Anthony Albanese really has this quite backwards. Social cohesion isn’t undermined by asking people to integrate into Australia. It’s undermined when governments bring in immigration at a pace that makes integration harder, while failing to encourage a shared national identity. Australia has always welcomed migrants who want to become Australians. That means learning English, respecting our laws, embracing our democratic institutions and contributing to the country they’ve chosen to call home. Those expectations apply equally, regardless of a person’s faith or country of origin.
Pauline Hanson resonates with many Australians because she’s giving voice to concerns that many people feel have been ignored. If Labor and the Liberals continue running historically high migration programs without placing enough emphasis on successful integration and a shared civic culture, they shouldn’t be surprised when Australians become concerned about social cohesion. National unity isn’t built by pretending differences don’t exist. It’s built by welcoming newcomers into a confident Australian identity, rather than encouraging people to live in separate cultural silos.
Singer is one of the few lucid investment analysts. He tends to drop truth bombs. Meanwhile, if you watch the MSM business shows, you get banal, superficial, gobbledygook. 🙄
The man that you can hear talking in the video is Frank Pieper, who was trying to help an elderly man that just had a heart Monitor fitted leaving the Southport Court house.
He and another woman were both arrested on the foot path for not moving fast enough. The woman was arrested first and Frank Turned to look and was hit from behind by Police. Frank says he was slammed to the ground by 3-4 police, they kneed him in the ribs resulting in Bruises, internal left lung bleeding and an old back injury has flared up after it took years to get over previously. They were both filed with non compliance.
📅 Australian Macro Watch: Key Dates That Matter
If you want to understand where Australia’s economy is heading, these are the dates worth watching over the next month.
📍28 July: RBA Governor Michele Bullock speaks. Markets hang on every word from the Governor. Even small changes in language can shift expectations around inflation, interest rates, the Australian dollar and government bond yields.
📍30 July: RBA Assistant Governor Sarah Hunter speaks. Sarah Hunter oversees economic analysis at the RBA, so her comments often provide valuable insight into how the Bank is interpreting inflation, employment, wages and economic growth.
📍10–11 August: Reserve Bank Monetary Policy Board Meeting. This is where Australia’s interest rate decision is made. The Board reviews all the latest economic data before deciding whether to raise, cut or hold the cash rate.
📍11 August (2:30 pm AEST): Cash Rate Decision & Statement on Monetary Policy. This is arguably the most important economic release for Australians. It influences mortgage repayments, business borrowing costs, the Australian dollar, bond markets and investor confidence. The accompanying Statement on Monetary Policy also updates the RBA’s forecasts for inflation, unemployment and economic growth.
📍12 August: RBA Chart Pack. The Chart Pack provides a visual snapshot of Australia’s economy, including inflation, wages, employment, GDP, housing, consumer spending and financial markets. It’s one of the best resources available for anyone wanting to understand the economy through data rather than headlines.
📍25 August: Minutes of the August RBA Meeting. The minutes reveal what was discussed behind closed doors, what risks concerned the Board most and whether members were close to changing interest rates. They often provide important clues about the future direction of monetary policy.
If you’re serious about understanding Australia’s economy, these are the releases to watch. They tell you far more about where we’re heading than the daily political noise, and they’ll shape everything from inflation and mortgage rates to investment markets and the value of the Australian dollar 🇦🇺📈
For years, One Nation has argued that Australia’s housing crisis isn’t just about the excessive demand, it’s also about cumbersome regulations, planning delays, red tape and unnecessary costs that make it harder and more expensive to build new homes. When mainstream media starts highlighting those same issues, it’s a sign that the conversation is shifting. Australia needs more homes, faster approvals, less bureaucracy and policies that make it easier to build, not harder. Government should be removing obstacles instead of creating more of them 🇦🇺
The people who helped create Australia’s economic problems are now asking Australians to trust them to solve them. We currently have; high inflation, high energy costs, slow productivity, a nearly 5% Australian 10-year bond yield and oil now pushing back towards US$85. Australia needs a new direction built on affordable energy, lower taxes, productive investment and fiscal discipline.
Vote One Nation 🇦🇺
Australia is walking into an inflationary environment at exactly the wrong time. Brent crude has surged, Australia’s inflation expectations remain elevated at 5.5%, the 10-year government bond is around 4.88%, and the 30-year bond is above 5.4%. Those are not the hallmarks of an economy with unlimited fiscal room. At the same time, the Commonwealth continues to run high levels of spending, government debt has grown substantially and the money supply has expanded significantly over recent years.
Yet we’re being asked to fund one of the largest infrastructure transformations in Australia’s history by rebuilding the electricity grid while retiring a large part of our existing coal-fired generation. Even the article shown here notes that electricity production costs could rise substantially as the system transitions after 2030. Reasonable people can disagree about the long-term energy mix, but it’s fair to ask whether now is the right time to commit to such an expensive transition when borrowing costs remain high, inflation pressures are elevated and households are already struggling with the cost of living.
Australians deserve an honest debate about affordability, reliability and fiscal sustainability, not just emissions targets.
Australia’s money supply has exploded. Broad money (M3) has grown from around $1.8 trillion in 2015 to around $3.3 trillion in 2025. That’s an increase of approximately 83%. More dollars chasing a limited supply of houses, goods and services inevitably reduces the purchasing power of each dollar over time. Money supply growth is not the only influence on inflation and asset prices, but it is one important factor economists examine alongside productivity, government spending, credit growth and supply constraints. Australians didn’t become 83% more productive over the same period so did the currency supply?
A very disturbing story. Muslim NSW Police officer Meleck Lababidi exchanged messages indicating an intention to target a TikTok user, allegedly used police intelligence systems and created or contributed to false intelligence suggesting the man was involved in drugs or organised crime. Incredible. The main issue is not the officer’s religion. The issue is whether NSW Police recruited, supervised and disciplined someone who allegedly treated public power as a tool for their own private revenge.
totally normal
6.85% per annum
fake CPI has averaged 2.66%
broad money supply 8.32%
it's all currency debasement
from money printing + home loan issuance
🇿🇼
The Pelican - Please Explain
The government flies in an ageing national treasure to shoot a new tourism ad — one that sells Australia to the world by the boatload. Paul gets his big bag of money. Then he tries to spend it.
What follows is a guided tour of where it all went: Snowy Hydro 2.0, the NDIS, a Rugby League team for Papua New Guinea, and a trillion dollars of debt — narrated by a red-headed pelican from Ipswich.
BREAKING NEWS:
NZ Police turned up to my house this morning to confiscate my hunting guns, and to advise that they have revoked my gun license.
All because I have spoken up about Mass Immigration!
Here's my live video, as it all went down...