So it has come to this. A man lauded for his selflessness in the face of unspeakable horror, the Bondi Beach shooting hero who ran into the fray while others fled, now finds himself charged with assault. The very system that praised him as a paragon of civic virtue has turned on him. One wonders: have we lost all sense of proportion? Or is this the inevitable decadence of a society that has forgotten what courage looks like?
Let us examine the facts. Last month, during the horrifying rampage that left four dead and several wounded, our hero intervened. He subdued the gunman with no thought for his own safety. The public hailed him. The media erected a shrine to his bravery. Politicians queued to shake his hand. But then the legal machinery ground into motion. A complaint, an investigation, a charge. The hero, it seems, used ‘unreasonable force’.
This is the same Australia that once lionised the digger, the bushranger, the frontier spirit. Now we fetishise procedural correctness over moral clarity. A man who saved lives is treated as a common thug because his heroics did not conform to a bureaucratic checklist. This is what happens when a society confuses law with justice. The two are not the same. Justice, as any student of history knows, requires wisdom and discretion. Law, when applied without regard for context, becomes a weapon against the very people it is meant to protect.
Consider the Roman Republic in its terminal phase. Legalism run amok, with every action subject to interminable litigation. The result? A paralysis of virtue. Good men declined to act for fear of the courts. Sound familiar? We are breeding a generation of spectators, not heroes. Who will intervene in the next crisis when the precedent is clear: heroism earns you a criminal record.
The charges themselves are a travesty. Assault, they say. But what is assault in the context of a mass shooting? A punch to subdue a killer? A tackle to prevent further slaughter? If this is assault, then we must redefine heroism as a form of battery. The logic is absurd. It is the logic of a society that has elevated victimhood above valour.
Do not mistake me: I do not advocate for lawlessness. Every society requires rules. But rules without exceptions become tyranny. The ancient Athenians understood this better than we do. They had a concept: epieikeia, equity, the idea that a rigid application of law must be tempered by a sense of fairness. We have lost that. We have replaced it with a mindless adherence to procedure that would make a Pharisee blush.
What of the victims? Their families, the survivors, the traumatised community of Bondi? Do they feel justice is served by prosecuting their saviour? Or does it compound their grief, their sense that the system is indifferent to their suffering? The authorities speak of ‘upholding the rule of law’. But the rule of law is not a talisman. It is a tool. When it is wielded to crush the very heroism the public craves, it becomes a mockery.
Some will say I overreact. That the charges will be dropped, that justice will prevail. Perhaps. But the damage is done. The message has been sent. And in a society where the chief pursuit seems to be the refinement of grievance, it is no surprise that a hero’s fate is decided not by the gratitude of the people but by the caprice of a prosecutor.
We are witnessing the slow death of common sense. The fall of Rome was not a single day. It was a thousand small betrayals of principle. This is one such betrayal. Australia must wake up. Or we will be left with a nation of paralysed bystanders, afraid to act, afraid to save, afraid to be heroes. And then, when the next Bondi Beach happens, the only sound will be the ticking of a clock, marking the end of a civilisation that forgot what it meant to stand up.








