I am ANTIFA

Tweet labeling Antifa as terrorist organization.
Image: Screenshot from YouTube - video uploaded by The National Desk on Sept 17, 2025

The Anti-Fascist I Was Raised to Be

I am ANTIFA. Or so says President Donald Trump, branding me and millions like me as terrorists in the same breath he decries “fake news” and “radical left” bogeymen. It’s a label that stings not because it’s novel – God knows we’ve heard worse – but because it erases the very soil from which it springs. Let me tell you who I really am, before the algorithms and outrage machines bury the truth.

My father fought in World War II. He was one of the Diggers who stormed the beaches, dodged the shells, and stared down the abyss in places whose names still echo like ghosts: Tobruk, El Alamein, New Guinea. When the war spat him out, he landed in a Soldier Settlers camp on the dusty fringes of rural Australia – a patchwork of tin shacks and hopeful paddocks where broken men tried to stitch lives from the scraps of peace. Everybody’s father there had fought. The camp was a republic of the scarred: limps from shrapnel, coughs from gas, eyes that flickered away when thunder rolled like distant artillery.

Nobody talked about the war. Not really. The soldiers wore their deep wounds like second skins – visible to all, but spoken of in silences around the communal fire, or in the way a man’s hand trembled pouring tea. Their lives were irrevocably changed, folded and refolded like old maps no longer leading anywhere familiar. But they carried on. They planted crops in unforgiving soil, raised kids who knew the taste of damper bread and the sting of billy tea, and built a world where freedom wasn’t a slogan but a hard-won breath.

We’d eventually learn, piecing it together from half-heard stories and library books, that they weren’t just fighting other armies. They were battling ideals – the poison of fascism that choked Europe, Asia, and beyond. Ideals that promised order but delivered ovens and gulags, that crushed the human spirit under the boot of blind obedience. My father and the thousands around the world – Allies from every corner of the globe – were the antidote. They were anti-fascists, plain and simple. Not with hashtags or headlines, but with bayonets and bullets, with the sweat of reconstruction and the vigilance of survivors. And so were we, the children, schooled in the camp’s unspoken creed: Guard the light. Question the shadows. Forgive the man, but never the machine that marched him to madness.

As scarred as those soldiers were, something extraordinary happened in that camp. Former enemies – Germans, Italians, even Japanese migrants fleeing their own ruins – washed up on Australian shores, seeking the same fragile peace. Friendships formed over shared fences and shearing sheds. My father put it to me one evening, his voice gravel from years of unspoken grit: “Michael, I forgave the enemy the day the war ended. The ordinary bloke on the other side? He was just like me – sent to die for a lie. But not the government that shipped us off like cannon fodder. And never the belief that drove those governments to war. That’s the real enemy. That’s what we fought.”

That forgiveness wasn’t weakness; it was the ultimate defiance of fascism’s divide-and-conquer rot. It built bridges where bombs had fallen. It echoed the Nuremberg trials, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the quiet revolutions of decency that followed. Anti-fascism wasn’t a club or a costume – it was the air we breathed, the legacy etched into every settler’s callused hand.

Yet now, in 2025, President Trump tells me – and millions like me – that I belong to a terrorist organisation. ANTIFA, he calls it, a shadowy cabal of chaos when, in truth, it’s the ghost of that very fight: a refusal to let authoritarianism creep back in, disguised as populism or “America First.” As a result, I see good people – everyday folks with ‘settler blood in their veins’ – being abused on social media. Labeled “warmongering ANTIFA bastards” for daring to call out lies, for marching against wars and white nationalism, for remembering that fascism doesn’t die; it just rebrands.

I seem to have missed something. What changed? The weapons? No – the ideals are the same: the cult of the strongman, the demonisation of the “other,” the march toward unchecked power. The difference is the battlefield. It’s not Normandy or the Pacific; it’s Twitter feeds and town halls, where words are the new front lines. And the soldiers? We’re still here, the children of those camps, scarred by our own wars – of inequality, climate denial, eroded truths – but carrying on.

Trump’s slur isn’t just an insult; it’s an erasure. It paints the anti-fascist as the fascist, the defender as the destroyer. But history doesn’t bend that way. My father’s forgiveness teaches me to pity the man behind the microphone, twisted by his own government’s machine. Yet it also demands I fight the belief that fuels him – the one that whispers war is glory, division is strength, and truth is optional.

So yes, Mr. President, call me ANTIFA. I’ll wear it like my father’s medals: not for the shine, but for the weight. Because in the end, the real terrorists aren’t the ones who remember the war. They’re the ones who want to start another.

 

Also by Michael Taylor:

Criminalising an idea: the dangerous fiction of “ANTIFA, the organisation”

 

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About Michael Taylor 201 Articles
Michael is a retired Public Servant. His interests include Australian and US politics, history, travel, and Indigenous Australia. Michael holds a BA in Aboriginal Affairs Administration, a BA (Honours) in Aboriginal Studies, and a Diploma of Government.

11 Comments

  1. MICHAEL TAYLOR

    Dearest Michael, I salute you and thank you for writing this profoundly moving article that has brought me to tears; such extraordinary literary eloquence embracing the rawness of discarded and ignored truths. We all know you are an extraordinary and fearless editor who is also a courageous and fearless writer as well. I’ve learned so much from this article, about Australia too and I want to know so much more about these soldier settler camps and I hope you consider writing a book about them based on your own personal experiences and impact on your own life and family and indeed. on the founding of AIMN.

    In love and respect. xxx

  2. I hear that US TV stations are looking for late-night hosts who have no opinions, don’t tell jokes about conservatives, are climate change deniers, are prepared to wear silly red MAGA hats and are opposed to free speech – there have been a rush of applications from SKY after Dark ‘contributors’.

    Just what I hear !

  3. I would love to see social media posts, memes, explaining what fascists and fascism are in simple terms and easy to share. Maybe the ignorant might see that anti-fascism is a good thing.

    Maybe the algorithms could be gamed using the antifa tag.

  4. the survivors of concentration camps who set up their new lives in Israel are now part of the new fascism that has taken over their government. It beggars belief that these people watch as their government turns Gaza into a giant ghetto which they are now systematically erasing. The true patriots of the world are ALL ANTIFA, to be otherwise is a stain on the graves of our fathers and grandfathers.

  5. Keitha, it took me a while to realise that Nazism and Fascism are not aimed at a specific race or religion, they just use race, religion, difference etc as a way of justifying their greed for power and control.

    This has caused me to take a renewed look at the goodies and baddies of history, especially with Bibi and his cartel.

  6. There is a stubborn knot of psychotic nonsense from the USA, involving the Bible Belt and violence; these have some how “bred” with equally paranoid cultural views from Bibi and his strange friends.

    Behind it all, a change in the economy over a generation, induced by a budding oligarchy that has turned into a dominant and domineering one.

    Yes. One may well be “antifa”,
    but is it too late?. Certainly for the Gazans and any one above idiot level elsewhere..

  7. The bottom line here is if you do not like Chump you are a terrorist and must be cancelled. That is the Chumps little dictator playbook.

  8. Thank you Michael for this brilliantly written article.
    The detail is starkly visual. Perhaps it was so for me as I am the daughter of a WW11 returned soldier too. Nonetheless the story you tell, particularly of your fathers wisdom and forgiving heart, is very moving.

  9. Thanks Michael,

    We’re all wounded by the manic grasping men who push war, and cowering hateful flakes who manufacture lies for their own aggrandisement, such as T-Rump & his flunkies.

    America, from its start has a history of brutality & stupidity. Premised on greed & acquisition by any means, the quests of individuals so corrupted grew unrestrained to a collective reliance on mayhem, murder & coercion. It seems it is incapable of growth through forgiveness, so has now fully turned in on itself.

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