#MichaelWGumley
This needs to be said.
This morning at the ANZAC Day Dawn Service at the Shrine of Remembrance.
There were people booing during the Welcome to Country — and honestly, I’m more disgusted that more people didn’t join in.
The media will spin it like the crowd booed the ANZAC ceremony itself. That’s not what happened.
The booing was directed at the Welcome to Country — more specifically, the political messaging that came with it. The elder used inflammatory language, declaring “this is Aboriginal land,” in front of families whose loved ones died fighting for Australia. Not a divided nation. Not a re-written version of history. Australia.
ANZAC Day is sacred. It’s one of the last few things that still brings Australians together — or should. Normally, I’d say booing at such a solemn event is completely out of line. But if there was ever a time to draw a line in the sand, this was it.
People are tired of having the “always was, always will be” narrative forced upon them at every event, without any space to question or even discuss it. You’re not asked. You’re expected to stay quiet and go along with it — or be labelled a racist or a bigot.
You're outraged that someone booed a Welcome to Country?
You should be more outraged at the long game being played — the slow conditioning to get you to accept the idea that Australia never belonged to you. So that when the time comes to “give the land back,” or hand control over to the UN through Agenda 30/30 or some other globalist framework, you’ll just nod and comply.
Why did our grandparents and great-grandparents die in war if a few generations later we’re just going to give it all up without even asking why?
Now — let’s address the elephant in the room. Yes, there was one individual who yelled something racist like “this is for white Australians.” I completely condemn that. Aboriginal Australians served, fought, and died in both world wars. They deserve to be honoured and remembered for their courage and sacrifice, same as anyone else.
But don’t let one idiot hijack the narrative.
The media will put that guy on full blast to make it look like everyone who booed is some neo-Nazi extremist. That’s not the truth. That’s not who was there. Most people just want to honour their heritage and their country without being made to feel guilty for it or having divisive politics shoved in their face at every opportunity.
The booing wasn’t racism.
It was resistance.
And if we don’t have the guts to stand up and say “enough” on ANZAC Day of all days — then when will we?
#MichaelWGumley