Bondi Was Not a Surprise: How Antisemitism Was Normalised in Australia
Why the Bondi attack was not an aberration, but the consequence of years of tolerated antisemitism across Australian public life.
A collection of 85 posts
Why the Bondi attack was not an aberration, but the consequence of years of tolerated antisemitism across Australian public life.
The identity of the Bondi Beach terrorists reveals some uncomfortable but important truths about antisemitism within Australia’s Muslim population.
The massacre at Bondi Beach was shocking—but after years of denial and equivocation about antisemitism, it was inevitable.
Fifteen people are dead after gunmen opened fire at a Jewish Hanukkah festival on one of Sydney’s most iconic beaches.
The British establishment is experiencing a schism over China policy and approval of a controversial new embassy.
A month after the lethal Manchester synagogue attack, the UK still refuses to take its number one terror threat seriously.
An in-depth interview with Chapin Fay of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation on delivering aid in a war zone—and why their unconventional model has drawn both praise and criticism.
The Jewish state has secured its borders, recovered all living hostages, and put its enemies on notice as to what awaits them if they attempt a reprise of 7 October.
The modern CIA is everything its enemies and friends say it is—by turns heroic, villainous, duplicitous, servile, and frequently ineffective.
The real hoax is the one being peddled by the Trump administration right now.
The Australian security services have confirmed that Iran orchestrated antisemitic attacks in Sydney and Melbourne. This is not the first time leftist causes have been hijacked by Islamists. It is time we confronted this danger.
Jefferson Morley’s dogged pursuit of a CIA connection in Miami is all smoke and no fire.
The Constance Holden Memorial Address, 2025.
Iona Italia talks to historian and film-maker Phil Craig about the latest in his series of books about World War II: ‘1945: A Reckoning: War, Empire and the Struggle for a New World.’
The leaders of NATO admit that they must pay for their own military defence but seem reluctant to put their commitments into practice.