Albanese Gets Booed Out of Mosque – Senator Babet Offers a Calmer Alternative
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese tried attending Eid al-Fitr prayers at Sydney’s Lakemba Mosque to mark the end of Ramadan, but the welcome quickly turned hostile. Protesters heckled him, booed loudly, shouted “get out,” branded him a “genocide supporter,” and forced a hasty exit through the back door over his government’s stance on Israel’s actions in Gaza.
The disruption unfolded in one of Australia’s largest mosques during a sacred service, highlighting the anger directed at Labor’s foreign policy.
The message lands hard. When politicians pander to one faith community and get shouted down for not being radical enough, perhaps it’s time to stop chasing votes in divisive settings and return to traditions that value order and decorum.
Australia deserves leaders who don’t need security details to flee religious gatherings. Babet’s sarcasm cuts through: if mosque visits end in chaos, maybe try a church next time – the hymns are quieter, and the congregation stays seated.
Many people think sleep is just about closing their eyes.
They’re wrong. Your bedroom, your posture, even the glow of your phone may be quietly wrecking your body and mood.
Some experts now say your nightly routine could be the hidden reason you wake up exhausted, anxious, or strangely numb.
We are not just “resting” at night; we are programming our bodies.
The way you fall asleep becomes a nightly message to your nervous system:
you are either safe and healing, or tense and on alert.
Harsh lighting, endless scrolling, and twisted, compressed postures keep your brain in survival mode, even while you sleep.
Over time, that can show up as persistent fatigue, unexplained aches, irritability, and a sense that your emotions are always slightly off-center.
Changing this doesn’t require a complete life overhaul. Dim the lights an hour before bed. Keep your phone out of arm’s reach.
Choose a posture that lets your spine feel long and your chest open, so your breathing can deepen
.These are small, almost invisible decisions.
But repeated every night, they quietly teach your body what it has been craving all along: a place where it is finally allowed to let go.

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