Dear John
Throughout Australia, tent cities are popping up continuously as
desperate families are thrown onto the streets because of extreme
levels of immigration.
The situation is critical, and the stories from these camps are
heartbreaking. From families with six children, to pensioners who have
always had a roof over their heads, these Aussie battlers have been
stood on, and then stood over, by a government determined to destroy
our way of life.
In these camps, families bathe intermittently, washing clothes
proves difficult, and forget homework. The focus for these families is
where the next meal's coming from.
The kids in these camps are suffering, and it is heartbreaking. All
these loving parents want for their kids is a safe, permanent roof
over their heads.
________________
Watch Pauline Hanson launch her fish and chip wan on Sky News.
______________
Labor has let these families down. Every new immigrant that Anthony
Albanese lets into the country with the hope of getting their votes,
is an immigrant who steals a home from these desperate families.
Homelessness was once complicated. Primarily, those on the streets
were there because of a mix of issues, and mental health was usually
the root problem.
In the Australia we have grown up in, families were never really
victims of homelessness, and if tragedy struck, they could usually
find a new place to live within days.
The mess we are in now is not the Australia any of us wanted or
ever imagined a government would subject us to, and it's
frightening.
It is really an emotional experience to walk through homeless
camps. To hear these stories and think about how much the Labor
government must hate Australians but love immigrants by inflicting
such a horrid fate on our fellow citizens is just mind-boggling.
Pauline Hanson has always advocated putting Aussies first,
not refugees. As Anthony Albanese rolls out the welcome mat
for immigrants, Pauline Hanson feeds the tired, poor, huddled masses,
yearning for a roof over their heads, yearning for food in their
children’s bellies, and desperate for change.
________________
Buy the shirt Pauline wore to her Fish
and Chip van launch - on our shop for a limited time.
______________
This week Pauline Hanson went back to where it all started and
launched her mobile fish and chip van. She jumped in her ute and drove
that van right to Steven Miles’ electorate to cook fish and chips for
those people Labor has thrown onto the streets. Pauline let everyone
of them know she cares, she cares more than any other leader in the
country about what these people are going through.
And with every fish and chip meal prepared, Pauline was sending a
clear message, things must change, and if the major parties don’t
change, they need to get out of the way for someone who will make a
difference. Aussies first, please.
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When you invite clowns to your castle,
don't be surprised when your home turns into a circus. This week's
Please Explain cartoon is a seminal piece of work exposing the
censorship controls being sought by Australia's political elites. And
can you guess which clowns are leading the charge?
______
The headline says it all - 'Please don't
Google it' - because the results will break your heart. More children
die from childhood dementia - rarely if ever reaching 18 years old -
than die each year from childhood cancer.
It has taken the hard work of Sarah Game
to bring this tragic disease to light and obtain a $250,000 funding
commitment from the SA State government to research and work on a cure
for this debilitating and tragic disease.
Pauline Hanson’s One Nation https://www.onenation.org.au/
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