When the World Rewards Rejectionism, Peace Dies
Peace does not come through rewarding violence. It comes through shared responsibility – and truth.
Peace does not come through rewarding violence. It comes through shared responsibility – and truth.
We must act not out of fear, but foresight. The jihadist genie is not gone. Whether we contain it – or ignore it again – is a matter of political will and strategic maturity.
It is time for media outlets, civil society, and political leaders to wake up to the role they are playing in perpetuating Hamas’s war strategy.
Melbourne’s anti-Semitic terrorists promise more of the same.
Proscribing Palestine Action was justified, but, in a deeply divided country, the government faces a minefield: enforce the law selectively and lose trust or enforce it strictly and risk unrest.
If ‘never again’ is to mean anything, it must start with this: when a terrorist organisation says it wants to commit genocide, we must believe it. And then act accordingly.
Operation Sindoor was not about retaliation for Pahalgam but a redefinition of India’s strategic doctrine vis-à-vis terrorism from across the border in Pakistan.
The ‘respected photojournalist’ who was a Hamas propagandist.
Foiled Iranian terror plot is just the tip of the iceberg.
Why are NSW police putting ‘social cohesion’ ahead of the law?
Here in NZ today, where summer’s easygoing pace continues on a million miles away from this unfolding tragedy, I’ve felt like screaming into the void, being so far away yet connected to this dark, horrible news.
There are still a lot of open heavy questions that should be addressed. Specifically, who would control Gaza, and how to prevent Hamas from regaining its stronghold on the strip.