The timing matters because hate speech laws were rushed through, in part, because of the angst over antisemitic attacks.
Because the future of hope is neither static nor silent. “Antisemitism thrives when people look away, when they stay silent,” Mazzig said. “But we are not silent. We are here, we are loud, and we are ...
FacebookLikeShareTweetEmail Australian police have confirmed that a “caravan terror plot” targeting a synagogue in Sydney ...
The ABC can reveal that one of the 14 people arrested by detectives under Strike Force Pearl earlier this week is believed to ...
Hate speech laws were passed in NSW after an explosives-laden caravan was found in Dural alongside a note referencing The ...
Albanese knew "for some time" that an explosives-laden caravan was likely a hoax threat, despite initially labelling it an act of terrorism.
Australian Jews were facing violent incidents for months but authorities say there hasn't been a significant attack since ...
Violence, real or threatened, is terrifying. But the facts matter when we're left with anti-terror laws that make us not demonstrably safer but instead distinctly less free.
At the core of the ongoing debate over definitions are genuinely different understandings of what constitutes antisemitism.
The revelation that a explosives-filled caravan initially believed to be part of an antisemitic terror plot was in fact a ...
More than a dozen people are facing charges over alleged antisemitic incidents across Sydney. But authorities now say the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results