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As Australia prepares to vote in the 2025 Federal election, a hometown acquaintance is now grappling with the fact that maybe his number one political concern has become not just irrelevant, but outright unfashionable.

Kayde Sadler (40) has not yet forgiven the government for making him get vaccinated against COVID-19 to keep his job as an orderly in the aged care wing of the Betoota Base Hospital in 2022.

“It was fascism” says Kayde, as he begins rolling out the talking points of the anti-vaxxer community.

As a voter who’s political enlightenment came in his mid-30s, Kayde isn’t that interested in the party politics that seem to dominate the news cycle.

In his mind, both the major parties are as bad as each other, and the mainstream media that supports them should be prosecuted for war crimes.

He’s not sure which party Scott Morrison belonged to, but he vows to teach him a lesson by voting for anyone but Prime Minister Albanese at the 2025 Election.

As he points out, the hastily made vaccines that Australians demanded be made hastily at the start of the pandemic, were not bound to the same checks and balances as every other immunisation shot. He thinks the government’s decision to descend into biomedical fascism has played a big role in his male pattern baldness.

And no, he doesn’t think the cost-of-living crisis is the number one issue for most Australians this election. He’s certain that millions of voters have the same axe to grind as he does.

“Just you wait” he says.

“People haven’t forgotten what they made us do”

“There’s a big class action coming. Albanese could go to prison for this”

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