Australia Just Normalized Mass Online ID Checks—Your Country Could Be Next
Starting December 27, Australians will be forced to upload government ID every time they search the web while logged in. Google, Bing—it doesn’t matter. No ID, no search.
The excuse? Protecting kids from adult content. The reality? A full-scale experiment in digital control.
- Mandatory ID uploads for all users—teenagers, seniors, everyone.
- Facial recognition or digital ID linking as the "convenient" alternative.
- No opt-out. No transparency. Just compliance.
This isn’t just about Australia. It’s a test case for global surveillance. Once the infrastructure exists, what’s stopping other governments from adopting it? Tracking searches? Censoring results? Who decides what you’re allowed to see?
If this stands, your country will be next.
The slippery slope starts here. Will you let them build it?
New York, be afraid, be very afraid.
Zohran Mamdani will take you to a very dark place.
Just like Sadiq Khan has done to London.
The woke MSM are despicable in their celebrations tonight.
To all that voted for this communist, you are to blame for the death of this great city.
When this city becomes the next London, don't dare blame Trump.
Mamdani is a slap in the face to America.
The climate loons at the @smh are at it again.. Hottest day ever, furnace-like winds.. and away we go now.
https://t.co/XbKcbfUY9z
And the weather drama queens over at #SkyNewsAust are all doom and gloom.. for clicks.
Psst, cool change coming.
It's always like this in October.
Oh dear
He didn’t destroy the car industry
The button plan, Whitlam and rapacious unions did
Abbott merely said enough
Remember Nissan and Mitsubishi went first, under Rudd/Gillard
How is this fair
Kevin rudd Australia's ambassador to USA gets $300,000.00 pa Govt pension & earns $700,000.00 pa as ambassador
An Australian pensioner gets
$28,000 pa & can only earn $60.00 per week before their pension is cut!?
"When 79-year-old George retired, he didn’t buy a golf club or a hammock. He hung a handmade sign in his garage window: “Broken things? Bring ’em here. No charge. Just tea and talk.”
His neighbors in the faded mill town of Maple Grove thought he’d lost it. “Who fixes stuff for free?” grumbled the barber. But George had a reason. His wife, Ruth, had spent decades repairing torn coats and cracked picture frames for anyone who knocked. “Waste is a habit,” she’d say. “Kindness is the cure.” She’d died the year before, and George’s hands itched to mend what she’d left behind..
The first visitor was 8-year-old Mia, dragging a plastic toy truck with a missing wheel. “Dad says we can’t afford a new one,” she mumbled. George rummaged through his toolbox, humming. An hour later, the truck rolled again—this time with a bottle cap for a wheel and a stripe of silver duct tape. “Now it’s custom ,” he winked. Mia left smiling, but her mother lingered. “Can you… fix a résumé?” she asked. “I’ve been stuck on the couch since the factory closed.”
By noon, George’s garage buzzed. A widow brought a shattered clock (“My husband wound it every Sunday”). A teen carried a leaky backpack. George fixed them all, but he didn’t work alone. Retired teachers proofread résumés. A former seamstress stitched torn backpacks. Even Mia returned, handing him a jar of jam: “Mom says thanks for the job interview.”
Then came the complaint...
“Unlicensed business,” snapped the city inspector. “You’re violating zoning laws.”
Maple Grove’s mayor, a man with a spreadsheet heart, demanded George shut down. The next morning, 40 townsfolk stood on George’s lawn, holding broken toasters, torn quilts, and protest signs: “Fix the law, not just stuff!” A local reporter filmed a segment: “Is kindness illegal?”
The mayor caved. Sort of...
“If you want to ‘fix’ things, do it downtown,” he said. “Rent the old firehouse. But no guarantees.”
The firehouse became a hive. Volunteers gutted it, painted it sunshine yellow, and dubbed it “Ruth’s Hub.” Plumbers taught plumbing. Teenagers learned to darn socks. A baker swapped muffins for repaired microwaves.
The town’s waste dropped by 30%.
— But the real magic? Conversations. A lonely widow fixed a lamp while a single dad patched a bike tire. They talked about Ruth. About loss. About hope.
Last week, George found a note in his mailbox. It was from Mia, now 16, interning at a robotics lab. “You taught me to see value in broken things. I’m building a solar-powered prosthetic arm. #PS: The truck still runs!”
Today, 12 towns across the state have “Fix-It Hubs.” None charge money. All serve tea.
☕️ Funny, isn’t it?
How a man with a screwdriver can rebuild a world."
Let this story reach more hearts...🥰
#Credit: SYJ