Greg Sheridanโs bombshell article inย The Australian, โAustralia Divided, Misgoverned, in Retreat,โ doesnโt just diagnose a nation in trouble; it rips off the bandages to expose the systemic rot infecting every major artery of the country. From education to energy, defence to demographics, Sheridan paints a chilling portrait of deliberate national erosionโa collapse that is being orchestrated under the cover of normalcy.
Sheridanโs core contention is clear: what weโre witnessing is not merely policy failure or bureaucratic inertia. It is a calculated dismantling of the structures that once made Australia sovereign, secure, and successful. The education system is not declining by mistakeโit is producing citizens less able to question authority. The military isnโt being neglected accidentallyโitโs being hollowed out at a time of mounting regional threats. The housing crisis doesnโt just reflect economic shiftsโit enforces dependence and disillusionment.
And the worst part? Australians, hard-working and trusting by nature, are too burdened by daily survivalโby the cost of living, by insecure work, by raising families in a climate of constant pressureโto realise theyโre being quietly and methodically strangled. The machine of misgovernment runs best when no one notices the chains tightening.
Sheridan needs to be congratulated for his courageโnot only for diagnosing the rot but for having the audacity to name it. In an era where speaking inconvenient truths can cost a career, he chose integrity over safety. Andย The Australianย deserves a rare pat on the back for publishing it. At a time when most mainstream outlets are content to recycle press releases and political spin, this piece stands out as a journalistic act of defiance. Itโs a clarion call, and itโs time we listened.
A People Distracted, A Nation Dismantled
You canโt blame the average Aussie. Theyโre working double shifts, juggling childcare, watching rent skyrocket while their wages stagnate, and praying that the next government handout or tax break will buy them a little breathing room. Meanwhile, they are fed slogans and distractions while the pillars of the nation are quietly reduced to rubble.
Sheridanโs thesisโand the numbers he lays bareโshould jolt every complacent citizen out of slumber. This isnโt just political failureโitโs the systemic exploitation of trust, sold to the highest bidder.
Debt: Over $1 trillion and rising, with $27 billion a year evaporating just in interestโmore than the entire federal education budget. Thatโs not fiscal policy. Thatโs economic quicksand.
Education: We are four years behind Asia in math. Our classrooms are factories of intellectual erosion. One in three students canโt pass basic literacy. We are raising a generation less capable than the last, in a world thatโs only getting more complex.
Mental Health: Suicide is now the number one killer for Australians aged 15โ44. Let that settle. Not car accidents. Not disease. Despair. Australia now ranks just behind the U.S. in youth mental illness trends, according toย The Lancet. We are burying our future in cemeteries of silence.
This is not just incompetenceโitโs engineered helplessness. A nation anesthetised with Netflix and bureaucracy, while its social fabric is shredded in boardrooms and rubber-stamped in parliaments. Whatโs happening isnโt accidentalโitโs orchestrated.
The Death Spiral of a Sovereign Nation
Sheridan doesnโt tiptoe. He fires a warning shot directly into the heart of Australiaโs delusion: this is not a drift into second-rank statusโitโs a nosedive, and someone has both hands on the yoke.
But whoโs flying us into the mountain?
Itโs not the single mum skipping meals to feed her kids. Not the tradie pulling overtime to make rent. Not the millions of Australians who still believe their vote matters. NoโSheridan names the true saboteurs: a โcomfortable, coddled and second-rate political class.โ The architects of decline wear suits, smile for cameras, and rubber-stamp ruin from behind government desks and think-tank podiums.
These people are not failing us. They are betraying us. Decisions are no longer made in Canberra for Australiansโtheyโre dictated from offshore boardrooms, global NGOs, and multinational interests whose loyalty lies not with nations but with profits and power.
Sheridanโs insight is not just a local revelationโit is a geopolitical alarm bell. This blueprint of engineered collapse is not unique to Australia. Itโs a western-wide contagion:
In the UK, the once-mighty industrial engine has been dismantled by bureaucrats preaching carbon puritanism while relying on Russian gas.
In the U.S., the middle classโonce the backbone of the worldโs most powerful democracyโis disintegrating under debt, division, and digital surveillance.
In Canada, a nation built on resource wealth and rugged independence is drowning in a cost-of-living tsunami and authoritarian climate dogma.
These arenโt isolated policy mistakes. They are surgical strikes against sovereignty. What we are witnessing is not decayโitโs demolition. It is cultural euthanasia masked as progressive reform. It is a silent war on the nation-state, and Australia is not just in the crosshairsโit is the test case.
If they can gut Australiaโrich in resources, history, and resilienceโthen nowhere is safe. And no one is coming to save us.
Energy as Ideology, Not Strategy
Sheridan calls it out: โNet zero is a fraudulent concept.โ And that fraud is costing lives, liberty, and livelihoodsโespecially among those who can least afford it.
Net Zero has become the cruelest bait-and-switch of our time: a shimmering promise of planetary salvation masking a brutal regime of economic disenfranchisement. The elites who drafted this agenda will never be touched by its fallout. When they speak of sacrifice, itโs never themselves they have in mind. While they dine on wagyu beef and fly in private jets to climate summits, they instruct working Australians to eat bugs, give up their utes, and endure blackouts. For them, carbon credits are indulgences; for the rest of us, theyโre digital shackles.
It is the single mum who canโt afford to retrofit her home, the pensioner shivering through winter, the tradesman priced off the road by fuel taxesโthese are the real casualties of Net Zero. This isnโt a climate strategy. Itโs a class war, executed in the language of virtue. As factories close and power bills skyrocket, we are told to celebrate our sacrifice as noble. But this is not nobility. It is enforced austerity. And it is no accident. Itโs policy. A top-down, asset-stripping operation where the poor are priced out of modernity and the middle class is gaslit into submission.
Even in Britain, the spell is breaking. Reform UK is rising not because they deny climate change, but because they refuse to pretend that destroying your economy will save the planet. Meanwhile, Australia marches forward like a climate lemming, ignoring nuclear, punishing the productive, and applauding its own deindustrialisation. This isnโt a green future. Itโs a controlled demolition disguised as salvation. The biggest losers? The ordinary people. The ones who never had a seat at the table but will still be handed the bill for the banquet they werenโt invited to.
The Price of Denial
Sheridanโs article isnโt anti-Australian. Itโs the most pro-Australian thing youโll read this yearโa rallying cry buried in a media landscape where truth has become a contraband item. He compares us to Nauruโonce wealthy, now forgottenโand itโs not a stretch. The implication is clear and terrifying: even the most blessed nations can be brought to their knees if they abandon vigilance, sovereignty, and above all, informed public discourse.
But hereโs the twist: itโs not the publicโs fault. Australians arenโt stupid or lazyโtheyโve been systematically kept in the dark. Censorship isnโt just a dystopian buzzword anymore; itโs the invisible hand that shapes what we see, hear, and believe. Dissenting voices have been algorithmically buried, de-platformed, or discredited. Experts who challenge the narrative are labelled fringe or dangerous. Meanwhile, the same five talking heads rotate through television panels, reinforcing a consensus that was never honestly debated. What Sheridan does in his article is nothing short of heretical in todayโs tightly policed discourse.
This is the danger of managed information: a nation sleepwalks into ruin while believing itโs just enduring a rough patch. Weโve confused comfort with freedom, headlines with truth, and government reassurance with national stability. Sheridanโs piece rips through that fog like a flare in the nightโand it should terrify us into action.
This Is Not InevitableโBut Itย Isย Imminent
The good news? Decline isnโt fate. But it demands recognition.
Sheridan scorns both Labor and Coalition cowardice. He implores Australians to wake up, reject the cultural cringe, and fight for their future.
If Australia can be dismantled, so can any nation.
So read the article.ย Share it. Rage at it. But above all, realise this:
Australia isnโt dying of old age.
Itโs being murdered.
And unless we fight for it, thereโll be nothing left to inherit.
You can follow Gaz's Substack page A Defender's Voice HERE.
โSecond-rateโ ! No - thatโs not correct. Their intention is to degrade Australia to 10th rate. But our โleadersโ are assuring jobs, jobs, jobs for all youth - as burger-flippers or tattoo parlour attendants. That is what the Net-Zero fraud is all about - destroying Australiaโs future.