No 1 for 2025: I am ANTIFA

Trump tweet designating ANTIFA as terrorist organization.
Image: Screenshot from YouTube - video uploaded by The National Desk on Sept 17, 2025

Michael Taylor’s I am ANTIFA – published in September – takes out the Number 1 spot for our most widely read article for the year. The article was also republished locally by Independent Australia, Pearls and Irritations, and Antinuclear, as well as numerous American sites. Well done, Michael.

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.


Keep Independent Journalism Alive – Support The AIMN

Dear Reader,

Since 2013, The Australian Independent Media Network has been a fearless voice for truth, giving public interest journalists a platform to hold power to account. From expert analysis on national and global events to uncovering issues that matter to you, we’re here because of your support.

Running an independent site isn’t cheap, and rising costs mean we need you now more than ever. Your donation – big or small – keeps our servers humming, our writers digging, and our stories free for all.

Join our community of truth-seekers. Donate via PayPal or credit card via the button below, or bank transfer [BSB: 062500; A/c no: 10495969] and help us keep shining a light.

With gratitude, The AIMN Team

Donate Button

6 Comments

  1. Dear Michael, congratulations on being our Number One, in more ways than one. Thank you too, for founding AIMN and providing a safe place for writers and the twin freedoms of speech and thought.
    Thank you too, to Carol and the AIMN team. Am looking forward to working with you all in 2026 and sharing more journalistic adventures with our loyal readers as well.

  2. Fantastic piece !! How do we make sure this is taught in every school, in every playground, in every workplace where it might now have been read. Every migrant coming to our shores must be given a copy so that they know what kind of country our diggers fought for, what kind of people we are. Maybe we actually need to form ANTIFA – it would have MILLIONS of members, too many for even the most corrupt POTUS who has ever held the office to rail against.
    Happy New Year

  3. Brilliant piece, Michael. In every way. Agree with Keitha it should be on the syllabus. And with Tess. So fitting that you are numero uno. And thank you for rekindling the memory of my own father, John, BEM (Military) who joined the Royal Navy, the week war was declared and whose perspective was profoundly changed from a youthful idealism to an astute and informed scepticism as to who it was that really profited.

  4. Well done Michael,

    An excellent piece that had me recognizing that I too should refer to myself as ANTIFA as the need arises (which seems more and more often).

  5. Thank you Michael for giving the political abuse of the acronym such well-deserved short shrift.

    This must have been very hard to write. So little is known about the sufferings of returned servicemen because they were to a man silenced by what was unspeakable and cursed by a self-preserving instinct to stifle unbidden memories; then they departed this world, bequeathing new variants of emotional wounds and inexplicable variants of painful memories to their offspring to deal with and puzzle out. But your father could speak from a place of inviolate integrity, and it seems to me that somehow from this spark you are shedding light on the brutal facts before they are replaced by treacherous revisionism and the erasures of mythology, an heroic endeavour for which I for one am grateful.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*