Monday, February 23, 2026

Teens Will Soon Be Banned from Major Social Media Platforms in This Country.

Legislation prohibiting children under 16 from accessing most social media platforms is advancing in Australia. Communications Minister Michelle Rowland announced on Thursday that the platforms included in the ban are TikTok, Instagram, Reddit, X—and notably—Snapchat, which is widely used by Australian youth.

There was initial uncertainty regarding Snapchat’s inclusion due to its classification as a messaging platform, similar to WhatsApp, which is exempt from the ban. However, Rowland confirmed that Snapchat will be restricted.

Supporters of the ban argue that platforms like Snapchat have a detrimental influence on children. However, critics fear that, like a proposed Misinformation Bill, it will force all Internet users to submit photographic and possibly biometric identification in order to use social media, paving the way for the implementation of Internet “passports” and the elimination of online anonymity.

Australia’s left-wing Labor government says it is seeking to “create a strong incentive for compliance and increasing the maximum penalties for online safety breaches to up to $49.5 million brings our penalty framework into line with other laws.”

The Australian Human Rights Commission, a statutory body, is objecting to the bill, warning: “Where rights are limited to protect children from online harms, any limitations must be lawful, necessary and proportionate.”

“This means using the least restrictive option available to achieve the intended purpose,” the objection adds.

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Legislation prohibiting children under 16 from accessing most social media platforms is advancing in Australia. Communications Minister Michelle Rowland announced on Thursday that the platforms included in the ban are TikTok, Instagram, Reddit, X—and notably—Snapchat, which is widely used by Australian youth. show more

Foreign Misinformation Bill Could Impact U.S. Platforms.

New misinformation laws could impact free speech online worldwide, pressuring social media platforms to censor supposedly “harmful” content under threat of punishing fines. Brian Marlow, Executive Director of the Australian Taxpayers’ Alliance, warns an Australian draft Misinformation Bill extends beyond Australia’s borders, “allowing unelected bureaucrats to regulate social media companies outside Australia if they provide services to Australians.”

This would include U.S. platforms, such as Facebook, YouTube, and X (formerly Twitter), which has adopted a more pro-free speech approach to online discourse under Elon Musk‘s ownership.

“[C]ontent doesn’t even need to be false to be removed—it just has to be deemed ‘harmful’ by authorities,” Marlow says of the Misinformation Bill, noting: “If platforms don’t comply, they risk massive fines, pressuring them to enforce Australian censorship globally to avoid penalties.”

“This will set a dangerous precedent, creating a global standard that pressures platforms to censor content across borders, ultimately killing free speech worldwide,” he adds.

RECOURSE.

Recently, Vice President-elect J.D. Vance hinted that supposed U.S. allies in the European Union (EU) may see the protections extended to them by the U.S. military curtailed if they try to undermine the First Amendment with pro-censorship regulations.

“I forget exactly which official it was within the European Union, but [they] sent Elon [Musk] this threatening letter that basically said, ‘We’re going to arrest you if you platform Donald Trump,’” Vance said in September. “So what America should be saying is, if NATO wants us to continue supporting them and NATO wants us to continue to be a good participant in this military alliance, why don’t you respect American values and respect free speech?”

While Australia is not a NATO member, the U.S. is still a major trade and security partner. Similar threats could discourage legislation like the Misinformation Bill.

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New misinformation laws could impact free speech online worldwide, pressuring social media platforms to censor supposedly "harmful" content under threat of punishing fines. Brian Marlow, Executive Director of the Australian Taxpayers' Alliance, warns an Australian draft Misinformation Bill extends beyond Australia's borders, "allowing unelected bureaucrats to regulate social media companies outside Australia if they provide services to Australians." show more

Immediate Vaccine Suspension Ordered Over Contamination Fears.

An immediate halt to the use of Moderna and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccines has been called by Port Hedland’s local government in Western Australia. The move follows claims of synthetic DNA contamination in the vaccines. During a special meeting on October 11, councilors voted 5-2 to alert all 537 local councils across Australia about the potential risks linked to this contamination.

The council is expressing serious concerns about possible health impacts, including genomic integration, cancer, hereditary defects, and immune system issues. Healthcare providers in Port Hedland received correspondence urging them to inform patients considering these vaccines. Federal Member of Parliament (MP) Russell Broadbent echoes the council’s stance. He is also demanding an investigation into the contamination.

The initiative came after testing by Canadian virologist Dr. David Speicher found synthetic DNA in vaccine vials at levels allegedly exceeding regulatory limits. Similar findings in other countries have brought attention to DNA remnants that result from the vaccine production process. These findings have sparked responses from health officials like Florida‘s Surgeon General Dr. Joseph A. Ladapo, who previously called for suspending the vaccine program.

In contrast, regulatory bodies, including Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), maintain that the vaccines pose no safety risks. The TGA has described reports of contamination as “misinformation,” although detailed evidence to counter these claims has not been released publicly. The agency has tested several vaccine batches and declared them compliant, but the results remain redacted.

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An immediate halt to the use of Moderna and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccines has been called by Port Hedland's local government in Western Australia. The move follows claims of synthetic DNA contamination in the vaccines. During a special meeting on October 11, councilors voted 5-2 to alert all 537 local councils across Australia about the potential risks linked to this contamination. show more

What the World Saw: Foreign Media Unanimous That Vance Won Debate.

Foreign media outlets are near-unanimous in conceding, sometimes grudgingly, that Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) triumphed over Governor Tim Walz (D-MN) in Tuesday night’s vice presidential debate. There is a consensus that Donald J. Trump’s running mate was “polished,” even “genteel,” and notably non-abrasive. At the same time, Walz—Vice President Kamala Harris’s number two—appeared nervous, faltered initially, and “stumbled” frequently.

ACROSS THE POND.

The BBC said Vance “probably” won the debate, calling the Republican a “polished public speaker” and Walz “halting and unsure.”

The Times of London, Britain’s de facto newspaper of record, gave the nod to Vance in two analyses of the debate. The first, by New York correspondent Will Pavia, is the more damning, describing how the Nebraska-born Democrat “looked staggered,” “distinctly uncomfortable,” and “confused Israel and Iran” out of the gate.

“He kept halting mid-sentence. I wondered if the television was frozen. There was enough time to check, before he started talking again,” Pavia wrote. Sen. Vance, by contrast, was praised for coming off as affable and sympathetic—appearing moments to even win over Gov. Walz.

Similarly, U.S. assistant editor David Charter described Walz as “visibly nervous” and Vance as “self-assured.”

“Despite being vilified by Democrats as a misogynistic opportunist after his comments on ‘childless cat ladies’ running the country, Vance gave a slick performance promoting Trumpism with civility, empathy, and focus,” he admitted.

Walz, in contrast, was again dinged for having “muddled up Iran and Israel” and for having “bumbled through a non-answer that involved admitting he was ‘a knucklehead at times'” when pressed on the fact he lied about being in China during the Tiananmen Square massacre.

Meanwhile, the Telegraph said its experts were “unanimous” Vance had triumphed, observing: “He was not, in the words of Mr Walz in an earlier rally, ‘weird.’ His answers on policy issues were detailed, and he spoke repeatedly about children and families in a way that was designed to appeal to the female voters who are driving Kamala Harris’s poll lead.”

Instead, “It was Mr. Walz, the man picked by Ms. Harris for his folksy Midwestern charm, who came unstuck in front of the cameras,” the newspaper observed: “Stuttering over his words, getting agitated and failing to pick up on some of the most obvious attack lines to use against Mr. Vance, he looked out of his depth on the stage.”

Even the leftist Guardian, heavily invested in boosting the Democratic ticket, admitted Vance “looked the more polished performer.” Walz was again dinged for his Tiananmen Square lie and for botching a question on gun control by saying he “befriended school shooters.”

CANADA AND AUSTRALIA.

Sky News Australia’s coverage of Walz’s performance was damning, with guests saying he had a “horrible start” and is clearly “not ready for prime-time.” Like the Guardian, the Australian broadcaster flagged how “Walz ‘misspoke’ at least three times between 2009 and 2019 saying he was in ‘Hong Kong and China during the democracy protests,” despite not arriving until months after Tiananmen Square.

Other Australian outlets, such as the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) and SBS News, avoided declaring a winner but echoed the language of outlets that did, with Vance “polished” and Walz “nervous.”

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) went further, saying Vance had given audiences “a taste of Trumpism, minus Trump,” making his case “with the fluidity one might expect from a past editor of the Yale Law Review,” while preserving the essence of the America First policy agenda.

Walz was again described as having “stumbled,” suffering “more hiccups than his rival, including the wince-inducing: ‘I’ve become friends with school shooters.'”

CONTINENTAL EUROPE.

Coverage of the vice presidential debate in the European Union (EU) has been muted—suggesting European journalists, who are largely hostile to Trump and Vance, likely believe the Ohio senator had the better night.

Germany’s Die Welt said Vance “appeared confident, remained relaxed, and did not stumble,” presenting himself “as a statesmanlike vice president.”

“Walz, on the other hand, seemed fidgety, often faltering and pursed his lips. The 60-year-old governor from Minnesota often stayed in the same pose for too long, which brought back memories of Joe Biden, who froze in his debate,” the German media outlet added. One of its reports on the debate included the subheading ‘Vance crushes Walz.’

France’s Le Monde tried to claim there was “no clear winner,” suggesting “Vance’s cleverness was so calculated and apparent that it deprived him of naturalness and genuine presence.” There were few such barbed compliments in the assessment of Walz, described as having “got off to a rocky start” and “blatantly clumsy.”

Le Monde suggested that Walz may have fared better if not for the fact he and Harris have studiously avoided giving press interviews for much of the election campaign, leaving him floundering under fire.

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Foreign media outlets are near-unanimous in conceding, sometimes grudgingly, that Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) triumphed over Governor Tim Walz (D-MN) in Tuesday night's vice presidential debate. There is a consensus that Donald J. Trump's running mate was "polished," even "genteel," and notably non-abrasive. At the same time, Walz—Vice President Kamala Harris's number two—appeared nervous, faltered initially, and "stumbled" frequently. show more

Foreign Media Spins Hard for Harris Post-Debate, But Israel Stance Spells Trouble.

Foreign media outlets are spinning hard for Kamala Harris following her debate against Donald Trump on Tuesday, feeding a narrative that she “got under his skin” and rubbishing his remarks about Haitian migrants killing pets in Ohio—an emphasis that could come back to haunt them if the allegations are substantiated. However, many conceded ABC News skewed the debate and that Harris did not outline a clear vision. There are also signs her pro-Israel remarks alienated Muslim voters key to winning swing states such as Michigan.

MOTHER COUNTRY. 

Britain’s Telegraph, a notionally right-wing broadsheet, damned Harris with faint praise, with U.S. editor Tony Diver claiming she “made [Trump] look ridiculous” but “gave woolly and unclear answers on questions about the economy, and could not convincingly shrug off accusations from both Trump and the moderator that she has abandoned many of her beliefs in favour of the pursuit of power.”

Telegraph columnist Tim Stanley, who has long advocated for censoring Trump online, described the debate as a case of “he was crazy and she was insufferable,” giving a “narrow win” to the former president overall.

Telegraph readers gave Harris a slight edge, at 56 percent, but—like Stanley—suggested the ABC moderators tipped the scales in favor of the Vice President. “[T]he moderators were doing the debating for Harris,” said one.

The Daily Mail commissioned a poll of 800 independents, with 49 percent saying Harris won the debate against 43 percent who gave the nod to Trump. However, Harris only gained two points in terms of voting intention, rising from 36 percent to 38 percent. Trump also rose, from 44 percent to 45 percent.

‘SUPPORTING GENOCIDE.’

Qatar-owned Al Jazeera interviewed a number of “experts” post-debate. Predictably, none of the mostly left-leaning observers gave a clear advantage to Trump, but support for Harris was not effusive. Barbara Perry of the University of Virginia merely said, “At the very least, she didn’t put [undecided, moderate] voters off or make any disqualifying gaffes.”

However, in a sign of trouble for Harris in swing states, she received criticism for her stance on the Israel-Hamas war. “Vice President Harris has been pretty clear in previous statements, as she was tonight, that she will continue Biden’s policy of unconditional military and financial support for Israel’s war on Gaza,” said Reem Abuelhaj, of the No Ceasefire No Vote organization, referencing voters who feel “unable to cast their ballot for a candidate who is actively supporting genocide.”

DOWN UNDER.

SBS News, owned by the Australian state, said Harris won the debate—citing a CNN poll—and insisted, like many media outlets, that the Vice President got “under Trump’s skin.” However, the state media organ could not help but betray its clear bias, asserting Trump has “spent weeks insulting [Harris] with racist and sexist attacks.”

Sky News Australia, which leans right, stressed the bias of the ABC moderators. “I didn’t know whether I was watching Trump versus Kamala Harris or if I was watching Trump versus the ABC and Kamala Harris,” said one host. “Every single time they could, they gave her an assist.”

DO-OVER. 

While many foreign media outlets claim the Harris camp expressing its willingness to do a second debate in October shows they are confident she won on Tuesday, Raheem Kassam, Editor-in-Chief of The National Pulse, believes it shows they want a do-over.

Previously, ABC—which has a 100 percent positive spin score for Harris—was the only venue the Vice President’s team was willing to accept for a debate, with Fox News and even NBC rejected.

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Foreign media outlets are spinning hard for Kamala Harris following her debate against Donald Trump on Tuesday, feeding a narrative that she "got under his skin" and rubbishing his remarks about Haitian migrants killing pets in Ohio—an emphasis that could come back to haunt them if the allegations are substantiated. However, many conceded ABC News skewed the debate and that Harris did not outline a clear vision. There are also signs her pro-Israel remarks alienated Muslim voters key to winning swing states such as Michigan. show more

BBC Presenter Jailed for RAPING DOZENS OF DOGS.

A BBC presenter has been sentenced to ten years in prison by a court in Australia for raping, torturing, and killing dozens of dogs. Zoologist Adam Britton pleaded guilty to 56 charges of bestiality and animal cruelty last September, as well as child pornography offenses.

Britton was a senior researcher at Charles Darwin University and featured in several productions for the BBC and National Geographic. He even starred in a BBC series alongside legendary nature documentarian Sir David Attenborough.

Courts heard that Britton tortured 42 dogs and killed 39 of them in a shipping container, filming many of his crimes. Britton had a “sadistic sexual interest” in the animals and abused his own dogs and those of others who had been entrusted to his care.

“Your conduct on each of those occasions involved a degree of depravity and reprehensibility which falls entirely outside any ordinary human conception and comprehension,” the judge in the case told Britton.

THE BBC SEX CRIMES LEGACY. 

The sentencing comes just after the BBC’s top-paid news anchor Huw Edwards pleaded guilty to making indecent images of children.

Edwards was part of a depraved WhatsApp group in which images were shared from December 2020 to April 2022.

The BBC has plagued by sexual abuse scandals for decades, most infamously that of former presenter Jimmy Savile. The DJ abused children for decades while working at the broadcaster, which has been accused of covering up the abuse or at minimum turning a blind eye to it.

The BBC is funded largely by British television owners through the TV license, a de facto tax which anyone who watches live programming—even if none of it is BBC content—must pay, or else face criminal fines backed by the threat of imprisonment.

Reform Party leader Nigel Farage has called for the TV license to be scrapped and for the BBC to switch to a subscription-based funding model.

Image by Dan Bennett. 

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A BBC presenter has been sentenced to ten years in prison by a court in Australia for raping, torturing, and killing dozens of dogs. Zoologist Adam Britton pleaded guilty to 56 charges of bestiality and animal cruelty last September, as well as child pornography offenses. show more

France Is No Longer France: Tourist Gang Raped by Five ‘African-Type’ Men in Paris.

A 25-year-old Australian woman was publicly gang-raped by five “African-type” men in Paris, France, on the night of July 20. Such crimes are becoming increasingly common in multicultural Paris, which is set to host the Summer Olympics from July 26 to August 11.

This incident follows a similar case involving a British tourist who was raped and robbed during the Fête de la Musique on June 22. The suspects in that case are yet to be apprehended. Another Briton, a female police officer on vacation, was raped at knifepoint in October of last year at the base of the Eiffel Tower.

In June, a 12-year-old Jewish girl was gang raped in a suburb of the French capital, by two 13-year-olds who were also accused of berating the victim with anti-Semitic insults.

In 2023, the Paris police reported 93 cases of rapes occurring in public spaces like streets and parks, a slight increase from 92 cases in the previous year.

Former President Donald J. Trump has expressed his own concerns about the state of Paris, saying the city was no longer recognizable earlier this year in May, and that Europe has “opened its doors to jihad.”

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A 25-year-old Australian woman was publicly gang-raped by five "African-type" men in Paris, France, on the night of July 20. Such crimes are becoming increasingly common in multicultural Paris, which is set to host the Summer Olympics from July 26 to August 11. show more

Ex-Soap Star Hosts MASSIVE Trump Fundraiser in London.

Former pop music and television star Holly Valance is hosting a mammoth fundraiser for Donald Trump alongside Donald Trump Jr. and his fiancée Kimberly Guilfoyle in London, England, on June 12. Valance is well-known to the British public for her role on Neighbours, an Australian soap opera also popular in Britain. She gained international fame for her 2002 album Footprints, and especially for her single Kiss Kiss.

“She’s glamorous. She doesn’t fit into the pigeonhole. She doesn’t fit into the woke agenda of Hollywood, and people don’t expect that,” a Valance admirer in Trump’s camp told the British press.

“It’s a Holly party, so you can guarantee it’s going to be enormous fun,” said Nigel Farage, the former Brexit Party leader and Trump ally.

Farage introduced Valance and her husband, billionaire property developer Nick Candy, to Trump at Mar-a-Lago in 2022.

“She kept quiet for many, many years,” Farage said of Valance’s conservative views, saying he had often warned her that “once you go public, there’s no way back.”

Valance, who describes Trump as “charming, polite, very quick-witted,” and “a great listener,” said in February that “Everyone starts as a leftie, and then wakes up and realizes all the ideas are crap.”

“It was a funny sliding doors moment because I didn’t think anything I said was particularly edgy or profound or revolutionary,” she said of her comments “coming out” as conservative.

“But maybe it was a good moment for someone in the entertainment industry to buck the trend of only contributing their latest project pitch or their pronouns.”

Tickets for the London fundraiser cost up to $100,000 (£78,500) for a couple.

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Former pop music and television star Holly Valance is hosting a mammoth fundraiser for Donald Trump alongside Donald Trump Jr. and his fiancée Kimberly Guilfoyle in London, England, on June 12. Valance is well-known to the British public for her role on Neighbours, an Australian soap opera also popular in Britain. She gained international fame for her 2002 album Footprints, and especially for her single Kiss Kiss. show more
Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel

VIDEO: Bishop Stabbed During Live-Streamed Service.

Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel of the Christ the Good Shepherd Church in Sydney, Australia, was stabbed multiple times in the middle of a live-streamed service.

Footage of the sermon shows a dark-skinned man in a black jacket approaching the bearded clergyman while he is speaking before flying at him with a knife. Parishioners at the church can be heard shrieking in horror before rushing forward to stop the attack.

“Officers attached to Fairfield City Police Area Command attended a location on Welcome Street, Wakeley, following reports a number of people were stabbed,” confirmed New South Wales police.

Mar Mari is a vocal critic of Islam and has a substantial following on social media. Clips of his preaching often go viral on TikTok, causing him to be dubbed the “TikTok Bishop.”

He was previously a bishop of the Ancient Church of the East, which is separate from the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox communions. He was excommunicated in 2014.

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Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel of the Christ the Good Shepherd Church in Sydney, Australia, was stabbed multiple times in the middle of a live-streamed service. show more

WATCH: ‘The Colony Can Fall’ – Century-Old Statue of Queen Victoria Torn Down.

A bronze statue of Queen Victoria has been torn down in Geelong, Australia, in the latest of a series of targeted attacks on British historical monuments in the former colony.

Erected in 1912, the statue of the 19th-century monarch was torn from its plinth in the early hours of Thursday morning. It was then vandalized with red paint, which was also used to deface the plinth, reading ‘Victoria, Queen and Empress, 1837-1901,’ with the words’ THE COLONY CAN FALL.’

The statue was less seriously vandalized earlier in March, being splashed with red paint and daubed with the words ‘THE COLONY WILL FALL.’

The same slogan appeared on a Melbourne statue of Captain James Cook, the British explorer who mapped much of Australia and New Zealand and discovered Hawaii, in January, which was toppled by being broken at the ankles. A second statue of Cook in the city was cut down in February.

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A bronze statue of Queen Victoria has been torn down in Geelong, Australia, in the latest of a series of targeted attacks on British historical monuments in the former colony. show more