Monday, December 08, 2025

In which the pond tosses aside sundry reptiles to land on Joe and King Donald, and the Major in the grip of fundamentalist Zionism ...

 

The reptiles lead with sport this day, an easy pass for the pond ...



Anyone wanting more than a headline can follow up at the Graudian or in the Nine rags.

Meanwhile assorted reptiles kept assorted jihads alive...

There were expenses and budgets ...



It was within guidelines’: Anthony Albanese backs Anika Wells as travel bills rack up
Anthony Albanese says he approved Anika Wells’ $3000 trip to Thredbo with her family and $34,000 flights to a UN event, as new details emerge over the Communications Minister’s mounting travel bills.
By Noah Yim

Anika Wells's expenses puts the Albanese government to the test
A $34,000 return ticket to New York defies imagination. But it’s Anika Wells's taxpayer-funded trip to Adelaide that really pushes the ‘pub test’, the standard that felled Sussan Ley almost a decade ago.
By Simon Benson

That's what the crusaders are reduced to?

Pretty, pretty tragic, and there was an EXCLUSIVE rehashing of Jimbo as Satan's chief minion turned up to help the reptiles business model ...

EXCLUSIVE
Jim Chalmers eyes reform in next budget
Jim Chalmers has flagged major budget reforms to boost private investment while revealing spending cuts in next week’s MYEFO.
by Geoff Brown

Sauron's assistant was over on the extreme far right ...

Mid-year update will be sensible, not a spendathon
Private sector recovery means we confront global volatility and persistent price pressures from a position of genuine economic strength.
By Jim Chalmers

The pond couldn't get past the extraordinary banality of the opening illustration:



You deserved that Jimbo, helping out the flailing, failing reptile business model, and withholding your pebbles of wisdom by making punters hand over shekels to Lachy to read them is an unseemly affair.

Rice was on the boil yet again with an EXCLUSIVE heaven-sent opportunity to mingle TG bashing with a goodly dose of ABC bashing:



EXCLUSIVE
Point-scoring ABC embraces ACON to steer its trans coverage
The ABC has achieved platinum status from trans rights lobby group ACON, but critics say the national broadcaster has compromised its editorial independence by paying for ideological approval.
by Stephen Rice

Nah, not really, though the pond realises that's two favourite reptile Jihads combined, and another nah to Jennings of the fifth form, as he carried on another favourite reptile jihad:

SIS brides saga reveals Labor’s ‘instinct for secrecy’
Eventually the details of the jihadi repatriations will emerge. The real question is how long voters will tolerate a government that treats openness as a threat rather than an obligation.
By Peter Jennings
Contributor

There the clue was the sinister looking figure on the left, looking vaguely like Pauline:



With all that whittling, that reduced the pond to just two reptiles.

First up was Joe, lesser member of the Kelly gang, having an anxiety attack about King Donald (*archive link):




Sorry, the pond is trying to defeat the bots which currently swarm the blog ...

The pond can assure correspondents nothing much as lost and there was no news that an aged, demented narcissist was in charge, and currently losing his marbles on a daily basis.

Instead there was a firm understanding of policies ... that wouldn't be changed the next day, after the small-hand authoritarian king had another fit of pique ...

...The good news for Canberra is the strategy’s commitment to preventing large-scale conflict in the Indo-Pacific – a sign there will be an enduring rationale for AUKUS in the Trumpian world view. Yet, the worrying news is Washington’s critique of Europe – a development that will heighten uncertainty among US partners about the changing character of American leadership and reliability.
By expressing open ambivalence and caution towards Europe and NATO – coupled with relative silence on the Russian threat – the strategy reads as a considered attack on the foundations of the post-World War II trans-­Atlantic partnership. “It is more than plausible that within a few decades at the latest, certain NATO members will become majority non-European. As such, it is an open question whether they will view their place in the world, or their alliance with the United States, in the same way as those who signed the NATO charter,” the strategy warns.
Washington is openly declaring one of its principal concerns to be the “stark prospect of civilisational erasure” in Europe while questioning the ongoing legitimacy of the EU project itself.
The 2025 strategy sounds the alarm on the “activities of the European Union and other transnational bodies that undermine political liberty and sovereignty”, while questioning “migration policies that are transforming the continent and creating strife”.
It reserves the ability of the US to intervene in European politics, declaring “our goal should be to help Europe correct its current trajectory”.
While The Hague Commitment, in which NATO members agreed to increase defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP, is touted as a new global standard, it is also presented as an American liberation from the security treaty.
Deep cracks are emerging in one of the most successful alliances in history, which has preserved peace in Europe for more than seven decades – an outcome likely to lead to heightened instability rather than improving future security.

The reptiles tossed in just one distraction: Crucially, ending the Ukraine war and ensuring its survival as a viable state are identified as key objectives in Europe. Picture: Sergey Bobok/AFP



Joe was entranced by high sounding verbiage ...

Crucially, ending the Ukraine war and ensuring its survival as a viable state are identified as key objectives. But the motivations for these include re-establishing “strategic stability with Russia” – the terms of which are not spelled out.
The elevation of US dominance over the western hemisphere as the pre-eminent foreign policy goal represents another major departure. The strategy describes this objective as “a ‘Trump Corollary’ to the Monroe Doctrine” – a correction taking place after “years of neglect … to restore American pre-eminence in the West”.

Does that include a Trump tower in Moscow?And maybe a rare earths deal with Vlad the impaler?

A major endeavour, this shift will lead to the US enlisting neighbours to “stop illegal and destabilising migration, neutralise cartels, nearshore manufacturing and develop local private economies”. It will also involve a “readjustment of our global military presence”.
Amid intensifying global competition, the Trump administration is fortifying its dominance closer to home while signalling its intention to play a reduced role in fighting global tyranny. This will be seen as a new model of how the US projects power – doing so more brazenly and openly, but more often in its own backyard. Under this approach, the contentious attacks on suspected drug vessels in the Caribbean appear likely to become the new norm.
The most reassuring elements of the strategy relate to the Indo-Pacific, with the document outlining the need for military deterrence to ensure stability while upholding the importance of maintaining the status quo in Taiwan.
America will “build a military capable of denying aggression anywhere in the First Island Chain”. But the strategy makes clear that Washington “should not have to do this alone. Our allies must step up and spend – and more importantly do – much more for collective defence”.
The goal is to “win the economic future” while preventing military confrontation. In addition to lifting defence spending, this will see Washington pushing Australia harder to “counteract predatory economic practices” from China.
Rebalancing economic ties with Beijing is seen as a joint effort that can only take place if it is accompanied by an “ongoing focus on deterrence to prevent war in the Indo-Pacific”.
This position should provide great assurance to Australia by setting a key principle – improved economic ties with Beijing must not come at the cost of concessions being made on vital matters of national security.
Holding to this ideal will become one of the critical tests for Donald Trump in his second term as President, especially as he ­embarks on a new phase of high ­dialogue with Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping.

Says the mob currently conducting extrajudicial murders and doing their best to interfere in sundry countries, not limited to Venezuela.

Isolationism? Hah ...

Here, have a break ...



Finally it wouldn't be the Australian Zionist Daily News without a serve from the Major:



The header: How Nazi anti-Semitism shaped modern Islamist ideology backed by today's protesters;The Western world’s pro-Palestinian protesters don’t know it, but they are puppets for the inheritors of German Nazi racism and anti-Semitism.

The caption: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Special Envoy to Combat Islamophobia Aftab Malik and Multicultural Affairs Minister Anne Aly address the media in Sydney in September. Picture: NewsWire/ Gaye Gerard

It was a five minute rant by the Major, designed to ensure him a place in Benji's cabinet, and with Nazi slurs flung around illiberally, though the pond last noted that the only party that had really put into effect a genocide in recent times was the current government of Israel, what with mass displacement, mass starvation as a method of waging war, mass destruction, and plans for mass ethnic cleansing:

The Western world’s keffiyeh-wearing, anti-racist, pro-Palestinian protesters don’t know it, but they are puppets for the inheritors of German Nazi racism and anti-Semitism.
The past century’s two greatest sources of disinformation, Nazi Germany and Communist Russia, are as crucial as the Koran to the rise of the Islamism that now joins forces with the anti-racist left.
Western journalists are prepared to call out the Kremlin’s false claims that the Jewish President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, is leading a modern resurgent nation of Nazis.
Yet much of the Western media has framed the victims of the Holocaust as perpetrators of a genocide. They accept false claims that the Middle East’s only genuine pluralist democracy – where Jews, Arabs, Christians and Druze all elect members to the Knesset – is an apartheid state.
Yet most Jews from the rest of the Middle East have been banished, and Christians, Yazidis, Kurds and other minorities are persecuted in many countries in the region.

Puppets? The pond guesses that the Major would know about that, being something of a puppet himself, as the reptiles tried to distract from the rampant Zionism with another matter: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks to the press in Kyiv in December. Picture: Genya Savilov / AFP




Then the Major trotted out a slur, as if conflating and confusing what's gone down in Gaza with other matters would seal the deal:

Chanting protesters in Australia, preaching hate for Israel, show no interest in the oil- and gas-rich oligarchies that surround it and keep their populations in poverty. They show zero concern for the millions who have died in Islamic violence in Sudan, Somalia, Nigeria and Syria.
They denounce as Islamophobic any criticism of Muslim violence against poor black Africans or Christian girls kidnapped by Boko Haram in Nigeria to prevent their education.

Not so, it's possible to chew gum, and deplore what's happening in many places, just as it's possible to deplore allegedly Xian violence, such as murder on the high seas, and what seems like another colonial adventure in Venezuela beginning to take shape (never mind that the current ruler should be replaced, it's just that US interventions always produce a mass of unknown unknowns which ruin things for decades, including the terrible fate of women in Afghanistan) ...

But when you're a extremist Zionist, the world takes a very simple shape ...

The Special Envoy to Combat Islamophobia, Aftab Malik, last week in Senate estimates argued religious motivation should be removed from definitions of terrorism. Yet many terror incidents in Australia and around the world are perpetrated by radicalised Muslims.
Malik says Australian Muslims know terrorism is motivated by extremist ideology rather than religion. Yet for 100 years the extremist ideology of Islamist groups and Muslim anti-Semites has been at the heart of Muslim violence.
Many Muslim polemicists railing against Israel’s war to retrieve its hostages from Gaza peddle a discredited conspiracy theory against Jews pushed by the Nazis in Berlin in the 1930s and by the Communist Party in 1920 in Baku, Azerbaijan, during the first “congress of the peoples of the Orient”.
Nazis and Communists used the tsarist Russian-era conspiracy forgery, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, as the basis of their hate campaigns. The Protocols still underpin much of what is said by Islamist politicians and journalists in parts of the Middle East, especially Iran and Qatar.

The reptiles introduced another distraction, Tense exchanges when a pro-Israel protester walks past the pro-Palestine demonstration after a Burgertory chain-restaurant owned by Palestinian-Australian Hesham Tayah burned in Melbourne. Picture: Alex Zucco / SOPA Images/Sipa USA




It seems the Major uses as his sources the thoughts of cackling Claire, as if she's gospel ...

In a column in this newspaper on July 5, Quillette founding editor Claire Lehmann discussed how “beginning in 1967, Moscow launched a sweeping campaign of ‘active measures’ aimed at portraying Israel as a fascist outpost of Western imperialism”. The Soviets “embedded anti-Zionism into the moral DNA of the Western left”.
Undoubtedly the Soviets knew the actual fascist antecedents of radical Islam and were more concerned with using diplomacy to isolate the US’s main ally in the region. Even the Palestine Liberation Organisation owed more to Nazism than communism.
This column in The Australian on October 14, 2023 – the first Saturday after October 7 – traced the origins of Islamic fascism in Palestine to the mufti of Jerusalem, Sheik Haj Amin al-Husseini, who allied his people with Adolf Hitler and lived in Berlin pumping out Nazi propaganda to the Arab world from 1941 to 1945.
He was not tried for war crimes as his German hosts were. Instead he was held in France for a year before fleeing to Egypt on June 11, 1946, where he was welcomed by Hassan al-Banna, spiritual guide of the Muslim Brotherhood and himself an avowed supporter of Nazi Germany.

Flinging around the Nazi slur is a common trick, much practised by Russian state media these days, where almost every state in Europe, especially Ukraine, is run by Nazis, likely in partnership with Satanism ... but it would be a lot simpler to judge the current state of Israel by its ethnic cleansing actions than on ancient propaganda.

The reptiles interrupted with another snap designed to enrage and inflame...A rally for Gaza in front of Israeli Embassy in October in Canberra. Picture: Martin Ollman/NewsWire




It's true, for example, that you can find Ukranians who fought alongside the Nazis, gripped with the delusion that this would free them from the Russians, and it's true that Arab states joined in the second world war on the side of the Axis alliance, but the current governments of the middle east owe a lot more to absolute monarchies from ancient European times ...

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud, for example, would think nothing of the absolute right of kings, princes and potentates to chainsaw a journalist, and then be welcomed back into the tent by King Donald, a regular abuser of journalists and of any media that refuses to kow tow ...

Meanwhile, the Major carried on slurring ...

Al-Banna had founded the Brotherhood in 1928. It is banned in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and most Gulf states but its leaders are welcomed in Hamas-supporting Qatar and Turkey. The Brotherhood is committed to a global caliphate and has been using a new generation of young Muslims in Western countries, especially the UK, France and the US, to build links with leftist anti-racist, pro-trans and gay rights lobbies.
Never mind such rights don’t exist in the Muslim world, and gays and trans people are murdered by Hamas and other offshoots of the Brotherhood. Islamists know us better than we understand them.
Welcoming al-Husseini, al-Banna described the mufti as a “hero who defied an empire (Britain) and fought Zionism, with the help of Hitler and Germany”. Earlier, he said: “The mufti is Palestine and Palestine is the mufti.”
Al-Husseini went on to lead the 1948 Arab revolt against the partition of Palestine approved under UN Resolution 181 into a Jewish state by the Mediterranean and an Arab Palestinian state west to the border of Jordan.
Al-Husseini had earlier led the armed revolt from 1936-39 against the UK Peel Commission plan for a more sweeping partition that would have given most of the land to the west of what is now modern Israel to Transjordan, which was to be home to the world’s Palestinians.
The latest research on radical Islam makes clear al-Husseini’s legacy is the key to understanding modern Islamism. For Palestinians, he was the intellectual guiding light to both PLO leader Yasser Arafat and current Palestinian Association president Mahmoud Abbas.

Could it be that the explanation for radical modern Zionism can be explained by the way that those who have been bullied early in life turn to bullying?

It's a well-known phenomenon, per Psychology Today ....

At 300 pounds, freshman Bryan Kohberger was an easy target (Fixler, 2023). He always had been. Classmates at Pleasant Valley Intermediate and Pocono Mountain East High School in Pennsylvania subjected him to the kind of systematic cruelty that can leave lasting scars. He was miserable, posting in online forums about feeling like "an organic sack of meat with no self-worth" (Fixler, 2023).
Then Bryan took charge. By the end of his junior year, he had lost over 100 pounds through a combination of obsessive dieting, punishing workouts, and kickboxing training (Fixler, 2023). His body transformed from soft target to hardened weapon. So did his psyche.
This could have been an inspiring success story: a bullied kid overcomes adversity, gets healthy, and helps others facing similar struggles. Instead, friends witnessed the formerly meek, withdrawn victim become someone they barely recognized. "It was like he'd decided that since he'd been the victim, now it was his turn to make others feel small," one peer recalled (Fixler, 2023). He didn't become confident; he became controlling. He didn't find peace; he found power.

There's an enormous amount of bullying gone down in Gaza...






The reptiles tried to distract from the carnage ... Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas waves as he arrives for the opening of the Fatah youth conference in Ramallah on November 27. Picture: Jaafar Ashtiyeh / AFP



There's also the alleged criminality of Benji, what with incessant war a convenient excuse for seeking a pardon, and never mind the way that he and his minions allowed for the funding of Hamas.

But as a rampant Zionist, the Major isn't that much interested in any of that ...

Jeffrey Herf, professor of Modern European History at Maryland University, discussed at length in Tablet magazine on July 6, 2022, the latest books on al-Husseini that confirm the mufti’s influence on the thinking of al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden’s Hamburg cell of Islamist terrorists.
“Al-Qaeda’s Nazi lineage through the Muslim Brotherhood showed that the 9/11 attackers were not leftist anti-imperialists. Rather they were a product … of the … aftershock of Nazism in the Middle East,” Herf wrote.
Nazism had been defeated in Europe but “enjoyed a robust afterlife in the Muslim Brotherhood and its offshoots, such as Hamas and al-Qaeda … motivated in large part by anti-Semitic conspiracy theories”.
Herf links this to al-Husseini’s writings widely available in the Middle East after the war.
Herf cites Stanford professor Russell Berman arguing “it was the ideological mixture of Nazism and Islamism that was the most important causal factor which led leaders of the Palestinian Arabs to reject the UN Partition resolution of November 29, 1947”.
After al-Husseini and al-Banna, the later books of Egyptian Sayyid Qutb cemented anti-Semitism at the heart of the Brotherhood.
Herf discusses author and journalist Paul Berman’s 2003 book, Terror and Liberalism, which focuses on the parallels between fascist totalitarianism in mid-20th century Europe and “Qutb’s reactionary attack on liberalism, the Jews, the United States and Israel”.
“Qutb, like al-Husseini, offered a paranoid construct of Islam under attack by the Jews, Christians and modern culture,” Herf writes. Qutb mapped out a modern “counter-attack that celebrated death and martyrdom in an effort to create a pristine Islamic State in which state and religion would be fused and liberal modernity banished”.
Journalists covering the Middle East should understand this is what modern Islamism wants for the world. These are the views of the movement that today’s rainbow coalition of anti-Israel protesters is supporting.

And what does the Major want? A complete take over of the West Bank, and the expulsion of residents from Gaza so that a great new Riviera could arise?

As usual, after a bout of Major zionism, the pond likes to purge with a reading from Haaretz ...(*archive link) ...




And in conclusion?

...Netanyahu has not taken an ounce of responsibility for October 7, and he never intended to. He identified an opportunity to take over the defense establishment after it had failed, and to replace its top figures with his close associates, thereby eliminating a powerful opposition force that had hampered him for years.
It's more than likely that today, Netanyahu would not have appointed Eyal Zamir as chief of staff. In this respect, Katz is but a useful proxy who profits personally along the way.
Instead of Israel's enemies, the IDF chief is forced to battle the defense minister's ego Yossi Verter
IDF chief spots the front where he can't give ground: Netanyahu and his defense minister Amos Harel
In his request to halt his trial, which he submitted to President Isaac Herzog, Netanyahu hinted that if his criminal indictments were lifted, he would involve himself in matters pertaining to the justice system and the media, both of which are currently under attack by particularly aggressive cabinet members.
One may assume that Netanyahu is broadening and improving his method: He would like to reach the election, or any other event endangering his continued rule, with defense agencies well-stocked with his own people.

And so to the 'toon closer, and for some reason that talk of bullies seemed to sit well with the Herbert of the day ...





Sunday, December 07, 2025

In which Polonius makes a belated appearance for a late arvo stroll down memory lane ...

 

Of late the only interest in Polonius's postings is whether the grumpy curmudgeon would default to ABC bashing, recycling ancient memes on his shortcut-laden key board - there's never been a conservative on the ABC since he started listening to 2BL in 1932! - or whether he could bore some other topic into submission, grind it into the dust.

It came as no relief to discover in Polonius's belated copy this week that the ABC was mentioned only once.

Instead he spent all his energy on a wander down memory lane, before returning with a jolt to the contest between lettuce and Susssan, or more broadly, to the fate of the Liberal party, aka GOM (grand old Ming party).

Here there was only one question worth answering.

Would the aged dodderer manage to mention Ming the Merciless? Would the reptiles help out by showing a snap of Ming?

The pond supposes that's two questions, but really Ming is a mystical entity, the Sun God of the hive mind, so it's only two sides of a singular coin.

Spoiler alert, the aged delinquent dodderer came through ...



The header: Is the Liberal Party finished? Don’t bet the rent on it yet; There is talk about the Liberal Party being doomed. We’ve heard this before. Labor was finished in 1977. The Liberals in 1993. Both came back — and energy prices could be Labor’s undoing.

The caption for the dire collage, which conforms to all that's bad about reptile illustrations, and which was credited to a certain Sean, new to these here parts: Opposition Leader Sussan Ley. Artwork by Sean Callinan

The pond really should have put up another warning: decrepit old dotard about to take a walk down memory lane - but who could question is wise advice not to bet the rent money on idle predictions.

Did not the original Polonius cunningly use idle gaming as a way to ferret out the truth:

...do you mark this, Reynaldo?
REYNALDO:  Ay, very well, my lord.
POLONIUS: “And, in part, him, but,” you may say, “not well.
But if ’t be he I mean, he’s very wild,
Addicted so and so.” And there put on him
What forgeries you please—marry, none so rank
As may dishonor him, take heed of that,
But, sir, such wanton, wild, and usual slips
As are companions noted and most known
To youth and liberty.
REYNALDO:  As gaming, my lord.
POLONIUS:  Ay, or drinking, fencing, swearing,
Quarreling, drabbing—you may go so far.
REYNALDO:  My lord, that would dishonor him.
POLONIUS : Faith, no, as you may season it in the charge.
You must not put another scandal on him
That he is open to incontinency;
That’s not my meaning. But breathe his faults so
quaintly
That they may seem the taints of liberty,
The flash and outbreak of a fiery mind,
A savageness in unreclaimèd blood,
Of general assault.

Faith, 'tis hard to focus on this Polonius, wandering into the past like a mendicant in search of Liberal alms:

Next Saturday is the 50th anniversary of the Malcolm Fraser-led Coalition’s victory over the Labor Party led by Gough Whitlam.
It was a stunning result, just over four weeks after Fraser had been sworn in as a caretaker prime minister following the dismissal of the Whitlam government by governor-general Sir John Kerr on November 11, 1975.
For a while, Labor was completely disillusioned. Partly because Whitlam did not step down as leader after the election and led his party to another devastating defeat in the (early) election held on December 10, 1977. Bill Hayden, who was to become a most successful Labor leader, challenged Whitlam for the leadership in mid-1977 but failed narrowly to get the numbers.
I remember former Labor MP Barry Cohen telling me that his mind told him to support Hayden but his heart went for Whitlam. Cohen followed his heart. At the time, Fraser was despised by many Labor supporters for blocking supply in late 1975 and bringing on the Dismissal. Later on, Fraser turned on Kerr, palled up with Whitlam and became much loved at literary festivals, where he received standing ovations from left-wingers who had once worn “Shame Fraser, Shame” badges.

Ah the fatal flaw: "I remember":

Do you remember an Inn,
Polonius?
Do you remember an Inn?
And the tedding and the spreading
Of the straw for a bedding,
And the fleas that tease in the High Pyrenees,
And the wine that tasted of tar?
And the cheers and the jeers of the young muleteers
(Under the vine of the dark verandah)?
Do you remember an Inn, Polonius,
Do you remember an Inn?
And the cheers and the jeers of the young muleteeers
Who hadn't got a penny,
And who weren't paying any,
And the hammer at the doors and the Din?
And the Hip! Hop! Hap!
Of the clap
Of the hands to the twirl and the swirl
Of the girl gone chancing,
Glancing,
Dancing,
Backing and advancing,
Snapping of a clapper to the spin
Out and in --
And the Ting, Tong, Tang, of the Guitar.
Do you remember an Inn,
Polonius?
Do you remember an Inn?

Never more;
Polonius,
Never more.
Only the high peaks hoar:
And Aragon a torrent at the door.
No sound
In the walls of the Halls where falls
The tread
Of the feet of the dead to the ground
No sound:
But the boom
Of the far Waterfall like Doom.

Oh dear, the pond can't quite understand how that rollicking Belloc-ing quite came over the pond... 

Perhaps it was a sense that this endless recycling of ancient history somehow resembled a Waterfall of Doom.

Or perhaps it was a fit of nerves at the sight of more lizard Oz graphics, this time from Emilia, quite forgetting to blame AI for it all...Malcolm Fraser and Gough Whitlam. Artwork by Emilia Tortorella




That's artwork? A bit of wretched colouring in?

Back to the wander down memory lane ...

In going through some files recently, I came across the December 17, 1977, issue of The Bulletin weekly magazine. The cover featured a large photo of Fraser holding his hands above his head in victory mode. It featured only three words: “Is Labor Finished?”
There is footage of Whitlam looking deeply depressed as he departed his post-election press conference accompanied by a red-headed staffer. It was Kerry O’Brien, best known for his journalistic life at the ABC.

And that, dear devotees of Polonial prattle, is the only mention of the ABC this day ...as the memories came flooding back like toxic sludge in search of a drainpipe ...

In time Whitlam became one of Labor’s (secular) saints, remembered for the circumstances of his dismissal rather than the manifest incompetence of his government. Hayden took over from Whitlam and did well in his first election in October 1980. However, he was replaced by Bob Hawke on the eve of the March 1983 election, which Labor won comfortably.
The motivation of Hawke, Paul Keating, Hayden, Peter Walsh and other members of the Hawke cabinet was not to repeat the errors of the Whitlam years. They succeeded, winning five elections in a row until John Howard and the Coalition prevailed in March 1996.
So, Labor was back in office in just over seven years after the Dismissal and just over five years after The Bulletin queried whether the party was finished. There is a message here for the Liberal Party.
As I have mentioned in these pages previously, writing in The Age on July 17, 1993, left-of-centre academic Judith Brett declared that “the Liberal Party in the 1990s seemed doomed”.
That was after Liberal Party leader John Hewson lost what some called “the unlosable election”. However, the Liberal Party was back in office in 1996 with Howard as prime minister after 13 years in opposition. And its leader went on to become the second longest serving prime minister in Australian history.
Today, again, there is talk about the Liberal Party being doomed. Who knows? But we do know that it’s difficult to wind up and rebuild a political party. Especially in an electoral system at the commonwealth level that provides for preferential and compulsory voting (the latter now relies more on habit rather than compulsion).
Look at it this way. The Liberal Party of Australia has a federated system. It exists in NSW, Victoria, Western Australia, South Australia, Tasmania and the ACT. In Queensland there is the Liberal National Party (the members of which formally belong to the Liberal Party). Then there is the Country Liberal Party in the Northern Territory. These days political parties depend significantly on government funding – calculated according to the primary vote that parties attain at the previous election. In short, it’s not easy to establish a new party.

Who knows?

“Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows!"



Sorry, the pond realises this might be sounding flippant, even disrespectful, but the weekend's nearly over, toujours gai Archy, toujours gai, wotthehell, especially as the reptiles eventually came through with that snap of Ming the Merciless ... Robert Menzies established the Liberal Party of Australia in late 1944.



The pond will allow a five minute break for worshipful prayers.




Respect!

Now how about a bit of self-promotion from a certified author, provided you hearken unto 1994:

As I pointed out in my 1994 book Menzies’ Child, when Robert Menzies established the Liberal Party of Australia in late 1944 he brought together a number of all but independent non-Labor organisations. The United Australia Party, which expired in 1944, was not an organised federated institution like the Liberal Party of today.

Still to be found today ...



And so to a bit of both siderism, a chance to berate Malware and dilute any thought of savaging the mutton Dutton:

Commentators correctly point to the fact that, under the leadership of Peter Dutton, the Coalition ran a dreadful campaign in 2025. It should be noted that the Nationals, as part of the Coalition, did relatively well.
But it is also true that the Liberals ran an appalling campaign under Malcolm Turnbull in 2016 in which 14 seats were lost.
In other words, the Liberal Party has performed poorly under the likes of moderates such as Turnbull and political conservatives such as Dutton.

Finally, at last, Polonius offered some thoughts on Susssan v. the lettuce.

It remains to be seen whether Sussan Ley will succeed as leader. But she has developed stances on energy and immigration (the latter yet to be announced) that indicate the Liberals have some direction.

Indeed, indeed, much remains to be seen ...



Sad to say, the lettuce wasn't intimidated.

That "remains to be seen" saved it from a serious case of wilt, especially when the reptiles flung in a snap of Malware, what with Susssan in a former numerological life being almost as wet as him... Former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




The lettuce loves duelling with wets ...



...Ley told Melbourne radio station 3AW on Friday that the name change came during her “punk phase” as a teenager, shooting down a long-running story that she had added the extra letter because of a belief it would make her life more exciting.
The Liberal leader has also conceded women were “disappointed” with the opposition’s policies at last month’s election, promising the Coalition would “modernise” and offer new ideas on housing, especially for young people, as well as childcare and aged care.
In a 2015 profile with the Australian newspaper, Ley was quoted as saying: “I read about this numerology theory that if you add the numbers that match the letters in your name you can change your personality.
“I worked out that if you added an ‘s’ I would have an incredibly exciting, interesting life and nothing would ever be boring. It’s that simple … And once I’d added the ‘s’ it was really hard to take it away.”(The Graudian)

Apparently the lettuce favours a mix of the I Ching and Sun Tzu's The Art of War as a way of helping punk numerologists live in interesting, neigh exciting, times.

In his final gobbet, Polonius strategised, devising ways to help Susssan...

The recently released Australian Election Study suggests that, for the first time, Australian voters prefer Labor over the Coalition when it comes to economic policy. But it also indicates that cost of living is easily of most importance to voters.
The Coalition is ahead of Labor in only one area – namely, national security. But it’s an important issue.
It’s probably 2½ years to the next election. Labor is comfortably in office but appears to face long-term problems with rising energy prices, which are central to cost-of-living concerns as well as to businesses of all sizes.
As Liberal Party operative Michael Kroger consistently says, the task of the Liberals is to get back to home-ground issues. Namely the economy broadly defined, including cost of living and debt.
The Coalition is currently bleeding votes to One Nation, but unless it collapses, some of this support will come back via preferences.
Apart from a national security surprise, the next election is likely to be fought on economic issues. The Albanese government looks secure for now – but energy prices seem likely to remain a serious problem, even if sections of the media are yet to recognise this.
I suspect that the Liberal Party will be around for some time and that the answer to such a question – “Is the Liberal Party finished?” – will be in the negative.
Gerard Henderson is executive director of The Sydney Institute.

Bold, heady stuff by this defiant braveheart, but how wise it was to banish him to the late arvo boondocks ...

On the upside, it gave the pond the chance to catch up with the weekend infallible Pope.

On the downside, what a waste of an infallible Pope, and the pond reserves the right to refer to it at another time and place ...



What a fine tribute to a broadcaster which earns its way screening wall to wall Nazi docs ...




In which Nick tells the story of two colonial losers, while Killer keeps on with his obsessive compulsive comrade Dan fixation ...

 

The pond does miss the Sundays when fun could be had courtesy of the Pellists and the angry Anglicans.

The pond was reminded of those lost days by a YouTube video that dragged up an old favourite beloved by atheists everywhere, the tail end of Matthew Ch. 16:

21 From that time forth began Jesus to shew unto his disciples, how that he must go unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised again the third day.
22 Then Peter took him, and began to rebuke him, saying, Be it far from thee, Lord: this shall not be unto thee.
23 But he turned, and said unto Peter, Get thee behind me, Satan: thou art an offence unto me: for thou savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men.
24 Then said Jesus unto his disciples, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.
25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it.
26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?
27 For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and then he shall reward every man according to his works.
28 Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom.

The sting is in that last line. 

Either those standing there managed to last a few thousand years, and are still living in hope, or Jesus didn't return in time to reward them before they tasted death,.

So he's either a bald-faced liar, or a deceiver and deliverer of broken promises, not a good look for an all knowing being.

If only the rest of Sunday could proceed in that vein, but imagine the pond's surprise when it went looking for the usual weekend dollop of Polonial prattle as a way to kick start proceedings, and could only find his last entry from a week ago brooding about Vlad the sociopath...

Had Polonius succumbed early to the Xmas spirit? (He must have, because it seems like he delivered his copy late and it only turned up late morning yesterday, and so the pond decided to punish him by burying him in a late afternoon slot, 4 pm to be precise).

Whatever the reason for his dilettante tardiness, his dilatory sluggishness, it left the pond scrambling to find alternatives.

Could the pond go back and resurrect some previously dismissed reptiles?

Nah, the likes of "Ned", Dame Slap, snappy Tom and garrulous Gemma had been sent from the classroom for good reasons, and besides, they were still available on the intermittent archive.

Could the pond do a Tootle and simply leave the reptile tracks?

There were many temptations, with Marina's hydeing reminding the pond of the original epic lettuce v. politician conflict: The Liz Truss Show will confront the big issues of the day. For example: who on earth would watch Liz Truss?

On the disunited states scene, Susan B. Glasser was in good form in The New Yorker, War Is Peace, the Dozing Don Edition, The outcry grows over Trump's undeclared war in the Caribbean. (*archive link):




And so on, and at least the gave the pond an excuse to segue to a 'toon or two...




Or the pond could have gone over to the Nine rags for a sighting of a simpering onion muncher, in a nauseating snap with the former Chairman ...



It’s your own fault you are losing, Abbott tells world’s conservatives (*archive link)

Sure it was fun observing the post-ironic way he was, in his tone deaf day, completely oblivious to irony:

“There is no mystery to the conservative eclipse – revolving-door prime ministerships, careerist MPs, policy incoherence, and a sense of impotence against the unelected and unaccountable administrative state,” Abbott said.

Nah, the pond knew its duty, no matter how burdensome or repressive. 

The pond had to stay on the reptile tracks.

But what to do?

The pond had absolutely no taste for parish pump politics in distant croweater land, served up Penbo style ...

A policy meant to be a free kick became an own goal that destroyed Vincent Tarzia’s leadership of South Australia’s Liberal Party amid its confusion over the nation’s only Indigenous voice.
By David Penberthy
Columnist

Just look at the gormless one at the top of that tale of woe ...



And the lizard Oz editorialist was a compleat bust ...

Bigger lesson in bad water and botched hydro plan amid energy transition
The failure of Queensland Labor’s ‘world’s biggest pumped hydro’ project is a case study in how the difficult realities of the energy transition are too easily ignored by politicians.

The pond routinely bans TG bashing by the reptiles, and there was no reason to exclude the lizard Oz editorialist from the ban:

How trans lobby group ACON co-opted Australia's biggest institutions
Health and education policy has been influenced by a deliberate plan.

The pond is so over bigly TG conspiracy theories. Such a tiny minority, and yet so relentlessly persecuted by reptile bigots.

And the lizard Oz editorialist could only manage this on the need to stop watching musical garbage ...

Israel betrayed by shameful boycotts of Eurovision Song Contest, Objection to Israel’s participation at Eurovision shows activists’ misguided naivety.
Editorial
less than 2 min read
December 6, 2025 - 12:00AM
Yuval Raphael, representing Israel with the song New Day Will Rise, parades with her national flag during the dress rehearsal for the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2025. Picture: AFP
Yuval Raphael, representing Israel with the song New Day Will Rise, parades with her national flag during the dress rehearsal for the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2025. Picture: AFP
As nations with histories scarred by war – through invasion, occupation and sectarian conflict – Ireland, Slovenia, Spain and the Netherlands have turned their backs on their bedrock values of democracy and freedom and Judaeo-Christian heritages in boycotting the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest over Israel’s participation. Their objection is the conduct of the war in Gaza.
That war, now subject to a fragile peace treaty, was acutely painful for Palestinians, largely because Hamas, backed by Iran, hid its terrorist arsenals behind civilian targets. Israel, after the massacre on October 7, 2023, in which 1200 Jews died and 250 were taken hostage, had no choice but to defend itself. As the Middle East’s sole democracy, it was, and is, fighting an existential battle against a ruthless enemy and its terrorist proxies – Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis – whose stated objectives are to wipe it off the map and harm the West. In doing so, Israel has made the world safer.
Many of the brave Dutch who shielded Jews such as Anne Frank in World War II, the Irish who kept the faith at makeshift mass rock altars, longing for freedom, and Slovenians who battled for liberation would be unimpressed by those who demonstrated against Israel’s candidates outside the last two contests. So would many Spaniards who understand civil war and religious conflict. The 70th Eurovision, set for Vienna in May, in a country that also has triumphed after a chequered history, should be about song and true to its motto: United by Music. In activists’ misguided naivety, the boycotts will only boost Hamas and Iran.

Ah, so not watching music that's been indigestible crap since ABBA left the scene puts the pond in company with Hamas and Iran? 

The Australian Daily Zionist News strikes again.

Sorry, SBS, the pond is over and out, and so should you have been.

And that's how the pond ended up with Nicholas Jensen, celebrating two epic losers and dropkicks who managed in suicidal fashion to kill themselves going bush.

Young Nick is these days high up the reptile pecking order...



That puts him in a plum position to meditate on those two epic dingbats ...




Some might get a sense that they're sitting in on a social studies class circa 1950s, celebrating Oz explorers, and that seems to be about the right period for Nick.

The header: Monumental self-loathing drives Burke and Wills from the public square; Australia seems to suffer from a deep aversion to the epic, a cringing hostility towards the monumental in our history. We are anxious, often nakedly hostile, to public expressions of our past.

The caption for a snap which didn't manage to show either the statue or the town hall in style: Burke and Wills monument at the corner of Collins and Swanston streets, Melbourne.

Of course the real reason that the bloody monument was moved was that it was on the corner that has had the Metro Tunnel Project going on for what seems like an eternity, perhaps since the days when the pond first visited Melbourne as a child ...



But Nick was determined to do a bit of jingoistic sabre rattling, sticking it up the fuzzy-wuzzies in good Rudyard Kipling style ...

Public monuments can make powerful statements on the rare occasions we get round to noticing them. As sites of memory, they bear the imprint of a collective culture and carry the remnants of a past that resists sliding into forgetfulness. Yet in Australia we suffer from a deep aversion to the epic, a cringing hostility towards the monumental in our history. We are anxious, often nakedly hostile, to public expressions of our past, especially our settler past.
Every day in our cities we pass soaring, mostly triumphant figures that stare down at us from a distant, unfamiliar time. They are the conspicuous yet unseen adornments of our cityscapes; it’s often only when they’re threatened they are noticed.
In Melbourne, across from the Old Treasury Building, stands a bronze statue of General Charles Gordon, cast as the embattled military hero brooding his fate. Few passers-by would probably bother to look up at him today. But when news broke across Australia in early February 1885 that the British garrison at Khartoum had fallen to the attacking Mahdi rebels and that Gordon had likely died in the siege it was hailed as one the great epics of the colonial era.

It doesn't seem to have occurred to Nick that Gordon had absolutely no business being in Khartoum, unless you happen to be a late Victorian with a colonial empire mindset... Gordon's last stand in Khartoum, 1885.



Nick was in raptures at the way that the empire turned the planet red (not that sort of red, more the red you found in 1950s maps of the world):

Reports of his downfall were relayed throughout the far reaches of the empire with a blast of imperial fervour and sentiment. In Australia, devoted audiences, eager to learn of Gordon’s fate, consumed newspapers and cabled updates from London with an almost fanatical avidity. It was the late 19th-century equivalent of a social media trend or meme gone viral.
The statue, erected through public subscription and unveiled before a crowd of thousands, portrays the general as the tragic Christian hero. Piety, adventure and military prowess – those romantic traits derived from late 19th century representations of imperial heroism – found their spectacular apotheosis in Gordon.
Until relatively recently, a little farther down the road at the intersection of Collins and Swanston streets stood two other mighty figures of Victorian tragedy and triumph. Robert O’Hara Burke and William John Wills were both men of destiny. Their monument, said to be the oldest public work of art in Melbourne, has been relocated across the city five times since it was first presented by sculptor Charles Summers in 1865. Now it’s expected to be moved again, to the Royal Historical Society of Victoria at the edge of the CBD, clearing the way for the design of a new city square, where the two explorers were situated until 2017 when they were taken down for the construction of Melbourne’s underground rail project.
As this newspaper reported last weekend, the relocation has provoked discussion of de-colonising the urban space and drawing greater emphasis on Indigenous history. It seems drearily fitting, in this era of statue-toppling iconoclasm, that Burke and Wills should be cast down and relegated to the second league, condemned to gather dust in relative obscurity.

The reptiles kept digging up snaps to reinforce the mind set ... The Burke and Wills monument at a previous location, on the corner of Collins St and Russell St, Melbourne.



Sh*t happens and things get moved around, with the yellow peril exiled to near ACCA in Southbank...




Sic transit gloria, but Nick is still mourning the lost empire, and the inept meanderings of a couple of singularly incompetent colonials, as if determined to emulate the feats of Irish bushranger Ned, whose main skill was to get himself hanged ...

The story of their expedition across the arid heart of the continent to the Gulf of Carpentaria – beginning with their triumphant farewell in Royal Park and ending in the dramatic funeral procession through Melbourne – is one of those celebrated events in Australian folklore that captures our imagination precisely because it ended in disaster.
Like Gordon’s defence at Khartoum, it is an epic punctuated with terrible coincidences, small oversights and spectacular miscalculations that turned what could’ve been one of the great triumphs of exploration into a poignant failure.
When the Victorian government announced in 1860 its ambitions to dispatch an expedition northwards, the colony’s elite were determined that its explorers should cross the continent’s interior before a competing mission was launched from South Australia. No expense was spared. The company of 19 was lavishly supplied, famously with camels imported from India.
In August, they departed Melbourne for Menindee on the Darling River, where Burke left part of his company under command of William Wright, and then forged on to Cooper’s Creek, near the dead heart of the country.
Despite warnings about travelling through high summer, Burke and Wills made for the Gulf of Carpentaria with two others, Charles Gray and John King. Just south of the Gulf the river water tasted brackish. It was their moment of triumph, as they realised they’d achieved what no other explorers had since the possibility was first discussed by the Dutch as early as the 1640s – they had traversed the continent from south to the north.
The attempted return journey, as is now legend, ended in disaster. Abandoned and emaciated at Cooper’s Creek, suffering scurvy and malnutrition, Burke and Wills died within days of each other. They recorded their demise with simple understatement.

Inevitably there's an artist to blame for the mythologising of this pair of loons, and Ned as well, Burke and Wills by Sidney Nolan, 1948.



Nick kept on regurgitating that 1950s school text ...

When the relief expedition led by Alfred Howitt arrived in September 1861 and found King – kept alive by the Yandruwandha people – they came upon the bodies of the two explorers. Now in full possession of the tragic story, Howitt remarked: “It is impossible to describe the feelings of sadness and awe that filled our minds as we gazed on the spectacle – the remains of brave Burke.”
Not long after their reburial in Melbourne, Summers produced a work of colossal proportions, now at the centre of controversy. The figure of Burke stands at least 3.6m tall, a slender, hatless, bearded giant in shirt-sleeves, gazing out towards the horizon, his right hand gently resting on the shoulder of Wills, sitting next to him with his diary. It is a stirring yet desolate depiction, a monument shot through with melancholy, exhaustion and dashed hopes; the two noble explorers holding forth in grim eminence, against all the odds, against all the wild and capricious forces this unforgiving land could throw at them, joined together, at the end, like medieval knights, somehow intuiting their fate before the fall.
“This seems to have been a story of predestined anticlimax,” Alan Moorehead wrote in his brilliant 1963 account of the expedition. “Without the tragedy on the Cooper, Burke and Wills would have remained rather minor figures, but with it they were lifted to another and a higher plane, one might even say a state of grace. And that perhaps is more important for them than the conquest.”
More than 160 years later, the two men remain a curious study in contrasts: Wills, 27, as the young and disciplined Englishman, devoted to science and deduction; and Burke, 40, as the mercurial, charming, irascible Irishman, who, despite his lack of experience in bushcraft, nourished hubristic visions of glory from the beginning.

It's impossible not to gaze on this spectacle and not note that fact that perfectly competent people of the Aboriginal kind wouldn't have been so bloody stupid and inept.

Dying from incompetence and stupidity is the way that you can get elevated into tragedy?

Or is it because not much of note happened in Australian history in the early days, so a couple of plonkers would have to do?

How desperate did Nick get? 

Why he had to introduce that notorious commie Order of Lenin medal wearer (or so Major Mitchell says, and who could doubt an explorer like the Major?)

Alan Moorehead, Manning Clark



Inevitably Nick had to put in a disclaimer for referencing the notorious Commie swine ...

Manning Clark, that seminal but flawed prophet of Australian history, was especially enamoured of the two hero explorers, and the tragic motif that has haunted their legacy ever since. “In the story of Burke and Wills,” Mark McKenna writes in his 2011 biography of Clark, “he (Clark) came to see the embodiment of everything he had tried to convey in his writing of the country’s history.
“It had all the necessary ingredients – grand visions, majestic ambitions and fatal mistakes – European explorers who were lured by fame into the heart of the continent and slowly undone. All that he (Clark) wanted to say about man and his environment in Australia could be said in the telling of their tragic story.”
But what of the tragic now? What appetite is there today for history at scale? A combination of fear and self loathing has led to a degrading of the monumental in the public square.
While our culture places enormous emphasis on Anzac as an affirmation of ritual and remem­brance, it is nonetheless ridiculed by some as a tradition of perverse extravagance and base jingoism, among other sins. This does not mean admonishing public memorials and ceremonies is wrong; certainly no colonial-era statue I know of enjoys universal acclamation. Nor should it. (After all, it was the Victorians who excelled in the mass manufacture of kitsch chauvinism and stony lifelessness.)

Speaking of kitsch and lifelessness - the reptiles obliged again ... Arrival of Burke, Wills and King at the deserted camp at Cooper’s Creek, April 1861, by John Longstaff, 1907.




What a trudge, but at least the pond could break the journey by heading to the fridge for a snack ...

Still, it suggests that, after years of animus and attack, our culture no longer recognises the difference between what is triumphalist trash and what is telling us something genuinely interesting and worthwhile about our shared inheritance and who we are. The antidote to this is more history, not less; it means commemorating people such as the Yandruwandha, who also played a decisive role in the Burke and Wills epic.
For almost a decade now it has been voguish among certain groups to paper over these distinctions by simply getting rid of things they don’t like or find too irksome. Or, worse still, deploying the past as a kind of weapon to redress historical grievance and fix contemporary inequalities. None of this is new; in fact, it has become predictable and boring.
In the case of the Burke and Wills memorial, its expulsion from the centre of civic life (whatever the lame excuses) is not merely a symptom of a state that is badly governed, or of a national self-confidence in desperate need of renewal, but of a far deeper sense of cultural nihilism that is, perhaps now, ineradicable.

To be fair, Nick managed to be both predictable and boring, and as well as inducing a far deeper sense of cultural nihilism, he also managed to induce an ineradicable sense of ennui and existential tedium.

Worse, he gave absolutely no excuse for the pond to catch up on a few 'toons, so the pond decided to run them anyway ...





And that's the last bit of pleasure allowed on the pond, because Killer of the IPA was also on the loose ...



The header: Daniel Andrews’ big build leaves a big bill, and there’s no relief in sight, Daniel Andrews transformed Victoria from one of Australia's most fiscally prudent states into its most indebted, leaving behind a $235bn debt legacy that threatens the nation’s finances.

The caption for that cornball collage featuring comrade Dan and a cartoon bomb worthy of Wile E. Coyote: For his last budget before leaving office in late 2023, Daniel Andrews, left, projected net debt to surge to a forecast $171bn across the next four years – almost eight times the 2019 level. Now Jacinta Allan, right, has pencilled in net debt of $235bn by mid-2029 using a broader estimate. Pictures: News Corp/iStock

The pond offers this outing as a community service.

Anyone who reads it and switches off will likely have saved themselves the pain of dropping thirty bucks on a Killer item from Connor Court.

The constant obsessive compulsive talk of comrade Dan - who has been long lost to the real world for an immeasurable time - is deeply weird, but it becomes more understandable as a trailer for flogging that Killer book ...

Daniel Andrews evidently governed with political skill, winning three elections. But his fiscal legacy is one of recklessness, overreach and denial – which more Victorians apparently are beginning to realise amid reports the former premier often faces abuse when he ventures out of his home. He leaves behind a state in financial peril, with few levers left to pull.
In his eulogy for former Labor premier John Cain, who died in 2019, Andrews recalled being told by his political mentor and hero “never to waste a day”.
He certainly didn’t in transforming Victoria from one of the most fiscally prudent jurisdictions in the country to one of the most indebted, with painful years of adjustment ahead for Victorians and potentially the rest of Australia, too.
Even if unclear to the average voter who naturally associates him with destructive pandemic restrictions, Andrews’ most harmful and enduring legacy is in public finance.

The reptiles thought so little of the outing that they kept interrupting with sundry snaps, as if hive mind readers might wander off, never to return: Then opposition leader Daniel Andrews celebrates in his electorate of Mulgrave after Labor won the November 2014 state election. AAP Image/Joe Castro




2014? That's an eternity ago ...

summer grass
all that remains
of a Samurai’s dream (Basho)

And yet they must keep on battling that phantom, that ghost, in pursuit of unlikely book sales...

The figures are startling. In June 2023, a few months before Andrews retired from politics, Victoria’s net debt stood at almost $117bn, a $96bn absolute increase, or more than five times greater than what he had inherited from the Napthine government in November 2014.
In his last budget before leaving office in late 2023, Andrews projected net debt to surge to a forecast $171bn across the next four years – almost eight times the 2019 level. As it turned out, that was optimistic. Jacinta Allan, Andrews’ successor and former cabinet colleague, has pencilled in net debt of $235bn by mid-2029 using a broader estimate that includes government non-financial corporations.

The visual interruptions started to come thick and fast ... The Victorian Legislative Assembly soon after Jacinta Allan, lower right, took over as Labor Premier of Victoria in 2023. Picture: Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images




Boring ... and after a short gobbet ...

Shockingly reckless increases in spending were to blame: for the 2026 financial year $107bn, up from less than $70bn before 2020 – a 55 per cent increase, vastly more than the state’s population growth of about 8 per cent across the same period and similarly ahead of inflation. Victoria no longer holds a AAA credit rating from any major agency, a significant symbolic and financial blow that underscores the state’s deteriorating credibility. At AA, Victoria is now the lowest-rated mainland state in Australia.

...more bore ... Daniel Andrews at a 2022 press conference to talk about the Covid situation in Victoria. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling




Inevitably mask- and vax-fearing Killer dragged Covid into it ... on the basis that IPA elephants never forget or forgive ...

The deterioration didn’t begin with Covid, which the government’s apologists often cite as an excuse, but it didn’t begin on day one of the Andrews premiership either. Indeed, Andrews began his lengthy term observing the prudent examples of the earlier Bracks and Brumby Labor governments. When his veteran treasurer Tim Pallas handed down his first budget in May 2015, the state’s net debt stood at $21.5bn.
Three years later, in June 2018, Victoria’s net debt had actually declined to under $20bn.
By the time of the delayed 2020 pandemic budget – released in November that year – the government had pencilled in a tripling of net debt from $44bn to $154bn across the next four years.
That surge was not solely driven by the costs of so-called public health measures. Indeed, total state government spending on Covid-related measures, across the three financial years to June 2022, was $35.8bn, according to a fiscal retrospective published by the Treasury in 2024.

After just four pars, the reptiles felt the urgent need to intervene with the liar from The Shire ...

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has raised concerns about the Andrews Labor government’s plans to increase taxes in next week’s budget. Victoria is set to unveil a swath of tax measures targeting high income earners as the state struggles with a mounting debt and much-needed revenue for coronavirus recovery schemes. Anticipated tax hikes include a $2.4 billion property tax increase and a 50 per cent tax rate for developers who reap windfall gains above $500,000 when their property is rezoned. A new premium stamp duty rate for property transactions valued above $2 million is also expected in the fast approaching budget. Mr Morrison said the Coalition’s plans for Australia’s recovery from the coronavirus pandemic was to be fuelled by lower taxes. “Lower taxes are underpinning Australia’s economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic,” he said. “That’s why it concerns me that taxes are rising here in Victoria under the Labor government and equally the federal Labor Party is looking to increase taxes as well. “That’s not how you grow your economy. That’s not how you get people in work. That’s not how you help them buy their first home.”



Then came another two short pars...

Notorious lockdowns – which lasted longer in Melbourne than in any other major city in the world – hurt revenue as they shut businesses for months on end. But it was government choices, not public health necessity, that underpinned the extraordinary budget blowout.
The politicisation of infrastructure, not Covid, explains the bulk of the cost blowout. Australia’s population was growing rapidly everywhere but only in Victoria did annual infrastructure investment explode from a steady $5bn a year across the decade to 2016 to nearly $25bn in the 2024 financial year.

The reptiles stayed fixated on comrade Dan, while keen to drag in Jacinta too ... Then premier Daniel Andrews and at left, Jacinta Allan, then minister for transport, at a Suburban Rail Loop site at Clayton in 2022. Picture: Andrew Henshaw/ pool via NCA NewsWire




Killer of the IPA barely had the chance to get out just four more pars of moan ...

Andrews launched infrastructure megaprojects on a scale never before seen in Victoria, often with little to no cost-benefit analysis. Projects routinely were announced with no federal funding secured and scant regard for how they would be paid for.
The Suburban Rail Loop, which would link outer suburbs of Melbourne in a radial fashion, was emblematic. Touted as a transformational piece of infrastructure, the SRL was announced before a business case was released and even now remains only partially funded.
Internal government documents and senior Labor figures have since admitted the hope was always to pressure Canberra into paying for a third and for land value capture to pay for another third – a strategy that appears increasingly fanciful. On her trip to China in September this year, Premier Allan had even resorted to asking Chinese investors to help make up the shortfall.
The SRL was first announced in 2018 with a mooted price tag of $50bn; some observers now expect the total cost across the three stages to surpass $200bn.

... and then then the reptiles decided to double down on the visual distractions with two large snaps of what looked like propaganda for a Victorian government on the move ... An impression of what the Box Hill SRL station in Melbourne’s outer east would look like; Work at the SRL site at Box Hill. Picture: Mark Stewart



On and on Killer rambled ...

One senior Labor figure confided that they didn’t believe the government was ever serious about building the SRL when it was announced, seeing it instead as a clever political strategy to win votes in marginal seats that would ultimately be walked back.
Other projects, such as electrifying the rail lines to Melton and Werribee, bringing them into the suburban network and taking pressure off regional services, would have cost far less and brought greater benefits.
Almost incredibly in hindsight, Andrews quashed a proposal from a consortium of investors including even Labor-aligned IFM Investors to build a high-speed rail link from the airport to the city, which would have cost Victorian taxpayers $5bn and could at least be justified on the basis that Melbourne was one of the few major cities in the world without a train connecting its airport to its CBD.

Quick, another AV distraction as the ogre goes about destroying Melbourne, which somehow still managed to score fourth place in the 2025 Global Liveability Index ... behind Copenhagen, Vienna and Zurich, but ahead of Geneva, Sydney, Osaka, Auckland, Adelaide and Vancouver ...

Daniel Andrews has defended Labor’s decision to increase the state’s debt, telling Sky News it is ‘perfectly prudent to borrow to build’. Labor campaigned on the promise it would deliver more road and rail projects but later revealed it would have to borrow $25 billion to do so, doubling net debt to 12 per cent of gross state product. The re-elected Premier told Sky News the infrastructure program will be a ‘gift’ to Victorians that will last generations.



Killer raged on ...

The North East Link was another example. Initially budgeted at $10bn, it is now expected to cost $26bn. The West Gate Tunnel has nearly doubled in cost because of mismanagement and environmental remediation issues. Other examples include the level-crossing-removal program, originally forecast to cost $5bn, which now has exceeded $10bn, and the decision to expand the size of the National Gallery of Victoria. Even the Frankston Hospital upgrade is on track to cost over $1.1bn, more than double the forecast in 2019.
The excessive and growing influence of the CFMEU, the most powerful construction union in the state, has been a major factor in rising construction costs across Australia, up about 30 per cent in recent years.
The militant union, long accused of criminal activities, has used aggressive industrial tactics and restrictive work practices to increase its influence over the more politically moderate Australian Workers’ Union, which once competed to oversee the workforces of state government projects, helping keep a cap on costs.
Even unionised traffic controllers on major sites have reportedly been paid more than $200,000 a year – more than double what police or nurses might earn. Far from confront it, Andrews appeared to ensure the CFMEU would oversee every single major construction project in the state.

But just as he kept building up a head of steam, the reptiles kept interrupting with absolutely meaningless stills that contributed nothing to the ravaging of comrade Dan... Construction work under way on the Suburban Rail Loop in Melbourne’s suburbs. Picture: Mark Stewart



So they do concrete in Victoria? Big deal. We in NSW specialise in shutting down motorways and trapping motorists for hours ...

Undeterred, Killer of the IPA slogged on ...

Then there was the 2026 Commonwealth Games. Marketed as a decentralised triumph for regional development, the Games became a textbook example of fiscal incompetence when it was cancelled barely more than a year after it was announced. The cancellation cost $589m, including $380m in compensation payments, without a single race run.
Cynics noted the Games, which would have helped the government win votes in marginal regional seats where many of the events were to be staged, were announced in early 2022 before the state election. Their cancellation barely more than a year later created an impression that a government floundering in debt might not have intended to host them at all.
Beyond infrastructure, Andrews presided over a bloated political machine. The premier’s private office had 86 staff in 2022, dwarfing the 51 employed by prime minister Scott Morrison at the time. Such overreach was emblematic of a broader approach to government that increasingly blurred the line between public administration and political campaigning.
Across the eight years to 2022 about 20 per cent of new jobs in Victoria were in the public sector, a share that has exploded to 70 per cent of new jobs since then, according to Institute of Public Affairs research from late 2024.

Good old IPA, doing their best for the barking mad ratbag fundamentalist Xians and assorted loons who have infested the Liberal party down south ...Victorian Liberal Leader Jess Wilson has declared a “debt crisis” in Victoria. The state's Opposition Leader claims debt is causing longer wait times for ambulances, fewer police, increased crime and financial pressure on schools and hospitals. Victoria's plunge into the red is projected to total $194 billion by 2028. Ms Wilson has pledged no cuts to frontline workers under a Liberal government.




The pond began to wonder if Killer would ever end, before the point of his rage was finally revealed...

The Victorian public sector workforce grew from 277,670 in June 2015, including 37,942 in the core public service, to 382,823, including 57,345 in the public service, in June 2024. That’s growth of 38 per cent overall and a remarkable 51 per cent for the bureaucracy. Almost one in 10 workers in Victoria now works directly for the state. Combined with the private sector construction workforce dependent on government projects, a significant portion of economic activity and employment is dependent on the largesse of government.
The contrast with the relatively frugal Bracks and Brumby governments, in power from 1999 to 2010, is instructive. They were fiscal moderates who had inherited the political scars of the Cain-Kirner economic collapse in the early 1990s. John Brumby, as treasurer and later premier, delivered infrastructure such as EastLink on time and under budget, often claiming publicly it remains the cheapest toll road built in Australia.
One of the more common lines of defence used by the Andrews government and its supporters is that debt-servicing costs remain lower than under Joan Kirner’s Labor government in the early ’90s. Back then, interest payments absorbed about 15 per cent of budget outlays because the level of interest rates was so much higher. Today the equivalent figure is about 7 per cent.
But this is false assurance, given greater levels of global uncertainty that could lead to a sharp surge in interest rates, which would apply to a much larger sum of outstanding debt in nominal terms.

Back to the future? 

Back to 2008 ... In 2008, then roads minister, later treasurer, Tim Pallas, then premier John Brumby and then ConnectEast tollway managing director John Gardiner at the EastLink opening announcement. Picture: Nicki Connolly




Again Killer of the IPA managed only a few pars...

Another favoured deflection comes from comparisons to the ’60s, when net debt reportedly reached 57 per cent of gross state product under Liberal premier Henry Bolte. But Bolte’s debt was held mostly by revenue-generating state-owned enterprises such as the Gas and Fuel Corporation that have long since been privatised. Andrews’ debt, by contrast, is predominantly held by the general-government sector, with far fewer revenue-producing assets to service it.
And whereas Bolte’s liabilities were associated with infrastructure that generated long-term productivity gains, much of Andrews’ spending was directed towards vanity projects and the ongoing expansion of the public service, about which even veteran Labor figures have privately expressed concern.

... before yet another still interrupted his train of thought, and even more boring than the boring ones that had gone before ... Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at the Victorian Trades Hall Council Building in Melbourne for Daniel Andrews’ farewell event in 2023. Picture: Tony Gough




Killer began to wind down as his hysteria still kept on building ...

Soaring debt was hardly a function of restraint in taxation, which soared during the Andrews administration. According to one analysis, the Andrews government introduced 63 new and increased taxes, fees and charges. Among these were the Covid debt levy, first pitched as temporary but which has become permanent, raising more than $1.1bn a year from overtaxed businesses in 2025.
Land-tax thresholds were lowered to as low as $50,000 (from a previous threshold of $300,000) and rates increased dramatically, hitting small investors and retirees.
A new mental health levy extracts another $1.1bn a year from employers in added payroll tax. Registration fees, such as for births, deaths and marriages, were hiked.
Despite these revenue increases, Victoria continues to run large operating deficits. Victorian taxpayers are now the most burdened in the nation. Total tax revenue is projected to rise by more than 22 per cent by 2029, yet the budget remains structurally in deficit. Even huge revenue windfalls during the Covid recovery period – when property markets and payrolls surged – were spent rather than saved.
The question now is whether Victoria can unwind the debt trap it has built for itself. That will require a level of political courage not yet visible from the Allan government, which has shown little appetite for reform.

There came one last snap of the Sauron of the south, Daniel Andrews and Deputy Premier Jacinta Allan after the Labor government was sworn back in at Government House in 2022. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling



It was way past time to reveal the real point of this Killer outing...

Allan’s May 2025 budget was a continuation of Andrews’ legacy: optimistic assumptions, vague references to future savings and an almost religious commitment to infrastructure spending, not to mention a contempt for private business – epitomised by the Premier’s August 2025 call to mandate two days a week working from home.
Reform would require substantial cuts to a bloated public service, program cuts and significant reductions in taxation, especially on investors and small business.
The assumption has long been that economic growth will lift the state out of its fiscal hole. But there is little evidence to support that. Population growth has slowed relative to NSW and Queensland. And interest rates, while lower than in the ’90s, are no longer near zero. Debt-servicing costs are already approaching $12bn a year, on track to absorb a quarter of the state’s total annual own-source taxation revenue. That number could rise rapidly if borrowing costs increase even modestly.
The government already has sold the Land Titles Office, leased the Port of Melbourne, and privatised VicRoads licensing and registration. What remains is politically toxic or legally complex to divest.

Thar she blowed... The Dark Legacy of Daniel Andrews, edited by Morgan Begg, published this week (Connor Court).




Killer of the IPA delivered a few more pars ...

The government has appointed Helen Silver, former head of the Department of Premier and Cabinet, to identify $3.3bn in savings. But no serious cuts to the public service have been proposed. No major programs have been wound back. And the looming 2026 state election makes any politically costly move unlikely.
Some defenders of the government point to the similar behaviour of all Australian states; Queensland’s net debt is forecast to triple, for instance. But none has gone as far, as fast or as carelessly as Victoria.
Despite the lack of genuine fiscal independence, Andrews nonetheless made the decisions to embark on the most ambitious infrastructure agenda in the nation, inflate the size of the public sector and maintain pandemic-era public spending levels into 2025 and beyond – and there is now a very real prospect that ultim­ately the federal government will be required to step in and bail out the state.

Then came the revealing credit...

This is an edited extract from The Dark Legacy of Daniel Andrews, edited by Morgan Begg, published this week (Connor Court).

However, Killer is the only author credited in that excerpt. 

Likely it was pretty much an extensive, 9 minute guide to his chapter in the work.

So why buy the book?

With Killer already covered by way of the pond's community service, not much was left to contemplate

The rest of the restless contributors rabbiting away looked like mere dross up against Killer's guarantee of iron pyrites ...

Mirko Bagaric | Morgan Begg | Gigi Foster | Scott Hargreaves | Peter Jennings | John Lloyd | Brianna McKee | Kevin You 

Why get out of bed or fork over 30 bucks, knowing that Killer's krazed kavortings are probably a fair indication of the entire collection? And now he's been done and dusted.

That's a negative space vibe, the book promotion that ensured the pond likely wouldn't bother to pick it up even if it turned up for free in the local street library.

Killer of the IPA might want to brood about long one comrade Dan, but the pond still has a lettuce locked in mortal battle with Susssan ...

Just remember that first the reptiles came for TG folk, then for pesky furriners, then for Eurovision protestors, then they came to pick your pocket of a hard-won thirty bucks, in aid of Connor Court ...



Why are the reptiles so humourless, so lacking in a sense of fun?