Avi Yemini | |
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Born | Avraham Shalom Waks[1] 17 October 1985[2][3][4] |
Nationality | Australian, Israeli |
Citizenship |
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Education | Yeshivah College, Melbourne[1] |
Occupations |
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Employer | Rebel News (since 2020) |
Political party | Liberty Alliance (2018–2019)[1][5] |
Military career | |
Allegiance | Israel |
Service | Israel Defense Forces |
Years of service | 2004–2007 |
Unit | Golani Brigade |
Part of a series on |
Far-right politics in Australia |
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Avraham Shalom Yemini (né Waks; born 17 October 1985) is an Australian-Israeli far-right provocateur and commentator.[6] Since 2020 he has worked as the Australian correspondent for Rebel News, a Canadian far-right website.[1][7] Yemini has been involved in numerous cases of litigation, initiated both by him and against him.
Yemini grew up in a large family in Melbourne, Victoria, and attended various orthodox Jewish schools in Melbourne and overseas.[1] When he was 16 he experienced substance abuse and at the age of 19 joined the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in an attempt to get off drugs.[1]
In 2018, Yemini unsuccessfully ran as a candidate for the Australian Liberty Alliance in the Victorian state election.[1] In that same year he was banned from Facebook for doxing a journalist.[8][9] Yemini was denied entry to New Zealand in 2022, due to criminal convictions.[10]
In 2015, he established Rebel Media, a far-right outlet that regularly features global and domestic "stars" of the nationalist movement.
Far-right Twitter accounts come and go, often generating significant traction without any obvious relation to organised movements. As a stage of his reinvention of self after the EDL, its leader Stephen Yaxley-Lennon ('Tommy Robinson') reinvented himself as a journalist, working for the Canadian far-right media company Rebel Media.
The Rebel Media, a far-right news organization, published articles by Canadian alt-right propagandists such as: "Want to sop cultural Marxist indoctrination? Cut public funding of universities" (Nicholas 2017); "Social justice is socialism in disguise" (Goldy 2016); and "How progressives use our kids for Marxist social experiments" (Goldy 2017).
Far-right Canadian media outlets, for instance, have bombarded its subscribers with all kinds of pro-Trump, racist and xenophobic dialogue, both before and after Trump's victory. Rebel Media, a popular far-right online media platform run by Ezra Levant, a controversial Canadian far-right political activist, writer and broadcaster, has been an outright supporter of Trump, publishing countless extreme-right leaning articles on why to support him.
Beyond US-based far-right news websites such as Breitbart, Infowars and Epoch Times, other alternative online media outlets include Australia-based XYZ and The Unshackled, Canada-based Rebel News and UK-based Politicalite.com and PoliticalUK.co.uk, just to name a few, which operate as far-right metapolitical channels and counter-publics that strive to influence mainstream culture and discourse (Holt, 2019).
All four, including Robinson himself, were employees of The Rebel Media, a Toronto-based far-right website.
Jack Posobiec, a journalist with the far-right news outlet The Rebel, was the first to use the hashtag with a link to the hacked documents online, which was then shared more widely by WikiLeaks.
With politicians including Conservative heavyweights Andrew Scheer and Brian Jean swearing off appearances and a raft of exits by prominent contributors, Ezra Levant's far-right video and commentary network The Rebel spent the last week in damage control, trying to distance itself from the extremist alt-right movement whose values many have alleged the site's content too often sympathized with.
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