The reputation of Australia’s gun control took a massive hit with the Bondi Beach attack. For decades, it was held up as the perfect example of gun control, one that former President Barack Obama said he favored for implementation here. In other words, he literally thought it was consistent with the Second Amendment.
Insane.
But the selling point was never its constitutionality, but the fact that it supposedly prevented mass shootings and crime as a whole.
Bondi Beach shattered that myth.
Still, officials immediately jumped to gun control. It seems, though, that not everyone was interested in buying that.
“Of course, there is a significant reframing of the narrative here,” PR Counsel Managing Director Kristy McSweeney told Sky News host James Morrow in an interview. “Don’t forget the government has spent the first 25 days trying to make this issue about gun laws, about gaps in security legislation … everything but antisemitism.”
Nationals Leader David Littleproud, speaking also to Sky News, clarified it a bit further. He said that Australia doesn’t have a gun problem, but an “extreme Islamic ideological problem” instead.
The truth is that the officials pushing the anti-gun narrative here are doing everything they can to avoid the elephant in the room. This was, in fact, an act of Islamic terrorism, one targeting Jews because of the radical Islamic antagonism toward Jews and Israel. By making it about guns, these people think they can avoid having to talk about the real problem and appearing Islamophobic.
While I know that not all Muslims are terrorists in the making, the truth of the matter is that Islamic terrorism was the problem on Bondi Beach, and failing to address that underlying cause is just enabling the next attack.
More gun control won’t stop it, either. Look at the attacks we’ve seen in Paris or Mumbai. These aren’t exactly pro-gun locales, but terrorists got guns and slaughtered innocent people.
Even if they can’t get guns for some reason, have we forgotten the Nice truck attack? Have we forgotten New Orleans on January 1st of last year?
The ruling elite in Australia would rather stick their heads in the sand and blame an inanimate object rather than risk the potential of being called bigoted or other mean things. They’d rather leave Australians vulnerable than address the underlying problem, which is radical Islamic terrorism.
And really, how is that any different than here?
When Charlie Kirk was murdered in front of a crowd at a Utah university, the anti-gun brigade tried to make it about gun laws, not the rhetoric that painted people like Kirk as somehow dangerous. Over and over again, they try to make it about the tools, not the tools using them.
Personally, I’m glad to see some people in Australia calling out this particular flavor of stupidity. It’s one thing to not like guns in the hands of private citizens. It’s quite another to blame them for the actions of terrorists when we know that terrorism doesn’t care about what laws are in place. If they did, they wouldn’t commit acts of terrorism, for crying out loud.
This isn’t difficult, but the truth of the matter is that too little of the “free world” is all that free in this day and age.
Editor’s Note: President Trump and Republicans across the country are doing everything they can to protect our Second Amendment rights and right to self-defense.
Help us continue to report on their efforts and legislative successes. Join Bearing Arms VIP and use promo code FIGHT to get 60% off your VIP membership.
Read the full article here

30 Comments
Interesting how quickly the discussion shifts away from security gaps and towards gun laws.
Politics as usual—distract with policy debates when tough conversations are needed.
This attack exposes the weakness of relying solely on firearm restrictions.
How does Australia justify pushing for gun control after failing to stop this attack?
They can’t. It’s time for a new approach to security.
Gun control alone won’t solve ideological terrorism. Leaders need a broader strategy.
Bondi Beach proves that gun control alone can’t prevent all attacks.
Official emphasis on gun laws seems to miss the point entirely.
The focus on gun laws feels like a diversion from the real issue of radicalization.
Extremism isn’t stopped by legislative bans. Stronger societal measures are needed.
The response shows a disconnect between policy and actual security concerns.
Leaders need to act on facts, not partisan agendas.
The political reaction feels like an attempt to avoid discussing radicalism.
This attack was about ideology, not gun access. Time to reflect on the real threats.
Bondi Beach attack challenges Australia’s long-held gun control narrative. Was this a failure of policy or something deeper?
Australia has strict gun laws, but ideology seems to be the bigger threat here.
The focus on gun laws after Bondi Beach feels like a missed opportunity to address extremism.
Australia should address the ideological roots of violence, not just weapons.
Australia’s gun control model was flawed from the start if it couldn’t prevent this.
Calling out extremism directly is a refreshing change from the usual talking points.
More honesty, less avoidance, would help prevent future attacks.
Bondi Beach was a failure of security, not just gun laws.
Official response seems to deflect blame rather than confront root causes. Focus on antisemitism is long overdue.
Time to prioritize prevention over political narratives.
This wasn’t a gun problem—it was an ideology problem disguised as one.
This tragedy shows that gun control isn’t the silver bullet some claim it is.
Gun control advocacies are ignoring the real causes of this tragedy.
If gun control worked, why did this happen? Time to rethink assumptions.
Hard to believe gun control advocates are pushing for more restrictions after this.
Perhaps it’s time to acknowledge that guns aren’t the only problem.