By MICHAEL SLOVANUS
TWO outstanding Australian men who were at the coalface of the battle against the criminal global Covid19 bioterrorism operation, will present their stories at an afternoon meeting at the Gold Coast Croatian Club on July 27th.
Those two men are Nick Patterson of Melbourne and Tristan ‘Triccy’ Van Rye, whose organisation The People’s Revolution is hosting the meeting. Paterson was the victim of Victorian Labor Premier Dan Andrews’ brutal Covid lockdown enforcers, Victoria Police, and Van Rye the leader of massive Brisbane freedom marches who also encountered police and establishment persecution.
Both fought back from dire circumstances to uphold the rule of law, those constitutional and common law rights that still exist in Australia and underpin our essential political freedoms, but which were simply cast aside by unlawful state and federal legislation during the planned Covid19 global assault on freedom from 2020 to 2022.
In Victoria the assault on basic freedoms and the rule of law was particularly vicious, prompting some brave souls like Nick Patterson to take a stand. Patterson and some friends dared to walk freely on the streets during Andrews’ imposition of 5km movement restrictions.
Police knew Patterson was not only the owner of a mixed martial arts business but also ran an organisation called Peacemakers, which advocates Christian values and basic political and human rights under Victorian law.
Video evidence shows the Public Order Response Team (PORT) police used an extraordinary level of provocation and harrassment before charging him and an associate with a string of assault and related offences that allegedly occurred after police stalked Patterson and his friends as they returned home along a footpath.
Patterson’s friend Jason Reeves, who walked ahead of the group, was then ambushed by police after they crossed the road and confronted him, claiming they had a “line” to enforce and declaring him under arrest. Reeves stepped back then employed clever defensive moves after the cops repeatedly lunged forward to grab him but failed, which no doubt riled them up. They also swung punches.
Patterson and his group then ran to assist but a wild melee ensued as the rest of the police gang swooped in. They got the provocation they wanted although they had to break the law to do it. Patterson, despite his martial arts skills did what he could defensively but had his shoulder broken.
The police stalking and harrassment of Patterson and his group was empowered by a piece of legislative Orwellian filth called the Public Health and Wellbeing Act, administered by the chief health bureaucrat Brett Sutton, the recipient of the Victorian of the Year Award 2023 and subsequent plum position at the CSIRO, an organisation now zealously defending the Federal Government’s lies about the alleged benefits of “net zero” renewable energy.
Patterson is pursuing further legal action in relation to the PORT actions, seeking an apology and a not guilty verdicts on his charges that had to be dropped by police because the evidence was ruled inadmissible by the Victorian County Court. He will also seek compensation for losses and the 29-days he was held in jail. Judge Gaynor’s full ruling is available online at Constitution Watch.
Triccy Van Rye’s story is not quite a dramatic as Patterson’s confrontation but nevertheless involved various provocations by police acting under Queensland Labor’s Covid dictatorship in addition to cancellations of his accounts by corporate banking cowards.
Triccy led some of the most successful marches against the Covid regime seen in Australia as tens of thousands of supporters marched through Brisbane CBD on a number of Saturdays during 2022-23, alerting the public to the situation. Unlike Victoria Police, Queensland cops eventually realised it would be futile to try to stop the marches.
However, Queensland Police have indulged in some highly disturbing actions including the shooting of the Train family, their neighbour and two young police officers at Weambilla and the death of Warwick man Steven Harrison, a political activist who was subjected to psychological torture with sound weapons directed at his home during a seige.
