They Don’t Hate the Day. They Hate the Nation.

Defending Australia from the grievance industry, one truth at a time.

They Don’t Hate the Day. They Hate the Nation.

Today, while ordinary Australians are firing up the barbecue, kicking the footy, and celebrating the best country on Earth, the usual suspects are out on the streets clutching cardboard signs and chanting slogans about “Invasion Day.”

Let’s call it what it is: a campaign of cultural sabotage by people who despise the country that gave them everything.

“Invasion Day” isn’t about justice or reconciliation. It is about resentment. It is about rewriting history to fit a narrative of perpetual victimhood and national shame. The activists who peddle this line don’t want to mark a different date. They want to erase the entire Australian story and replace it with a self-loathing ideology imported from overseas universities and TikTok influencers.

They don’t hate January 26. They hate what it represents: a proud, sovereign, successful Australia.

This date marks the founding of modern Australia. It gave rise to one of the freest and fairest nations on Earth. A nation where people of every background have come to live in peace, prosperity, and opportunity. That’s what we’re celebrating today. And that’s precisely why they want it gone.

Because the “Invasion Day” crowd isn’t just anti-Australia Day. They are anti-Australia, full stop.

They burn the flag, vandalise statues of great Australians, and turn a day of pride into a spectacle of grievance.

What they want is not a better Australia. What they want is a country ashamed of itself, run by unelected bureaucrats, soaked in guilt, and ruled by ideological purity rather than common sense.

But the silent majority is waking up. And we’re not going to apologise for loving this country. Not today. Not ever.

Australia Day belongs to every citizen who believes in hard work, fairness, freedom, and the Aussie spirit that says we don’t whinge. We get on with it. That spirit is what built this country. And it is what will save it from the cultural arsonists trying to burn it all down.

So celebrate proudly. Don’t flinch. Don’t apologise. Because if we lose Australia Day, we’ll lose a lot more than just a date on the calendar. We’ll lose the backbone of our national identity.

Thought for the Day

“For the first time in history, we have a nation for a continent and a continent for a nation.”
– Sir Edmund Barton

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