Albanese government told to ‘step in' to fight antisemitism in Australia
Holocaust survivor Eddy Boas claims 'education' is the one thing which can stop holocaust denial.
'Education is the only way you can stop it,' Mr Boas said.
'But the governments got to step in.
'I'm getting fed up with this government.
'If they don't go about it differently, it's only going to get worse.'
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In the Oval Office one day last week, President Donald Trump renewed his no-holds-barred attack on the nation's oldest university. 'They're totally antisemitic at Harvard,' he declared. Just 10 hours later, he posted an image of himself striding down a street with the caption, 'He's on a mission from God and nothing can stop what is coming.' Shown in the shadows, watching with approval, was a cartoon figure commonly seen as an antisemitic symbol. The appearance of the figure, the alt-right mascot Pepe the Frog, was the latest example of Trump's extensive history of amplifying white supremacist figures and symbols, even as he now presents himself as a champion for Jewish students oppressed by what he says is a wave of hatred on American college campuses. As a younger man, Trump kept a book of Adolf Hitler's speeches in a cabinet by his bed, according to his first wife. 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To the side was Pepe the Frog, a cartoon character that, according to the Anti-Defamation League, has been adopted by alt-right antisemites as a symbol of white supremacy. Loading It is not clear if Trump noticed the Pepe the Frog image in the shadows of the illustration, which was originally posted by a follower of Fuentes. The White House did not respond to a question about why he shared the image or express regret about sharing a post with an antisemitic symbol. Trump has expressed an interest in Hitler. In a 1990 interview, he said he had a copy of Mein Kampf, though his first wife, Ivana Trump, said it was actually My New Order, a collection of Hitler speeches. As president, Trump's chief of staff, John Kelly, recalled that Trump said during his first term that 'Hitler did a lot of good things', like bolstering Germany's economy, and complained that American military officers were not loyal enough to him. 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Fuentes has compared himself to Hitler and expressed hope for 'a total Aryan victory,' while West said shortly after visiting Mar-a-Lago that 'I like Hitler' and that 'Hitler has a lot of redeeming qualities'. Trump said he did not know West was bringing Fuentes to dinner, but did not denounce him after learning of his past. Twice last summer, Trump's golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, hosted speeches by Hale-Cusanelli, who has posed for pictures looking like Hitler and has said that 'Hitler should have finished the job', according to federal prosecutors. Hale-Cusanelli, who was sentenced to four years in prison for his involvement in the assault on the Capitol before Trump pardoned the attackers, was described in court papers as a 'white supremacist and Nazi sympathiser' who compared Jews to a 'plague of locusts'. The Trump campaign said at the time that Trump did not attend the Bedminster events and was not aware of Hale-Cusanelli or his comments. Hale-Cusanelli has denied being a Nazi sympathiser. Now that he is back in office, Trump has not seen allegations of extremism as disqualifying, even as he accosts Harvard for it. Loading His newly promoted Defence Department press secretary, Kingsley Wilson, has echoed antisemitic extremists who have asserted that Leo Frank, a Jewish man lynched in Georgia in 1915 on what historians have called false charges of raping and murdering a 13-year-old girl, really was guilty. She has also endorsed the 'great replacement' conspiracy theory that white Christians are being intentionally supplanted. Ed Martin, who had been chosen by Trump to be the US attorney for Washington, ran into Republican opposition in part because he had hosted Hale-Cusanelli on his podcast, calling him 'an extraordinary man' and giving him an award. In a futile effort to salvage his nomination, Martin apologised and denounced Hale-Cusanelli's comments.