Lonely Deaths in Australia
Dateline: 4 July 2026
By Paul Donley
Tens of thousands of Australians will die alone over the next decade or so as their life expectancy expires. These elderly and disabled people will be too frightened to venture out of their homes to seek help. Most, male and female, will trace their lonely misery back to one man: Rob Hulls.
To many of this generation, Rob Hulls is just a name from the past.
In a recent interview, Mr Hulls replied to a question about his time as Attorney-General of Victoria: “You have to understand the politics of the time. Our job was to stay elected.”
“We governed with a ‘Keep them all happy, and hands-off’ style,” Hulls said. “Oh, and thanks for the paychecks!”
Because of cost of living increases, Mr Hulls receives over $275,000 a year, free medical insurance, and a generous superannuation payout. The general failure of the superannuation funds to secure a healthy retirement makes these payouts particularly grievous and sensitive to many elderly Australians.
Rob Hulls was a ‘political hack’ – in the language of the times. When he removed from the Gaming Commission, allegedly only minutes ahead of a federal inquiry, Steve Bracks made Hulls Attorney-General for the state of Victoria.
Hulls continued his unethical attempts to secure voting blocks for Steve Bracks. An infamous effort to appoint a biased, radical-feminist magistracy and court infrastructure in Victoria has become notorious.
Everyone in Australia, of any age, will recognize the results: the Mexican Divorce.
Victoria is still jokingly referred to as ‘Mexico’ because of it’s ‘down South’ from most of the continent.
Hulls’ court appointees defied the national trend towards 50:50 parenting, which has reduced divorce rates and litigation costs for every other part of Australia. 50:50 parenting has been credited with many other benefits.
50:50 parenting lowered the rate of social anxiety and depression – in every state but Victoria, where the numbers have skyrocketed. Social anxiety and depression has been shown to be a large part of the reason there were 5 male suicides for every female suicide. (In Victoria, the rate has been estimated at nearly 7 male suicides for every female suicide.)
In addition, lower rates of social anxiety and depression – nicknamed “the Fathers’ disease” – have resulted in increased productivity, a general sense of well-being, and even lower crime rates amongst youth and young adults.
None of these benefits have been shared by Victorians, according to recent studies. The disparate results have been cited as ‘proof of concept’ arguments for 50:50 parenting.
Social anxiety and depression, “the Fathers’ disease”, has been reported to cost Australia over $100 billion a year in lost productivity. It affects approximately 10% of the overall population, and has been estimated to affect nearly one in five Victorians, men and women.
The dominance of youth gangs in Melbourne and regional Victoria is the reason most elderly and disabled people will not venture from their homes.
Youth gangs were once a problem only in Sydney and some parts of the Gold Coast. In fact, at one time police refused to admit they existed at all in Sydney. The gangs moved south to Melbourne, where they found a fruitful combination of fatherless young people and an increasingly arrogant and corrupt magistracy.
The violence of these youth gangs has been compared to the ‘ultra-violence’ of Stanley Kubrick’s prophetic movie, “A Clockwork Orange.”
The early 21st century is recognized as an example of party politics placed above the general welfare. Another of Bracks’ appointees, Tim Holding, administered a stunningly corrupt police structure that repeatedly failed to protect its own sensitive information. Despite repeated reports and investigations, both internal and in the press, Police Commissioner Holding ignored the dangers of exposing private information until members of his own family were killed in a terrorist attack.
Although many large public works projects were initiated by the Bracks’ administration, the long-term failings of their administration has been a national disgrace. Most of the grandiose public works projects were finished at more than twice the projected costs. Over time, much of the increased cost has been attributed to the embedded corruption of the administration.
But more than anything else, the activist courts created by Rob Hulls has been blamed for Victoria’s decline and abasement.
Hulls attempted to appease an radical minority of the feminist movement that has come to be called ‘Victim Feminists.’ This radical minority gained access to a number of professional media and academic positions during this time, and with expansive government funding, produced a decades-long propaganda and disinformation campaign demonising men and fathers largely for their own professional and financial gain.
Hulls assumed these radical feminists could deliver the elusive womens’ vote to keep Mr Bracks in power. The results were a number of key appointments to the higher Victorian courts. These appointees gained control of the whole of the Victorian court system and supporting bureaucracy.
These appointees and courts were found to have ignored the law repeatedly.
From the writings at the time, it can be seen that was the goal of the appointments, to “rewrite” the laws by abuse of magisterial and judicial discretion.
The continuing expositions of corrupt and illegitimate actions by magistrates and police were often involved in cover-ups – usually orchestrated or involving Rob Hulls’ appointees. Hulls’ appointees found by every means possible to stay in power, sometimes despite active investigations and even indictments.
Rob Hulls has been compared to John Mitchell, Richard Nixon’s Attorney-General from the infamous Watergate scandal.
Tens of thousands of men lost their homes, property, income and families. Children were forced into a dysfunctional and disassociating system. Women were forced into situations where they could barely manage a home and children; forced to abandon opportunities for education and promotion.
The children of these broken homes had no reason to have faith in either parent, or society. The attitude towards the police and justice system in Victoria is appalling amongst young people in Victoria.
Neither adults nor children have any faith in the law or the legal system. Many cite their experiences in Family Courts as the reason in study after study.
The lack of faith in the law, police, and courts has produced alarming rates of social anxiety and depression across Victoria.
The lack of faith, if not outright disgust, in the legal system has produced fertile ground in Victoria for gangs. Young people seek out the gang structure to provide a sense of security most of all.
All of these factors are traced back to Mr Hulls’ opportunistic and mercenary appointments and poor administration.
(This article is, of course, spoofed. Note the date is 20 years from now, on American Independence Day.)
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