With mad King Donald's ongoing war in the middle east a spectacular mess, and with too many convolutions to track on an hourly basis, the lizard Oz editorialist felt the need to emit a squawk this day ...
Oh dear, so much for the war with China, and as for mad King Donald, put it another way ...
And now, thanks to the intermittent archive currently working, the pond decided to make a series of honourable mentions, on a thanks but no thanks basis ...
Australia’s proposed gas tax threatens to break our word with key trading partners
Australia’s gas belongs to Australians and we have the right to tax it any way we like, but it comes at a cost.
By Saul Kavonic
As a heads up, Saul is credited by the reptiles as: Saul Kavonic is head of energy research MST Marquee
Head off to the company website, and you'll see this in Saul's CV... He has worked in commercial and strategy roles at Woodside Energy, Australia's largest oil and gas company ...
Thanks but no thanks, but the pond is happy to put it another way ...
Also deserving of intermittent archive honourable mentions ...
Mark Butler is walking away from children who have serious needs
For many without supports, their autism or development delay is a barrier to participate in everyday life.
By Amanda Camm
Amanda's credit ran ... Amanda Camm is the Queensland Families Minister.
The reptile trick here is to run countless numbers of articles and stories bashing the NDIS as out of control, a disaster for the economy, even worse than renewables, and then just as the hapless government attempts to do something about it, drag in a deep north ministerial toad to deplore said attempts.
In a similar vein ...
‘Lifeboat’ for those most in need is sinking with rorting, inefficiency and buck-passing
Parliament unanimously backed a national scheme built around fairness, dignity and choice – with significant ambition.
By John Della Bosca
This was an even more cunning reptile ploy, as the reptile credit explains, John Della Bosca is a former Labor politician who led the campaign for the National Disability Insurance Scheme.
It's the old reptile ploy of getting 'em coming and getting 'em going. Don't do anything, and its a disaster; do try to do something, and it's a disaster.
Moving along, the pond would have liked a reptile excuse to segue to the Wilcox of the day, but whatever ...
And so to the first sign of the season, a bit like listening to the Delius tone poem, On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring.
Come on down Jason ...
We must never abandon the Australia our soldiers defended
Our political class have treated freedom as a limitless resource that can be extended to its enemies without consequence.
By Jason Thomas
Um, actually Jason, the Australia early diggers defended was inclined to racism, misogyny, bigotry, and a full on war between tykes and proddies, together with assorted other malfunctions and mistreatments of minorities (fancy being a gay in the the war years in Tamworth?).
Some of those aspects of "freedumb" needed to be abandoned ...though it has to be said that the reptiles at the lizard Oz still valiantly attempt to defend those ancient times, what with the war on China by Xmas a daily torment ...
And if you head off to Jason's website, you're served a word salad which begins this way ...
Jason has a specific interest in complexities of cross-border projects or those located near porous international boundaries. He develops locally tailored approaches to establishing stable community and political relationships to protect a project’s commercial value.
A teaser trailer will explain why the pond gave the Jason game away early ...
There you go ... all that blather about a cohesive Judaeo-Xian democracy, and talk of Islamist-influenced utopias and so on and so forth.
On the other hand, Jason did mention George Orwell, for which the pond is profoundly grateful, because the pond had promised to itself that the first time it came across a George reference, it would run T. S. Eliot's rejection letter for Animal Farm (click on to enlarge):
(The story at the Graudian: It needs more public-spirited pigs': TS Eliot's rejection of Orwell's Animal Farm)
Does it have anything to do with Jason bleating about Judaeo-Xians and kicking atheists and secularists to the kerb?
Nah, but it's really funny to read the words of a conservative English ponce who simply didn't get a classic bit of writing ...
And so to the reptile treat of the day, courtesy Dame Slap ...
The header: You can teach people to count ... but you cannot make them think; Critics who tally story numbers to attack this newspaper have missed the point entirely.
The pathetically defensive caption for an uncredited, truly pathetic collage: The truth matters. And we said so. When did the left get so timid about challenging those who wield power over us?
Dame Slap is one of the sturdiest (and some would say silliest) reptile jihadists of them all.
She was conducting jihads on climate science long before she donned a MAGA cap and stepped into the New York night life to celebrate the arrival of a mad king, thereby giving free rein to a whole new world of jihads.
The Dame particularly dislikes uppity women, especially if they have an Islamic hue, but today she spent a bigly five minutes being curiously defensive about the jihadist lizard Oz ...
The best one can say is they can count – though that’s up for debate. But they sure can’t think.
Famous for being unfairly sacked by the ABC, Antoinette Lattouf claimed a journalistic coup recently by counting how many stories this newspaper has run about Israel-hating extremist academic Randa Abdel-Fattah.
Working with a data analyst and mathematician, Dr Robert Bean, Lattouf thinks she struck journalistic gold: their counting exercise found this newspaper ran 412 unique articles mentioning Abdel-Fattah – which apparently was “more than Nine Newspapers, ABC News Online, The Guardian and Australian Community Media’s Canberra Times, Newcastle Herald and Bendigo Advertiser COMBINED”.
With a Trumpian flourish like that, Lattouf and Dr Bean might be in the running for the Walkley’s new award for bean counters of the year. Except on our count Abdel-Fattah was mentioned only 268 times during the relevant period.
Double counting by the intrepid counters aside, the bigger point is: so what? Thinkers will notice why our coverage differs from other media outlets. Unlike most other media organisations, we take antisemitism seriously. If you’re at a loose end, Antoinette, count the number of stories we ran from Australians calling for a royal commission into antisemitism.
As an aside, before it folded in early 2025, the group co-chaired by Malcolm Turnbull – Australians for a Murdoch Royal Commission – caught the counting bug too just weeks before the voice referendum. When it was clear the Yes side would not prevail, the group released research about how many pieces News Corp outlets ran supporting the No case to suggest wicked bias. As it turned out, the more interesting number was the 9,452,792 Australians (or 60.06 per cent) who voted against the constitutional change. They did so for sound reasons that The Australian and other News Corp outlets explored in far greater detail than all other news outlets combined. (No caps needed for emphasis.) We call this public interest journalism.
What's funny about this? You don't need to count numbers to realise that the lizard Oz routinely conducts jihads and one of their leading jihadists is Dame Slap.
Why bother disputing it? Why not wear it as a badge of honour? If you're going to carry on like a Taliban extremist or a ratbag mad mullah, why not just own it?
Instead, Lattouf regurgitated Abdel Fattah’s belief that “being a woman who is Palestinian and Muslim makes her a prime target for The Australian”. That sort of fatuous argument finds friends in the knee-jerk world of identity politics.
In the serious world of public interest journalism, being a woman who is Palestinian and a Muslim does not warrant any more scrutiny and – importantly – any less scrutiny than any other ethnic or religious background.
She squawks and bleats and protests too much, though that is the jihadist way.
The reptiles once again reminded the hive mind of the subject of one of their never-ending jihads - a jihad which incidentally the pond has largely ignored because it's been so angry and over the top: Coverage of academic Randa Abdel-Fattah has become a focal point in media criticism debates. Picture: AAP
Dame Slap used this chance to carry on with the jihad, regurgitating all the reptiles standard jihad talking points...
The paper ran news stories on her circa $900,000 taxpayer-funded grant from the Australian Research Council, on her bragging about how she “bends the rules” on her grant and on her exclusion – then inclusion – at Adelaide Writers Week. All this was most certainly in the public interest.
The fact that Macquarie University took no action against Abdel-Fattah, that the ARC decided her grant was in order and the Adelaide Festival board decided to cave to pressure and re-invite her to speak at the 2027 Adelaide Writers Week, all of which we faithfully reported, invites more questions about our educational and cultural institutions. It turns out that readers were very interested to learn about how tax dollars are spent and the laughably hypocritical culture of writers festivals.
The only thing the counters have revealed is that Abdel Fattah owes The Australian a note of thanks. She is no longer an obscure academic. After all, what’s the point of all that bleating about Israel if no one hears you?
Amanda Meade at The Guardian likes to count too. After the Australian Press Council decided against this newspaper concerning a complaint by former ACT chief prosecutor Shane Drumgold, Meade counted how many words – apparently 4000 – we wrote putting our case that the press council got it woefully wrong.
The pond was exceptionally pleased to see the venerable Meade get a mention.
She must really have stuck in Dame Slap's craw, and what a chance to provide a link to The Australian throws 4,000-word tantrum at press council ruling as Drumgold waits for just one" sorry.
Of course another Dame Slap jihad was at the heart of it ...
We say tantrum because the newspaper published on Thursday an extraordinary 4,000-word riposte, including a front-page story, a timeline, two comment pieces and a thundering editorial questioning the Australian Press Council’s competence and integrity.
This railing against the umpire is all the more bizarre, given News Corp effectively controls the APC as a majority member which pays up to 70% of its annual $1.7m budget.
The columnist Janet Albrechtsen wrote all three pieces that were criticised, although the Sydney bureau chief, Stephen Rice, shares a byline on one. Of Albrechtsen’s role, the council said it was “a significant omission” not to disclose the writer’s role in the inquiry into the Bruce Lehrmann trial for which Drumgold was the prosecutor.
In 2024, the ACT supreme court ruled Walter Sofronoff’s extensive communications with Albrechtsen gave rise to an impression of bias against him during the inquiry into the Lehrmann trial. The judge found Sofronoff’s 273 interactions with Albrechtsen gave the impression he “might have been influenced by the views held and publicly expressed” by her.
Drumgold complained to the council that three pieces written by Albrechtsen after the ruling misrepresented the findings. The APC ruled in Drumgold’s favour despite a last-ditch attempt by the Oz to change its mind.
When The Australian received the preliminary adverse finding it responded by commissioning two independent legal opinions. The council said the legal opinions were not relevant and it was only judging whether the publication had breached its editorial standards.
Drumgold responded to The Australian’s dummy spit with a post on LinkedIn: “Who needs the truth, when you have a whole newspaper … Sorry seems to be the hardest word.”
So when Dame Slap wrote the words "we wrote putting our case", she's deflecting from the real problem. It was she that wrote all three pieces judged to misrepresent the findings.
That's what happens when you're a jihadist intent more on ideology and theology than on giving someone a fair go, or admitting an error.
The reptiles decided this would be a good point to fling in a snap of the victim, Shane Drumgold. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Jihadist Dame Slap carried on bleating ...
The truth matters. And we said so. When did the left get so timid about challenging those who wield power over us?
Of course, at the heart of this counting-as-journalism fetish is a discomfort with the nature of our news, analysis and opinion pieces. If Lattouf or Meade agreed with the stories, they wouldn’t have their calculators out. Most important, if these critics could find something genuinely wrong with our reporting – inaccuracies, for example, are always a good place to start – they would surely go hell for leather on that front. Instead, to borrow a phrase from Paul Keating, each has reduced themselves to a human abacus.
The most recent number-counting exercise to try to justify a claim this newspaper has done something dreadfully wrong concerns our reporting on the serious allegations about white art gallery workers intervening in the artworks of Indigenous artists and concealing that intervention.
The Australian’s “white hands on black art” investigation into the APY Art Centre Collective was high-quality journalism. Based on numerous sources, the 2023 investigation included a disturbing video showing a white staff member from APYACC-affiliated art centre Tjala Arts painting on the canvas of award-winning Indigenous artist Yaritji Young.
It’s understandable that groundbreaking investigations that question the status quo will raise the ire of vested interests. But these were matters of profound public interest for everyone involved in the Indigenous art world and beyond.
The reporting has proven deeply inconvenient for many at the centre of the allegations, and for institutions that carried out their own reviews.
It was a relief when the reptiles decided this would be a good time to con hive mind suckers out of a few shekels to keep the Murdochian clan in their accustomed US citizen lifestyle ...
Yaritji Young paints Tjala Arts centre
Become a member to access our premium video content
That provided Dame Slap with a chance to regurgitate another favourite reptile jihad.
The Dame has always been up for a little bashing of uppity blacks, so why not indulge in her favourite pastime?
Those who are deeply uncomfortable with The Australian’s investigation have failed to show concern for the truth. A partisan website launched last week to coincide with the APYACC exhibition makes wild claims about the white hands investigation, focusing on the volume of stories. The APYACC’s catalogue, on sale in the NGA’s gallery, carries an essay claiming, in effect, that the white hands on black art investigation might have been timed to defeat the voice referendum. This is a crazy conflation of two very serious matters.
In the end, readers will decide what matters. They read The Australian because we run important stories, not comfortable ones. They focus on substance, not numbers. For the record – to save our critics some time – this piece is 1253 words.
Oh that must have hurt, there's a lot of smarting and cheek-burning going on in that epic bout of defensiveness.
How tough it is to be a jihadist and cop all those slings and arrows and word counts.
That noted, by the pond's count, Dame Slap's piece was 1249 words too long.
Just a few words would have sufficed: The reptile jihad continues ...
And so to the Rowe of the day ...
And speaking of Orwellian ...