No AUKUS protesters rallied against Australia's military involvement with the United States in the Middle East outside the American Chamber of Commerce. Elias Boyle reports.
Issue 1433
News
Three activists from Stop Burrup Hub were given suspended sentences or community service with the judge recognising the altruistic nature of their action in letting off stink gas at Woodside.听Colin Hughes reports.
Doctors, nurses and supporters gathered outside the NSW Police Headquarters to protest police violence against peaceful pro-Palestine protesters outside SEC Plating. Neville Spencer reports.
Merri-bek City Councillors decided, six to four, to reinstate a full-time library social worker position, after pressure from librarians, residents and some councillors. Jordan AK reports.
听
Merri-bek City Council narrowly voted against a proposal to provide support to Nourishing Neighbours, a 100%听volunteer-run emergency food relief organisation. Jordan AK reports.
The Ecosocialism 2025 agenda has been updated with new new international and local speakers and sessions. Fred Fuentes, a conference organiser, reports.
The Sydney Road Accessible Tram Stops Now campaign marked two years of the Victorian government鈥檚 doublespeak about accessible tram stops along Sydney Road. It was an anniversary none wanted. Darren Saffin reports.
Shaye Candish, general secretary for the NSW Nurses and Midwives Association, told a snap protest outside Royal Prince Alfred Hospital the union would not allow midwives to be cut. Pip Hinman reports.
Thousands of people took to the streets across Australia over June 27鈥29, again demanding Labor sanctions Israel and stops sending arms. Pip Hinman and Isaac Nellist report.听
Victorian teachers protested the Jacinta Allan government鈥檚 decision to delay at least $2.4 billion in promised funding for public schools. Isaac Nellist spoke to Adam Bremner, Victorian public school teacher, Australian Education Union (AEU) member and Socialist Alliance member, about the impact of this funding cut on teachers and students.
NSW Labor鈥檚 2025-26 budge hands subsidies to developers and other private businesses but largely ignores the welfare of workers and the poor. Jim McIlroy reports.
New South Wales Police brutalised pro-Palestine protesters picketing SEC Plating, hospitalising one and arresting five others. Isaac Nellist reports.听
Palestine solidarity activists are organising to converge on Parliament House in Canberra to demand Labor places sanctions on genocidal Israel. Jacob Andrewartha reports.
Environment campaigners rallied outside NSW Parliament to condemn Labor for further delaying the Great Koala National Park in its latest budget. Isaac Nellist reports.
Anti-war groups, parties and MPs are demanding the Australian government stop making excuses for the United States鈥 and Israel鈥檚 illegal bombing of Iran. Pip Hinman reports.
First Nations activists prevented killer cop Zachary Rolfe, who shot and killed Kumanjayi Walker in 2019, from speaking at a police conference. Zebedee Parkes reports.
Refugee rights activists demanded permanent visas for all refugees on World Refugee Day. Chloe DS reports.听
Protests across Australia demanded the Labor come out strongly against the Israel-United States attacks on Iran, and reiterated the need for sanctions on Israel for its war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank. Pip Hinman听and Peter Boyle report.
Activists highlighted New South Wales Labor鈥檚 destructive housing demolition agenda by temporarily occupying public housing at 82 Wentworth Park Road, Glebe, reports Isaac Nellist.
More than 100 people launched the new Rising Tide documentary Turning the Ship.听Alex Bainbridge reports.
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Construction, Forestry and Maritime Employees Union members rallied to demand that the administrators and High Court tell the truth.听Jonathan Strauss reports.
Analysis
Markela Panegyres argues that while the global movement for Palestine has shifted public opinion, it has to become more organised to stop this genocide.
NSW Greens Senator David Shoebridge told Suzanne James听that听Israel and the United States鈥櫶齛ttacks on Iran were 鈥渙utright illegal鈥, with 鈥渘o evidence鈥 that Iran is close to having nuclear weapons.
Niko Leka听reports that First Nations Elder Uncle Robbie Thorpe has lodged an application with the Federal Court for Hamas to be removed听from the list of terrorist organisations, as Hamas is a legitimate political entity.
Even before Donald Trump got the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation to agree to raise military spending,听Oxfam听said that less than 3% of the richest seven countries鈥 annual military spending, about US$1.5 trillion, could totally eradicate world hunger. Peter Boyle reports.
Nuclear obsession warps our thinking about truth.听Nuclear armed countries establish so-called red lines around their weapons and yet accept genocide in Palestine, aggression in Ukraine and civil wars in numerous other countries, argues Tony Smith.
As Labor pitches AUKUS as an opportunity for 鈥渉igh tech鈥 jobs, the听City of Newcastle听is conducting a survey that urges respondents to approve of a missile factory, adjacent the Newcastle Airport/Williamtown Air Force base.
Greens spokesperson for foreign affairs, peace and nuclear disarmament, David Shoebridge, speaks to 91自拍论坛's Suzanne James.
Socialist Alliance national co-convenor Sam Wainwright discusses the illegal United States and Israeli attacks on Iran on the latest episode of the 91自拍论坛 Show.
The strikes on Iran are the manifestation of a failing international order, where the 鈥渕utually binding rules-based order鈥 is being replaced by the pantomime of strongman politics, argues听Academics for Palestine WA and Gwen Velge.
The CFMEU鈥檚 tradition of struggle听can inspire all workers and explains why the ruling class wants to break its power, argues Jonathan Strauss.
Antoinette Lattouf鈥檚 unfair dismissal case win against the ABC in the Federal Court is a victory for all those who seek to tell the truth, argues Isaac Nellist.
Humanity should be in awe of this human story that goes back further than most non-Aboriginal people can fathom,听Chris Jenkins told Sue Bull. But Woodside and Labor are putting the exquisite, ancient petroglyphs at risk.
Labor鈥檚 position is the culmination of a decades-long process of eroding United Nations鈥 convention commitments and obligations, argues Peter Henning.
International law is clear: the right to self-defence does not include 鈥減re-emptive鈥 attack. Israel鈥檚 attack on Iran is naked military aggression, argues Jews Against the Occupation 鈥48.
Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves听wrote this open letter to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese demanding he take action to deliver justice for Kumanjayi White, the 24-year-old Warlipiri man who was killed by police in May.
World
Zohran Mamdani's win in the New York City Democratic mayoral primary has been celebrated by the left around the world as a spark of hope since the election of Donald Trump last year. Isaac Nellist speaks to听Winnie Marion 鈥 a DSA member 鈥 about the campaign and its broader implications for politics in the US and internationally.
Iran鈥檚 monarchist opposition鈥檚 support for 鈥渓iberation鈥 by invasion proved to be a nightmare for ordinary people, says Iranian American socialist feminist Frieda Afary in an interview with Alternative Viewpoint鈥檚 Farooq Sulehria.
The British Labour government has proscribed protest group Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation in a frightening overreach of power, reports Simon Hannah.
Sarah Glynn looks at the brutal crackdown on Kurds and other minorities and activists since the Israeli-United States bombings of Iran.
Malik Miah looks back at the police murder of George Floyd five years ago, which sparked the Black Lives Matter movement.
The aftermath of Operation Midnight Hammer, a strike by the United States Air Force on three nuclear facilities in Iran authorised by President Donald Trump, was raucous and triumphant. But that depended on what company you were keeping, writes Binoy Kampmark.
Left organisations in Malaysia, the Philippines, India and Australia have responded to Israel鈥檚 illegal 鈥減re-emptive鈥 strikes on Iran and the bombing of Iran鈥檚 nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan by the United States, reports Susan Price.
Community members and tourists in Pisac, a small town in Peru鈥檚 southern region of Cusco, gathered in the main square to show solidarity with Palestinians, as Gaza鈥檚 death toll mounts, reports Ben Radford.
Isaac Nellist听speaks to Thomas Malone, an LA-based socialist and union organiser about the anti-deportation protests that broke out on June 6, the deployment of police, National Guard and marines to suppress them and how a broader movement against Donald Trump鈥檚 mass deportation campaign could grow.
As the United States and Israel bomb Iran, Barry Sheppard looks at why the US and its Zionist allies want to bring Iran to heel and surveys the revolution that toppled the US-backed regime of Shah Reza Pahlavi.
Culture
Corporate media and establishment politicians went into a frenzy when musicians performing at the iconic Glastonbury Festival in Britain over June 25鈥29 spoke out against Israel鈥檚 genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, reports Isaac Nellist.
In his latest book, Yanis Varoufakis, economist and former Greek finance minister in the leftist SYRIZA government, argues that with the advent of the internet and related technologies, we have now entered an era beyond capitalism 鈥 technofeudalism. But is this really the case, asks Neville Spencer.
Scholar and activist Marty Branagan examines how language, film, history, gender issues, the arts and religion 鈥渃an contribute either to cultural violence or to cultures of peace鈥 in his book, The Cultural Dimensions of Peacebuilding. Jim McIlroy reviews.
Mat Ward looks back at June's political news and the best new music that related to it.
Trade unionist, academic and socialist activist Alexis Vassiley tracks the rise and fall of union power in Western Australia鈥檚 mining region in his new book. Alex Salmon reviews.