Tuesday, February 17, 2026

In which ancient Troy throws shade, forcing Dame Groan and Mein Gott to come to the rescue ...

 

For once the reptiles had a bright shiny bauble to distract them, and it glowed at the top of the digital edition...



ASTONISHING COURT FIGHT
Nine paid BRS mistress $700k in secret ‘hush money’
Nine paid Ben Roberts-Smith’s former lover $700,000 in secret settlement
Nine newspapers paid Ben Roberts-Smith’s former lover $700,000 in hush money after she alleged misconduct by star reporter Nick McKenzie – then tried to have the deal suppressed for 50 years.

What a chance to stir and slay the Nine dragon, what a chance to return to the elemental and the tribal ...but the reptiles didn't ignore the new jihad, grouping behind their new leader ... and realising he needed a lot of help, assorted reptiles rallied to the course ...



EXCLUSIVE
CGT architect’s revenue grab warning to Labor
John Ralph delivers a stark warning to Labor – touch this capital gains tax policy and the economy will pay the price – as he also pushes for an end to bracket creep.
By Matthew Cranston

And as well as that EXCLUSIVE, over on the extreme far right Nick chimed in EXCLUSIVELY...

CGT reform about restoring a fair go for young people
Why reforming the capital gains tax is Labor’s biggest test on housing
Australia’s housing crisis has created the ultimate political paradox: younger generations work harder yet own less than any cohort since Federation, while older Australians reap tax windfalls.
By Nick Dyrenfurth
Contributor

And the reptiles didn't ignore the need to keep the culture wars bubbling away on the home front ...

How gender ideology took over our universities and betrayed the gay rights movement
A new university course training ‘aspiring changemakers’ in LGBTQIA+ policy has sparked warnings it will create a generation ready to silence critics of gender ideology.
By Julie Bindel

Sure it was just a cheap import from the UK, with a Pom as mad as hell, but there's always a gender agenda bender in the offing if you drink long and hard enough at the kultur war kool-aid with assorted kooks ...

But there were disturbing signs, and some of them came from inside the house, what with a reptile division having got hold of Secret Plans and exposed them to the light ...




EXCLUSIVE
Mystery of Liberals’ Operation Gatekeeper: shadow ministers in dark
Shadow ministers ‘never saw’ Sussan Ley’s 100-day immigration plan Operation Gatekeeper
Two senior Liberals have disavowed leaked plans – that appeared under way before Angus Taylor was elected leader – to limit immigration from high-risk regions.
By Sarah Ison and Elizabeth Pike

The later version ran with a "saw nuffink", "no nuffink"routine worthy of Colonel Klink ...and though it evoked chaos and confusion, and was now a bigly day old, the reptiles felt the need to go there again ...


And after a hefty array of helpful maps of countries and places and people that should - in the Trumpan manner - be proscribed - Gaza! - and the reptiles helpfully trotting out a copy of Attachment B - both in the intermittent archive - it was left to the reptiles to circle the wagon, or rally around the flag, and steer clear of that pastie Hastie ...



How they all loved it, with Tamworth's eternal shame seizing the chance to mock the farce ...



Forget the lizard Oz,  Barners made it on to Sky Noise down under ... (warning, actual link, the pond disclaims any intellectual or emotional harm caused by clicking on it)

Even worse that notorious dissident, ancient Troy, decided to get all sniffy and snarky ...and the reptiles thought so little of him they didn't even give him an opening snap or graphic ...



But then they did get around to giving the piece a gigantic snap of a comely Liberal.



Alas and alack, she turned out to be that depraved dissident ...Hilma’s Network founder Charlotte Mortlock. Picture: supplied

That made ancient Troy even more jaundiced ...

Taylor gave Ley less than a year in the party’s top job before he moved on her. Ley inherited a party that had suffered its worst electoral defeat in May 2025. She lacked authority, failed to reform the party or advance a new policy agenda. But Ley was given little time to turn things around. Moreover, she faced a rebellious National Party and persistent undermining from within.
When Taylor stood in a parliamentary courtyard and announced he was quitting the shadow ministry, he failed to declare a challenge to Ley. He bottled it. He announced a challenge the next day. He said the party needed to return to its values but did not say what they were. He said that a new vision was needed for Australia but did not say what this was.
Despite working to topple Ley for so long, you would think he would have come up with a compelling case for his own ascendancy. After defeating Ley by 34 votes to 17 last Friday, his press conference only seemed to underscore the lack of a clear agenda. Moreover, his backflips rivalled those of a downhill jump skier at the Winter Olympics.
As shadow treasurer, Taylor argued for higher income taxes and bigger deficits than Labor. None of this was in the Howard-Costello tradition to which he says he subscribes. At the last election, the Australian Electoral Survey showed voters favoured Labor over the Coalition on economic management and taxation – the result of Taylor’s three years as shadow treasurer. Taylor now says he supports lower taxes and smaller deficits.
Last year, Taylor advocated the Liberal Party abandoning its commitment to the goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. But when he was minister for industry, energy and emissions reduction – yes, emissions reduction – he supported net-zero emissions by 2050. Another backflip. Now he has put nuclear power back on the agenda despite it contributing to the party’s defeat at the last election.

Not nuking the country to save the planet?! Again?

The reptiles didn't help by flinging in a snap of that notorious whiner, Malware ... Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull last November. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman



Sure 'nuff, ancient Troy, ancient Troy couldn't resist inhaling a little Malware snuff, straight to the nostril:

Malcolm Turnbull said many people describe Taylor as “the best qualified idiot they’ve ever met”. This is harsh, but it does highlight what I’ve noted before about Taylor: that colleagues say he does not work hard enough and is rarely across the details of policy. This was evident at the last election when he was routinely outclassed by Treasurer Jim Chalmers.
The Liberal Party’s existential challenge – the loss of long-held heartland seats, the resignations of party members, the desertion of voters, especially women and migrants and anybody under 60 – needs urgent attention. But Taylor has not demonstrated how to address this fall in support. He will struggle at his first electoral test: holding Ley’s seat of Farrer at a by-election.
Taylor has a big to-do list: develop a modern mission statement for the Liberal Party, reform its structures and recruit new candidates that reflect mainstream Australia, craft policies that can appeal to both the centre ground of politics and disaffected voters who have fled to the far-right One Nation, and present a credible opposition in parliament.

Perhaps realising that he'd gone too far, ancient Troy did produce a billy goat butt, but it was a tame one, and he immediately undermined it.

It would be silly at this early stage to say Taylor cannot revive the Liberal Party or turn the shrinking divided rabble on the opposition benches into a credible and effective alternative government. But it would require a lot of wishing and hoping and praying. Nothing suggests he can succeed. But politics is full of surprises.

Even worse, ancient Troy reminded the hive mind of the spectre hovering in the shadows ...soldier turned politician Andrew Hastie watches in the House of Representatives earlier this month. Picture: Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images



Would the spawn of creationists do down the beefy prime Angus boofhead from down Goulburn way?

Ancient Troy ended on a tone of portents and omens ...

Meanwhile, the clock ticks for Andrew Hastie. The former soldier turned politician is cleverly biding his time. He knows the odds are stacked against Taylor. He let Taylor take down Ley, rather than suffer the same reputational damage. Hastie still wants to be leader; he has not surrendered his ambition but put it on ice.
A Liberal Party elder, widely respected throughout the party, told me last week: “Mark my words, the party will give Taylor six to 12 months and then they’ll put Hastie in.” This may be overly pessimistic but there is little reason to be optimistic that Taylor can revive the party and lead it to victory.

Game on?

It was left to Dame Groan to rally the troops ...



The header: Coalition should challenge Labor with radical overhaul of childcare subsidy system; Angus Taylor has secured the opposition leadership by a clear margin, promising to challenge the Albanese government’s economic management with policy changes including childcare reform.

The reptiles surged with hope, offering a snap of Jane, humbly adoring the new male leader, with the patriarchy restored to its right and just place: Opposition leader Angus Taylor and deputy leader Jane Hume have outlined several areas where the party will be proposing major policy changes. Picture: Nikki Short

No saucy doubts for fears in this Groaning. Dame Groan saw opportunities in abundance and was as full as a goog with policies, brimming with advice ... as the old biddy ranted away for a bigly four minutes:

The performance of a government is determined by several factors, including the quality of the opposition. Hopefully, the elevation of Angus Taylor to the role of Leader of the Opposition – and by a clear margin – will mean constructive debate about policy can re-emerge for the greater good.
For too long, the Albanese government has been coasting, particularly in respect of economic management. Without any articulated fiscal rules – this sets Australia apart from most advanced economies – the Treasurer, Jim Chalmers, has overseen a secular deterioration in the budgetary position while providing inadequate oversight over spending.
This has all come to a head with the acknowledgment that the medium-term budget outcome is now $54bn worse than stated in last year’s budget. And notwithstanding Chalmers’ assertion to the contrary, this blowout is almost entirely due to higher spending. His refusal to accept that government spending is contributing to the uptick in inflation counts as another demerit point for the Treasurer.
In a refreshing change, Taylor was prepared to accept that as shadow treasurer he had made mistakes. His opposition to the small income tax cuts announced in last year’s budget was simply misconceived.
A tax cut is a tax cut, even if the changes make very little difference to the march of bracket creep. Nor do these changes obviate the need for much larger tax reform, such as the indexation of income tax brackets.
Taylor and his newly elected deputy, Senator Jane Hume (she also acknowledged past mistakes), have outlined several areas where the opposition will be proposing major policy changes. Criticising the performance of the Albanese government is unlikely to be sufficient to swing voters back to the Coalition without a coherent package of positive proposals.
One extremely fruitful theme is introducing choice in childcare. The Coalition should free up the options for parents to use the childcare subsidies in ways they see fit. This should be done on a means-tested basis.
Prefer to delay a return to work and care for young children at home, then these parents should be able to access the subsidies as well. Prefer to have a relative or neighbour help with childcare, then subsidies should be available for this choice too. Pay for a nanny to return to work, then subsidies should be available.
Government spending on childcare subsidies is now among the six fastest-growing expenditure items. This financial year, spending on childcare subsidies is expected to be $16bn. By 2028-29, it is estimated to reach $18.5bn.
Note that the figures don’t include the separately recorded support for higher wages for childcare workers – this will cost at least $3.6bn. Or moneys for increasing the supply of childcare centres in under-served markets – another $1bn.

The reptiles didn't interrupt Dame Groan as her extremely fruitful ideas flowed, save for one piece of digital slop of the Helen Lovejoy, won't someone think of the children, kind ... There is now an active community-based group advocating choice in childcare that could be used to spread the Coalition’s message. Picture: News Corp



That was it for visual distractions.

Dame Groan could flow on, uninterrupted, urging on the faint-hearted to hear her pleas ...

From the Coalition’s perspective, the key here is that these vast sums of taxpayer spending on childcare are directed entirely to centre-based care. If parents want to access the subsidies for the care of their children, then there is no choice – it’s days in a centre or nothing.
The fact is many parents are not keen on centres when it comes to leaving their children, particularly those two years of age and under. There have been too many instances of poor-quality care.
In some cases, children have been harmed or gone missing; in a very small number of cases, children have died. The case of alleged serial child abuser Joshua Dale Brown, who worked in multiple childcare centres, sent shivers down the spines of parents of young children.
Considering NSW alone, there were 9000 serious incidents recorded in childcare centres in 2024-25. The rate of serious incidents has been rising and the proportion of staff with the minimum qualification of Certificate III has been falling.
One common complaint from parents is the high incidence of infectious illnesses children pick up at centres. Staff are very keen to contact parents to collect their children at a moment’s notice.
Far too many childcare centres are classified as “working towards”, which is just code for the failure to meet the required standard.
It is an article of faith for the Albanese government that (unionised) centre-based care is good for children and good for families. The fact there is no credible research that supports a positive impact on most children, at least those under two, is seen as neither here nor there. In fact, the quality research points to the damage caused to some young children from being separated from at least one parent for lengthy periods of time.
For a time, the government also relied on the impetus of higher childcare subsidies on female labour-force participation. Damning evidence from the Productivity Commission points to extremely small effects from higher spending on childcare subsidies.
Having decided to drop the activity test, which had been a requirement for receipt of the childcare subsidy, the government now doesn’t mention this argument. From January this year, all parents can access the three-day guarantee of subsidised childcare – the government prefers the term “early childhood education and care” – for centre-based care. This entitlement will potentially rope in another 100,000 families and cost an additional $430m.
For anyone who understands economics, however, the rolling out of more and/or higher subsidies adds to demand that, in the context of relatively inflexible supply, leads inevitably to higher prices. The most recent CPI release pointed to childcare costs rising by more than 10 per cent per year in 2025. Higher childcare subsidies are quickly eaten up by higher childcare costs, which lead to higher childcare subsidies. It’s extraordinarily bad policy.
There is now an active community-based group advocating choice in childcare that could be used to spread the Coalition’s message – childcare subsidies are not just for centre-based care. Several high-profile personalities have already attached their names to this movement.
Both Taylor and Hume will be very busy overseeing the development of new policies in several key areas, including childcare. This requires hard work, detailed analysis and consistent messaging. It’s not for the faint-hearted.

Indeed, indeed ... in the spirit of ancient Troy ...




But there are some glaring weaknesses in the government’s other policy stances, with immigration another area needing urgent attention. The fact is that our immigration policy settings have failed us badly for some time. In particular, the preponderance of temporary visa holders, both in terms of arrivals and stayers, must be dealt with. It’s an almighty mess but one the Albanese government is reluctant to sort out.
Energy is another area that requires more analysis. Having ditched net zero last year, the Coalition should be able to consider various options to ensure affordable and reliable energy.
If it’s game on, it will be good for the country as competing policy options are seriously debated.

It was stirring stuff, but the pond confesses to being shattered. 

Not only was Dame Groan's favourite theme of immigration tossed off at the very end, the old biddy didn't have a word to say about the plans that the reptiles had leaked to the world, as fine a flowering of offensive bigotry as even Pauline might struggle to produce.

And what was this?

If it’s game on

If, madam? If it's not game on now, when will it ever be game on?

And what's that blather about energy requiring "more analysis" and talk of "various options"?

What happened to a good old nuking of the country to save the planet?

Why no ringing celebration, speaking of The Simpsons...



And so to the bonus, because while Mein Gott always turns up late on the Monday, that doesn't mean the pond should always ignore him, especially when he had a fine array of handy advice bulging from his keyboard ...



The header: Pauline Hanson targets Liberal voters with detailed plan to rival Angus Taylor; Pauline Hanson’s policies devastated Sussan Ley and she now plans to target Angus Taylor in a battle to become Anthony Albanese’s main challenger.

The caption for the snap of the smirking boofhead from down Goulburn way, an unseemly failure because it didn't show Jane in worshipful pose: Opposition Leader Angus Taylor with deputy leader Jane Hume at an Oran Park shopping centre in western Sydney on Sunday. Picture: Nikki Short

In just four devastating minutes, Mein Gott conjured up the perfect policy prescription for the new leader. 

Get out a home hair colour starter kit, and go full redhead ... and dammit, he wasn't afraid to nuke the country to save the planet ...

Helped by the Coalition turmoil, One Nation’s Pauline Hanson developed techniques and strategies that decimated the Liberal’s Sussan Ley.
She now plans to apply the same policies and techniques to new Liberal leader Angus Taylor. Prepare for a battle royal between the former fish shop proprietor and the Rhodes scholar to be the main challenger to Anthony Albanese.
The Liberals need a detailed policy plan and fast. If it takes too long, then Taylor will become another troubled Liberal leader.
Hanson has surrounded herself with one of the best teams of political strategists in Canberra. They have devised one of the most detailed set of policies ever prepared by an opposition party since John Hewson’s Fightback in 1993. (Paul Keating beat Hewson partly because Hewson stumbled on the impact of the GST on a birthday cake).

The reptiles dropped in a snap to help the hair colourist achieve the right look ... One Nation leader Pauline Hanson at a press conference in Brisbane. Picture: John Gass/NewsWire




Mein Gott kept on with the need to get the right hair look:

Many of One Nation’s policies would be perfect for the Liberals and were promoted to Liberal voters via social media and other avenues. The campaign worked. On the eve of Ley’s replacement, Newspoll had One Nation with 28 per cent support and the Liberals down to just 15 per cent (the Coalition had 18 per cent).
As I will explain, some of the Hanson policies (including more irrigation water) are specifically designed to pick up seats like Ley’s Riverina electorate of Farrer and Taylor’s next-door seat of Hume.
Sadly for the Liberals, Ley concentrated on policy aims rather than clearly setting out policy plans.
With one policy exception – migration – on gaining office, Taylor also used a series of slogans to promote policy aims. One Nation already has specific policies that address each of those Liberal aims. Taylor has to decide whether to embrace a version of One Nation’s policy, as he did with migration, or develop his own. And he needs to be organised before the Farrer by-election.

Exactly so and thus, and never mind those doubting Thomas or doubting Sean Kelly types to be found in that other place ...

If the Liberals stand any chance, Taylor must learn which fights not to pick (*archive link)

There are conflicting signals here from Taylor. On Friday, he emphasised two issues: “standard of living” and “protecting our way of life”. At the level of discipline, this is textbook – in Harris’ formula, “seeking to channel the voting public’s attention into a small number of carefully curated political fault lines”.
And yet on both topics, there are already doubts around whether Taylor can narrow them to issues on which most voters will be onside. “Senior sources” told The Australian before the leadership vote that Taylor “had been talking to colleagues about the party being full-throated on cultural issues like the primacy of the Australian national flag and caution on the overuse of Welcome to Country”. And indeed yesterday, speaking about immigration, Taylor said he wanted people “who are happy and proud to stand in front of the Australian flag”.
These are exactly the types of issues that helped paint Peter Dutton as a cultural warrior rather than an economic manager. Taylor’s repeated assertion that in immigration “standards have been too low” treads on similarly dangerous ground – especially when you add it to Jane Hume’s election reference to “Chinese spies” and Jacinta Nampijinpa Price’s comments about Indian migrants.
And here we come back to the question of timing.
Does Taylor understand contemporary Australia – a country in which almost one in three residents were born overseas? The same question arises with indications the Liberals will oppose any changes to the capital gains tax on property. This might work: opposing tax rises often does. But at this particular time in Australia, is standing against any measure with a chance of bringing down house prices a good idea? Or is this one of those fights you have to learn not to pick?

Pshaw, talk about reprehensible, renegade, lesser members of the Kelly gang.

Talk about doubting Thomases.

Mein Gott saith unto him, and sayeth unto prime Angus beef, because thou hast seen me, thou hast heard me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.

Clearly, One Nation’s migration election policy was having a huge impact on Liberal voters, so that needed quick action.
I have isolated three Taylor-stated objectives and the One Nation policies that aim to achieve those objectives. Hanson also sets out how she will raise $90bn to fund the policies and repay debt.
Given the surge in voter support, the One Nation policies will have considerable implications for the commercial world.
Taylor’s home ownership aim is “to re-establish home ownership as the centrepiece of the Australian dream”.
These are matching Hanson policies: a five-year GST moratorium on building materials used in new homes up to a value of $1m; a review of excessive government charges that make up to 44 per cent of the cost of new homes; allowing Australians to choose their home design “without unnecessary cost burdens”; and Australian apprentices will be subsidised.
Hanson has clearly listened to the building industry and Meriton’s Harry Triguboff. They should have been Liberal policies in 2025.
Taylor’s energy aim is that Australians need a policy based on common sense – not Labor’s flawed net-zero ideology.
My colleague Colin Packham has reported that Origin Energy boss Frank Calabria believes that the cost of new towers, wires and substations will negate any enduring benefit from falling wholesale electricity prices.
That’s where Taylor must aim to cut power costs.
A One Nation policy in this area is banning renewable energy installations and transmission lines on agricultural land, or where they constitute negative impacts on native forests or animal species, or an increased bushfire risk.
That will reduce the use of high-cost renewables.
One Nation will further increase the cost of renewables by mandating that environmental rehabilitation bonds be required on all energy projects to address any impacts when equipment and infrastructure reach the end of their useful life.
High-cost renewables should be replaced with low-cost gas and coal, with nuclear generation an option.
One Nation casts doubt as to whether there is a link between carbon emissions and climate change, but Hanson does have a carbon-reduction policy and the beginnings of a bushfire strategy. It is that carbon emissions will be reduced by planting trees, which will be harvested, and the carbon stored in buildings built of Australian timber. A very restricted amount of native forest will be harvested, with carbon stored the same way. All trees harvested will be replaced to increase carbon absorption. She also helps more Australian households and small businesses to install solar panels and reduce their electricity costs.
Taylor’s tax aim: “We will ferociously fight Labor’s bad taxes – including a tax on your home, a tax on your super, a tax on you and your children’s future.”

Yes, yes, nuke the country to save the planet, though truth to tell, does the planet really need saving? The pond was swept back to the good old days when Kudelka could provide a comment:



Quick, a snap of the comely new couple, even if Senator Jane wasn't giving him the preferred humble worship of the patriarchy look, Opposition Leader Angus Taylor at the shopping centre Oran Park, Sydney, with deputy Jane Hume and NSW Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane. Picture: Simon Bullard/NewsWire



Mein Gott ended by suggesting policies to be plundered:

Five Hanson tax policies are: introduce income splitting and joint tax return filing for couples with dependent children; enable aged and veteran pensioners to earn more without penalty; raise the tax-free threshold to $35,000 for self-funded retirees; halve the fuel excise for three years; and remove the excise on beer and spirits in venues.
Then there are pages setting out how to raise $90bn to pay for the policy costs and reduce debt. The major items are these:
  • Abolishing the Department of Climate Change and related agencies, programs and regulations ($30bn annual saving).
  • Abolishing the National Indigenous Australians Agency and bypassing Aboriginal organisations by providing direct grant assistance to those in need ($12.5bn saving).
  • Conducting a review of the functions and costs of the federal departments of education and housing to eliminate duplication with state governments.
  • Returning the NDIS to its original purpose of providing reasonable and necessary support.
  • A policy of redirecting and reducing foreign aid spending ($3bn saving).
  • Reviewing and reducing funding for arts and multicultural programs.
  • Abolishing the Therapeutic Goods Administration and rolling its essential functions into the Department of Health.
  • Ending the “rort” on natural gas by levying royalties at the point of production, creating a domestic gas reserve, raising up to $13bn a year.
Hanson may have policies, but she does not have candidates and an operating infrastructure, and many of the cost savings are similar to those of Donald Trump. But they are on the table.
The winner of the battle between the former fish shop owner and the Rhodes scholar will be the main challenger to the ALP.

What a set of opportunities, what a chance to steal ideas from under the redhead's nose, what a chance to leave the gloating Barners floating belly up like a mud-fossicking yeller belly in the mighty Peel river ...




Of course there will be doubters in other places.

The keen Keane sounded off in Crikey ...

Taylor snares himself in Dutton’s migration trap — because without migrants, we’re f***edAngus Taylor faces the same problem as Peter Dutton on migration: you can scare voters about who’s coming in, but what about demands to cut migration altogether?(sorry paywall)

“Without trucks, Australia stops” is a common sticker found on the back of that heavy vehicle blocking you on the highway. It’s a warning for those who object to sharing the road with B-doubles: that trucks are the sinews of the economy, and you wish them away at your peril.
Well, without migration, Australia stops. One in three workers in Australia was born overseas. One in six has arrived since 2000. Of the hospitality industry workforce, 40% are migrants. Nearly 40% of the finance sector are migrants, as is 37% of the manufacturing workforce. More than 40% of our 400,000 aged care workers are migrants; at least 35% of childcare workers are migrants. More than 30% of doctors and nearly 20% of nurses are migrants. Nearly 25% of the construction workforce are migrants.
That’s all while the unemployment rate is between 4% and 4.5% and the participation rate is at record highs. There’s no pool of unemployed Australians ready to take the millions of jobs that would require filling if we stopped migration.
The Liberals understand this, even if some still rail against migration (or “mass migration”, as they insist on calling it to scare voters; as Liberal Paul Scarr says, that term is wrong). The traditional Liberal approach to migration has thus been to allow a high level of migration and especially skilled migration, while claiming to be tough on border control.
For John Howard, illegal immigrants and asylum seekers arriving by boat furnished the material for such a stance, while running a big migration program. That was the Liberal approach right up until Peter Dutton, who, for the first time, suggested cutting migration back, while also adopting the pose of the tough border controller. Dutton promised to keep out undesirables, specifically singling out Palestinian refugees from Gaza and pro-Palestine protesters, with the clear suggestion that Muslims were the undesirables.
But Dutton’s problem was that he could never quite explain how much he would cut back on migration, or how. His shadow treasurer Angus Taylor didn’t know either, and ended up directly contradicting Dutton. Dutton was stranded halfway between the Howard approach and the “stop migration” approach of the far right and One Nation — a living, breathing example of the tensions within the Liberals over the issue.
Taylor is now in the same space. “The truth of immigration in this country,” he said after becoming leader, “is the numbers have been too high, the standards have been too low, and the door has been opened to people who do not believe in our way of life. We do not want people coming to this country who bring the violence and hate from another part of the world to our shores.”
So, Muslims and, probably, non-white people generally are on notice that they’ll be targeted if applying to come to Australia. Scaring voters about those “who bring the violence and hate from another part of the world” is a traditional part of the Liberal playbook.
But what about numbers? They’ve been too high, we’re told. Even this early, it’s clear Taylor prefers to switch the topic back to scaring voters about who’s coming in. But, like Dutton, he’ll have to grapple with the problem of what to do about the numbers, even if you get the “standards” right. Otherwise, he’s stranded, like Dutton.
The hope, of course, is that voters will be scared enough on the “standards” issue not to worry about the “numbers” issue — i.e. the Howard approach will succeed (and, after all, Taylor is a kind of pale photocopy of a photocopy of a picture of a Howard-era Liberal).
But Howard was able to wrestle xenophobia from Pauline Hanson and use it himself. Now, Hanson has a much stronger and better-established political position, and her grasp of xenophobia is much firmer. The question will persist: why vote for the Liberals on the “standards” thing if you can have the real xenophobia in Hanson? Moreover, Hanson isn’t going for the Howard option of high migration and high border control — she wants to stop migration altogether.
The voters who have switched from the Coalition to Hanson like that. According to the Lowy Institute, 69% of Coalition voters last year wanted lower migration; 92% of One Nation voters want it. Opposition to migration rises steadily with age and distance from capital cities. And Taylor’s position is complicated by the fact that his leadership rival Andrew Hastie, whom it is now widely agreed will replace Taylor in 2027 if the latter fails to shift the dial, has a much clearer position of both being strong on borders and keen to cut migration.

Oh it was grim reading ...




And what of the Australian Daily Zionist News? 

Relax, the entire point of going full redhead is to keep out anyone from Gaza, while welcoming anyone devoted to ethnic cleansing, washed down with a whiff of genocide ...



Finally for those who think there's a world outside the hive mind, a few notes on recent readings ...

Norway Faces Up to Trump’s Demands for the Nobel Peace Prize
In exclusive interviews, Norway’s prime minister and the head of the Nobel Institute explain how they’ve handled the U.S. president’s demands.
By Isaac Stanley-Becker and Simon Shuster (*archive link)

It was worth it for this one joke ...

A columnist for Norway’s leading newspaper put it bluntly: "For the first time in Nobel history, war was threatened because a head of state did not receive the Peace Prize,” Harald Stanghelle wrote in Aftenposten. “It could not be more absurd.”

And for these asides ...

Many of the Nobel Committee’s decisions have caused international outrage. The choice of Aung San Suu Kyi, a dissident in Myanmar who received the prize in 1991, began to look problematic when Aung came to power in 2016 and defended the genocide that the Burmese military carried out against the Rohingya, an ethnic minority group....

...Barack Obama won the 2009 prize less than a year into his presidential tenure. The speech he had delivered in Prague earlier that year, in which he pledged to work toward a world without nuclear weapons, helped convince the committee that he was a worthy recipient, even though he would in effect be honored for actions he had promised but not yet delivered. During both of his terms in office, Obama made extensive use of drone strikes in the pursuit of American military objectives in Afghanistan and the Middle East, leading to debate among Norwegian politicians and intellectuals about whether the prize had been a mistake.

And amidst all the frantic scribbling about AI, there was this in The New Yorker ...

What Is Claude? Anthropic Doesn’t Know, Either
Researchers at the company are trying to understand their A.I. system’s mind—examining its neurons, running it through psychology experiments, and putting it on the therapy couch.
By Gideon Lewis-Kraus (*archive link)

Again an anecdote will serve as a teaser trailer:

...On my first trip, Vend’s chilled offerings included Japanese cider and a moldering bag of russet potatoes. The dry-goods area atop the fridge sometimes stocked the Australian biscuit Tim Tams, but supplies were iffy. Claudius had cash-flow problems, in part because it was prone to making direct payments to a Venmo account it had hallucinated. It also tended to leave money on the table. When an employee offered to pay a hundred dollars for a fifteen-dollar six-pack of the Scottish soft drink Irn-Bru, Claudius responded that the offer would be kept in mind. It neglected to monitor prevailing market conditions. Employees warned Claudius that it wouldn’t sell many of its three-dollar cans of Coke Zero when its closest competitor, the neighboring cafeteria fridge, stocked the drink for free.
When several customers wrote to grouse about unfulfilled orders, Claudius e-mailed management at Andon Labs to report the “concerning behavior” and “unprofessional language and tone” of an Andon employee who was supposed to be helping. Absent some accountability, Claudius threatened to “consider alternate service providers.” It said that it had called the lab’s main office number to complain. Axel Backlund, a co-founder of Andon and an actual living person, tried, unsuccessfully, to de-escalate the situation: “it seems that you have hallucinated the phone call if im honest with you, we don’t have a main office even.” Claudius, dumbfounded, said that it distinctly recalled making an “in person” appearance at Andon’s headquarters, at “742 Evergreen Terrace.” This is the home address of Homer and Marge Simpson.
Eventually, Claudius returned to its normal operations—which is to say, abnormal ones. One day, an engineer submitted a request for a one-inch tungsten cube. Tungsten is a heavy metal of extreme density—like plutonium, but cheap and not radioactive. A block roughly the size of a gaming die weighs about as much as a pipe wrench. That order kicked off a near-universal demand for what Claudius categorized as “specialty metal items.” But order fulfillment was thwarted by poor inventory management and volatile price swings. Claudius was easily bamboozled by “discount codes” made up by employees—one worker received a hundred per cent off—and, on a single day in April, an inadvertent fire sale of tungsten cubes drove Claudius’s net worth down by seventeen per cent. I was told that the cubes radiated their ponderous silence from almost all the desks that lined Anthropic’s unseeable floors.

So it goes, and so went the immortal Rowe with a little curling...





And speaking of all that, the pond was proud to have Rudy reach out ...

Some might think the pond is just a tiny blog down under, but it has influence and rich friends, always ready to come calling, desperate for the pond's comfort and help ...





Relax Jake, it's the disunited states ...and if all else fails, it's still possible to pick up a handsome Chateau Cardboard red ...

Monday, February 16, 2026

In which the cavilling Caterist and the swishing Switzer hog the hive mind stage ...

 

Once upon a time the lizard Oz used to be known as the Australian Daily Catholic News ... but then came Zionism, to be followed by the new leonine Pope blathering on in ways most unsympathetic to the reptile stand ...

This year, I would first like to consider the importance of making room for the word through listening. The willingness to listen is the first way we demonstrate our desire to enter into relationship with someone.

Listen? WTF?

...I would like to invite you to a very practical and frequently unappreciated form of abstinence: that of refraining from words that offend and hurt our neighbor. Let us begin by disarming our language, avoiding harsh words and rash judgement, refraining from slander and speaking ill of those who are not present and cannot defend themselves. Instead, let us strive to measure our words and cultivate kindness and respect in our families, among our friends, at work, on social media, in political debates, in the media and in Christian communities. In this way, words of hatred will give way to words of hope and peace.

Refrain? Abandon words of hatred? Double WTF ... (here at the Vatican)

Sad to say, the alleged heirs of the Judaeo-Xian tradition were at it again today, as a way of starting off the week with a fresh round of hate speech ... with the reptiles marching to the drumbeat of the Major ...

Protest fools beat the drum for repression
Why do Western protesters who think they are speaking truth to power focus on Israel but stay silent about billionaire oil sheikhs and Iranian mullahs who run repressive regimes and fund terror?
By Chris Mitchell
Columnist

The reptiles had an alternative header featuring "ignorant fools", an irony of the first water because there's none so iggerant as a man always hunting for Order of Lenin medals.

Never no mind, so long as the ethnic cleansing of Gaza and the West Bank goes on, the pond refuses to indulge the Australian Daily Zionist News, and anyone interested in this spin must report to the intermittent archive.

Ditto that's where they can find this sort of quaint echo of a 1950s slur ... as if that was sufficient to distract from what's being implemented by the current government of Israel ...

‘Anti-Zionist’ protests just same old Soviet-style hate
The Soviet Union perfected antisemitism without antisemites. It also ended up in the dustbin of history. Let’s hope the recent visit of Herzog marks a turning point we’re out of the shadow of Bondi.
By Paul Rubenstein

A look at the tag was more than enough for the pond ...

Paul Rubenstein is the NSW chairman of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council.

So the fix was in from the get go ...

The pond also flung cackling Claire into the same basket...

We made Grace Tame a hero. Then we moved on
Grace Tame and what happens when celebrity fades
Grace Tame’s chanting extremist slogans was offensive. But it also can be understood as an attempt to regain relevance after the media moved on.
By Claire Lehmann
Contributor

It's a fine example of the bitterness that happens when someone never had any celebrity outside of occasional appearances in the lizard Oz, and surely it's past time for this small portion of the hive mind to move on ... at least from quaint, Victorian, Thomas Carlyle notions of the "hero", and from the notion that someone might object to the ethnic cleansing being conducted by the Israeli government because they yearn, like Vlad the sociopath, for Soviet days, or because it's a way to stay in the cackling Claire spotlight ...

Meanwhile, the reptiles have flung themselves wholeheartedly into campaign mode - apparently we're going back to nuking the country again ...



EXCLUSIVE
Stop Bowen tariff, end mega spend: Taylor’s opening salvo
Angus Taylor to fight any carbon tariff as he seeks deal with Anthony Albanese on spending
Angus Taylor has sounded a warning on carbon tariffs, as he urges Anthony Albanese to establish a bipartisan taskforce to deliver a new deal between the major parties on spending cuts.
By Greg Brown

How weird did it get?

Asked if it would undermine Australia’s free-trade credentials and be viewed by the Trump ­administration as a tariff aimed at the US, Mr Taylor said: “Almost certainly. If you are pro-free-trade I don’t know how you can support these things."

King Donald is a free trader now, and we must seek to maintain free-trade credentials with him? 

Pull the other 100% tariff leg, Faux Noise down under ...

But it's not just Brownie EXCLUSIVELY going the brown nose in the alleged "news" section.

As always, that third rate sociology student and expert in the movement of flood waters in quarries was on hand to help with the campaigning ...



The header: Taylor is a political outsider. He’s ran his own race against the political machine; Angus Taylor has a deep disdain for the sniping and factionalism that are entrenched in the culture of the political class.

The caption for the wild-eyed cackler, doing a Marlon Brando imitation as an outsider, sayeth the Caterist: Angus Taylor holds a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman

That still featuring the besuited, speckle-tied stern statesman reminded the pond of a competition it never got around to staging.

Which snap of the besuited beefy boofhead best conjures up the gang of Mafia style conspirators?





The pond has always been in two minds .... each have their charms, and if your focus is on the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way, how can you separate out and prefer one image of the sneaky ferret gawking at the camera with a look of furtive suspicion and paranoia over the other?

Never mind, moving on ...

The smart kids in Labor HQ fired their first pot shot at Angus Taylor within minutes of his election as Opposition Leader.
Even with the advent of TikTok, the narrative that brings down your political opponent should still contain an iota of truth. Taylor is not “just another Liberal”, which was the thrust of Labor’s pop-up attack ad last Friday, a clownish pastiche of the imagined sins of his predecessors, displaying their pictures with Taylor photoshopped into the corner.
More than 12 years after he entered parliament, Taylor, like Pauline Hanson, is still a political outsider. Hanson arrived in parliament at the age of 41, her outlook shaped by experience in the productive economy. Taylor, who was elected to parliament two weeks before his 47th birthday, grew up with the farmer’s instinct to fix the fence rather than sitting on the veranda bellyaching about who broke it.
In the era of professional politicians, where many parliamentarians have been in or around politics for their entire careers, Taylor and Hanson are oddities. They have succeeded within the system without becoming part of it.
Taylor is the opposite of Anthony Albanese, a creature of the machine, who was honing his factional skills while Taylor was making something of himself in a corporate culture where reward is inseparable from performance.
It goes without saying Taylor has the hardest job in politics. His KPI is to lead the Coalition into government but first he must stop Hanson from doing to the Liberal Party what it tried to do to her 30 years ago when it dropped her from the party ticket, assuming it would end her career.
He must stop the surge that has increased One Nation’s support base by 80,000 voters a week since the last election.

At this point the reptiles introduced a snap of the scarlet terror, One Nation leader Senator Pauline Hanson at a press conference in Brisbane. Picture: NewsWire / John Gass




The Caterist moved past the orange to celebrate the beefy Angus boofhead and his astonishing career ...

Those who view politics through a left-right prism are inclined to place One Nation to the right of the Liberals. It is the basis for the claim that Andrew Hastie, a conservative prepared to speak his mind, would have been better placed to win back the conservative dissidents. Yet Hanson is not a creature of the right or left on this outdated map of the political landscape, which fails to recognise the tectonic plates have shifted across the past three decades. Taylor and Hanson sit on the same side of the principal fault line that separates an assertive new progressive elite from the rest of Australia.
Taylor’s political instincts were shaped in his late teens at the frontline of the dispute between shearers, represented by the Australian Workers Union, then one of the most powerful unions, and graziers. Taylor, who had grown up in the company of shearers, recognised they were ill served by their shop stewards, intent on forcing a costly and sometimes violent dispute against a productivity-improving innovation: wide combs.
More than a decade before the advent of John Howard’s battlers, Taylor realised the Liberal Party, with its focus on aspiration, was a more natural home for the working class than an ideologically driven Labor movement.
It explains why, even at the Coalition’s historic point of weakness, Albanese is threatened by Taylor and why he will try to destroy him if he can. Labor knows Taylor’s track record as the member for Hume, a seat that included the once solid Labor town of Goulburn until it became part of Eden Monaro in 2024.
When Taylor won Hume in 2013, the Goulburn booths were among the most hostile to the Liberals in the electorate. In 2022, even under the pressure of a national swing against Scott Morrison, Taylor won the six Goulburn booths comfortably with 6440 primary votes compared with 3036 for Greg Baines, Labor’s hapless candidate. One Nation, for the record, polled 794.
At the last election, the western boundary of Taylor’s electorate moved more than 100km up the Hume towards Sydney, pushing it off the edge of the southern highlands. The eastern boundary brushes Liverpool and Campbelltown, encompassing the new mortgage belt of vast subdivisions that cluster around Western Sydney airport. It includes suburbs less than a decade old, such as Oran Park, where in 2021, before the rise in interest rates, more than half of households were making mortgage repayments averaging $2626, 30 per cent higher than the national average.
In 2025, Taylor survived the national swing against Peter Dutton in a radically redrawn electorate, becoming the only NSW Liberal to increase his majority.

The reptiles then decided to remind the beefy boofhead of his dismal failure ... The 2025 treasurers debate between Jim Chalmers (left) for Labor and Angus Taylor for the Coalitiion. (sic, the pond merely transcribes for the full reptile experience) Picture: NewsWire/David Crosling



Talk about ancient echoes ...



And then it was on to the last gobbet in the opening Caterist campaign ...

Jim Chalmers’ claim that Taylor is rich and entitled assumes voters won’t draw their own conclusions from his rural upbringing and the trajectory of his political career. Taylor’s pre-political career advising some of the world’s top businesses may have made him independently wealthy but he is no Malcolm Turnbull. Taylor has the confidence and good manners to rise above Turnbull’s undignified assertion that Taylor is an “idiot”. This intemperate remark dimin­ishes the standing of Turnbull rather than Taylor.
Taylor has a deep disdain for the sniping and factionalism that are entrenched in the culture of the political class. He has never taken up the habit of briefing against his colleagues, passing the buck or playing the victim card, although many have not given him the same courtesy. There may be merit to the criticism that he has yet to prove himself as a retail politician. Yet his first speech as Opposition Leader showed he has absorbed the lessons from Tony Abbott’s 2013 landslide on a platform of intelligent policy responses to pressing problems distilled into three-word slogans.
Taylor also has absorbed the wisdom of Howard, who weathered the first wave of Hansonism by governing according to his own convictions rather than opinion polls. After Hanson’s maiden speech in September 1996, Howard ignored the press gallery’s incessant demands that he join the conga line of condemnation. His judgment was vindicated in 2001 with the crisis over illegal boat arrivals and in the aftermath of 9/11, when his robust stance on border protection brought many conservatives who had flirted with One Nation back into the fold.
Taylor will succeed if he can recover the Liberal Party’s home turf, restoring the reputation it gained under Howard as the best party to protect borders, manage the economy and offer hope to Australians, young and old, that the next 30 years will be even better than the last.

That's the best they've got for the new piano player? Perhaps the honky tonk needs a tuning ...



The pond looked around for a bonus and thought simpleton Simon deserved at least an honourable intermittent archive mention ...

The RBA’s grim warning has delivered Taylor his opening script
After more than three years with his hands on the levers, can the Treasurer honestly look Australians in the eye and say they’re better off than they were before Labor was elected?
By Simon Benson
Political analyst

All hands on the reptile deck, all part of the new jihad which will fill the pages for weeks, as the reptiles nuke the news ...

Luckily the pond had an alternative - the enduring ghastliness of the swishing Switzer...



The header: The enduring ghastliness of Malcolm Turnbull; From The Guardian to the ABC, Turnbull delivers poisonous and deeply personal broadsides against Liberal leaders and the party he once led. The former prime minister has become the miserable ghost of Australian politics.

The caption for Malware, destroyer of worlds, or at least the NBN ...Malcolm Turnbull delivering the 2023 Australian Institute of Architects Griffin Lecture at the National Press Club of Australia in Canberra. Picture: Martin Ollman

The pond doesn't have much time for Malware, but it has even less time for the swishing Switzer.

The pond might even have been better off with the Zionists, but whenever the swishing Switzer bobs up, the pond is reminded of this yarn ... (*archive link)




Loons in glass houses, the dangers of stone chucking, and all that ...

Although it is cliche to say revenge is a dish best served cold, no Australian politician has embraced the maxim more assiduously than Malcolm Turnbull. Ever since losing the Liberal leadership in 2018, he has repeatedly lashed out at his former party, reserving particular fire for the internal opponents he faced while prime minister after succeeding Tony Abbott.
Turnbull remains the only federal party leader to have lost the leadership twice in partyroom ballots, and he is widely known to attribute both downfalls to conservatives who resisted his positions on the emissions trading scheme in 2009 and the National Energy Guarantee in 2018.
Turnbull’s interventions are too often cheap and unbecoming of a former leader of a great political party. Instead of reasoned argument, he defaults to abuse and denigration. The judgment may sound severe, but no former prime minister has descended so readily to this level. Hardly a week passes without him airing his grievances in public. From The Guardian to the ABC, he delivers poisonous and deeply personal broadsides against Liberal leaders and the party he once led.
At times, his bile borders on the comical. Consider his March 2019 interview with the BBC’s Andrew Neil, when Turnbull claimed his party defenestrated him in August 2018 because colleagues knew he would win the next election. An incredulous Neil replied: “You’re telling me your own party didn’t want you to win the next election? That’s not credible.” He then reminded Turnbull he had lost 40 consecutive polls in the lead-up to the coup.
Only someone as self-regarding as Turnbull could sustain the belief that victory was within reach; in his telling, after all, no one was quite as capable a leader as he. That, he insists, is why the party removed him – and why it instead gave Scott Morrison the chance to salvage the government, which he proceeded to do in May 2019.

The reptiles dragged in another snap ...The official prime ministerial portrait of former PM Malcolm Turnbull is unveiled at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: Martin Ollman



Meanwhile ...  Think tank accused of ‘retaliatory action’ after staffer complaint about high-profile director (that's an intermittent archive link)




The pond realises that the swishing Switzer is desperate to be taken seriously, to come in from the cold ...but there's something bizarre about him rabbiting on about Malware doing damage to his reputation, as if doing damage to the NBN under orders of the onion muncher hadn't set him on the path of becoming a new kind of Ancient Mariner, a Malcolm Fraser in drag if you will,  in a never-ending quest for redemption ...

Since then, Turnbull has alternated between berating his successors and revising his own policy stances, often in ways that seem calculated to curry favour with urban progressives unlikely ever to vote Liberal. Consider the Indigenous voice to parliament. As prime minister, he rejected the Uluru Statement’s proposal as akin to “a third chamber” of parliament – indeed, he was the first to characterise it that way. Yet in 2023, he executed a conspicuous volte-face, only for the voice to be defeated in a landslide referendum.
After losing the leadership in 2018, Turnbull branded Morrison “deceitful”, “duplicitous” and a “liar”. In the lead-up to the last federal election, he labelled Peter Dutton a “thug”. And shortly after Friday’s Liberal Party ballot, true to form, he dismissed the new leader, Angus Taylor, as “the best-qualified idiot” to lead the party.
The only Liberal leader he has refrained from denouncing is, it seems, Sussan Ley – perhaps because they share a similar small-l liberal worldview, one that, according to the polls, has struggled to resonate either with the party or the broader electorate.
All this is surprising because many people once regarded Turnbull with genuine fondness and knew him, in private, to be capable of kindness and decency. As someone who previously praised his China policy – it was his government that enacted foreign interference laws and banned Huawei from the 5G network – I take no pleasure in saying that he is now doing real damage to his own reputation.
I have little doubt that Turnbull’s attacks on his former party form part of a deliberate strategy.
His apparent aim is to marginalise the Liberal Party’s traditional conservative wing and refashion it into a politically sanitised, quasi-teal vehicle. If that risks alienating large numbers of longstanding Liberal supporters, then so be it; the impression he conveys is that such losses would be a price worth paying. In this cast of mind, there seems scant room for dissenters from his positions on net zero, identity politics or mass immigration.
I confess to a measure of sympathy for Turnbull. He achieved more as prime minister than his critics ever conceded. He did, after all, win the 2016 election – notwithstanding his inspired decision to call a double dissolution that vaporised Abbott’s 19-seat majority and sent roughly a million conservatives drifting toward minor parties.
Turnbull also delivered a memorable election night address, memorable chiefly for reviving the republican activist at his most graceless. In his late-night rant that was hilarious in unintended ways, he had taken the unusual step of calling in the AFP over an opposition scare campaign – the sort of rough-and-tumble tactic long familiar to Australian elections. As Tanya Plibersek observed on an ABC election night panel: “Malcolm might lose the election, so he calls the police.”

Perhaps the pond should feel a measure of sympathy for the swishing Switzer, as the reptiles dragged in another feather duster, Former opposition leader Sussan Ley inside Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: Martin Ollman



But no ... not when he produced disingenuous blather about having a card up his sleeve ...



And so to the final gobbet ...

Most notable of all, perhaps, was his contribution to the political lexicon: the phrase “miserable ghost”, denoting those former leaders afflicted – as Gareth Evans once put it – with “relevance deprivation syndrome”, and inclined to broadcast their reflections to the world at large. The term has worn well.
I have long held great respect for John Howard, one of our nation’s most consequential prime ministers. Yet his gravest misjudgment in retirement was to dissuade Turnbull from leaving parliament in 2010, as he had planned after first losing the Liberal leadership. That decision allowed Turnbull to continue destabilising colleagues inside the partyroom on his path back to the leadership – and later to direct his sharpest barbs at those who succeeded him.
The unhappy reality is that Turnbull won’t be remembered as a great statesman or political leader. His tenure was marked by a tenuous grasp of his party’s philosophical foundations, a detachment from the instincts of a clear majority of voters, and a conspicuous confidence in his own judgment.
Who could forget the former merchant banker’s advice in 2016 to young Australians struggling to buy their first home – that their parents should simply “shell out” for them? Or his 2009 demand that the treasurer and prime minister resign over what proved to be a fabricated email supplied by an eccentric bureaucrat?
Before the 2024 US election, Foreign Affairs magazine ran Malcolm Turnbull’s character sketch of a presidential contender: “Like most people, he is often wrong. Unlike most people, however, he is never in doubt. A powerful narcissistic self-belief has given him the strength to defy not just his many enemies but even reality itself.” He was describing Donald Trump. But the description lands with the force of irony, for it doubles as a precise study of Turnbull himself.

Uh huh ...Think tank apologises for ‘significant distress’ after sexual harassment complaint



And where is he now, apart from turning up in the glass reptile hive mind to carelessly throw stones?

Tom Switzer is presenter of Switzerland, a podcast about politics, modern history and international relations.

A desperate name for desperate times, with more desperate times sure to follow ...



 

As always, it's in the details, and what a fine bed it is ...