White Dogs of Australia feat Lucy Valentine (Premium E304) Sample
Amid nation-wide Australian anti-immigration marches involving Neo-Nazis, a visiting Julian embarks on a foolish task: to play an unfunny prank on a notoriously annoying Australian twitter figure. Our guest is Lucy Valentine from the Boonta Vista podcast.
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Lucy Valentine: https://x.com/LucyXIV
The Boonta Vista Podcast: https://boontavista.com/
Check out C.O.F.F.I.N. - https://www.coffinband.com/
Liv Agar’s Stream: https://twitch.tv/livagar
Editing by Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe, and Jake Rockatansky. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (https://instagram.com/theyylivve / https://sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (https://pedrocorrea.com)
https://qaapodcast.com
QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast.
If you're hearing this, well done, you found a way to connect to the internet.
Welcome to the QAA Podcast Premium Episode 304, White Dogs of Australia.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rokotansky.
Liv Akar.
And Julian Field.
This week we've got a fantastic guest.
You've heard her on this podcast, you've heard her on Perverts.
She's one of the co-hosts of the Bunta Vista podcast.
It's Lucy Valentine.
Welcome to the pod, Lucy.
Hey, it's nice to be back.
It's been a while.
I figured, you know, if if we're gonna have an Australia episode, we need at least one Australian to not make it feel like we're doing it.
It would be offensive otherwise, yeah.
That's true.
I think it's illegal.
It would be illegal, actually.
Yeah.
Yeah, especially with me here, like the cops would be at my door.
Yeah, very quickly.
And they are very violent here.
They sure are.
I think you've been really settling into Australia, by the way.
I'm worried I've been kind of like awake in fronting you.
Like I've been the disgusting little Australian man that's like, drink, drink, drink.
Yeah.
Having the real Australian experience.
Yeah, I had never I had never done that before I came here.
Yeah.
I thought that all the cops in Australia had like eight legs and like they uh they hung out on the ceilings, like you haven't seen any of those, Julian?
Well, I've been caught in a few webs.
Yeah.
But all consensual.
Well, I suppose uh we might as well jump into the uh what the episode that I regret um taking upon myself and writing and every part of it.
And I'm I regret being here today to record it with you guys, so.
Wait in fright.
I was in some kind of fugue state, stranded on the 15th floor of a high rise in Brisbane, Australia, hiding out from a variety of ills, both personal and political.
Military fighter jets had been corralled over the city for several days now to threaten me.
The only thing keeping me alive was a steady diet of Dexies, black market cigarettes, beer, and some very fine coffee.
That and Brecki.
They're really quite good at Brecki.
The situation was dire.
It was just a few days from having to return to the United States, and the news coming out of that wretched hellhole had grown increasingly alarming, even by American standards.
A surreal video of some guy chipping off the word defense from a government building and replacing it with war.
Militarized police marching the streets, mass thugs thrown a badge by some of the most evil people on earth, proudly driving around residential neighborhoods looking for people to blackbag and deport.
The hallucinatory self-destruction of the West through their stubborn material support for Israel as they livestream a Holocaust.
And then there was the summary execution of a group of supposed drug-dealing gang members from Venezuela.
They're both disappearing in a ball of fire in the footage proudly released by the government.
We were swirling down the shitter at speeds unseen.
And in the opposite direction.
Yes, exactly.
With seven days left to go in my little working vacation, I pondered just how lazy I'd become.
Sure, I got my QAA work done, but I was barely capable of that.
A great lassitude had come over me months, maybe even years prior, and it just didn't seem to want to dissipate.
I had to accomplish a single thing while I was here.
Something to hang my hat on and say, see, I exist.
But the only thing I'd invested proper time in was an ill-advised endeavor I hesitate to even call a prank.
It was more like a Russian nesting doll of terrible decisions, each one trapping me in the next, each one bringing me physically closer to a man called Drew Pavlou.
I knew him due to his Twitter account, with about 175,000 followers, which had become a running joke among me and a couple of friends due to how annoying and morally repugnant it was.
But this episode is not about him.
It's about Australia, a country like many others in the perceived West that has been absolutely shitting its pants about white people being replaced by non-white people.
If anything, Drew Pavlou was an irritating creature of the awful moment.
This was larger than whatever psychosexual derangements had pushed him to post the way he did about deportation and non-white immigrants like a dog baying for blood.
But before we get to dark abundance, me driving to the University of Queensland to meet Drew Pavlou, and the excellent Australian punk band Coffin, we need to talk about March for Australia.
a set of protests held in all the major Australian cities on August 31st of this year, 2025.
Although most of the Australian media is owned by the evil billionaire Rupert Murdoch, there are still some outlets trying to do decent reporting.
Among them, a funny little paper called Crikey.
Now, we've actually spoken to a great reporter from Crikey before, Cam Wilson, but in in this case, I'm going to be relying on reporting by another Crikey journalist, Daniel Said.
He wrote an article about the amount of politicians who attended these rallies.
A number of Australian politicians joined neo-Nazis, conspiracy theorists, and other anti-immigration protesters on Sunday for the March for Australia.
Police estimate around 5,000 protesters as well as counter-protesters took to Melbourne streets for an event where well-known neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell spoke.
Sewell was described as a quote, right wing activist by Sky News in an interview in front of the Flinder Street Station and was wearing a Heli Hansen jacket sporting the brand's H logo.
A choice of attire shared by several of his comrades.
So that, of course, for for the unversed is Heil Hitler.
Yeah, it's not Hulk Hogan, to tell you that.
Yeah, and and calling him a right wing activist is very funny.
That is very funny.
Yeah, his party is straight, like straight up like absolutely Nazi.
Yeah, openly.
Meanwhile, around 8,000 people were estimated to have turned out in Sydney.
While the exact role of any neo-Nazis or related groups in the planning of the marches is unclear.
What is clear is that several of them spoke at the Melbourne rally while white nationalists were responsible for at least some of the logistical support.
A number of notable federal and state politicians attended the marches in their respective cities, including independent MP Bob Cater in Townsville, and One Nation Senators Pauline Hansen and Malcolm Roberts in Canberra.
Several other local and state-level politicians and political aspirants also attended, including two Libertarian Party representatives, New South Wales state member John Ruddick, and Sydney Councillor Steve Christou.
Lee Hanson, Pauline's daughter, spoke at the march in Hobart.
Now, I realize this is a long list of names that might be unfamiliar for anybody in our audience who is not Australian, so I'd like to focus a bit on a father-son duo, which Said writes about in the article.
Cater Sr. and Jr., as well as two other Cater Australian Party politicians were photographed at the Townsville rally with a man believed to be a neo-Nazi.
Both Catermen made use of a megaphone adorned with Nordic style runes associated with the Schutzstaffel, the Nazi paramilitary organization.
Yeah, so the little SS, those little SS lightning bolts.
They taped it onto the megaphone, or they had a sticker, maybe.
Yeah, it was on the megaphone, and so, you know, they're like, well, well, I don't know.
This was the mic that was there.
Right wing, we are right wing activists.
Yeah, this was this was what we had, man.
I don't know what to tell you.
I searched megaphone on Amazon, and it was the first one that came up.
It was Amazon's first choice.
There was a person there with a speakerphone, which we used because we didn't have one ourselves.
So that's about the extent of the relationship.
Robbie Catter told the ABC.
Just borrowed the SS microphone.
This is insane.
Yeah, they rock.
It's like, you didn't see that on the side.
Like m most people would take that, be like, oh, I shouldn't.
You know what, man, I'm I'm gonna find a better, I'm gonna find a different microphone.
Yeah.
Yeah, it sounds like you're like, looks like you're holding like the main bit of the microphone manually, so people can't see the SS.
All I can do is sort of state indifference to it because any perceived association was done through ignorance, and we felt it was important that we were there and had some control over the rally.
So Bob Catter, if you talk to any Australian, is a colorful and complex figure in Australian politics.
Some positive aspects include his involvement in promoting labor unions and his focus on community.
Negatives include an insane drift into racism and anti-immigration uh obsessions.
Whenever I spoke to Australians about Catter, they brought up this incredible clip about same-sex marriage uh that was recorded in 2018.
Yeah, people are entitled to the sexual proclivities.
Yeah.
I mean, let there be a thousand blossoms bloom, as far as I'm concerned.
Yeah, but I ain't spending any time on it.
Because in the meantime, every three months, I personally store the places by crocodile in North Queensland.
I love that you could really see him change gears like mid-sentence when he was like, he was like, Oh, I fucking kills it, but I'm not really going to spend any more toon talking about it.
It's beautiful that an Australian almost went an entire sentence without thinking about dangerous wildlife.
Yeah.
You've been listening to a sample of a premium episode of the QAA podcast.
For access to the full episode, as well as all past premium episodes and all of our podcast miniseries, go to patreon.com slash QAA.
Travis, why is that such a good deal?
Well, Jake, you get hundreds of additional episodes of the QAA podcast for just five dollars per month.
For that very low price, you get access to over 200 premium episodes, plus all of our mini-series.
That includes 10 episodes of ManClan with Julian and Annie, 10 episodes of Perverse with Julian Liv, 10 episodes of the Spectral Voyager with Jake and Brad, plus 20 episodes of Trickle Down with me, Travis View.
It's a bounty of content and the best deal in podcasting.
Travis, for once I agree with you.
And I also agree that people could subscribe by going to patreon.com slash QAA.
Well that's not an opinion, it's a fact.
You're so right, Jake.
We love and appreciate all of our listeners.
Yes, we do.
And Travis is actually crying right now, I think, out of gratitude, maybe?