Summary

Jacob Hersant, a self-described Nazi, was sentenced to one month in prison, becoming the first person in Australia jailed for performing an outlawed Nazi salute.

Convicted in Victoria for making the salute outside a courthouse in October, Hersant’s act followed new legislation banning the gesture.

Magistrate Brett Sonnet justified the sentence, citing Hersant’s intent to promote Nazi ideology publicly.

Hersant’s lawyer argued that his actions were nonviolent and claimed they were protected as political expression, stating plans to appeal the ruling on constitutional grounds.

  • Victoria
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    288 hours ago

    I’m sorry, since when was being a nazi in public in any way tolerable? We aren’t talking about “I don’t like cereal” here, the nazis were arguably one of the darkest times of our history. Trying to revive it is absolutely not acceptable.

    • @[email protected]
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      -138 hours ago

      Never give the government power that you would not want turned against you because governments change. I vehemently disagree with their cause, but I would also vehemently defend their right to express their opinion.

      • Krzd
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        55 hours ago

        Nazi ideology is never an opinion. It’s a threat to human rights and democracy.

      • chingadera
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        -56 hours ago

        This is the right take, and the fact that these people aren’t seeing it is insane.

        • @[email protected]
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          85 hours ago

          No, we’ve just seen enough at this point to understand that absolute freedom of speech/expression is a mistake.

          • chingadera
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            -13 hours ago

            I’ve seen the right redefine woke and legislate it on a whim to prosecute political enemies, what’s stopping the opposition from using this law against you or I?

            The world is more complex than that, and I’m sure you know it.