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Vandalising the Vietnam war memorial an act of sacrilege

 9 RAR soldiers during their farewell parade from South Vietnam in November 1969 [Public Domain]

My letter to the editor was published in the Canberra Times today.

Today (Tuesday, March 12) I saw the photos of the vandalism of the Vietnam War Memorial in Canberra and I am livid.

How dare they. Get out of my country.

If it was not for those who served in the Australian military and the thousands of Americans who died defending Australia the freedoms the perpetrators abuse would not exist.

If they think Australia's responses to the Malayan Emergency, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War were wrong then go and live in North Korea and enjoy the paradise they must imagine exists there.

The police have to prosecute those responsible. They have crossed a line.

No leniency should be shown.

Michael de Percy, Gunning, NSW 

Eshays, imported riots – are water cannons next?

WaWe 10 with the earlier WaWe 9000 in green. [Photo: Dirk Vorderstraße CC BY 2.0]

Queensland is suffering from a crime wave, and both of my grandmothers (in their nineties) have been victims of youth crime. Following the weekend's eshay-fest, is it time to bring in the big guns?

Whether it’s antisemitic pro-Palestinians or a gathering of ‘eshays’ in Logan in Queensland, our police forces have lost control of the streets. We’ve used up our smugness and we can no longer say, ‘We are so lucky that doesn’t happen here.’

Well, now it does.

My latest in The Spectator AustraliaEshays, imported riots – are water cannons next?

Discussing communist roots to anti-nuclear sentiment and left-biased AI

The Week in 60 Minutes, Spectator TV Australia, with Alexandra Marshall

This week I had the opportunity to discuss my latest Spectator Australia article, Communist roots to anti-nuclear sentiment in Australia, on Spectator TV. I am on from 21:49.

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