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Just Call It Fascism

Just Call It Fascism

From the river to the sea,” is an expression that has become illegal in Australia. An insecure nation with government often desperate to placate foreign interests and those who keep the politicians rich. And, in 2026 any thing that has been determined as ‘antisemetic’ is forbidden. Read, anything that is anti-Israel. Not, necessarily Jewish.

Bonnie Carter, who was taken by the police and has not been charged at this time. Upset them enough to wear a shirt. What she wore, ensured that armed, mostly men could force her to go with them. Her fate in their hands, and the hands of their masters. Bonnie Carter, eighteen, is a threat to the State.

Aussie cops have shown they will do what cops the world over do. Serve masters. Whether they agree with the politicians or not, really doesn’t matter. They serve them. Whether they think the laws are bullshit or not, they enforce them. The tired lie often told, “I don’t make the laws, I enforce them, if you want to change them, go through the political process.”

A political process which is both theatre and self serving. To vote often leads to more of the worse, or variations of the pain. More government. Many of those who do vote are seduced by the dangling charm of a welfare increase or the liars promises not to tax them any more. Or, more laws that will some how fix things, make us all safer. Aussie culture has become one obsessed with banning things. The increase in surveillance, censorship, prohibitions are all done, we are told, for security, safety, and health. To save the children from freedom, to stop the terrorists from allowing more freedom, the insecure only know how to ban and outlaw.

Which brings us to the image of an 18 year old girl being arrested by police officers who found the words on her shirt offensive. This Australia which has spent much of the last and current century inviting itself to wars, proclaiming human rights as a justification for intervention and acting with moral self-righteousness whenever it decides to. Free speech, is meant to be offensive and to challenge. It can be as ugly as it can be beautiful. To homogenise society and disapprove of art and expression, to only allow certain statements while forbidding others is the hallmarks of political ideologies that many seem to view as a pariah. It’s also the cowards pragmatism.

We are Charlie Hebdo…” an act of terrible violence because the murderers saw an offence in imagery and words. “From the river to the sea,” an affront to an ongoing genocide and an apartheid State. It may be an offensive, or an implied statement that challenges and threatens, so what? What is government policy other than brutal threats? YOU WILL OBEY, or else!

Moving forward, does the Australian public think it will be freer for these laws? Better for it all? The more dependent they are made on the Government, the less choices. The rising costs due to the policies and parasitic manipulations from it. Less choice when it comes to things that are allowed to ingest. More restrictions as to what may be said, read and viewed or heard. Less privacy, every thing must have a camera recorded what and where we are or the digital communications between familiars, strangers and intimate partners observed, stored and monitored. Where did you get that five cents from? Have you paid fees and taxes on it? You can’t save without us having some it! What exactly will be allowed? Or, is allowed?

It’s a predatory culture levelled by insecure masters and professionals who lack any morals or, steel themselves with a zealotry that excuses any wrong doings as a greater good, a good they see as being righteous or ideological pragmatic. With an increase in violent crimes, the citizenry disarmed in their ability and right to defend property, self and loved ones. The masters assume their mercenary constabulary will be enough. Many of which are best serving as political officers and revenue workers than they are investigators and deterrents to violent criminals. But, the monopoly on violence insists you must comply and take it. Suffer, endure. It’s for the greater good?

Let the machete attacker hit you, think about the jobs it creates. Medical, NDIS, lawyers, it’s a shattered window of economic reasoning. To defend and protect yourself, that’s dangerous. Independence! That is radical. To deny your victim hood is being selfish. Or something hyperbolic like that. You get the picture.

To expose yourself online by using government approved ID’s along with the march towards further digital dependence is an insistence that does not ensure convenience or safety for the individual. Perhaps some enjoy it as a one stop. It determines that all must have a digital life style, must comply with the measures and must reveal every aspect of their life possible to those who are consuming the data and using it. Technology no longer serves the customer or individual, it’s now used against them. It serves equity, corporations and above all else, governments. It’s a twisted partnership of absolving responsibilities while retaining loopholes that satisfy their control and manipulation over human beings. The chattel for them to rule.

Ignoring the power outages, incompetence and obsession with turning most things as AI reliant. It will also cost lives and time. Not to mention such “smart” measures dumb down the populace and those very sinister beings who are using it against the citizenry. Which will lead to ghosts in the machine and hallucinations becoming less known or causing trouble which can’t be fixed until too late. More corruption, though that seems to be a perk of such careers. The outsourcing of morality and trust in such systems and machines will lead to a religious embrace, that they are always right. Morality and curiosity are algorithms. And to shrug, “the machine said…”

Decades ago it would be fictional depictions of what to avoid. Now, this far along, ensnared in public and private debt, hooked on welfare and the grifts associated, locked into mortgages and a lifestyle which requires a regular income, a safe career and brow beaten by media and social media bobble heads which cry over anything thing as the greatest testament of human destruction, if not for a new law. If only there was another tax. Another regulation. The solution is always the same. Control.

The Australian government will arm and support coalitions that would blow up school busses in Yemen, pretend a genocide is not occurring in Gaza, join in a war that does not seem possible to be won and has little popular support. Then again, nations like Australia love war. Even if the culture has turned it’s dingo bark into the pathetic whimper of a lap dog. Decades of dependency and belly swelling corporate slop living has turned the nation into a soft handed and shrill public service.

But such insecure societies need a win. It’s great victory, arresting an 18-year old lass because she wore a shirt. I guess that’s why the diggers fought, and why they will fight again. And the cops. They would throw children into packed trains and watch them die in chambers full of gas. We know this to be true. History has shown us. Just ordinary men…people in this case. These ordinary, though armed mostly men would force Bonnie Carter to go with them. Because she wore a singlet with words.

Call it whatever you want. Ideologies adapt, they evolve. Above all else, those who boast “anti” as pragmatic beasts will adopt the very things they lied to oppose.

The fascists won, again.

The Kyle Anzalone Show [GUEST] Lt Col Karen Kwiatkowski: Operation Epic Failure: Trump’s War in Iran Is NOT Going As Planned

A war launched with shifting reasons and sliding timelines is a warning sign, not a strategy. We sit down with former Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski to examine how the U.S.–Iran confrontation veered from consent to chaos in days: bungled evacuations, brittle base defenses, and a communications vacuum that can’t cover for poor planning. Karen draws a sharp line from the Iraq playbook—months of theater and “evidence”—to today’s improvisation, arguing that when leaders skip the work of persuasion, they often skip the work of preparation too.

We unpack the divergence between U.S. national interests and the aims of regional allies who gain from fragmentation rather than stability. From alleged false flags to decapitation strikes that harden, not break, an adversary’s will—especially during sacred seasons—Karen explains why social cohesion, religion, and memory matter in war as much as missiles and jets. We probe the culture inside the Pentagon, where candor fades as rank rises, and how that dynamic leaves troops exposed in trailers instead of layered defenses while press briefings promise “every precaution.”

The conversation gets unflinching about costs: industrial limits that can’t sustain a long fight, political timelines that breed wishful thinking, and a post-failure push for massive “rebuild” budgets that reward the very errors that caused the losses. Yet there’s a path forward. We chart a reset built on real national security—clear objectives, lawful authority, matched means, and diplomacy that lowers the premium on force. If America wants fewer funerals and fewer blank checks, it needs consent, competence, and clarity at the core of policy.

If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who cares about foreign policy, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can keep these conversations sharp and useful.

The Kyle Anzalone Show [Guest] COL. Lawrence Wilkerson: Trump Admits Americans Will Die in the War for Israel

War rarely begins with a single decision; it grows from motives, misreads, and momentum. We sit down with Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson to map how a promised era of “no new wars” gave way to a high-stakes confrontation with Iran that could redraw the strategic landscape. He unpacks an unsettling mix of incentives—profit for well-connected investors, donor appeasement, and domestic distraction—that, layered atop alliance politics with Israel, pushed Washington onto an escalation ladder with few exit ramps.

We walk through the hard realities of deterrence, from Netanyahu’s saber-rattling and nuclear ambiguity to the very real prospect of great-power entanglement. If a nuclear-armed state strikes a non-nuclear Iran, global norms shatter and condemnation surges, while Russia and China, already tightening ties to Tehran, weigh their leverage. Wilkerson explains why even “limited” nuclear use becomes a civilization-scale risk once the United States, Russia, and China—each with thousands of advanced warheads—are forced into a confrontational posture. That alone should demand humility and restraint.

Beyond headlines about missiles and speeches, the logistics are grim. Iran’s layered strategy of cheap drones and rockets is designed to drain expensive Patriot and naval interceptors, opening windows for heavier strikes. Maritime chokepoints—Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb—become economic pressure valves, where selective disruption could upend oil flows, food shipments, and global trade. Quiet diesel-electric submarines operating in the acoustically favorable North Arabian Sea complicate any escort mission and raise the chance of a sudden, costly loss. And talk of U.S. ground forces? A recipe for a grinding, urban-and-mountain war that repeats the most painful lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan.

We close on the long tail: how mass casualties, perceived impunity, and widening fronts unify otherwise divided communities, supercharge extremist recruitment, and tempt desperate states toward nuclear proliferation. Power isn’t just force; it’s legitimacy, alliances, and foresight. If we want stability, we have to rebuild credibility with clear aims, disciplined strategy, and diplomacy that matches the stakes. If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest question about de-escalation—we’ll tackle it in a future show.

Focus on Incentives, Ignore ‘Good Intentions’. Keith Knight & Joseph Solis-Mullen.

Focus on Incentives, Ignore ‘Good Intentions’. Keith Knight & Joseph Solis-Mullen.

The current President can teach us a lot about how incentives can alter a persons behavior.
 
Assume you agree with me, that Trump is a nefarious actor.
 
Was Trump more of a threat to humanity in the voluntary sector, or the political sector?
 
The Progressive world-view would predict: In the greedy private sector Trump exploited people. Now, as a public servant, Trump creates value by serving us, the collective.
 
The opposite is true.
 
Market advocates recognize the inevitability of humans being self-interested actors, using the freedom of (dis)association as the ultimate check and balance against wrongdoers.

The consumers are merciless. They never buy in order to benefit a less efficient producer and to protect him against the consequences of his failure to manage better. They want to be served as well as possible. And the working of the capitalist system forces the entrepreneur to obey the orders issued by the consumers.

– Ludwig von Mises, Bureaucracy, p. 37

Book discussed: Classical Liberalism: Rise, Fall, and Future of an Idea by Joseph Solis-Mullen

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Radar Follies: The Delicate Golden Thread

pentagram

What happens when billions of dollars of Western radars are shattered and decimated? Once fire direction can’t translate & collate Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) inputs to operable cueing and precise targeting for munitions, efficacy of fires falls off a cliff. You can have mountains of missiles and munitions but the tyranny of angles and location in a dynamic conflict demand precision targeting.

These billion+ dollar radar architectures are complex with long lead times to completion. The cost means the templating geographic coverage does not have very much redundancy.

These are connected to data processing facilities and SATCOM/communications infrastructure in a complex choreography that demands high levels of tightly synchronized coordination. That radar is the reception locus for cueing from a number of sources (including the radar coverage itself) and contributes to airspace deconfliction by naming the priority of threats after determining through Positive Identification (PID) and Combat Identification (CID). The vast inputs are binned into threats, friendly, neutral and unidentified objects and prioritized by apparent threat level prioritized to proximity.

I’m boring you with that to emphasize how important these technological marvels are in peer conflict in the missile age.

Gallium is crucial to build radars. Guess what? China controls 98% of gallium production.

The Iranians are making claims to radar destruction.

Apparently destroyed by Shahed drones.

I cannot verify the apparent AI-created image below.

The conclusion is this: if the Iranians are destroying radars, they are destroying vital links in the kill chain. If this is fiction, it is a lesson learned on how important it is for peer military powers to protect their radar sites.

radarsets1

The Kyle Anzalone Show: Signals of War? US Evacuates Embassy in Israel, Trump Unhappy with Iran

Sirens don’t always sound before a war—sometimes the warning is a bland memo telling diplomats to pack. We open with the U.S. pullback of non‑emergency staff from Israel and track how similar moves in Lebanon and likely elsewhere signal more than routine caution. From there, we map the fault lines in the Iran talks: Oman’s shuttle diplomacy, Tehran’s offer to dilute 60 percent uranium in exchange for real sanctions relief, and Washington’s push for a forever framework with stockpile transfer. When “progress” headlines collide with uncompromising demands, the math points one direction—toward force.

We challenge the claim that Iran “won’t say no nukes” by pulling the public statements and the religious decree that prohibit nuclear weapons, then set that against the hard lesson of deterrence from Iraq, Libya, and nuclear‑armed North Korea. Add in a persistent myth about EFPs in Iraq being “made in Iran,” and you get a narrative built to justify strikes rather than to solve a problem. We explain how these talking points, repeated often, become premises for action, and why a strike would likely trigger missile salvos that overwhelm defenses, hit U.S. positions, and drag Israel into a wider fight.

Power without process is a theme throughout. We press the missing question to the presidency: where is the congressional authorization for a new Middle East war? A real vote could slow or stop escalation, yet media and political opponents remain quiet. The show widens to Cuba, where intensified sanctions aim to force internal change, and to the AI front, where the U.S. moved to cancel contracts with Anthropic after the company resisted military targeting and mass surveillance uses. That confrontation reveals how quickly advanced tech can be bent to state aims when guardrails are treated as disobedience.

The Kyle Anzalone Show: Americans Don’t Want War with Iran – US Officials Have a New Plan to Manipulate Them

A quiet leak says the loud part: some senior voices in Washington think the politics “work better” if Israel strikes Iran first. Not because it changes the threat. Because it changes the story Americans hear. We pull that thread and walk through the actual mechanics of how a regional spark becomes a U.S. war—and how the talking points are already scripted to sell it as defense, not regime change.

We dig into the Wall Street Journal’s reporting on U.S. negotiating demands in Geneva: dismantle core facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan; ship out enriched uranium; accept permanent restrictions; get minimal sanctions relief. If the aim is nonproliferation, that package reads like a poison pill. We explain enrichment levels, IAEA safeguards, and why the JCPOA’s sunsets never legalized weapons. We also explore practical off-ramps—like diluting higher-enriched stock back to fuel-grade or transferring it to a third country—and why domestic politics and sanctions architecture block viable outcomes.

Then we zoom out to missiles, proxies, and red lines that Washington has outsourced to regional partners. That choice all but guarantees future friction and a pretext for strikes. On Capitol Hill, even narrow, monitored enrichment is attacked as “JCPOA lite,” while the constitutional question goes missing. If war is truly on the table, a clean declaration vote would force members to own the decision; a War Powers Resolution that can be vetoed only muddies accountability. We close by assessing costs that seldom make the headline—U.S. casualties, humanitarian fallout, a deepening refugee crisis, and an empowered military-industrial complex—while ordinary Americans shoulder the bill.

If this conversation adds clarity, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your take on whether Congress should be required to vote before any strike on Iran. Your voice shapes what happens next.

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