The news that the Bondi Beach gunman has been slapped with nineteen additional charges should shock precisely no one. It is the bureaucratic aftershock of a societal earthquake. But while Australia busies itself with tallying offences, we in Britain must ask ourselves: have we learned anything from this?
The answer, I fear, is a resounding no. We are witnessing the slow decay of public safety, masked by procedural noise. The Bondi incident is not an outlier; it is a harbinger.
Our authorities, like their Australian counterparts, are obsessed with cleaning up the mess after the explosion, rather than defusing the bomb before it goes off. This is the triumph of process over prevention, a hallmark of a civilisation in decline. The Victorians understood that order required robust institutions and moral clarity.
We, by contrast, have swapped conviction for caution, and security for sanctimony. Until we relearn the art of proactive governance, Bondi will not be a one-off. It will be a rehearsal.









