40 years in Education and IT | Director ASF @aus4science | Write for @SpectatorOz @Brownstoneinst | Media: YouTube, Rumble, Spotify

Joined January 2011
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Former WHO Dr David Bell and UN Assistant Secretary-General Ramesh Thakur will be headlining a special event in Sydney on 21st June on World Health. Take this opportunity to discuss this important message before parliament days later. Event by Australians for Science and Freedom. Consider becoming a member. @aus4science @bell00david @MaryanneDemasi @DrJulieSladden scienceandfreedom.org/events…
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Jason Strecker retweeted
1. The total deaths from these diseases today are a minuscule fraction of total deaths, so don’t exaggerate 2. None of these diseases can be eradicated, so there will be some natural variation 3. Any decline in vaccine uptake is because of terrorist “public health” policies which have destroyed ALL trust in the “medical” profession. Try honesty. And stop terrorising people. #AbolishPublicHealth - the biggest organised gang of thugs in human history
The resurgence of measles, whooping cough, rotavirus, bacterial meningitis, and severe pneumonia is an abject failure of health policy. We are relearning the lessons we have already paid the price for.
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“Australia's falling productivity levels have been driven down by the replacement of coal-fired power plants with billions of dollars in renewable energy projects, the Productivity Commission has declared, as it warns governments to make only the most efficient, cost-effective investments. "There has been significant investment over the past 20 years to replace coal assets reaching end of life," Dr Robson said “it has seen measured productivity fall significantly as there is a lag between when new energy assets are built and when they start producing at full capacity. Despite a 126 per cent increase in the capital stock since 2001-02, output has only increased 14 per cent over the same period." V “By the end of the 2026 financial year, the total number of staff employed by the federal government in regulatory roles will be more than 107,000. This represents an overall increase of more than 17,000, or 19 per cent, from the 2023 financial year. Research shows red tape has soared in Australia to record levels, with red tape at the federal level having increased by 88 per cent between 2005 and 2013. In fact, red tape has grown at a rate two-thirds greater than the overall growth in the national economy in the same period.” ••••••••••••• It’s not just renewable energy destroying our economy, the bureaucracy has also grown exponentially costing billions in wages and time lost due to red tape. Australia needs a Federation convention similar to the one held by our founding fathers in the 1890’s seeks to remove the duplication of roles and responsibilities between State and Federal governments. We don’t need two health departments, two education departments, two environment departments and so on. To think essential services like maternity wards are being closed when we have 9 health bureaucracies in a country of 28 million people is a joke. If you lower taxes and less regulation please sign up today at Peoplefirstparty.au
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Jason Strecker retweeted
People are defending Elon’s trillions on the basis of the wealth and good he creates. And that’s fine — I do that too. But it has the unfortunate implication that Musk’s riches are only ethical because of the good he’s doing. And that just encourages socialists to come up with ever more elaborate litmus tests for whether someone’s wealth is morally acceptable. In a free market, rich people get rich through consensual exchanges, usually with a great many people. Most exchanges are positive-sum, so even if the rich person doesn’t have a grand narrative about electric vehicles, free expression, helping the blind, building rockets, or digging tunnels, each exchange made the other party better off. That’s not irrelevant. It’s an important part of the ethical defense of free markets. But it’s not the crucial issue. The crucial issue is that the exchanges were voluntary. And that can be true even if every trade is zero-sum. Take a horse-track gambler who becomes rich by consistently exploiting inefficiencies in the betting market. Each exchange is zero-sum: bettors put money in, and only some of them get money out. If you become rich this way, you didn’t create wealth. But you didn’t harm anyone either. You didn’t steal from anyone. Every exchange was voluntary. You may not feel the same sense of awe toward this person as you would toward someone who built a fleet of spaceships. Fair enough. But that’s a different question. So yes, remind people of the good Musk’s companies are doing. It matters, because economics is deeply counterintuitive to most people, especially when it comes to the benefits that emerge from large decentralized systems. But don’t let them walk away thinking that the good Musk is doing is the reason he “should” be a trillionaire. He should be rich because the vast number of exchanges he participated in were voluntary. It’s really that simple.
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Jason Strecker retweeted
Donnelly is an Australian academic without equal. Looking forward to writing a review. 👊🏻
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Jason Strecker retweeted
Once wealth is justified by social good rather than voluntary exchange, you need Wealth Checkers — bureaucrats deciding who has earned “too much” and who has earned it the right way.
People are defending Elon’s trillions on the basis of the wealth and good he creates. And that’s fine — I do that too. But it has the unfortunate implication that Musk’s riches are only ethical because of the good he’s doing. And that just encourages socialists to come up with ever more elaborate litmus tests for whether someone’s wealth is morally acceptable. In a free market, rich people get rich through consensual exchanges, usually with a great many people. Most exchanges are positive-sum, so even if the rich person doesn’t have a grand narrative about electric vehicles, free expression, helping the blind, building rockets, or digging tunnels, each exchange made the other party better off. That’s not irrelevant. It’s an important part of the ethical defense of free markets. But it’s not the crucial issue. The crucial issue is that the exchanges were voluntary. And that can be true even if every trade is zero-sum. Take a horse-track gambler who becomes rich by consistently exploiting inefficiencies in the betting market. Each exchange is zero-sum: bettors put money in, and only some of them get money out. If you become rich this way, you didn’t create wealth. But you didn’t harm anyone either. You didn’t steal from anyone. Every exchange was voluntary. You may not feel the same sense of awe toward this person as you would toward someone who built a fleet of spaceships. Fair enough. But that’s a different question. So yes, remind people of the good Musk’s companies are doing. It matters, because economics is deeply counterintuitive to most people, especially when it comes to the benefits that emerge from large decentralized systems. But don’t let them walk away thinking that the good Musk is doing is the reason he “should” be a trillionaire. He should be rich because the vast number of exchanges he participated in were voluntary. It’s really that simple.
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Jason Strecker retweeted
Important article on chronic sickness and Christian fellowship by…..my sister, Julianne Chavura! Please read it and pass it on 🙏
"Instead of reaching in, [people] wait for you to reach out ... But when you are carrying so much already, it becomes impossible to also carry the burden of making others feel comfortable with your suffering." —Julianne Chavura au.thegospelcoalition.org/ar…
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Jason Strecker retweeted
Frances Hui (@frances_hui ) is this year’s recipient of the Victims of Communism (@VoCommunism ) Dissident Human Rights Award. The exiled 26-year-old from Hong Kong is a Christian with a bounty on her head. Read my full rundown for @TheCanDec here: dailydeclaration.org.au/2026…
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Jason Strecker retweeted
I call it #Phintel One big club. Pharma - Intel agencies - DARPA - US military. The 4th Reich. @RMConservative @Fynnderella1 @chrismartenson @DrJBhattacharya @RWMaloneMD
We have further proof that Dr. Fauci had deep connections to the intelligence agencies. When COVID-19 came about, he leveraged those connections to steer the intelligence community away from the idea that a lab leak took place at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. We now know a lab leak is likely what occurred. washingtonexaminer.com/news/…
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Jason Strecker retweeted
Former WHO Dr David Bell and UN Assistant Secretary-General Ramesh Thakur will be headlining a special event in Sydney on 21st June on World Health. Take this opportunity to discuss this important message before parliament days later. Event by Australians for Science and Freedom. Consider becoming a member. @aus4science @bell00david @MaryanneDemasi @DrJulieSladden scienceandfreedom.org/events…
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Brilliant winter afternoon for a beach/forest run in Shellharbour/Kiama. 22C (72F) swim time water temp 19C (67F).
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Jason Strecker retweeted
Back in court today. It's the latest in the on-going anti-free speech "lawfare" being waged against me by two 🏳️‍🌈 drag queens who demand the right to indoctrinate two-eight-year-olds into sexualised and gender fluid "queer culture" without being criticised. #FreedomofSpeech
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New South Wales remains one of the highest-taxed states in the country, and the Insurance Duty is among the most indefensible levies in our system. It is a direct penalty on responsibility. When individuals and businesses take the initiative to protect their assets, the government perversely punishes that prudence with a 9% surcharge. This is a classic "tax on a tax." Because the duty is applied after the federal GST, citizens are forced to pay the state a commission on a federal tax. For small businesses, community groups, and families already struggling with an escalating cost-of-living crisis, this compounding cost is a significant burden. Furthermore, high duties encourage under-insurance. When the state inflates premiums, people are forced to reduce their coverage or increase their risk. This makes our communities less resilient and more dependent on government intervention when disaster strikes. The ACT has already abolished this tax, proving that modern, efficient governance is possible without taxing the safety nets of its citizens. The NSW Libertarians call for the immediate and total abolition of insurance duty to return money to taxpayers and lower the cost of living. #abolishinsuranceduty #libertarian
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Jason Strecker retweeted
"Australians cannot address crime effectively if they underestimate its scale or ignore how measurement differences distort comparisons. Policymakers should focus on raising the risks to criminals" Important read by @JohnRLottJr and @MRobertsQLD spectator.com.au/2026/06/the…
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Jason Strecker retweeted
In Australia, 5.2 million people take prescription anti-depressants and yet the nation has declared a fatwa on nicotine. Fascinating what is declared safe and acceptable by the medical fraternity, and what is not. afr.com/companies/healthcare…
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My talented friend @MichaelPack_ has produced a great documentary about the lockdown dissidents & the silencing of science during the covid pandemic. So much harm caused by the lockdowns, school closures, and mandates could have been avoided. I'm working now to reform public health and science so nothing like that ever happens again. @WSJopinion
During the COVID-19 pandemic, a group of prominent scientists challenged the prevailing government approach to lockdowns. The Lockdown Dissidents tells the story of researchers who say they were censored when they questioned the public health consensus. on.wsj.com/3QyWXCd
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The mainstream media convinced Australians during 2020-21 that Covid was so contagious and lethal that lockdowns and untested experimental "vaccines" were necessary. We now know that both were exaggerated. But in case you were wondering if the MSM had reconsidered its position: news.com.au/national/victori…
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Jason Strecker retweeted
This is not to be missed folks. Hope to see you there.
Our 2026 National Conference Dinner speaker is the one and only Sall Grover! Come and hear the story of her incredible journey first hand. Where: The Epping Club, 45 Rawson Street, Epping NSW When: Friday 21 August, commencing at 6:30pm Register here: familyfirstparty.org.au/2026…
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