Jamie McIntyre to Sue ASIC, Fairfax Media, and the Australian Government for $250 Million Over Alleged Collusion and Character Assassination
JAKARTA, INDONESIA | November 2025 — Independent journalist, author, and Australian National Review founder Jamie McIntyre has confirmed plans to launch a $250 million legal action against the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), Fairfax Media, and elements of the Australian Government, alleging they colluded a decade ago to “destroy his reputation, businesses, and future income” in what he calls “one of the earliest examples of cancel culture driven by political and globalist interests.”
From Financial Educator to Political Target
McIntyre, who rose to prominence in the early 2000s through his bestselling book What I Didn’t Learn at School But Wish I Had, built a vast education, media, and investment network that at one stage was valued in the hundreds of millions.
He alleges that by 2015, after launching the Australian National Review and the 21st Century Australia political movement, he became a marked man.
“I was canceled for political reasons the moment I started building an independent media outlet that challenged establishment narratives and exposed the financial control systems run by global banking cartels,” McIntyre said. “They couldn’t risk a credible third-party movement gaining traction in Australia.”
The ASIC and Fairfax Campaign
According to McIntyre, ASIC and Fairfax Media conspired to label his financial education companies as fraudulent, freezing bank accounts and dismantling a network that had empowered tens of thousands of Australians.
He claims this campaign wiped out hundreds of millions in enterprise value and derailed his near-billion-dollar trajectory.
He argues the attacks were politically motivated and aligned with “the early rise of Israel-aligned cancel culture and censorship tactics” aimed at silencing independent critics of global finance, vaccination policy, and centralized government control.
Building Again Abroad
After leaving Australia, McIntyre rebuilt his career through international property ventures—most notably acquiring 100 percent ownership of Marina Bay City Lombok, a multi-billion-dollar master-planned development in Indonesia.
He also founded Lux Projects Bali, which has expanded across Southeast Asia with luxury villas and resort developments.
“They tried to destroy me, yet I’ve rebuilt bigger and stronger offshore,” he said. “The same regulators that attacked me also tried to stop Australians from buying Bitcoin when it was just $75 USD—a move that cost countless Australians fortunes.”
Political and Ideological Battle Lines
McIntyre maintains that his outspoken stance against what he calls the “woke, WEF-aligned one-world-government agenda” made him a target.
His 2015 book The Great Vaccine Con warned of a coming global vaccine mandate and alleged pharmaceutical-industry fraud years before the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I warned Australians they planned to mandate vaccines by 2022 to expand a $150 billion industry,” he said. “Now people know I was right.”
A Billionaire’s Comeback in Motion
Citing a verified record of clients collectively earning over $10 billion from his financial forecasts, McIntyre says the upcoming lawsuits are about “accountability, justice, and truth.”
He plans to file in Australia, seeking damages for defamation, malicious prosecution, and economic sabotage.
“They destroyed companies, seized assets, and tried to erase me,” he said. “But the evidence trail is clear—and I’m ready to expose it all.”











