Australia: How To Counteract the Takeover the Takeover?
by Mary W Maxwell, PhD, LLB
At the official website Melbourne.vic.gov.au, we find:
"You don't need permission from the City of Melbourne to conduct a demonstration, rally or protest or other form of public assembly [but] we'd like to hear about it so we can plan for impacts to parks, public places, streets and footpaths and notify affected businesses and services."
However, at coronavirus.vic.gov.au, we find:
"Victoria is currently under strict restrictions or lockdown due to the level of community transmission of COVID-19 and the number of unlinked cases. ... public and business events cannot occur, with the exception of professional sport which can proceed with no spectators."
The premier of the state of Victoria, Dan Andrews stands at a press conference, talking what can only be called gibberish, such as that you can have four vaccinated people gather together for a picnic (why not 6 or 20, if all vaccinated?). The premier of New South Wales, Gladys Berejiklian, publicly announces that, if you're in the supermarket and you see a neighbor, you mustn't strike up a conversation.
No, seriously, she said that on TV. Was not smiling or winking. She meant it. And remember not to say "Isn't it a lovely day?" to someone in the parking lot.
Yesterday, a 32-year-old nursing student was attacked by a police group in Sydney, in a park. This woman -- you can see it on Youtube -- was tackled to the ground and had her dress pulled up; they said "looking for documents." Hello? I hear they are from the Public Order and Riot Squad.
My friend Dee McLachlan filmed the September 18 freedom rally in Melbourne, at which all of the thousands of protestors were breaking the law just by existing (or so it seems). I will post the 3.1 minute video below. An interesting fact, uncovered by Dee, is that the cops used a pincer tactic to surround and entrap the group. Watch to see how they escaped.
If you follow the link at the bottom of this page, you will also see a video of a 70-year-old woman being hurled to the ground -- surely hurling is against the rules of engagement. And then while she is thusly captured, a cop sprays pepper spray at her face at close range. Surely that is against the rules of engagement, to the point of being simply criminal, conceivably murderous.
If you are an Australian ex-pat you may be moved by the fact that the video is set to the music of Peter Allen's song "I Still Call Australia Home."
Violence by police toward females is arousing the male instinct to protect women, thank God. A Sydney man named Aussie Cossack is doing a good job of social leadership, as is Monica Smit of NSW. But she is in jail for refusing to sign bond conditions that she disagrees with. Thank you, Monica.
In South Australia, Rachel Vaughan has an honorable history, since age 9, of dealing with police on behalf of children. In Queensland we have the ballsy Shane Dowling (has also been in jail), and in Victoria, a lawyer named Serene Teffaha at advocateme. com.au, and the aforementioned Dee McLachlan who cut her social-justice teeth in South Africa in them good ol' apartheid days. Fiona Barnett is underground (I hope!)
The shenanigans Down Under are to be taken very seriously by us in the north, as we are "on the schedule." Oh, I forgot to say: Parliament has passed a law to permit police to come to your house and delete your computer files. (Maybe these are in your underwear?)
We ought to help the imprisoned nation of Australia now. Here is the film of the pincer tactic. Bet they did not know an onlooker would figure it out. This is "Protest of 18 September" at the YouTube channel of GumshoeNews.
https://youtu.be/bfOXBQfIbYM
Mary Maxwell is a dual citizen if US and Oz. She lives in New Hampshire and has just published her book, "Keep the Republic, Kill the Takeover," a free download soon at her website: ConstitutionAndTruth.com.