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Cory Bernardi

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Australia’s relationship with the Islamic community is like a woman caught up with a deadbeat boyfriend. She knows he is violent and in order to protect herself gives in to his every demand.

We all know that such a relationship cannot last and that concessions given today are unlikely to stop atrocities tomorrow.

Given that is the case, why on earth would Australia want to get into bed with Islam when it could end the relationship today and avoid a future of pain and misery…
http://bernardgaynor.com.au/the-threat-we-face/
 
Australia’s relationship with the Islamic community is like a woman caught up with a deadbeat boyfriend. She knows he is violent and in order to protect herself gives in to his every demand.

We all know that such a relationship cannot last and that concessions given today are unlikely to stop atrocities tomorrow.

Given that is the case, why on earth would Australia want to get into bed with Islam when it could end the relationship today and avoid a future of pain and misery…
http://bernardgaynor.com.au/the-threat-we-face/
Cory Bernardi is the condom in this scenario?
Desperately trying against the odds to keep Islam from soiling the motherland?

I always assumed you would consider the country to be male, the Fatherland.

PS> PMSL at you idiotic Bill Leak reference.

Merde Putain Billii! Merde Putain!!!
 
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Your weekly dose of common sense.




Dear Kwikfix,

Many defence experts expect the next war to be partly digital, fought in the realms of cyberspace seeking to disrupt essential systems. We know that many nation states already engage in security probing of other country’s systems seeking to detect vulnerabilities.

We also know that there is state-sponsored censorship of news and current events coupled with an information battle that borders on propaganda. These infowars have left many people cynical about the veracity of virtually all media. For many of us, the media appears largely agenda driven rather than motivated by straight news reporting.

Information is one thing but a cyber-attack on critical infrastructure like utilities, banking, internet access or telecommunications could be devastating and quickly disable the social structure as well as the economic infrastructure of the target nation. Just think how interconnected our lives are; without the means to access the internet or a reliable electricity grid, almost every aspect of our lives would be affected.

That’s why some experts consider the deliberate targeting of essential systems by state-sponsored hackers to be an act of war.

Which is why the comments of US Vice-President Joe Biden last week captured my attention.

Amid allegations of Russian involvement in the WikiLeaks disclosure of Hillary Clinton’s damning emails and trying to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election, Biden has threatened US cyber-retaliation. It is worth noting that Russia has pointedly denied both claims.

Biden said on television that the US is planning to retaliate against Russia, "We're sending a message. We have the capacity to do it".

"He'll know it", Biden added, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin. "It will be at the time of our choosing, and under the circumstances that have the greatest impact".

Now, I don’t know what the US has in mind, but it seems odd that they would declare their intentions in such a forthright manner. Whether Russia is indeed responsible for the information release that damns the Democrat Party and their presidential hopeful is rather a moot point.

I have been told that the thing about cyber-attacks is that they are almost impossible to prove exactly who is responsible and under what circumstances. Are they rogue individuals or state-sponsored? Was it an internal system failure, software backdoor or a malicious code? In many instances, adept hackers also seek to redirect suspicion to others to cover their tracks.

I have no doubt that the US government has some of the most sophisticated IT systems on the planet – with the professionals to maximise their use. They might actually have rock-solid proof that Russia is behind the Clinton woes. However, if state-sponsored hacking is a crime and, as some experts suggest, a warlike action, why would Joe Biden telegraph US intentions?

It strikes me as a most unwise thing to do. Perhaps that is why Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin recently said that tensions with the United States are “probably the worst since the 1973 Mideast war".

That should be enough to concern us all.

Until next week.

Cory_signature.gif

Cory Bernardi

P.S Don't forget to listen to my regular podcast at www.corybernardi.com/podcast or subscribe to it here.



Things that make you go 'hmm...'
An explosive undercover investigation has revealed the insidious underbelly of the Democrat campaign – watch part 1 and part 2. More scandal has erupted from Clinton’s leaked emails, Angela Merkel goes hard on migrant unemployment benefits, while Paris struggles to cope with its migrant crisis. The world’s longest reign has just come to an end.

Locally, NSW tackles the big issues, police foil another potential terror attack, union thuggery is exposed, and support for One Nation continues to soar. The Adelaide Feast Festival, meanwhile, has purged all straight workers from its ranks.

The Dutch consider assisted-suicide for those who have 'completed life', CoverGirl changes its gender, parking across your own driveway gets you fined, McDonalds want to open a store next to the Vatican and 'to be white is to be racist' apparently.

Lastly, Italy has recently opened its first 'wine fountain'.


Copyright © 2016 Cory Bernardi, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are a member of CoryBernardi.com
Authorised by Cory Bernardi, 28 King William St, Kent Town 5067
k.

o
 
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Cory's a soft****, if he had any balls of his own, he'd stop sitting atop a nice safe Liberal Senate ticket, and throwing bombs from the safety of that. He should start an Australian Conservative Party, and see how many people support him. Silent majority my elegant posterior.
 
Your weekly dose of common sense.




Dear Kwikfix,

Many defence experts expect the next war to be partly digital, fought in the realms of cyberspace seeking to disrupt essential systems. We know that many nation states already engage in security probing of other country’s systems seeking to detect vulnerabilities.

We also know that there is state-sponsored censorship of news and current events coupled with an information battle that borders on propaganda. These infowars have left many people cynical about the veracity of virtually all media. For many of us, the media appears largely agenda driven rather than motivated by straight news reporting.

Information is one thing but a cyber-attack on critical infrastructure like utilities, banking, internet access or telecommunications could be devastating and quickly disable the social structure as well as the economic infrastructure of the target nation. Just think how interconnected our lives are; without the means to access the internet or a reliable electricity grid, almost every aspect of our lives would be affected.

That’s why some experts consider the deliberate targeting of essential systems by state-sponsored hackers to be an act of war.

Which is why the comments of US Vice-President Joe Biden last week captured my attention.

Amid allegations of Russian involvement in the WikiLeaks disclosure of Hillary Clinton’s damning emails and trying to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election, Biden has threatened US cyber-retaliation. It is worth noting that Russia has pointedly denied both claims.

Biden said on television that the US is planning to retaliate against Russia, "We're sending a message. We have the capacity to do it".

"He'll know it", Biden added, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin. "It will be at the time of our choosing, and under the circumstances that have the greatest impact".

Now, I don’t know what the US has in mind, but it seems odd that they would declare their intentions in such a forthright manner. Whether Russia is indeed responsible for the information release that damns the Democrat Party and their presidential hopeful is rather a moot point.

I have been told that the thing about cyber-attacks is that they are almost impossible to prove exactly who is responsible and under what circumstances. Are they rogue individuals or state-sponsored? Was it an internal system failure, software backdoor or a malicious code? In many instances, adept hackers also seek to redirect suspicion to others to cover their tracks.

I have no doubt that the US government has some of the most sophisticated IT systems on the planet – with the professionals to maximise their use. They might actually have rock-solid proof that Russia is behind the Clinton woes. However, if state-sponsored hacking is a crime and, as some experts suggest, a warlike action, why would Joe Biden telegraph US intentions?

It strikes me as a most unwise thing to do. Perhaps that is why Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin recently said that tensions with the United States are “probably the worst since the 1973 Mideast war".

That should be enough to concern us all.

Until next week.

Cory_signature.gif

Cory Bernardi

P.S Don't forget to listen to my regular podcast at www.corybernardi.com/podcast or subscribe to it here.



Things that make you go 'hmm...'
An explosive undercover investigation has revealed the insidious underbelly of the Democrat campaign – watch part 1 and part 2. More scandal has erupted from Clinton’s leaked emails, Angela Merkel goes hard on migrant unemployment benefits, while Paris struggles to cope with its migrant crisis. The world’s longest reign has just come to an end.

Locally, NSW tackles the big issues, police foil another potential terror attack, union thuggery is exposed, and support for One Nation continues to soar. The Adelaide Feast Festival, meanwhile, has purged all straight workers from its ranks.

The Dutch consider assisted-suicide for those who have 'completed life', CoverGirl changes its gender, parking across your own driveway gets you fined, McDonalds want to open a store next to the Vatican and 'to be white is to be racist' apparently.

Lastly, Italy has recently opened its first 'wine fountain'.


Copyright © 2016 Cory Bernardi, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are a member of CoryBernardi.com
Authorised by Cory Bernardi, 28 King William St, Kent Town 5067
k.

o

Bernardi should be the next Liberal leader. Abbott had his chance, lied to us all - especially to get into office, and failed. And Turnbull has been underwhelming, he is easily positioned - both by Shorten and the right of his party. Turnbull is the nothing man. Shorten has had an absolute field day with Turnbull, even since Malcolm has taken over the leadership - Bill Shorten has had a very easy time of it. I actually voted Labor myself. Abbott deceived us to get elected (like Daniel Andrews in Vic), and Malcolm got into office by knifing Abbott. At least Bernardi represents something. I respect him more than the other two, and he did stand up to Shorten in the past.
 
Cory's a soft****, if he had any balls of his own, he'd stop sitting atop a nice safe Liberal Senate ticket, and throwing bombs from the safety of that. He should start an Australian Conservative Party, and see how many people support him. Silent majority my elegant posterior.

He mightn't have to start a conservative party. The Liberal party are about to self destruct. Once the dust settles - Benardi will throw his hat in the ring.
 
He mightn't have to start a conservative party. The Liberal party are about to self destruct. Once the dust settles - Benardi will throw his hat in the ring.

Only 1 problem.
Can't be leader of the government if you don't sit in the House of Reps.
 
By saying that you were both stupid (and Number37 got an infraction from me) is evidence that the mods are against you? At least Number37 didn't carry on afterwards. My deletion notice even said that's post went too far lol.

I think he is offended or insulted by the words "sorry mate".
 

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Dear Kwikfix,

The news that extreme environmental activism in Australia is being funded by international groups with links to the Clinton campaign should set alarm bells ringing.

These groups appear to have misused their domestic tax-deductible status and green credentials to engage in a shameless political campaign designed to damage our national interest by shutting down the Adani coal mine. Their financial (and other) links to the US Democratic campaign machine demonstrates what the agenda of a Clinton presidency might really have in store, irrespective of her campaign statements.

For this exposé and for many other insights into the Left’s political agenda, we have WikiLeaks to thank. Without them, the dishonest and co-ordinated global movement driving the Leftist agenda might only be tinfoil hat territory. Instead, the culprits are exposed and convicted by their own words.

The Clinton campaign has described Catholics as "backward", taken big money from misogynist governments whilst professing to support women, organised campaign violence and colluded to breach campaign finance laws. All of this is now a matter of record – and yet much of the mainstream media refuse to openly criticise those involved.

It truly is welfare of the political elites, where the supposed servants of the people instead consider themselves their masters.

This status is not exclusive to US politics or Australian green extremism. Domestically, our Human Rights Commission seems terminally compromised, our educational system has been infiltrated with an activist agenda and at least one politician has had their private bills paid by a foreign government.

It seems that many top-level international institutions have also been captured by the statists. Having spent the past six weeks observing the United Nations, I’ve seen plenty of evidence for myself.

Few nations seem willing to stand in the path of the progressive juggernaut as it marches relentlessly forward – at least publicly. According to some insiders, those that do are subject to strong lobbying to reconsider, lest their aid or status be compromised.

It’s as if the entire system is working against the regular person and for vested-interests.

Even the multi-billionaire funder of the Left agenda, George Soros, is recorded in the minutes of his Open Society Foundations as saying “he believes that the rise of money in politics endangers our democracy". He should know.

It’s his money behind so many of the activist campaigns globally – he is the founding money behind Australia’s Getup! and goodness knows how many other similar outfits. One media outlet disclosed he even secretly paid the salaries of four staffers in the then-Moldovan Prime Minister’s office.

We are right to ask just how deep and how far does this shaping of our democracy go. It seems that money and media can now determine the outcomes of elections, business investments, our social standards and the freedom of self-determination.

It’s a cesspit that we are wise to be wary of, but it is also something we need to fix. As Donald Trump has said, “it’s time to drain the swamp”.

We just need more people in positions of influence willing to pull the plug.

Until next week.

Cory_signature.gif

Cory Bernardi

P.S Don't forget to listen to my regular podcast at www.corybernardi.com/podcast or subscribe to it here.



Things that make you go 'hmm...'
The Clinton campaign contractor caught in a voter-fraud sting visited the White House an astonishing number of times – the undercover investigation recently released part 3.

Clinton has embraced a “radical” open borders policy, the Facebook COO “badly” wants her to win, while the Pirate Party is on the verge of victory in Iceland.

The Human Rights Commission has been accused of bias over the 18C cartoon case, the ‘gay cake’ appeal fails Christian bakers, and schools ban sharing birthday sweets. Unsurprisingly, the ABC continues to twist the truth.

In other news, the PC brigade puts the hard word on a Canadian professor, a university offers counselling for offensive Halloween costumes – while others ban those not PC enough – and at another university, a human chain prevented white students from getting to class.

Lastly, thankfully this person was caught before he branched out into other crimes.


Copyright © 2016 Cory Bernardi, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are a member of CoryBernardi.com
Authorised by Cory Bernardi, 28 King William St, Kent Town 5067
You can also keep up with Cory Bernardi on Facebook.
This email was sent to phuklefties@gmail.com.

To unsubscribe from emails, click here.
 
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Dear Gullible Idiot,

Something happened that I don't like and the alarm bells started ringing.
Then something else happened that I am 100% convinced is part of the lefty conspiracy.
A woman in a position of power is doing something I don't like, another reason for the alarm bells to ring.
It is outrageous that lefty groups have influence when clearly they have an agenda.
Research by the IPA proves exactly what I am saying.
We need people like you to keep believing the shit that I make up.
Send money.

Until the sky falls in again next week.
White man in blue tie


P.s. Don't just read my dribble I made a podcast so you can get double the bullshit.



Things that make you go hmmmm
Clinton did something, nothing to do with us but get offended
Clinton did something else. It means something about Labor, look for the expose in my next email.
Did I mention the woman running the HRC.
Did you hear me. Woman. HRC.
Can you see the problem.
Shocking isn't it.

Lastly, George Pell is innocent, that goat is a liar.


You are receiving this email because you are a gullible idiot.
This email was sent to gullible.idiot@reclaimaustralia.com

To unsubscribe from this email, use your brain and think for yourself.
 
Cory's a soft****, if he had any balls of his own, he'd stop sitting atop a nice safe Liberal Senate ticket, and throwing bombs from the safety of that. He should start an Australian Conservative Party, and see how many people support him. Silent majority my elegant posterior.

There is no place for hard core Micks in a conservative party.

He can foxtrot oscar to the Vatican.

Dear Gullible Idiot,
.

.. our viewing numbers are down despite all the stories on those lovely hard done by boat people and the impending global warming armageddon. Please tune in more often

YOUR ABC.
 

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I find it amusing how Bernardi sees people just living life by a different set of principles than him is part of a wide-spread, deliberate and coordinated plot against him.

Seems to be mistaking apathy for strategy.
 
Your weekly dose of common sense.

For all the innovation that America and its entrepreneurs have driven over many decades, they still haven’t got a clue about coffee. The default option here is a tepid brew of dirty dishwater served in as large a cardboard cup as possible. Sometimes they’ll add ice and call it ‘cold brew’ but the only word that I feel does American coffee justice is ‘awful’!

Thankfully a new breed of Australian entrepreneur is making its mark in the Big Apple and helping to change the tastes of the locals whilst improving the lot for us coffee-loving visitors.

There are literally dozens of cafes built around the Australian coffee experience, not to mention the many successful bars and stores run by expatriate Australians. They have chosen New York because of the opportunity it offers, the relative ease of doing business here and the captive large population.

The Aussie ingenuity and subtle cultural differences are apparent whenever you walk in to one of their stores. The welcome is warmer; still courteous but more familiar, usually delivered in strine (despite the best efforts of globalisation, our accent is still quite a novelty).

I have concluded this reflects our British heritage which usually involves a less direct approach to conversation. For New Yorkers it’s all ‘how may I help you’ after the hello without room for conversations about the weather … or much else.

The Aussie approach seems to be making a difference. Our business people are respected, liked and doing great things in many fields. The Aussie takeover of Manhattan still has a way to go but I did notice my local supermarket now has a small supply of Vegemite available, clearly for the expat community as I’m yet to find an American who likes it!

From my perspective, I’m just happy so many Australians are making their mark on the international stage, proving once again we can compete and win in the most competitive market on earth.

Speaking of competitive, this will be my final comment before the US Presidential election; an election where the outcome is still far from clear.

Few seem enamoured with either major Party candidate but if the rallies are anything to go by, the enthusiasm for Trump far outweighs any support for Clinton.

That said, many are deeply sceptical of Trump’s candidacy; he is unorthodox, deeply flawed and somewhat erratic but he has tapped into a deep well of discontent.

Even Clinton’s most ardent supporters are deserting her in the wake of her personal, political and financial history. She is the poster child for everything that is wrong with the American political system.

Trump has highlighted those shortcomings and exploited them for his own ends. In a binary choice, I’d be picking Trump because he is the least bad candidate.

I disagree with a number of his policy positions but there’s a lot of what he is saying that I do agree with. The hostility with which he has been treated by sections of the media, some political insiders and the militant Left only reinforces the need for change.

There is a very real sense the political game over here has been rigged against the people for a long time. The voters put the politicians first and they in turn put the voters last. Trump’s rhetoric seeks to change that.

Whether he wins or not next Tuesday, I suspect the impact he has made on the political system here will be felt for a long time to come.

Next Tuesday, unlike most of my colleagues Down Under, I’ll be cheering on a Trump victory. I hope there’ll be something to celebrate.

Until next week.

Cory_signature.gif

Cory Bernardi

P.S Don't forget to listen to my regular podcast at www.corybernardi.com/podcast or subscribe to it here.

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Things that make you go 'hmm...'
The FBI has reopened their investigation into Hillary Clinton’s shady email scandal, giving new life to Trump’s election chances. Australia’s involvement with the Clinton Foundation has brought nothing but trouble.

Labor considers ‘gay quotas’, corporations look at gender quotas, and the South Australian government is considering adopting a 'more multicultural' flag. The CFMEU, meanwhile, has fired a broadside at the ALP.

Not being a feminist doesn’t make one a sexist, but that won’t stop them telling you what to think. The left are now smearing Muslim reformers as ‘anti-Muslim extremists’ despite fears of another terror attack.

A school bans scary clowns, while a professor speaks out against political correctness and another gets the boot. This week the PC-brigade took aim at anyone wearing a controversial Halloween costume and blocked a 'funeral for Halloween', foretelling a terrifying Orwellian future. Facebook is again under fire for censorship.

Lastly, a man is suing the media for ridiculing his mullet.
 
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I find it amusing how Bernardi sees people just living life by a different set of principles than him is part of a wide-spread, deliberate and coordinated plot against him.

Seems to be mistaking apathy for strategy.
1 look at him and you can tell he's not the full-quid.
 
1 look at him and you can tell he's not the full-quid.
I've a friend who works with him quite closely, and he reckons Bernardi has an eye to a future career as a shock jock as much as anything else, he knows his career path within the Liberal Party is severely limited.
 
This case and the many others like it under various state and federal laws do not prove that these laws work, or that there are appropriate safeguards. Rather, it is conclusive proof that the system is a gravy train for frivolous and vexatious complaints. The anti-discrimination industry is nothing more than a taxpayer-funded bureaucracy that caters for a legal form of extortion based on trumped-up and emotional charges of offence.
http://bernardgaynor.com.au/the-ground-is-shaking/
 

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