JAMIE McINTYRE: CANCELLED, TARGETED⦠AND STILL STANDING
The Man Who Says Australia Has Been Hijackedāand How to Take It Back
In 2013, while most Australians were still trusting the system, Jamie McIntyre stepped outside itāand paid the price.
Founder of the Australian National Review and the 21st Century Australia Party, McIntyre didnāt just launch a media platform⦠he launched a challenge to the entire establishment.
A real newspaper. Distributed nationally.
A political movement. Drawing thousands.
A message. That Australia was losing control of its own destiny.
What followed, he says, was no coincidence.
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āTHEY CAME FOR EVERYTHINGā
McIntyre claims that almost immediately after launching his party and independent media network, he became a target.
ā¢A speaking empire shut down
ā¢Multiple companies dismantled
ā¢Over 100 jobs wiped out
ā¢Tens of millions in annual revenue destroyed
ā¢More than six land projects seized or halted
At the centre of it all, he points to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC).
McIntyreās view is blunt:
This wasnāt regulation.
This was retaliation.
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A POLITICAL RUNāBLOCKED BEFORE IT BEGAN?
At the height of his momentum, McIntyre was drawing crowds of over 3,000 people to rallies across Australia.
His 21st Century Australia Party wasnāt left.
It wasnāt right.
It was designed to unify.
But he says the system had other ideas.
According to McIntyre, actions by regulators prevented his party from formally contesting the 2013 federal electionāforcing him to run as an independent against Barnaby Joyce in New England.
A grassroots movement⦠cut off at the knees.
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THE SYSTEM HE SAYS IS BROKEN
McIntyre argues that Australia isnāt just mismanagedāitās structurally compromised.
And his solution? Tear out the foundations and rebuild.
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1. ABOLISH INCOME TAX
McIntyre says taxing Australians on their income is one of the greatest economic distortions ever imposed.
He points to the global banking system, including institutions like the Federal Reserve, as part of what he believes is a system of debt-based control.
His position is simple:
Australians should not be taxed for working.
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2. TAX THE RESOURCESāNOT THE PEOPLE
Australia is one of the most resource-rich nations on Earth.
So why, McIntyre asks, are citizens taxed heavily while resources are exported offshore?
His model mirrors Norway:
ā¢Tax resource exports properly
ā¢Build a sovereign wealth fund
ā¢Pay dividends back to Australians
In his vision, Australians wouldnāt just avoid income taxātheyād receive income from their country.
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3. END THE HOUSING CRISISāBY DESIGN
McIntyre says Australiaās housing crisis is not accidental.
Itās engineered through:
ā¢Excessive taxes
ā¢Artificial supply constraints
ā¢Policy failure
His solution:
ā¢Remove property taxes
ā¢Roll out large-scale affordable housing
ā¢Use modular construction to slash costs
āA rich country should never have homeless citizens,ā he argues.
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4. CHEAP ENERGY FOR AUSTRALIANS
Australia exports energy to the world⦠yet locals pay premium prices.
McIntyre calls it absurd.
Comparing Australia to Indonesia, where fuel is subsidised, he says Australians are effectively subsidising their own government through fuel taxes.
His stance:
ā¢Scrap fuel taxes
ā¢Deliver low-cost energy domestically
ā¢Let Australians benefit from what their country produces
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5. END THE LEFT VS RIGHT DIVIDE
McIntyreās political philosophy rejects the traditional spectrum entirely.
He argues:
ā¢Division is manufactured
ā¢Australians are being played against each other
ā¢Leadership is increasingly influenced by external interests
His alternative?
A nationalist model focused on:
ā¢Unity over division
ā¢Sovereignty over global influence
ā¢Accountability to Australiansānot outsiders
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A FIGURE THEY COULDNāT SILENCE
Love him or hate him, one thing is undeniable:
Jamie McIntyre didnāt disappear.