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Dear John,
Labor’s announcement that Australia
will surrender to terrorists and recognise a
Palestinian state has dominated the headlines this week.
It’s a
big deal in the media because the announcement represents a major
departure from a longstanding bipartisan policy—the so-called
‘two-state solution’ to the everlasting conflict in the Middle
East.
The Prime Minister no doubt feels that following Labor’s
landslide election win and a weak Opposition led by an even weaker
Sussan Ley, he has sufficient political capital to finally make the
radical move Labor’s extremist left faction has been agitating for
years.
Australian foreign policy is almost unrecognisable from
what it was a generation ago: today Australia insults its traditional
allies while it kneels to communist China and hands terrorists
everything they want on a golden platter. Hamas—a prescribed terrorist
group backed by a rogue theocratic terrorist state in Iran—has already
praised the Albanese government for caving in to its
demands.
One Nation has roundly condemned this abysmal foreign
policy shift, pledging to withdraw Australia’s recognition of a
Palestinian state and setting non-negotiable conditions for
Australia’s agreement to the implementation of the ‘two-state
solution.’ As Senator Hanson said, you don’t stop terrorists by giving
them what they want; you stop them by always denying what they
want.
In the meantime, it’s important we don’t let a conflict
being fought 12,000 km away take our focus off local issues, and One
Nation has again put the focus on poor governance in the Aboriginal
industry this week, revealing that 1,258 Indigenous
corporations had failed to comply with reporting requirements for the
2023-24 financial year.
These corporations aren’t even subject
to the requirements of the Corporations Act 2001. They have their own
law: the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Act
2006; the level of compliance required by this law is substantially
lower than for non-Indigenous corporations, yet around one in three
Indigenous groups can’t even meet these basic standards. The body
charged with ensuring compliance, the Office of the Registrar of
Indigenous Corporations (ORIC), is effectively toothless, while
Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy seems more
interested in enforcing welcomes to country than enforcing the
law.

Liberal & Labor Betray Soldiers
As someone who deeply respects the men and women of our Australian
Defence Force, I find it heartbreaking to witness the betrayal they’ve
suffered at the hands of the Liberal and Labor parties.
Former Chief of Defence Angus Campbell will likely be let off
scot-free by the uniparty, despite clear evidence the medals he wears
require review.
Brave Australians sign up to defend our nation, often risking their
lives, yet their service is being diminished by a broken system of
recognition—and worse, by political indifference.
One Nation initiated a Senate Inquiry into the military medal
system because we listened to the voices of those who serve. What we
uncovered was a two-tiered structure where senior officers award
themselves medals, sometimes without meeting the “in action” criteria
for being under fire, while frontline soldiers are overlooked.
Our recommendations were clear. We called for a review of medals
awarded to top brass between 1991 and 2012, a restoration of the
original “in action” definition, and protections against the arbitrary
cancellation of medals. We proposed a fairer, transparent system that
honours genuine service, not bureaucratic self-congratulation.
But Liberal and Labor refused to back these reforms.

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You’d think protecting a pristine stretch of coastline like
Geographe Bay would be a no-brainer. But somehow, common sense seems
to have gone out the window, along with transparency, when it comes to
a controversial offshore wind project that’s causing real concern
across the South West.
One Nation Senator Tyron Whitten recently tried to get some
straight answers by filing a Freedom of Information (FOI) request. He
wanted to know how and why the Department of Environment decided that
the marine survey mapping was 'not a controlled action' for the
proposed wind facility, surveying using sound levels that deafen
whales, which rely on their hearing to survive. But here’s the kicker:
the FOI request was denied. And not just by anyone, it was shut down
by the same person who made the original decision to
greenlight the project.

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Pauline Hanson’s One Nation https://www.onenation.org.au/
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