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The Comfortable Cage
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8224287659
- EAN9798224287659
- Date de parution08/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurDraft2Digital
Résumé
The surveillance infrastructure is already built. The question is whether you noticed. Australia has constructed - incrementally, bipartisanly, and with your passive consent - one of the most extensive surveillance and control architectures in the democratic world. Ninety-two counter-terrorism laws passed in two decades. Sydney ranked the second most surveilled city on earth outside China. A US defence company with CIA origins holding $50 million in government contracts.
A military base in the desert quietly expanded to support nuclear war-fighting planning - without parliament's knowledge, and without yours. None of this required a conspiracy. It required something more mundane: a series of individually reasonable decisions, made by people with good intentions and conflicting interests, accumulating into a structure that no previous generation of Australians would have accepted if asked all at once.
THE COMFORTABLE CAGE draws entirely on public records - government databases, parliamentary registers, peer-reviewed research, and published journalism - to document what has been built inside the institutions of a free society, and why most people missed it. The metadata laws that gave 80+ agencies access to your phone records without a warrant The digital identity system managed by a weapons manufacturer The pandemic that proved how much you will accept when frightened enough The parliament of landlords who cannot fix the housing crisis because they profit from it The most consequential decisions - war, alliances, nuclear infrastructure - made in secret and announced as done deals The cage is comfortable.
The bars went up while you were busy. The door is not yet locked. Written from abroad by an author who spent decades in Australia watching these changes accumulate - and who now sees them more clearly from a distance.
A military base in the desert quietly expanded to support nuclear war-fighting planning - without parliament's knowledge, and without yours. None of this required a conspiracy. It required something more mundane: a series of individually reasonable decisions, made by people with good intentions and conflicting interests, accumulating into a structure that no previous generation of Australians would have accepted if asked all at once.
THE COMFORTABLE CAGE draws entirely on public records - government databases, parliamentary registers, peer-reviewed research, and published journalism - to document what has been built inside the institutions of a free society, and why most people missed it. The metadata laws that gave 80+ agencies access to your phone records without a warrant The digital identity system managed by a weapons manufacturer The pandemic that proved how much you will accept when frightened enough The parliament of landlords who cannot fix the housing crisis because they profit from it The most consequential decisions - war, alliances, nuclear infrastructure - made in secret and announced as done deals The cage is comfortable.
The bars went up while you were busy. The door is not yet locked. Written from abroad by an author who spent decades in Australia watching these changes accumulate - and who now sees them more clearly from a distance.



