Fifteen people died at Bondi on December 14. The government resisted naming what it was. ISIS brides landed in Sydney. Ben Roberts-Smith got prosecuted. Australia noticed.
December 14, 2025. Bondi Beach. A Hanukkah celebration. A thousand people.
A father and son drove in, got out, and opened fire. Fifteen people died. Eleven men. Three women. A ten-year-old girl. Four civilians ran toward the gunmen to stop them. Three of those four were killed trying.
Islamic State claimed responsibility. Police found IS flags in the vehicle. The evidence was not ambiguous.
It was the worst terrorist attack in Australian history. The deadliest mass shooting since Port Arthur in 1996.
And Anthony Albanese resisted calling it what it was.
In the days after the massacre the government hesitated on the language. Hesitated on the inquiry. Hesitated on the royal commission that the Jewish community and the opposition were calling for.
Albanese announced the royal commission on January 8. Three and a half weeks after fifteen people were killed at a Hanukkah celebration on one of Australia's most famous beaches.
Sussan Ley said he was forced into it.
His own headline called it a backflip.
The government that could not find the words for what happened at Bondi found them eventually. After enough pressure. After enough time. After enough people noticed the silence.
That is not leadership. That is management. And Australia has been managed for long enough.
On May 8, 2026, a cohort of ISIS-linked women and children landed in Sydney and Melbourne.
The government said it did not assist their return. They came anyway. The Australian Federal Police were waiting to make arrests. Tony Burke confirmed the government had known about their plans to travel.
May 8. Two days before the Farrer by-election.
The same government that took three and a half weeks to announce a royal commission into the worst terrorist attack in Australian history watched ISIS-linked women board planes to Sydney and said it had nothing to do with it.
The same government that prosecuted Ben Roberts-Smith for allegedly killing the enemy on a battlefield in Afghanistan.
Ben Roberts-Smith is Australia's most decorated living soldier. Victoria Cross. The nation's highest military honour.
The same political and media class that struggled to name what killed fifteen people at Bondi spent years and tens of millions of dollars trying to destroy him.
They prosecuted the soldier. They welcomed back the brides. They hesitated on the massacre.
That is not a coincidence. That is a value system. And Australia has been watching it operate for years.
Australia did not riot. It did not march. It did not burn anything down.
It went to the ballot box.
South Australia, April 2026. One Nation polled 22 percent of the primary vote. Up from 2.6 percent in 2022. They beat the Liberal Party statewide. Won four seats. Replaced the Liberals as the second placed party across suburban Adelaide.
Nepean, Victoria, May 2. One Nation pulled 25 percent of the primary vote in a seat they had never seriously contested. The Liberals held on. The ground shifted visibly underneath them.
Farrer, NSW, May 10. One Nation's David Farley won with 59 percent of the two-candidate-preferred vote. A seat the Coalition had held since 1949. Seventy-seven years. Gone in one afternoon.
Three elections. Three weeks. One direction.
This is not a protest vote. This is a verdict.
One Nation has now won its first federal lower house seat in thirty years of trying.
There will be people inside and outside the party who start talking about coalitions. About deals. About positioning for the next election. About what needs to be softened and who needs to be appeased to make the numbers work.
Ignore them.
The votes that are coming are not coming because One Nation found a way to play the game. They are coming because One Nation refused to. The moment the party starts managing its language, cutting its deals, and protecting its position the same way the political class it replaced did, those votes go somewhere else.
Australia does not need another party that puts itself first.
It needs one that keeps putting Australia first.
The votes are there. They have been there for years. The people who cast them do not need to be convinced. They need to be represented.
Do not form a coalition. Do not soften the position. Do not start managing the optics.
Just keep naming what everyone else refuses to name.
The globalist agenda did not fall apart overnight. It fell apart the same way everything falls apart. Slowly. Then all at once.
Climate change policy that made energy expensive and industry impossible. Identity politics that asked working Australians to feel guilty for existing. Optics operations dressed up as governance. A media class that told people what they were allowed to notice.
And underneath all of it, a government that could not find the words for what killed fifteen people at a Hanukkah celebration.
The people who went to the ballot box in South Australia, in Nepean, in Farrer were not voting for a party. They were voting against a class. A class that prosecuted the soldier and protected the brides. That managed the massacre and called it leadership. That ran the optics machine while the country fell further behind.
Common sense is not a political movement. It does not have a manifesto. It does not hold press conferences.
It just keeps accumulating. Quietly. Until one Saturday afternoon a seat held since 1949 falls by 59 percent and the people in the press gallery look at each other and pretend to be surprised.
They protected the wrong people.
Australia noticed.
And it is only getting started.
— Rico Holt · ricoholt.com
This piece is part of the thinking behind The Feedback Trap — how institutions and the political class protect the game, punish anyone who refuses to play it, and what happens when the country stops playing along.
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