There's a new enemy in town.
Once upon a time it was the communists, apparently the Russians too were going to invade the 'west', maybe even the shores of the U S of A, apparently there was this war on that was cold, was it in Siberia? At the time of this writing it's -32 ÂșC there so it still could be on.
Is the reality that there never was any danger from the 'Russians' as it's all about keeping the masses in fear, subservient to corporate rule?
Apparently the Rothschilds sent out their 'fake news' messenger which triggered the great depression.
So what's / who's this new enemy?
Why the people of course, silly, they always have been, but this time with their 'fake news'.
You see, the people of Australia are the enemy of the police, as they carry the guns as opposed to the police of New Zealand, but that could be another dozen posts or so or even relegated to 'fake news' / conspiracy theory.
You see, ever since the handing over of the 'internet' to the masses, the people have a 'publication' medium where their raw voice can be heard, unedited and to some degree 'true' without an agenda, of course putting aside, staged videos, stories and falsified pictures.
Before the days of the interwebs if one got bashed (literally for no reason) by a police person on a 'random' traffic stop, and reported this to a duopolised Australian media, then that story may not have come out depending on the agenda of the chiefs in charge.
Today, a member of the herd populace can obtain a digital video recorder cheaply (thanks to slave labour in China and soon Australia), a hidden voice recorder or a mobile phone and stream what's happening live to their favourite social media channel.
The people are conditioned that the corporate media are the purveyors of truth, justice and whatever, where the reality can be the direct opposite of what is being 'advertised'.
A 'recent' example is that of a viral (what, no flu shot or vaccine??? You anti video vaxxers you) video of a passenger on Melbourne's public transport abusing a French woman.
The Rupert Murdoch media empire provided (deliberate false and misleading?) information that the woman was a victim who was racially abused / traumatised where in reality this was far from the truth.
The woman stated :
“The media positioned me as a victim, but I didn’t feel like that on
the bus. I was surrounded by friends, I felt secure. It was only verbal.
“I felt a little confused but I was OK. I wasn’t traumatised at all.”
The irony being in this case that the Rupert Murdoch media slipped the truth out this time?
Read article from 15 December by news.com.au of the headline:
Creator of first ‘racist rant’ video meets the man he filmed on the bus
Mike Nayna sat down to talk to the ‘racist’ he publicly shamed on YouTube. Picture: Charles Lowthian
THE Melbourne bus passenger who
filmed the first viral video of a racist rant on public transport has
faced the man he shamed, four years after the footage gained 4.7 million
views almost overnight.
In the confronting video
Mike Nayna uploaded to YouTube, Hayden Stewart is heard screaming at a
young Frenchwoman: “F***ing stop there ay, you bitch. C***. I’ll f***ing
box cut you right now, dog”.
“Yeah come on c*** get off, f***ing ding, look at ya.”
Hayden,
24, was backing up a man named Graham, who told the woman to “speak
English or die” and threatened to cut off her breasts with a filleting
knife.
Graham called her group of friends, who were singing in
French at the back of the bus, “f***ing black c***s” and told them “300
years of history should have told them that they’re f***ing slaves”.
As Hayden walked away with his then-girlfriend, pushing their six-month-old daughter in a pram, he smashed in the bus window.
Mike, right, says he doesn’t think Hayden Stewart is a racist. Picture: Charles LowthianSource:Supplied
‘I’LL PUT A BULLET IN THEIR HEADS, RACIST SCUM’
The
shocking video made news across the world, with Mike discussing what
he’d witnessed on national TV in the UK, France, the Netherlands and the
US.
Viewers took to social media to express their disgust at
Hayden’s behaviour, with many threatening to kill him and his child.
“I’ll put a bullet in their heads racist scum,” read one threat.
–– ADVERTISEMENT ––
“Remember these faces and if you see them stomp their teeth into their ugly mullets,” ordered another social media user.
Both
Hayden and Graham did jail time over the incident in 2014, with Graham
losing his job in construction and sleeping on the streets after he was
evicted from his home.
Mike grew disturbed at the vigilante mob he’d created.
“It
was horrible,” he told news.com.au. “I started feeling really guilty.
You’ve got people having mental breakdowns caught on camera then
scrutinised. I was wondering what was happening to these people.”
The
aspiring filmmaker, now 32, had created viral videos before. Uploading
the footage to YouTube, he had hoped it would stop the men he had filmed
“turning themselves into the heroes of the story” and embarrass them.
“My
main motivation was personal,” he admits. “I felt humiliated. I guess
it was revenge, I didn’t think that at the time but I came to that
conclusion after speaking about it for a few hours on TV.”
The video of Hayden, then 24, abusing a Frenchwoman on a bus clocked up 4.7 million views around the world.Source:Supplied
Graham,
who racially abused Fanny Desaintjores and her friends, lost his job,
served time in jail and ended up evicted and sleeping on the streets
after the video went viral.Source:Supplied
‘HE LOOKED LIKE HE EXPECTED ME TO HIT HIM’
Four years on, Mike saw Hayden on the street in Melbourne, and screwed up the courage to approach him.
“He
looked like he expected me to hit him,” Mike says. “I apologised, he
apologised. It was a really strange conversation. ‘I’m the guy who made
your life hell’.”
Mike learnt that Hayden was on his way to rehab —
he had turned to drugs and suffered with mental health issues. He had
developed anxiety over walking around the streest, he reveals in an
interview Mike filmed for a documentary on his experience.
“People picked me out, ‘there’s that bloke, teach him a lesson’,” Hayden says.
He was “embarrassed, ashamed, guilty, everything,” he told Mike.
“I’ve
got me half-year-old daughter with me in a pram screaming abuse at a
lady at the back of the bus, it didn't look good. I’d only been out
three weeks so I was still kind of in that mindframe of jail mode,
you’ve got to threaten them before they get you first, you’ve got to
make sure they’re not going to come after you, you’re angrier and
scarier.
“I wasn’t in control ... I reacted the wrong way.”
Fanny, then 22, said she never felt in danger during the verbal attack and wasn’t traumatised afterwards.Source:Supplied
‘IT WENT WAY TOO FAR’
Mike, who is still in contact with Hayden, feels guilty for what happened to him afterwards.
“It got pretty bad for him,” says Mike. “He wouldn’t blame the video, but look at the timeline.
“It
went way too far. I don’t think anything positive happened as a result
of that video. If anything, it solidified his feeling of being on the
outside.
“This person’s already cast aside and doesn’t feel part
of culture, to push him further out and have him feel people are looking
down at him, I do feel responsible.
“But he’s an adult now. We don’t completely absolve him.”
Mike
doesn’t believe Hayden is racist, “not at all” and thinks Graham was
“playing to the crowd” when he shouted at the young French woman and her
rowdy friends on the rail replacement bus at the end of a long, hot
summer’s day.
“It was just excitement,” says Mike. “The racial
element was a small part of it. Obviously there’s some kind of racism in
these guys, but it’s the same with everyone I think.
“We’ve expanded the definition of racism so far it encompasses people going about their daily lives.”
Mike couldn’t track down the older man for the documentary. He has “gone off the grid”.
At
his sentencing, the 36-year-old told the magistrate: “Anything you can
do is nothing compared to what I’ve been through the past 12 months.”
As
for French woman Fanny Desaintjores, then 22, she did not press charges
and tells Mike in the documentary she never felt in danger that day.
“The
media positioned me as a victim, but I didn’t feel like that on the
bus. I was surrounded by friends, I felt secure. It was only verbal.
“I felt a little confused but I was OK. I wasn’t traumatised at all.”