
NORTHERN NSW man Dave Oneegs has made an impassioned appeal to freedom group leaders to put aside differences and support the August 31st rally.
Oneegs, speaking on social media, says dissatisfaction among Australians has finally reached a critical mass and there is “huge momentum” for Australians to gather and protest, regardless of who is organising the rally.
Some leading figures in the Australian freedom movement have expressed reservations about the August 31st rally because of the apparently involvement of the National Socialist Network, otherwise labeled as the “far right white nationalists” or Nazis.
However another group of activists who have laid claim to the March for Australia August 31 rally say the NSN is not involved. Their Facebook page says rallies are “all go” in all capital cities except Adelaide, but details are lacking except for the two-hour meeting times. No speakers have been announced with less then two weeks to the event – assuming that speakers are planned.
But Oneegs, who runs a popular Telegram channel, is convinced there is a groundswell of support. “It’s got momentum whether you like it or not,” he said.
“We have finally hit a critical mass of Australians who are aware of what’s going on in this country and that we are in incredible danger of losing our entire way of life. Whether it be the spraying, whether it be the mRNA injections, whether it be mass surveillance, whether it be digital ID. whether it be cost of living, this governmant’s gone rogue.”
He call on certain leaders and influencers in the community to cease their public disagreements and get behind the rally. He also said those leaders should get on the phone to the people running the rally and iron out their differences.
Oneegs’ reference to “leaders and influencers” was pointing to Monica Smit, Rukshan Fernanco, Avi Yemeni and Topher Field, who have been caught up in some public arguing about the August 31st event,
Smit posted some emotion-charged comments on her Facebook page about the issue.
“I’m sorry!!! My commentary about the 31st August event has been all over the place. I made a video and deleted it. I initially promoted it, and deleted those posts too!,” she said
“It’s such a tough situation. I’m torn. I support people’s freedom of expression, but the event stinks and has caused the most division within the freedom family I’ve ever seen! That can’t be a good sign.
“From a PR perspective, I stuffed up big time. The trolling and comments got the better of me on this occasion, which I’m embarrassed to admit.
“All I know is my gut is trying to tell me…if it stinks this bad and is causing this much division, it can’t be a good thing. If a friend called me and asked if they should go, I’d say “no way, stay away”. I need to stop flip flopping and be straight with myself, and you, and not be a coward fearful of hateful comments.
“I’ve never claimed to know all the answers, and on this occasion, I’ve been a terrible person to look to for advice. Please forgive me. I will reflect on this and try not to make the same mistakes again.”
The Albanese Labor government trotted out predictable rejections of the rally, with Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke going as far as calling the rally “un-Australian”, Burke said the Rally For Australia was un-Australian because “there is no place in our country for people who seek to divide and undermine our social cohesion.”
Burke should be making that point with the State Government of Victoria, whose open door to migrants has led to gangs of black African youths terrorizing shopping centres with knife and machete attacks or Moslem communities indulging in forced child marriages.
“We stand with modern Australia against these rallies – nothing could be less Australian.” How appropriate for Burke to be using the very same “modern Australia” term used by Opposition leader Sussan Ley in recent speeches.
The Minister for Multicultural Affairs, the Egyptian-born Dr Anne Aly told mainstream media “that multicultural Aussies will not be intimidated”.
She also appealed to the “modern Australia” term, claiming “movements grounded in racism had no place in modern Australia”.
“We stand with all Australians, no matter where they were born, against those who seek to divide us and who seek to intimidate migrant communities. We will not be intimidated. This brand of far-right activism grounded in racism and ethnocentrism has no place in modern Australia.”
The reality is that Burke and Aly represent UN-directed global socialism, like the Biden, Starmer and Macron regimes. These leftist parties employ mass immigration essentially as a social engineering tool to dilute and ultimately destroy traditional national identies, provide cheap labor for big corporations, and a mass voting bloc.
The last paragraph of the News.com.au report noted: “In lengthy posts shared through the March for Australia Instagram page, organisers have rejected associations with the alt-right “National Socialist Network, White Australia, or Thomas Sewell Uncensored,” adding that organisers come from a “diverse range of political backgrounds”.