A senior SAS commander has called for a violent revolution in Australia with ‘traitor’ nurses, politicians, and billionaires to be hanged for inventing a ‘hoax pandemic’.
Riccardo Bosi, 61, is a former Lieutenant-Colonel, motivational speaker, and leader of an unregistered political party called AustraliaOne.
The ex-soldier’s Covid conspiracy theories have circulated on far-right social media as well as his public calls for the execution of several high-profile Australians.
Riccardo Bosi, 61, (pictured) is a former Lieutenant-Colonel, motivational speaker and leader of an unregistered political party called AustraliaOne
The former Lieutenant-Colonel has appeared and spoken at several ‘freedom rallies’, including the Convoy to Canberra held last weekend (pictured, protesters in Melbourne)
The former Lieutenant-Colonel has appeared and spoken at several ‘freedom rallies’, including the Convoy to Canberra held last weekend,’ the West Australian reported.
In a recent video interview Bosi called for the shut-down of Australia’s power, sewerage and ‘communications to every globalist and elitist enterprise’.
‘If our international friends want to help, you can do the same. Shut down every Australian business, every Australian industry, every Australian High Commission and every Australian Consulate,’ he said.
The former soldier warns he has a list of names of ‘traitors’ who will face a violent end if found guilty of playing a role in the ‘pandemic hoax’.
‘One by one we’ll get them,’ he told supporters in Western Australia last year.
‘I’m not a nice guy. This (the coming war) is going to be brutal, but only in direct proportion to the brutality that these people have visited upon us.’
Bosi said former prime ministers and Justices of the High Court will be first ‘to swing’ followed by state premiers, billionaires, and even doctors and nurses.
‘We’re going to be hanging an exemplar from every piece of the Australian machinery: the polity, the bureaucracy, the judiciary, the military, the media,’ he said.
‘Everybody is up for the high-jump. If they do deserve to hang, they will hang.’
The former soldier (pictured) warns he has a list of names of ‘traitors’ who will face a violent end if found guilty of playing a role in the ‘pandemic hoax’
Experts say as anti-vaxxer demonstrators look for other outlets to oppose the Australian government, movements like Bosi’s can satisfy that desire (pictured, freedom rally in Sydney)
He refers to Nuremberg 2.0 as the rationale for trying and prosecuting individuals who played a role in the pandemic ‘hoax’ – in the same way Nazi leaders faced tribunals after the Holocaust.
Bosi warned the doctors and nurses who injected the Covid vaccine into the arms of Australians would be held to account for their actions.
‘It’s not just the various chief health officers around Australia who are going to be compelled to answer for their actions. Every doctor, every nurse that participated in this, to whatever degree, is going to be held to account,’ he warned.
In another video he warned followers the violent uprising could cost them dearly but had to be done anyway.
‘Be brave. Some of us might be hurt, and some of us might die,’ he said.
‘We are about to enter a period of history without precedent, a war for the world and we you and I are on the front line.’
His plans for a violent revolution follow a failed political career in which he unsuccessfully contest the 2019 federal election for the Australian Conservatives.
The former colonel received just 513 votes when he ran as an independent in the Eden Monaro by-election in 2020, and finished second-last when he ran for the seat of Nicklin in Queensland’s state election a few months later.
The former soldier’s plans for a violent revolution comes after a failed political career which saw him unsuccessfully contest the 2019 federal election for the Australian Conservatives
The AustraliaOne party has over 46,000 followers on Facebook and has been represented at major rallies in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra (pictured, a protester in Canberra)
The AustraliaOne party has over 46,000 followers on Facebook and has been represented at major rallies in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra.
Dressed head-to-toe in army camouflage, Bosi told crowds of protesters in the nation’s capital that immediate action had to be taken.
‘If we f**k this, we lose. Do you understand this? We either win, or lose. There is no middle ground. Those bastards out there are already killing our kids,’ he warned.
‘What do you think they’ve got in store for us next? This is our last throw the dice.
‘You’ve seen what they have planned for us. You’ve seen the vaccination camps. Have you seen how they have gas pipes connecting them?
‘Has that happened before? Don’t get into the cattle cars and get shipped off like a bunch of cattle or sheep… There are no more chances folks, this is it.’
The former SAS officer, among many other conspiracy theoriests, accused the Australian Federal Police of using long range acoustic and electromagnetic weapons to force crowds of demonstrators to move on.
He claimed the interruptions meant attendees were unable to upload footage from the march to social media in yet another attempt to silence crowds.
‘You’ve seen what they have planned for us. You’ve seen the vaccination camps. Have you seen how they have gas pipes connecting them?’ Bosi asked attendees during a march in Canberra
experts fear far-right and anti-vaccine movements could result in individuals carrying out terror attacks after being radicalised (pictured, protesters in Melbourne last November)
Ending mandates is just one of Bosi’s goals for his AustraliaOne party and he plans to create a new executive government council to take the place of parliament once it is dissolved.
Bosi says the council will have three months to ‘clean up the electoral system’ before the ‘first free and fair election in 60 years’ is held.
‘That’s when you get a chance to decide for yourselves what should be done as a result of this monstrous Covid plan-demic that has been foisted upon us and the entire world,’ he told the crowds.
Bosi holds bizarre views about coronavirus, and insists it can be easily cured and therefore Covid restrictions were ‘not about health’.
‘The virus can be simply killed by staying in the shower for 15 minutes at a time and breathing through the nose,’ he said in one speech.
‘To think that ending the mandates is any sort of victory is just insane,’ he said. ‘It’s one of the reasons we’re here but you don’t negotiate with a bunch of politicians who have been robbing from us, maiming us and killing us,’ he told the crowds.
Bosi was also photographed delivering a speech to about 70 attendees of the True Blue Crew Aussie Pride March in June of 2018.
They are self proclaimed ‘patriots’ against the ‘Islamisation of Australia’ and the ‘left wing’ and are led by Blair Cottrell, a known neo-Nazi and far-fight activist.
ASIO director-general Mike Burgess last month expressed grave concerns about right-wing groups hijacking large rallies to recruit new followers.
Experts warn as anti-lockdown and anti-vaxxer demonstrators look for other outlets to oppose the Australian Government, movements like Bosi’s can satisfy that desire.
They fear far-right and anti-vaccine movements could result in individuals carrying out terror attacks after being radicalised by talk of taking up arms and executions.
The growing presence of extremist groups on social media within Australia has intelligence officials deeply concerned (pictured, a protester in Melbourne last November)
The growing presence of extremist groups on social media within Australia has intelligence officials deeply concerned, after reports of neo-Nazis infiltrating and hijacking anti-vaccine rallies around the country.
Bosi himself has threatened and encouraged executions of notable public figures, including Alan Jones, Peta Credlin, and Ita Buttrose for their silence over what they describe as ‘vaccine genocide’.
In a 60 Minutes story earlier this year, Mr Burgess said right wing extremist groups took up the majority of the intelligence agency’s work.
‘They are getting our full attention at this particular time. We’re seeing people as young as 16 and 17 in these groups, that concerns us,’ he told the program.
‘They’re middle class, they’re well educated. They understand the ideology, they look like every day Australians and they’re not openly showing their violent beliefs.’
***
Read more at DailyMail.co.uk