20 February 2026

Canberra bar shutdown shows anti-hate laws are flawed

| By Ian Bushnell
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Dissent Café and Bar’s front window displaying the offending posters. Photo: Dissent Café and Bar.

We should thank the anonymous complainant who was offended by posters featuring a group of world leaders and a tech baron, depicted in German World War II uniforms, that adorned the front of a city bar.

It shows how absurd and dangerous the new anti-hate laws are, and how they could be used to stifle artistic expression and dissent, appropriately, the name of the City Walk bar, which became a crime scene on Wednesday night (18 February).

The artworks are nothing new, nor is the idea, but they make a point – whether you agree with it or not isn’t the issue.

The targets were a rogues gallery – Donald Trump, JD Vance, Benjamin Netanyahu, Vladimir Putin and Elon Musk. They all have plenty of form to attract this kind of attention, and you could add a few more to the list.

READ ALSO Satirical art prize taking aim at the rich, powerful and those in-between names 2026 winner

But just who was offended?

Was it a MAGA American? A Russian embassy official sticking up for the boss? A SpaceX admirer, angered that the great man was being made fun of?

My bet is it was the irony of an Israeli Prime Minister in a Nazi uniform that did it. It wouldn’t be the first time that Israel’s actions had been suggested to be similar to those of the regime that tried to exterminate the Jewish people.

And Mr Netanyahu is the subject of an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes in Gaza.

He also has plenty of critics within the Jewish community and in Israel itself, where a corruption cloud still hangs over him. Being anti-Netanyahu should not be conflated with being antisemitic.

But it could have been just the sight of the Nazi insignia that sent the complainant off to the police.

Dissent on Thursday with posters adorned with “censored”. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

This heavy-handed police action – three uniformed officers and two detectives – not only confiscated the artworks but declared a crime scene and closed down the venue where a band was preparing to play.

Punters had paid for tickets, and the bar owner lost a night’s takings.

This was based on one anonymous complaint and police suspicions that the posters were illegal. They admit their legality was unknown, revealing that the law is too complicated or unclear for them to understand.

Yet there they were, doing exactly the kind of thing that the posters in their own unsubtle way were making a point about.

The police action was carried out under the Commonwealth’s Combating Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism (Criminal and Migration Laws) Act 2026, passed in a hurry last month after the Bondi Beach attack.

The laws expand offences relating to prohibited hate symbols, allow police to seize items displayed in public and increase penalties for hate crimes.

Under the legislation, it is an offence to publicly display a prohibited symbol. A police officer may seize an item “if the thing is, depicts or contains a prohibited symbol that is displayed in a public place”.

There are exemptions for “religious, academic, educational, artistic, literary, scientific or journalistic” purposes.

ACT law also makes it an offence to publicly display a Nazi symbol, but there is an exception if the symbol is displayed in opposition to fascism or Nazism.

That means that the police had plenty of discretion, but so sensitive has the issue become that they obviously took the more zealous approach.

Unfortunately, it shows how such legislation can be a slippery slope, giving the state the power to intimidate its citizens and deny their artistic and political freedoms.

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This week, the winner of the satirical art prize, the Bald Archy, now an institution, was announced. It is a competition in which our political leaders and the rich and powerful are often the targets.

Winner Mark Davis said Australia’s democracy gave us “the privilege of both electing and critiquing our leaders, including through humour.”

This episode is a warning that satire may not be as safe in this country as once thought.

But were the laws intended to capture this kind of behaviour and waste police resources on a peaceful evening in the city?

I doubt it.

The bar owner wants his day in court. If common sense prevails, the police will retreat.

But the Albanese Government will need to take another look at the legislation to ensure it does what it is intended to do and does not trample on people’s rights, or waste police time and resources.

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Recently, Grace Tame raised a lot of heat and calls for her to be stripped from her Australian of the Year award, for chanting (using a loud speaker) “Globalise the Infantia” at protest rally.

I think most Australians would agree that her actions were provocative.

The signs and pictures in this nightclub are a step down from Tame’s actions, in my opinion, however to claim “satire” is stretching it a bit. They are political.

A few years ago “satire” was also claimed for pictures of ex-Duty PM Michael McCormack, also wearing a Nazi uniform.

I think we have all seen images of Albanese and others, wearing a bikini on social media. “Hate” or “Satire” or “Hilarious”? But to who?

I’m not sure where the line is between “hate speech”, “political protest”, “satire” and old fashioned “poor taste”? Is it the Nazi uniform? Is everything fair game, without that uniform?

I find this type of political protest, satire or whatever you call it to be in very poor taste.

The irony in seeing the political opportunists suddenly acting shocked to see the very laws they called for being used is hilarious.

Unfortunately many are exemplifying their goldfish like memories around what their actual stated positions were in the last few months.

But consistency and principled positions were never a strong point.

This event is a perfect example of how scary these new laws that were rushed through parliament actually are. What sets the limit? At what point would displaying a satirical picture of the sitting Australian prime minister in a Nazi or Soviet uniform be considered a criminal offense?

So you can display uniforms & insignia of groups that committed genocide and/or murdered millions ie Turkish military, Khmer Rouge, KGB, Chinese Communists & Revolutionary Guards but show a Nazi insignia & you are in trouble.

All makes complete sense.

Life can be very unfair sometimes franky. And it’s all happening here in the socialist republic of Canberra under chairmen Anthony and Andrew.

Perhaps you should vote for the Coalition next time, at least they pushed back on Albo’s legislation and forced changed.

You shouldn’t assume that I didn’t vote for the coalition. I haven’t voted Labor for a long long time.
The Nationals were the only major party to do the honourable thing & vote against laws.

Yes franky assumptions can be dangerous. But where would you draw the line on this issue ? I think that we can all agree that lampooning Trump in the way that the dissenting Dissent owner did was well inside the boundary lines. But there is a list of prohibited symbols that came with the legislation and the nazi insignia is clearly defined on the list. Fyi there’s about a dozen IRGC symbols also on the banned list.

Perhaps every wannabe young protester should receive formal training about what’s on the list, lest they get themselves shut down or arrested.

Btw is there any update to the Dissent status ? Has the place reopened ? One suspects it will fast become a Mecca for dissidents of all varieties once it reopens, proudly demonstrating their activist credentials and getting selfies taken next to those barbarian capitalists Trump and Musk.

But if it’s outrage you’re still feeling spare a thought for some of us – I’m outraged that Tony Abbott didn’t get a gig.

The irony is that a bar for sanctimonious lefties and serial offendees of various persuasions and myriad trendy causes gets shut down using the laws they supposed would only be used against their own class enemies. Haha. Of couse the posters were just typical undergraduate level examples of political satire, often seen on uni walls, depicting easy targets as fascist brutes, inoffensive messages to the tolerant majority, but now our gendarmes have to act because of how these laws can be misinterpreted and manipulated. But imagine the outrage if those depicted in Nazi uniforms had been cherished heros of the Left. Obama or a Greens or your own cherished icon of virtue wearing a swastika? Perhaps that arty statement could by interpreted as a warning against overly zeolous crackdowns from either side of politics limiting our freedom of speech, crushing even mild dissent and thus promoting antagonism, if not hate. Oh what a rod we’ve made…

Missing the point (as usual) there Acton.
Its about the Nazi insignia not the person.
Doesn’t matter if its Obama, Trump or JC himself – stick Nazi symbols on them & you are in trouble.

I can’t recall Obama saying that the ex-Joint Chief of Staff or that Congressmen should be executed for disagreeing with him. If the insignia fits, Trump should be depicted wearing it.

Ian yes this does seem a little over the top, but let’s dispense with the laughable claim of “artwork”. Taking the p… out of Trump, Musk et al should never be verboten, though if a swas …. oops “Nazi insignia” …. was involved then the owner clearly has deliberately and provocatively stepped over the mark. Maybe just remove the insignia.

But let’s step back a bit …. isn’t this legislation the reason the Nationals and Liberals split in December ? After much lampooning about the split from another well respected journo here at the RiotAct, have we reached the point where perhaps the Nats had a very fair point when they decided not to support Albanese’s new laws ? Are the Nats now owed an apology ?

Perhaps the best course of action now is for the Dissent owner to remove the insignias and the bar to reopen – to all of its maybe three patrons – and a public apology issued to the Nationals for all they’ve copped for crossing the floor for principles that many on the left are now defending.

The irony in it all is delicious ! Perhaps I’ll order an Uber-delivered pizza from Dissent to celebrate.

“My bet is it was the irony of an Israeli Prime Minister in a Nazi uniform that did it.” Well yeah, the equivalent would be like portraying an Aboriginal Politician in a KKK robes (minus the hood). Could you imagine the outrage? But still, the images aren’t discriminating of a collective identity so much as a disagreement with a politician or other person of power. I think what happened is an over-reaction.

If and Aboriginal politician acted like the KKK they would deserve to be so depicted.

Well done to the reporter.

The left cant handle criticism and get violent when you show support for Trump or Elon.

The law is the law if we dont follow it where do we end up? Gaza?

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