Open Spaces, Deep Fault Lines Exposed
The Bondi Beach shooting and the attack at Brown University are no longer just tragedies to be mourned; they are warnings that demand serious, even uncomfortable, reflection. These incidents did not occur on battlefields or at hardened government targets. They unfolded in places defined by openness: a beachside celebration and a university exam hall - spaces meant to symbolise safety, normalcy, and shared civic life. Their significance lies not only in the number of casualties, but in what they reveal about how modern violence exploits routine, predictability, and complacency. At Bondi Beach, the attack took place during a Hanukkah gathering, turning a communal religious celebration into a scene of terror. Multiple people were killed, dozens injured, and even police officers were wounded in the chaos. One attacker was killed, another apprehended, and the incident was quickly framed by authorities as terrorism. This framing matters. It signals that the violence was not merely spon...