thought it was over. They were satisfied that all that remained of our national day was guilt and mockery. Emboldened, they became more extreme, began burning our flag, and pushed to open our borders even further. All the while, they reminded us we are on “stolen land” whenever we dared to question the destruction of our identity. What they did not see coming was the March for Australia — the reawakening of the Australian spirit. This year’s January 26 will not be about guilt and submission; it will be about pride. We will not allow our sovereignty to be challenged by “always was, always will be.” We will not be shamed for having built this great nation. This Australia Day, we will reassert our sovereignty. We will decide the destiny of our nation. This Australia Day will host the biggest public celebrations in years. We will March for Australia, we will take our cities back. No guilt. This day belongs to Australians.

March for Australia

84,678 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

Australia Day is back and we’re not sorry. Not because history didn’t happen, but because a nation that must apologise before it even asserts the right to exist has already been weakened. Australia Day matters because it is one of the last moments where Australians are meant to affirm, without qualification, that this country exists, belongs to its people, and has a future worth defending. Many people in the West have absorbed the belief that because members of their civilisation may have committed atrocities, it is therefore morally bankrupt in its entirety. Its culture, art, history, and achievements are treated as tainted, permitted only after a moral warning label is attached. Celebration is allowed only if it is preceded by confession. This manifests physically. Monuments are vandalised or torn down. ANZAC memorials are defaced. The national flag is burnt in public. These acts are rituals of delegitimisation. They signal that the nation itself is something to be dismantled rather than led to new glories. This kind of denigration is far more corrosive than criticism from outside. External attacks can be resisted. Internalised shame cannot. When people are taught from childhood that their presence is morally suspect, self-assertion is interrupted by apology. Every sentence begins with “I’m not this, but…”. Every boundary is softened before it is even stated. Millions do this instinctively, every day. Australia Day sits directly at the centre of this struggle. It has been hollowed out into a ritual of qualification; celebrate, but only after you apologise. Yet a nation cannot defend borders, continuity, or identity if it doubts its own legitimacy. If the land is never truly yours, then neither are the symbols, the monuments, nor the future they represent. So we say no, we’re not sorry. We are Australians and this continent is ours.

auspill

26,872 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten