David Lipari
on May 19, 2023
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Voting ‘no’ for Voice to Parliament doesn’t make people racist: Alex Antic,
https://youtu.be/6euQxcEleZo
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Political Establishment, what does it mean…
The message is quite clear, ‘the average young person is more likely to respect the views of a rock star or top footballer, than those of a religious or political establishment.
Senator Alex Antic, has spoken primarily on how younger adolescents are persuaded to vote and what inspires their motivation.
Please read on,
Dear David,
People from across Australia regularly contact me to tell me they are tired of establishment, virtue-signalling politics and are grateful for politicians who take a stand for traditional values.
As much as the ideological legacy media would have us think otherwise, the conservative message of family, faith, and freedom resonates with many Australians for the simple reason that it is beneficial to them and their children, and it is true.
The dismay of the “forgotten people,” to use Sir Robert Menzie’s phrase, has only increased due to the restrictions of the COVID period, Labor’s divisive “Voice” campaign, the explosion of gender-identity politics, and Labor’s costly climate agenda.
Furthermore, Australians are living through a cost-of-living crisis. Despite Labor’s election promise of decreasing our bills by $275 per year, gas and electricity costs are increasing, as are fuel prices, grocery prices, and rent prices. We hear much talk on these matters, but see little meaningful action, as Labor are more concerned with the “Voice to Parliament,” a cynical attempt to brick a left-wing bureaucracy into our Constitution, and pursuing the Net Zero agenda, which exacerbates the cost-of-living crisis, at the behest of United Nations elites.
Labor always wants more red-tape, more bureaucracy, more taxes, more schemes. This suffocates innovation so that dependency on government, rather than self-reliance and strong local communities, increases.
We must work “towards a lean government that minimises interference in our daily lives,” and preserve “those most basic freedoms of parliamentary democracy - the freedom of thought, worship, speech and association,” as well as uphold “the importance of the family.” In our day, this requires good, old-fashioned courage, as left-wing bureaucracies and the media are determined to demonise these values.
On a personal note, I make no excuse for standing for common sense values. Simply put, if one wishes to stand for common sense, one is going to get called various “isms” and “phobias” that the left of politics tediously deploys. So be it. Let them call us names. It is our message that will resonate with Australians.
That’s why I told The Australiannewspaper last week:
“Australians do not want their politicians to resemble low-rent bureaucrats reading memorised talking points. They want authenticity and they want us to fight for our shared values. The voters of Australia have demonstrably rejected any suggestion that they want the Liberal Party to be a Labor-lite organisation. Establishment politics will not win the day. We need to be brave and fight on all fronts.”
Even as I penned this newsletter, a Victorian resident called my office to express her heartfelt gratitude for my stance on various matters. I do not say this to toot my own horn but to encourage supporters to keep speaking out so that you are heard loudly and clearly.
Establishment politics will not win the day. Let’s not be intimated by Labor and the legacy media’s virtue-signalling gestures. Let’s seize the moment.
Your sincerely,
Antic_signature.png
Alex Antic
Liberal Senator for South Australia.
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