Australia’s domestic security agency, ASIO, says right-wing extremism now makes up half of its priority cases. And the far right, while still fringe, has capitalised on division and social media to push its message during the pandemic.
So just how big a risk is this movement today? And how did we allow this discredited and dangerous ideology to get a foothold once again?
Author Lydia Khalil discusses how counter-terrorism turned a blind eye to the far -right and how we all need to solve that problem.
The truth about men who kill women
Read This: David Marr vs Australia’s Old Lie
Who knew the CFMEU's dirty secrets?
How to be a climate whistleblower
The surge in financial abuse against women
Assassinations, insurrections and massacres: an American story
Peter Dutton’s big Queensland energy
Read This: Leigh Sales Is a Professional Stickybeak
Artist and refugee Mostafa Azimitabar on painting from a hostile country
Will the threat of jail time help fix Aged Care?
The China think tank attacked by Wolverines
Inside Nine's journalism cuts: 'Quite a few people suspected retribution'
Project 2025: The Trump presidency wish list
Read This: The Three Words That Made George Saunders a Writer
The internet sleuths fighting fake research
The power and legacy of 'militant' union boss John Setka
The son of Hong Kong's jailed media tycoon
The Albanese government's $1 billion computer
Rishi Sunak's Australian communications 'magician'
Why would a university have a deal with Lockheed Martin?
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Morning Wire
The Daily
Up First
Today, Explained
Dobré ráno | Denný podcast denníka SME