We’ve witnessed two major demonstrations recently—the March for Humanity and the March for Australia. Both had fringe elements, both attracted ordinary people—but the media treated them in drastically different ways.
1. The March for Humanity: “Mainly Peaceful” Despite Violent Chants
At the pro-Palestine March for Humanity, violent slogans were openly broadcast:
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“Kill the IDF”
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“Intifada”
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“From the River to the Sea”
These are clear calls for violence—and for the elimination of Israel. Yet mainstream outlets mostly described the event as “mainly peaceful,” glossing over the chants and framing the narrative toward sympathy. Incidentally, so did our Prime Minister!
2. The March for Australia: Demonised Despite Marginal Extremists
By contrast, the March for Australia had some extremist figures, including known neo-Nazis and far-right ideologues. Yet many marchers rejected them—some literally turned their backs.
Still, media outlets relentlessly painted the entire rally as an ultra-right, racist mob. Headlines seized on the fringe—ignoring the majority.
Independent media, like Rebel News, delivered another view. Their video, “Forget the Nazis — THESE Aussies Are the REAL Story of Today’s March,” highlights that most participants were neither extremist nor hateful—but rather everyday Australians voicing concerns.
3. Media Double Standards in Action
Here’s the reality:
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One rally featuring violent chants is labeled “peaceful.”
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Another, with extremists marginalised by participants, is branded racist in entirety.
That’s not journalism—it’s narrative crafted to fit bias.
4. What the Broader Media Said
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Reuters labeled March for Australia a far-right rally that “propagated hate and community division.” Reuters
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News.com.au focused on clashes and extremist presence, characterising the event as dominated by extremists. News.com.au
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Courier-Mail emphasised nationalist slogans like “take our country back” and clashes with counter-protesters. Courier Mail
Despite this, none of these sources interrogated the March for Humanity with the same fervor over its violent messaging.
5. The Bottom Line
Both marches had extremists. Both rallies included ordinary people. Both were reported—but through wildly different lenses.
This glaring imbalance isn’t fair commentary—it’s selective framing. And that distorts the public’s understanding.
Want a More Nuanced View?
Check out the Rebel News video “Forget the Nazis — THESE Aussies Are the REAL Story of Today’s March” for a ground-level perspective that mainstream outlets skipped.
We owe it to ourselves to look past headlines—and confront media bias head-on.