Loading Experts say the comments represent an escalation in rhetoric from the far-right after the mosque attacks that left 50 dead. "They’re threatening to take violent action unless unreasonable conditions are met - that’s very, very worrying," Deakin University terrorism researcher Greg Barton said. The Lads Society was founded by several former members of the United Patriots Front in late 2017, setting up club houses in Sydney and Melbourne. The all-male group came to attention last year over fight club nights held in the club houses as well as an attempt by some members to branch stack the NSW Young Nationals.

The Herald contacted Mr Sewell to respond to comments he and Lads Society supporters made on Facebook about Tarrant on the day of the Christchurch attack. Mr Sewell, 26, had written "this was not a false flag ... take my word for it" and that Tarrant "had been in the scene for a while", according to screenshots obtained by the monitoring group White Rose Society. Mr Sewell told the Herald people in his scene had known of Tarrant online for at least three years. Although they never met, Melbourne-based Mr Sewell said Tarrant had multiple Facebook accounts and he approached him online to ask about possible Lads Society membership. "The specific correspondence I had with him was that he didn’t want to be a member," Mr Sewell said. Tarrant was about to go to New Zealand. But Mr Sewell also said he inferred from Tarrant’s comments at the time, not just the subsequent attack, that he "didn’t believe there was a peaceful solution to European people being genocided". The far-right use the inflammatory term genocide to describe their obsession with the idea that non-white immigration will lead to white people becoming a minority in Western nations.

Loading Mr Sewell said he did not wish harm on any minorities but that he would see violence as an option "if the state continues its persecution of our people for wanting to preserve their culture and heritage" or if his members were arrested. "The difference between my organisation, myself and him [Tarrant], is simply that we believe, certainly at this stage, that there is a peaceful solution for us to create the society we want to live in," Mr Sewell said. "We want a peaceful alternative, we want to be treated with respect, we want to be left alone. If we are not given that opportunity, well, time will tell. I'm not going to give you any explicit threat but it's pretty f--king obvious what's going to happen." Mr Sewell said "we’re all gravy at the moment" because police were leaving his group alone but that people were "making the world burn, and they have names and addresses."

ANU researcher Jacinta Carroll said while the Lads Society had an extremely small number of supporters, the language used by Mr Sewell indicated a possible shift from extremism towards support for illegal actions, including politically-motivated violence. "The language used in this interview suggests a simplistic, black and white view of the world based around what this group would seek in an ideal future," Ms Carroll said. Head of ASIO Duncan Lewis told a Senate estimates hearing last month that right-wing extremists represented a significant threat that had become "better organised" in recent years. Mr Lewis said the agency had monitored the threat for decades and in the aftermath of Christchurch "there's no early evidence to me that there will be some dramatic reset around this." Professor of Law at UNSW Luke McNamara said Mr Sewell’s comments would likely not amount to crimes or unlawful speech, partly because they did not identify a target.