DOJ to file tax evasion cases vs Sarah and Curlee Discaya
Meanwhile, the DOJ dismisses three other tax-related complaints against the Discayas and their St. Gerrard Construction due to lack of evidence
UpScrolled: The New Social Media App For Haters and Antisemites
Key Takeaways: The new social media app UpScrolled has taken off over the past couple of weeks, vastly increasing its user base due to widespread discontent with more traditional social media platforms (like TikTok) and its claim to be free of censorship. The app has been developed and boosted by various anti-Israel activists, and it […]
Video showing US warships, troops in Subic Bay is AI-generated
Multiple US military assets were last seen in the vicinity of Subic Bay during the Multilateral Maritime Event of Balikatan Exercise 2025
The thriving ethics community of Bondi Beach
Evelyn Levisohn is an ethics volunteer at Bondi Beach – a teacher and team coordinator. She writes here about their thriving ethics community, who help children look beneath the surface and have come together in firm solidarity after the recent tragedy on their doorstep.
Beyond the surface: Surfers, sunshine, run clubs and speedos: these might be the first things you think of when you think of Bondi Beach. It’s a place often associated with the ‘surface’: the tans, the activewear, the perfectly poured Instagrammable matcha latte. [Though tragically, it is also now known for the terrible shootings that took place in December 2025. More on that later.]
Look a little further, past the tourists on the promenade, and you’ll find there is a community engaged in something much deeper. At Bondi Beach Public School, just across the road from the beach, we have a thriving ethics program that is teaching the next generation how to look beneath the surface and question the status quo.
I’ve been part of this organisation for six years now, teaching two classes a week and serving as the ethics coordinator. We currently run 11 classes every week, from Kindergarten to Year 6, powered by a dedicated team of nine volunteers.

Journey into the ethics classroom: My journey into the classroom actually started at my day job. I’m a Marketing Manager for Studiosity, a purpose-driven edtech company that believes in the power of education to change the world. Because they value social impact, my work is flexible enough to allow me to teach and coordinate each year. In fact, I first heard about Primary Ethics because my boss was a volunteer. Every Wednesday, she would come into the office and regale us with stories about how funny the kids were, how fascinating the topics were and how rewarding and challenging the role was.
It sounded incredible and I signed up to teach at Bondi Beach the year before my eldest son even started there. I still remember the nerves of that first day teaching Kindergarten. They were so sweet and charming, offering unselfconscious answers with brash honesty. But the moment that truly hooked me, the moment I felt that click of satisfaction, was when a child made a logical argument about a story that even I hadn’t considered. Watching a child learn to reason, think and find their own voice is incredibly gratifying.
Becoming a coordinator: Eventually, my passion for the program outweighed my fear of stepping into the team coordinator role. When our previous coordinator moved away, I realised I was too invested to let anyone else take the reins. I cared deeply about the program’s success, especially as we navigated the long road back from the COVID shutdowns. Our school was actually the last in the state to bring scripture and ethics back onsite, only resuming in 2023. During that break, I kept my skills sharp by doing relief teaching at other local schools. When we finally came back onsite, my mission was clear: I wanted to build back a sense of belonging and camaraderie within the team. I started ensuring we had termly coffee catch-ups and end-of-year dinners.

Depth and compassion: Today, we have a thriving team from all walks of life, parents and community members alike. Our catch-ups are no longer just an admin checkbox; they are filled with deep personal reflections and philosophical musings. We support each other, as does the whole Bondi Beach community who came together with steadfast compassion when the school had to close for a few days following the shootings, ensuring nobody was feeling alone and the kids had a sense of togetherness and normalcy.
In the darkest of times, our community shone in its solidarity.
Evelyn
The world beyond the beach: Despite recent events, Bondi will always have its sunshine and its tourists, but what happens inside our classrooms is what prepares these kids for the world beyond the beach. Considering what our community has been through, and in an era of AI and global upheaval, these lessons in critical thinking and logical reasoning are what will truly help our children navigate the changing world. We aren’t teaching them to follow a specific set of beliefs; we’re teaching them to think for themselves. And there is nothing more important than that.

The post The thriving ethics community of Bondi Beach first appeared on Primary Ethics.
[Vantage Point] SEC vs the Villar empire: Too orderly to be innocent?
The SEC is not asking the courts to imagine a conspiracy, but to recognize a pattern so orderly, so beneficial, and so internally consistent that innocence would require a level of coincidence the capital markets simply do not produce








It takes a village.
![[Vantage Point] SEC vs the Villar empire: Too orderly to be innocent? [Vantage Point] SEC vs the Villar empire: Too orderly to be innocent?](https://i0.wp.com/www.rappler.com/tachyon/2025/06/SEC-Chair-Lim-turnover-5.jpg?fit=449%2C449&ssl=1)
![[Vantage Point] SEC vs the Villar empire: Too orderly to be innocent? [Vantage Point] SEC vs the Villar empire: Too orderly to be innocent?](https://i1.wp.com/www.rappler.com/tachyon/2025/06/SEC-Chair-Lim-turnover-5.jpg?fit=449,449&w=768&resize=768,0&ssl=1)










