Thursday, July 02, 2026

In which the pond returns, only to be confronted by a dire triptych of "Ned's" natter, Switzer's swishes and and Dame Groan's yearning for disaster...

 

The pond regrets missing any number of key events while sojourning in the deep south, not least Kez's ditties, and not least Paul Hogan calling Pauline Hanson a pelican, and the pelican invoking the ghost of Norman Gunston as the spirit of dinkum Australia.

The pond doesn't expect Hanson to share the pond's meta, post-ironic, post-reflexive, post-modern understanding of Gunston and the Aunty Jack show, which led decades later to the pond taking up residence in the mighty 'Gong, sharing space with hordes of cackling cockies. 

Suffice to say that she's much thicker than the average house brick, deeply dumb and deplorable, though you're not supposed to say such things for fear of a raid by the thought police. 

If the little Aussie bleeder, voice of the Illawarra, is the new standard bearer for dinkum men, then it's time for them to get out a big box of tissues and a cutthroat razor: Paul Hogan has reportedly called Pauline Hanson a ‘pelican’. Please explain?

The pond also missed out definitive proof that Jewish activists can be even more problematic and irritating than Islamic activists: Cairo Takeaway secures court win over pro-Israel activist who claimed he was ‘completely vindicated’ after settlement

Talk about a desperate attempt to distract from an ongoing genocide, a bit like reptiles sticking heads in sand about assorted heat domes.

On the upside, while down south, the pond did finally learn the meaning of a headlock, an insight that apparently escaped barking mad Moira: Moira Deeming misunderstood meaning of ‘headlock’ but won’t apologise to Matthew Guy for assault allegation, Victorian Liberal MP says interaction with her colleague left her fearful and confused

How long before she finds her true home amongst the gum trees and One Nation?

And damned if she was the only one fearful and confused, because the pond did its best to dig up some Commie swines and socialist preverts down south, but came up short.



As for the reptiles, the pond cared not one whit or jot ... but the pond is pleased to note that over the past month google alleges that the pond went way past a million views ...



It's all nonsense of course, just a bot counting bots in an inane way typical of AI - the real number is in the thousands - but the pond does appreciate those who hung in for the tabloid trash filler. The numbers fell away, but some showed remarkable intestinal fortitude, no doubt boosted by the chance of sighting a Kez contribution, or some other offering from a lark-inclined correspondent.

Speaking of regrets, the pond also apologises for returning on a Thursday, always low rent day at the hive mind, but wot the hell, time to resume the dance.

Sheesh, did the reptiles have to offer "Ned's" natter as the first chance to do the lobster quadrille?



The header: Can Anthony Albanese win where Keir Starmer failed? Albanese is not Starmer and probably won’t resemble Andy Burnham either. But the shared policy overlap between these parties of the left cannot be missed.

The caption and the unfortunate credit for the wretched collage: Can Anthony Albanese, left, succeed where Keir Starmer, right, failed so spectacularly? Pictures: News Corp / AFP. Artwork: Debbie Schipp For that banality, the reptiles offered a credit? 

As for "Ned's" dance card number, it's an entirely specious comparison between two different parties in two different countries, but it's an easy layup for the ponderously pompous pedant, and as a bonus, it's so wretched the eternal natterer could only manage a five minute read.

The tone was set by the gigantic billy goat butt in the sub-header: Albanese is not Starmer and probably won’t resemble Andy Burnham either.

So what's the point?

Well the natterer has to fill up those column inches, and the pond silently endured:

When a two-year-old government with a parliamentary majority of more than 160 seats has its prime minister forced to resign, the conclusion is irresistible – British Labour and its left-wing ideology have confronted a crisis of electoral support and political relevance.
The Albanese government, elected in 2022, has been a superior political performer to its British counterpart under the failed leadership of Sir Keir Starmer – but the British experience contains lessons in Australia both for the progressive left and for Albanese Labor.
Starmer ran a far more left-wing government than Albanese with much less political acumen. It was marked by two ideas above all – the assumption that a sustained greater role for state power was the key to a better economy and soci­ety, and that a steady transition to progressive cultural values would promote human flourishing.
These assumptions faced a virulent backlash from the parties of the right – Reform UK and the Tories – but they also provoked alarm and concern from the left itself. Albanese shares many of Starmer’s policy assumptions but he has been far more pragmatic for far longer. Yet, like every Labor prime minister, Albanese ultim­ately will be defined and judged by the quality of his Labor reformism and this raises the question: can Albanese devise a successful centre-left agenda that works in the current age of disruption?
Can Albanese succeed where Starmer failed so spectacularly?

Just to add to the idle speculation, the reptiles dragged in a snap of the man fitted up as being a Sir Keir clone, Anthony Albanese and speaks at the CME breakfast at The Westin. Picture: NewsWire / Colin Murty




The pond found it hard to take, especially as "Ned" resorted to his old trick of quoting the thoughts of others:

Starmer’s dilemma was captured by a senior Labour figure who told The Times: “We’ve passed the two most left-wing budgets in more than half a century and then bled votes to the Greens. We should probably reflect about why that is, before lurching off to the left again.”
Starmer faced a political assault on two fronts – by the right-wing populist party of Nigel Farage, still leading in the polls, and by the extreme left Green Party under Zack Polanski, campaigning against climate delay and timid politics and espousing quasi socialism. Starmer was the wrong man for the times – in an age of super-polarised, ideological politics he operated as a political bureaucrat, making his removal probably inevitable.
In their account of the Starmer era, Patrick Maguire and Gabriel Pogrund capture his immobility: “The prime minister liked to work alone in the upstairs room they called the Thatcher study. The Iron Lady stared down at him over the first weeks of his premiership; disturbed, he had the picture taken away. If she could have spoken, she would have told them that the prime minister was reading. That, as much as the deathly hush, was the biggest mystery of the new No. 10. For hours, Starmer sat alone, rigid with monastic int­ensity.”
Andy Burnham will not be sitting alone. He is a social creature. Britain’s new prime minister likes people and people, so far, like him. Virtually every profile of Burnham reports that his skill lies in pleasing people and that he adjusts his message to the audience.
While being popular after Starmer is an imperative, Burnham’s mission is to confront the nation’s economic crisis. There is a favourite and disrespectful joke told about Burnham: A Blairite, a Brownite and a Corbynite walk into a bar and the bartender asks: “What will you be having, Mr Burnham?”

The next caption featured a stunning insight, down there with "Ned's": Keir Starmer was forced to resign as the Prime Minister.



It's true it's a devastating insight into the paucity of "Ned's" insights, but is that any reason to keep on reading?

Burnham’s elevation, unchallenged to this point, is a devastating insight into the paucity of Labour politics. The party was unable to find a successor from within its own cabinet. Every sign is that Burnham, previously mayor of Greater Manchester, will be accorded a “coronation” despite offer­ing no comprehensive manifesto for his prime ministership and having no mandate from the British people for what he might do. This is hardly a recipe for success. A few voices have suggested he go to the people, but that would be a high-stakes gamble.
He inherits a government relieved but in disarray. Its centre-left governing ideology hasn’t worked. Under Labour, Britain is a high tax, high spending, redistributionist government with weak economic growth, poor productivity and struggling living standards. It is undermined by high energy prices arising from its successful decarbonisation, a flawed and unpopular immigration policy, suffers from an inflated welfare sector, a highly regulated labour market, and a culture of identity politics embedded across many institutions.
What was the problem? Was it Starmer’s ineffective leadership or Labour’s social democratic model?
In truth it was both.
The lesson of the past two years is writ large. British Labour is a strange blend of economic nostalgia, revived faith in state power, net-zero rigidity and a divisive culture based on identity characteristics. Burnham arrives having previously been a Westminster MP and with strong ideas about devolution, winding back Whitehall’s power and strengthening the regions.
Perhaps he will benefit from low expectations. The Economist magazine wrote: “Mr Burnham’s instincts do not appear to lean towards a convincing program either. One reason is his chameleon-like nature. Britain’s next prime minister twists with the wind and panders to the people in the room. At a time of extraordinary technological and geopolitical change, Mr Burnham tells voters that he can turn back the clock on 40 years of neoliberalism.”
Burnham will surely begin with a message of dramatic change – but change based on the future or the past?
Much of Britain’s problems lie in the system of government itself. The structure is ill-suited to the economic, technological and knowledge-based explosions of the coming decade. Too much policy is about protecting the public from change and its consequences, not maximising the opportunity and community benefits from change.

This from a rag that has studiously attempted to resist both climate science and the digital revolution, and still carries on with a tree killer edition? You could get a coffee for the price of the weekend rag if you were mug enough to pay full price for the folly.

Hang on, must show off Andy, Andy Burnham delivers a speech at The People’s Museum in Manchester, England. Picture: Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images




And that was that, a grim final gobbet from "Ned" in his usual Chicken Little, the sky is falling, doomsayer mode ...and wouldn't ya kno it, he resorted to Tony Bleagh as a truth teller ...

The grim conclusion from British Labour is that its current policy settings and ideological faiths aren’t working for the public as a whole. Is Labour in the 2020s the party of British decline? That question needs to be confronted. Indeed, the Albanese government should cast its eye on the UK and also reflect upon that question. If the idea takes hold that British Labour is presiding over national decline then the combined forces of the right will surely prevail at the next British election.
Maybe Burnham will provide the ultimate answer. Of course, Britain’s problems are deep-seated with the previous long-serving Tory government bearing much of the responsibility.
But Labour is now politically ascendant and purports to put its stamp on the country.
Albanese is not Starmer and probably won’t resemble Burnham either. But the shared policy overlap between these parties of the left cannot be missed. In this age of disruption and populism, centre-left politics in the West is moving further left. Britain demonstrates this and Australia seems to be moving in that direction.
In his recent essay Tony Blair got it right – the times are calling for bold policies from the radical centre, not the extremes of the left or right. Incrementalism won’t do the job. The public is after change and that puts the ideological beliefs of the left and right under searching pressure.
Albanese won’t be going the way of Starmer’s forced resignation. Indeed, his political position remains stronger than many of his opponents realise. But the parallel issue for Australian Labor cannot be missed: does Labor’s policy model and ideology still work for Australia in the 2020s?

Oh just go suck on a Board of Peace, and have a European heat wave just at the time Bleagh pretended climate change wasn't a thing, and dammit the pond refuses to miss out on the infallible Pope that turned up during the pond's away time...



Oh dear, he mentioned the unmentionable.

As for the rest of the reptile pack, the pond refused to add this to its dance card, but at least the pond could add it to the intermittent archive for those who cared:

China is not simply exporting influence. It’s expanding jurisdiction
Beijing has not enacted another domestic law. It has asserted a right to judge conduct occurring inside other sovereign states.
By John Coyne and Geoff Wade

What did they expect from a dictator running a one party state, but at least the archive seems to be continuing to work...

Unfortunately, that made room for the swishing Switzer, a man who could make the tango seem like a serve of rhubarb crumble (once a staple of UNE college kitchens back in the day).



The header: How Malcolm Turnbull’s 2016 election disaster started Liberal fragmentation. This was the moment many Liberal supporters began to conclude that Howard and Costello no longer represented their interests or values.

The caption for the snap of the self-regarding wondrous gesticulator with crooked lip: Malcolm Turnbull announces his victory in the 2016 Federal election. Picture: Braden Fastier

Look, the pond is always up for a bout of Malware bashing, but unfortunately when it's done by a dickhead the size of the swishing Switzer, there's a danger that the pond might be made to feel a trace of sympathy for Malware.

The opening line in this version of the blame game perfectly posed the problem.

Ten years after squandering Tony Abbott’s commanding electoral majority, Malcolm Turnbull still has the chutzpah to rant and rail about the Liberal Party.

Qué? The short lived onion muncher's reign did much to squander any regard for the Liberal party, and the loons that followed him didn't help, and not just Malware.

Currently it's a carnival of clowns, with the latest dropkick loser, the beefy boofhead, casting around to blame his predecessors: Liberal frontbencher calls for party ‘rebrand’ after drop in polls, prompting ridicule from Labor; Melissa McIntosh’s comment comes after Angus Taylor’s claim Morrison government ‘breached trust

So why shouldn't Malware join in the fun?

The swishing Switzer has to reach far back into time to drag up Ted Heath, and remind the pond that it still has a CD of Ted conducting classical music. (Please, call the maestro Edward, and it's not that bad).

Never mind, the swishing Switzer has an extraordinary talent for making himself unlovable, so the pond endured:

He has become something of Australia’s Ted Heath, the wet British Tory prime minister dubbed “The Incredible Sulk” for devoting his post-political life to undermining the Conservatives after Margaret Thatcher toppled him as party leader in 1975.
Like Heath, Turnbull possesses an extraordinary talent for making himself unlovable, sustained by the conviction that he has been right about almost everything and his successors wrong about almost everything.
Never mind that Turnbull’s prime ministership, from 2015 to 2018, marked the beginning of the Coalition’s long electoral fragmentation. The disappointing 2016 election, a decade ago on Thursday, was more than a poor result. It was the moment many traditional Liberal supporters began to conclude that the party of John Howard and Peter Costello no longer represented their interests or values.

The party of little Johnny and the man who didn't have the ticker?

The man who managed to lose his own seat as well as government?

What bizarro world does this Switzer live in, as the reptiles interrupted with a snap... Malcolm Turnbull with members of his ministry. Picture: Andrew Taylor / AAP Image



If you want a re-write of political history, the swishing Switzer is your man:

The irony is that Turnbull now dispenses regular advice on how the Liberal Party should rebuild itself, even though many of the fractures that now threaten the party first opened under his own leadership. Turnbull led the Coalition into the July 2 election as the overwhelming favourite but it lost 14 seats and clung to office by the narrowest of margins.
The most significant legacy of the election lay elsewhere. Nearly a third of Australians voted for minor parties and independents, foreshadowing the fragmentation that has since transformed Australian politics. Pauline Hanson returned to the Australian political theatre and One Nation, widely dismissed as a spent force, secured four Senate seats. This was on Turnbull’s watch.
How did Turnbull, a sophisticated, highly intelligent and self-made man who had seemed so assured when he deposed a first-term prime minister only nine months earlier, come so close to defeat?
Much of the answer lay with Turnbull himself. His justification for replacing Abbott in September 2015 – a case oddly echoed at the time by influential conservative commentators, such as Miranda Devine – was that he would broaden the Coalition’s electoral appeal and restore stability after years of leadership turmoil.

By this time the pond has so many bruises on its toes from doing the dance with this clumsy clodhopper that the snap of Ted merely felt like another elephant treading on foot: Sir Edward Heath at No. 10 Downing Street




Sheesh, instead of that distraction, the pond could have been celebrating the deep south with the immortal Rowe ...


Can someone put that creature in a headlock?

In the next gobbet, the swishing Switzer tried to pretend there's some weird brand of liberalism that embraces Ming the Merciless and the madness of the onion muncher:

The argument was simple: only Turnbull could win back centrist voters while retaining the Liberal base. The strategy failed. Rather than broadening the Coalition’s support, Turnbull’s leadership began to alienate many of the party’s traditional voters without winning enough new ones to compensate.
The deeper problem was that Turnbull himself was not, in Thatcher’s parlance, “one of us”. Long regarded as what Robert Menzies would have dismissed as a “little-L liberal”, he was viewed by the conservative grassroots as aloof, patrician and disconnected from mainstream Australia.
His enthusiasm for more ambitious climate policies and changes to superannuation unsettled many traditional Liberal voters who had expected something very different from a Coalition government. His positions on tax reform also shifted repeatedly, leaving an impression of hesitation rather than conviction.
No wonder the election campaign became a debacle. Having triggered the first double-dissolution election in nearly three decades over legislation to rein in corrupt unions, Turnbull scarcely campaigned on workplace reform.
Labor performed far better than expected, though the result was hardly a ringing endorsement of Bill Shorten. Henry Kissinger’s famous observation during the Iran-Iraq war – “It is a pity both sides can’t lose” – neatly captured the public mood. Britain had just voted for Brexit, Americans would soon elect Donald Trump, and many Australian voters had likewise grown disillusioned with both major parties.

The reptiles interrupted with the man who, so it seems, so it's alleged, ruined everything: Malcolm Turnbull meets locals on July 7, 2016 in Brisbane. Picture: Tertius Pickard / Getty Images



Malware did much that was wrong - destroying the NBN at the whim of the onion muncher for starters - but this is just a silly form of specious revisionism, a casting about for a victim in the blame game (as if the pond would lift a finger to argue in Malware's defence).

Turnbull’s decision to call a double dissolution proved a costly political miscalculation. The Coalition’s commanding House of Representatives majority was reduced to the barest parliamentary margin, while an increasingly fragmented Senate left the government dependent on a disparate crossbench to pass legislation.
The election fatally weakened Turnbull’s prime ministership. Although he remained in office for another two years, he did so as a diminished leader, increasingly constrained by colleagues who had lost confidence in his political judgment. Within two years, they did to him precisely what he had done to Abbott. It was a reminder of one of politics’ oldest laws: those who seize power by the sword should never assume they will not perish by it.
Looking back, the 2016 election was less an aberration than a warning. It was not simply a disappointing Liberal result; it marked an inflection point in Australian politics. The Coalition retained office but the election exposed a growing disconnect between the Liberal Party and many of its traditional supporters.
A school of thought holds that Turnbull, as a progressive Liberal, helped preserve the party’s affluent metropolitan seats in Sydney and Melbourne. That’s a fair point, although that trend became far more pronounced after the 2019 election.

Luckily dragging the wooden Sir Keir into the blame game heralded the final gobbet, Keir Starmer resigned as the British Prime Minister in June



And inevitably the final gobbet proved the ineffable stupidity of the swishing Switzer ...

The more important point, however, is this: had Turnbull moved further towards progressive positions on climate, border protection and constitutional change, he would almost certainly have deepened the estrangement already felt by many traditional Coalition voters. The Liberal Party today is bleeding far more votes on its right than on its left.
Turnbull will be remembered as an inconsequential prime minister who invites comparison with another British prime minister.
No, not the aforementioned Heath but Keir Starmer. Both entered office amid enormous expectations before leaving behind little in the way of lasting achievement or reform. Both also left office to the relief of much of the electorate.
Yet even the outgoing Labour prime minister has one distinction Turnbull can never claim. He won a landslide. Turnbull inherited one and nearly squandered it.
Tom Switzer is presenter of the Switzerland podcast.

That's the best distraction the reptiles can offer for the current woeful state of the Liberal party under the beefy boofhead?

Not bloody Starmer again!

What limited imaginations and references this antediluvian hive mind has.

Please allow the immortal Rowe to celebrate the way forward:




And so to a great relief, because Dame Groan was out and about this day, and as usual, we're about to be entirely rooned:



The header: Albanese government faces real estate downturn as new tax policies begin. While Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers will assume everyone will move on from their tax changes, one danger looms large.

Sadly there was no credit for the truly hideous collage, so AI can take the blame: A major downturn in the housing market would be a huge hit to the Albanese government.

As usual, Dame Groan was determined to find disaster at every turn, which perhaps explains why she drags Houdini into her wriggle and squirm escape act:

Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers think they have pulled off a budget Houdini act. The incoherent and compliance-heavy package of tax increases designed to attack owners of capital was rushed through parliament, with a few embarrassing tweaks made on the way.
The wrinkle of the “widow’s tax” still hasn’t been sorted, but the Treasurer assures us that he’s on to it. It’s a bit like his assurance that the capital gains tax and negative gearing wouldn’t be changed – not convincing, in other words.
What happens to anyone affected in the meantime through a death or divorce is anyone’s guess.
But the changes to the capital gains tax and negative gearing are now law, and so Albo and Jimbo assume that nearly everyone will just move on. For Labor, it’s a numbers game. There are not many voters directly affected by the new tax imposts, so the politics are auspicious. Let’s not forget here that the Albanese government is diabolically bad at policy but good at politics.
But here’s the thing: there is one major stumbling block that could really disrupt the best-laid plans of the two men. And this is a major correction in the real estate market – dare I even use the word “crash”. (A correction is usually defined as a price decline of about 10 per cent; anything significantly above that is a crash and is also associated with much lower numbers of transactions in the market.)

The reptiles decided to share the odium: Housing Minister Clare O'Neil says collapsing auction clearance rates are “a market correction”.



Here's the thing, and the pond says this as someone who actually owns a property in the inner west of Sydney.

In what universe is a block of land containing an aged Victorian era structure worth squillions, or at least a couple of million? How can anyone afford to get into that market, unless they happen to be a lawyer or a doctor, and even then not your average solicitor or GP?

Yet in Dame Groan land, this is all perfectly natural and to be expected, and must be maintained or the sky will fall, and clouds will hit the ground:
It’s clear that a major downturn in housing prices has begun. In June alone, home prices nationwide fell by 0.4 per cent, the biggest fall since 2022. In Sydney, prices fell by 1.2 per cent and in Melbourne, by 1 per cent. Even in some of the better-performing smaller capitals, house prices are beginning to soften.
Now the Prime Minister declares that this is “great news” because it favours young first-home buyers. He may want to think this one through.
If house prices are falling, who wants to rush in to buy if prices will be a whole lot lower in six or 12 months? And what happens to the supply of suitable homes for purchase when property prices are falling? They simply dry up as owners hold off on putting their properties up for sale.
We see this in recent house auction data. Not only has the auction clearance rate fallen below the magic 50 per cent mark, but the number of auctions is also far fewer than just 12 months ago.
The figures for housing approvals in May are also worrying. Total dwelling approvals fell 1.1 per cent, the third month in a row. Approvals for private sector dwellings excluding houses – that’s higher-density housing – fell by 10.4 per cent. Note here there is a considerable time lag between approval and completion of new homes. Not all approvals lead to construction.
The widely held view now is that the Albanese government’s target of 1.2 million extra homes by 2029 will not be met, with a shortfall of at least 200,000.

Only a shortfall of 200k? In the pond's view, that would be a miracle. And what of all the wretched apartments into which the rats are being packed, or the hasty "innovative construction" being backed by loons of the Minns' kind, structures that will be lucky to last twenty years before they need major overhauls?

Minns Labor Government backing innovative construction to build more homes faster

As Minns hoes into inner city public housing for a quick fiscal fix, he's determined to make replacement housing in the donga look like the sort of ticky-tack to be found everywhere in the United States, preferably in the path of a tornado.

Don't get the pond started, as the reptiles flung in an anodyne snap that didn't prove anything: Total dwelling approvals, fuelling developments such as Armstrong Creek in Victoria, fell for the third consecutive month. Picture: Getty Images



And so to the final gobbet, wherein Dame Groan came to a prospect that set her salivating, an economic crash, and the country flung into a depression. 

What joy for the old biddy ...

Naively, the Prime Minister is placing great store by Treasury modelling that indicates the combined impact of the changes to CGT and negative gearing will simply reduce the rate of growth of property prices by 2 per cent.
Let’s be clear here: this figure is not quite made up, but it’s close. Assumption upon assumption drives the outcome. Change the assumptions and the result looks very different. And let’s not overlook the fact here that Treasury is also suggesting that the combined impact of the tax package will lift the rate of home ownership by only 7500, on average, per year – that’s trivial – and there will be 35,000 fewer homes built as a result.
You think Albanese might have learnt his lesson about the folly of relying on modelling. It was Reputex modelling that told us all that electricity bills would fall by $275 per year. Yeah, right. He was happy to turn his back on that when it suited him.
He might end up doing the same thing with the Treasury modelling when he is dealing with the economic fallout of a real estate market crash.

Oh please, just wipe away the "we'll all be rooned" disaster drool, so we can settle down to a breakfast of tar and cement ...

And now, just to prove that the pond went on a trip, this from beefy boofhead central, otherwise known as the mighty town of Goulburn, which fancies itself as a down south Tamworth, but doesn't quite make it ...

How they love and care for their pose dogs ...





And now as the pond had to endure this pair blathering on about Lord Nelson for endless episodes during the trip down there, roughly equivalent to a constant repeat playing of Sir Edward Elgar's greatest patriotic hits, this for those interested in their take on the American War of Independence.

It might be too long for whatever this blog is being viewed on, but a search of The New Yorker YouTube channel will turn it up ...




Wednesday, July 01, 2026

In which little Timmie Bleagh holds the fort, and a tungsten light bulb ...

 

The pond really began to scrape the bottom of the reptile barrel as it attempted to find a little reptile-related cover for its Melbourne junket.

With coverage of the lizard Oz impossible, the pond was forced to revert to little Timmie Bleagh, but anything's better than offering up the Bolter.

The pond banned the Bolter long ago, and nothing has happened which would lift the ban.

On the other hand, the pond hadn't thought of Tim Blair for a long time. He was such a lightweight that he only occasionally turned up in the pre-lizard Oz specialisation pond era.

The pond remembers that little Timmie had a terrible time at the ABC ...

In 2001, he and Imre Salusinszky hosted a shortlived weekly one-hour radio program, The Continuing Crisis, that was intended to respond to conservative Australian Prime Minister John Howard's plea for a right wing answer to the Late Night Live program of Philip Adams on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's (ABC) Radio National. (The ABC is the government funded public broadcaster, the equivalent of the BBC).
The program - an initiative of the then Managing Director Jonathan Shier - ran from June to September 2001, when it was scrapped due to low ratings. Salusinszky subsequently complained that "we were given a tiny office, containing one desk and one phone". (Their office space was no worse than is provided to other specialist programs). (here)

Much as early exposure to fur, leather or plastics can result in fetishes, this left a deep Freudian scar in little Timmie's psyche, and thereafter he became a Don Quixote, forever tilting at ABC windmills.

He also became devoted to lost causes ...

For years little Timmie fought a rear guard action against those dreadful bulbs that threatened his cherished tungsten pets.

This is the result of a quick search, a reminder of his light bulb jihad at its peak ...






Deeply weird, but how he struggled and fought, and who knows, he might still have a supply of 60w and 100w bulbs lurking under his bed, so he'll never have to bother with saving electricity.

Back in the day, little Timmie made his name as a blogger when blogging was still a thing, and every reptile had to have one, and News Corp even financed a few.

Little Bleagh was infamous for routinely getting it wrong.

One moment came when he decided to do battle with Media Watch and David Marr, with a flag the basis for the feud.

Luckily the transcript can still be found in full at Trove here, with this the end piece the culmination of a yarn about a flag allegedly buried in Iraq...

It was part of that tormented quest by Bleagh to punish the ABC wicked ...



Flags, light bulbs, what a dedicated crusader he was...

These days he's just a dutiful hack, hacking it out for the Daily Terrorist, and you guessed it - deep sigh or groan - in the pond's curated examples, it's more Pauline.

The pond thinks that it's gone way above the odds to prove that the Hansonification of News Corp is real.

In this outing, Bleagh (so unfortunate to share the name with that sexed-up dossier rat) explained why Pauline was all the go:



The header: Tim Blair: Left sees common sense as a conspiracy; Besides shaking up the major parties, Pauline also causes leftist paranoia; my own explanation for One Nation’s rise is a little simpler. It’s that Australians are tired of being lied to by the major parties and Australia’s political class

The caption for the AV distraction:

PREMIUM
High Steaks with Pauline Hanson
Become a member to access our premium video content

Not more PREMIUM content and the alternative illustration saved in the intermittent archive didn't inspire the pond to reach for its shekels-laden purse.




Eek, she turned chef, as Bleagh turned effusive ...

One Nation’s primary vote in the 2025 federal election, barely more than a year ago, was just 6.4 per cent. Even the Greens, who took a hammering in 2025, racked up more than 12 per cent.
Then something changed. It’s still changing now.
By mid-October, just five or so months after the election, One Nation’s polling had leapt to double figures.
That number, Macquarie University’s Professor Shaun Wilson wrote at the time, was “high enough to challenge the Greens as Australia’s third-largest party in polling terms”.
“If this result was replicated at an election, it would put One Nation in a position to win House of Representative seats.”
Astonishing. But why not aim higher?

The reptiles then slipped in a cartoon, not the sort the pond usually features ... Warren Brown cartoon for June 2, 2026. One National Pauline Hanson



Luckily Timmie did the right thing and kept the outing to a tabloid short 3 minute read, as he marvelled at Pauline being the future:

Skip ahead another seven months to the present day, and the latest Redbridge poll puts Pauline Hanson’s party on 31 per cent – ahead of Labor’s primary vote and within reach of government.
This is all proving too much for ex-Labor strategist turned Redbridge director Kos Samaras. Even before the latest One Nation approval spike, Samaras and his nervous colleagues deduced that an old-fashioned global conspiracy was afoot.
“What’s actually happening,” wrote Samaras last month, is that “a sophisticated, transnationally-networked information operation has spent years cementing Pauline Hanson as ‘one of us’.”

He's such a wag, and so there was a waggish visual moment ...Behind the scenes as Redbridge's pollsters try and figure out One Nation's appeal, or a scene from the cult TV classic, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia?



Brilliant, and Pauline's brilliant too, and giving lefties paranoia, and isn't it all about owning the libs and that bloody ABC which was so cruel to him way back when, leaving scars that can never be erased ...

Hanson’s Please Explain YouTube cartoons, created by my Sky News mate Mark Nicholson’s Stepmates crew, are all part of this sinister plot.
“Cartoons don’t get scrutinised the way normal political ads do,” Samaras darkly explained. “They get shared. Laughed at. Quoted at the pub. They become the in-joke and once you’re in on the joke, you’re in the tribe. That’s the trick.”
Kos Samaras needs a holiday.
Redbridge researcher Alex Fein seems similarly jittery, claiming of Hanson: “The depth of the parasocial relationships that voters have now formed with her cannot be overstated. This is an authoritarian-style influence apparatuses of a kind we know well from overseas.”
A transnationally-networked information operation! An authoritarian-style influence apparatuses! Besides shaking up the major parties, Pauline also causes leftist paranoia.

Time for a worshipful snap of the new reptile heroine and "warrior queen" (thank you Joe): One Nation leader Pauline Hanson. Picture: Richard Dobson



Little Timmie sometimes purports to be a deep thinker, and he knows the reptile litany, and he chanted it in the same way that one might chant the responses in a Latin mass ...

My own explanation for One Nation’s rise is a little simpler. It’s that Australians are tired of being lied to by the major parties and Australia’s political class.
It’s not just the little lies, of the sort you expect from all politicians. It’s big lies, massive ones, such as:
Coal is expensive. Renewable energy is cheap. Jihadists are our friends. Australians aren’t taxed enough. Blokes can have babies. The UN knows what is best. Nuclear energy is dangerous. Diversity makes us stronger. Wages should always be set above demand. Housing regulations are a touch on the light side. Questioning immigration is racist. Colonisation is bad and multiculturalism is good – although you can’t have the latter without the former. Climate change is our problem to fix. And so on.
Concerns about these issues weren’t implanted by any transnationally-networked information operation. Australians have been rightfully worried about all of them for decades. Yet our political class has scorned those Australians. The Coalition signed us up to net zero, and even now, with One Nation consuming its core vote, the Coalition won’t withdraw from the Paris Agreement. Turnbull’s ghost haunts his party still.
Meanwhile, Labor is led by someone unable to make any decision at all without self-interested political analysis. Fifteen people were slaughtered on Bondi Beach, and the PM actually dithered over a royal commission.
The man views mass murder through a political prism. He does the same with basic biology. Albanese was asked last week by the ABC’s Patricia Karvelas if he supported reintroducing women to the Sex Discrimination Act. The stonewalling began. “I’m not engaging in culture wars here,” the PM said. Albanese dodged and ducked three follow-up questions before offering this telling line: “I haven’t seen the Coalition stuff.” Because that’s what he needs in order to compose a response. He needs a political framework.
Finally, softly, Albanese said this: “It’s important that women’s spaces be available for women.”
He got there at last.
Yet One Nation got there a lifetime ago.
In Albo-land, Labor would always succeed by taking down the Liberals. But if Australians can’t find a fit-for-purpose opposition that is ready-made and waiting to go, it turns out they’ll build one themselves.
One Nation may not yet be a finished product, but all the raw materials are there.

Yes, all that remains is for it to be fashioned into shape by News Corp and what a fine party they and Gina will have.

Have a break, because the pond reckons this will be still going down while the pond's away:



Now on with bonus Timmie, though regrettably the bonus was also about Pauline.

By this time, the pond was completely over the reptile infatuation with her, but summoning up what remaining strength the pond had, it was time to dive in.



The header: Tim Blair: Here’s to Hanson’s ever-helpful hater mates; Unable to see that the things they hate about One Nation are the same things that many Australians love, cranky leftists have turned their anti-One Nation movement into a great big Elect Pauline Project, writes Tim Blair.

The caption: Pauline Hanson creates history as support for One Nation now leads Labor for the first time in Newspoll, Anthony Albanese criticises Barnaby Joyce and the opposition parties. Plus, Donald Trump storms out of a sit-down interview with NBC.

Again the intermittent archive had an alternative illustration ...



...but the pond found it hard to get excited, especially as little Timmie trawled over the same ground as all the other reptiles.

The pond began to wonder if Pauline might just become a tungsten light bulb, another little Timmie enthusiasm:

Another poll, another spectacular win for One Nation. The latest Newspoll confirms that Pauline Hanson’s party is the most popular political organisation in Australia.
One Nation has achieved this in the most cost-effective way possible. Rather than spending huge sums itself on promotions and campaigns, One Nation is relying on its leftist enemies to get the word out and drum up support.
They’re doing this for free, God bless ‘em. Unable to see that the things they hate about One Nation are the same things that many Australians love, cranky leftists have turned their anti-One Nation movement into a great big Elect Pauline Project.
Here, for example, is eternal ABC activist and current X commentator Quentin Dempster’s fever-dream version of One Nation’s platform: “Frack, drill, open cut coal; deport/ban Muslims; restore landlords’ neg-gear/CGT slush; open slather gambling; paywall for ABC; axe Family Court; ‘work choices’ 2.0, burn Aboriginal flag.”

How little Timmie loves to hate the haters, being not too shabby a hater himself.

How the ABC must regret inflicting that scar on him so early in his career, leaving him shattered and bitter... Pauline Hanson is detested and sneered at the by the left, but their hatred only fuels her support. Picture: Lyndon Mechielsen/The Australian



Those memories of the evil ABC came bubbling back to the surface like the witches' brew in Macbeth:

Put aside Dempster’s misrepresentations, exaggerations and fearmongering, particularly about Aboriginals and Muslims, and you’ve got a pretty workable nation-rebuilding strategy there. As my mate Fred Pawle responded: “You had me at ‘frack, drill and open cut’. But a paywall for the ABC as well? Bring it on!”
Many similarly embraced One Nation’s opposition to an increased minimum wage – a stance characterised by Employment Minister Amanda Rishworth as horribly anti-worker.

A paywall? How noble he is. So deeply scarred, he might have called for its privatisation or defunding, but a paywall would put it in the same situation as News Corp, desperately scrabbling for punters, and not succeeding that well.

The next caption took on Timmie's words... Dopey Employment Minister Amanda Rishworth is unable to comprehend that the lowest paid workers in the country will earn even less if employers can’t afford to hire them, which is why Pauline Hanson has opposed increasing the minimum wage. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman



Oh yes, she's a worker's dream, and Gina loves her for it ...



Straight out of the Uncle Elon playbook, what a fine time will be had Dogeing the ABC and SBS ... fulfilling little Timmie's lifelong dream (and maybe tungsten bulbs can make a comeback).

“Senator Hanson’s comments about the minimum wage were deeply disappointing,” Rishworth whined on the weekend. “She says that she’s on the side of working people but can’t bring herself to back in a minimum wage increase for the lowest paid workers in this country.”
That’s because Hanson knows the lowest paid workers in the country will earn even less if employers can’t afford to hire them. She also knows that attacking average Australian employers runs counter to working class ambition.
Modern Labor is increasingly class-bound and ideologically rigid. By comparison, Hanson is reviving the spirit of Bob Hawke’s Accords. “There’s a give and take in employment,” Hanson told Sky News a week or so ago, “and people have a right to employ who they want to.”
Again, bring it on. And bring on more of the left’s elitist sneering, which just keeps driving Middle Australia towards One Nation.
Another ex-ABC chap, Barrie Cassidy, lately portrayed inner-city voters as too sophisticated for Pauline’s team. “They’re young, they’re better educated, they’re multicultural,” Cassidy said. “That is not fertile ground for One Nation.”

Dammit, not another ABC chappie, and even worse an Ex one, and never mind that little Timmie Bleagh was something of an Ex himself, Ex-ABC journalist Barrie Cassidy (with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, right) is a fervent Hanson hater. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman



Little Timmie was - surprisingly - pleased that vulgar educated youff might be rallying to the cause (other reptiles held their noses at such a notion):

When a party is running at more than 30 per cent on primary votes, it is inevitable that quite a few of those votes are coming from the young, educated and multicultural.
(Cassidy is of course a famously inaccurate analyst of non-traditional political shifts. Back in November 2016, as counting began in that year’s US presidential election, Cassidy grandly declared: “Trump cannot win. The nightmare is over.”)
Hanson is definitely a nightmare for ex-Department of Immigration file sorter Abul Rizvi. Referring sarcastically to One Nation’s call for locally trained medicos, Rizvi wrote in February: “All those One Nation types who left school at 15 could easily have become doctors and nurses. Everyone knows that!”
As it happens, my mother left school at 15 and became a nurse. She’s now a One Nation type – and a figure of scorn for tax-enriched Canberra ponces. An X reply nailed it: “Telling people they’re stupid for wanting to vote for Hanson will work really well I’m sure.”
And then after berating the ponces, little Timmie Bleagh broke into the satirical wit for which he's justly famous:
But the contest isn’t done yet, not with the next federal election so far away. If One Nation wishes to further increase their polling advantage, they need to activate the arts warriors.
An announcement along these lines might do the trick:
“Australian art is too vital and too beautiful to be administered by government. One Nation will liberate artists from government’s choking grip and allow them to create visions, sounds and spectacles worthy of awe and admiration.
“The arts funding machine in Australia, inflicted on us for decades by all the major parties, has generated masses of expensive rubbish but very little actual art. It has turned artists into bureaucrats whose talent is not expressed through image or song but via grant applications, paperwork, required criteria and approved politics.
“One Nation will abolish arts funding and erase the arts ministry. Those calling themselves artists may protest. In time, however, art itself will thank us.”
That’ll get them going. Let the crazy-framed arts administration glasses glow with indignation and the big dangly earrings rattle with rage. One Nation’s got some votes to harvest.

Big dangly earrings? The pond supposes it's a variation on Joe's derisive yowl about pearl-clutching, but not by much.

The final extended y'artz metaphor left the pond wondering what might be the sort of big-selling art that little Timmie cherished.

There came a tungsten light bulb moment:



Say no more, a perfect encapsulation of the sort of philosophically deep art that's at one with Gina, little Timmie and the thugby league-infested minds of the Daily Terrorist readership ...

And now, as John Oliver might say, this ...because the pond reckons this will also be still hanging around like a bad smell ...





Tuesday, June 30, 2026

In which the pond starts to get desperate, and turns to Joe to provide holiday filler...


The pond began to get a little desperate in its attempts to find a little tabloid filler while junketing in Melbourne (and so unable to fulfil the usual lizard Oz studies).

Eventually the pond had to land on Joe Hildebrand, who, to put it kindly, is not the sharpest reptile in the swamp.

He's always smirking (in lieu of a smile) and always wants to be liked, and is about as shallow as a algae-saturated reflecting pool.

This is how the reptiles pitched him to the Daily Terrorist readership ...

Joe Hildebrand is a columnist for news.com.au and The Daily Telegraph and the host of Summer Afternoons on Radio 2GB. He is also a commentator on the Seven Network, Sky News, 2GB, 3AW and 2CC Canberra. Prior to this, he was co-host of the Channel Ten morning show Studio 10, co-host of the Triple M drive show The One Percenters, and the presenter of two ABC documentary series: Dumb, Drunk & Racist and Sh*tsville Express. He is also the author of the memoir An Average Joe: My Horribly Abnormal Life.

Sheesh, yet another reason not to watch the ABC.

With gritted teeth, the pond plunged in ...



The header: Hildebrand: Labor risks losing its blue-collar base in a two-front war on ‘wokeness’; Labor is losing its working-class base to Pauline Hanson while also fighting off inner-city elites, in a two-front battle that could remake the party, writes Joe Hildebrand.

The caption for the AV distraction which seems to start off all these tabloid outings:

PREMIUM
Hanson says Australia can't be 'multicultural' in National press club address
Become a member to access our premium video content

Premium? Nah, and what followed suggested that as far as telling English history, Joe might have been better off studying rocket science.

The biggest turning point in English history came in the year 1066.
A bunch of Frenchy former Vikings led by William the Conqueror – the spoiler alert is in the name – did not entirely destroy the Anglo-Saxons but they so violently hollowed out their power structures and replaced their culture that England was never the same again.
Today the Labor Party is facing its own Battle of Hastings, and like the one King Harold had to fight it is a war on two fronts.
Harold famously marched north to Stamford Bridge to fight off an invasion by some proper Vikings led by Harald Harvard. Having disposed of the legendary warrior king he then marched south to face William of Normandy.
That travesty was all in the name of supporting the new reptile fixation with Pauline, demonstrating yet again how the reptiles are more than Hanson curious, and are now well into the Hansonifcation of News Corp.

This made the pond think that Joe learned his history from 1066 and All That, which can be found at Project Gutenberg ...

CHAPTER XI

WILLIAM I. A CONQUERING KING

In the year 1066 occurred the other memorable date in English History,
viz. William the Conqueror, Ten Sixty-six. This is also called The
Battle of Hastings, and was when William I (1066) conquered England at
the Battle of Senlac (Ten Sixty-six).
When William the Conqueror landed he lay down on the beach and
swallowed two mouthfuls of sand. This was his first conquering action
and was in the South; later he ravaged the North as well.
The Norman Conquest was a Good Thing, as from this time onwards England
stopped being conquered and thus was able to become top nation.

DOOMSDAY BOOK AND THE FORESTS

William next invented a system according to which everybody had to
belong to somebody else, and everybody else to the King. This was
called the Feutile System, and in order to prove that it was true he
wrote a book called the Doomsday Book, which contained an inventory
of all the Possessions of all his subjects; after reading the book
through carefully William agreed with it and signed it, indicating to
everybody that the Possessions mentioned in it were now his.
William the Conqueror (1066) is memorable for having loved an old stag
as if it was his father, and was in general very fond of animals: he
therefore made some very just and conquering laws about the Forests.
One of these laws said that all the forests and places which were not
already Possessions belonged to the King and that anyone found in them
should have his ears and legs cut off -- (these belonged to somebody
else under the Feutile System, anyway) -- and (if this had not already
been done) should have his eyes put out with red-hot irons; after
this the offender was allowed to fly the country.
Another very conquering law made by William I said that everyone had
to go to bed at eight o’clock. This was called the Curfew and was a
Good Thing in the end since it was the cause of Gray’s Energy in the
country churchyard (at Stoke Penge).
Although in all these ways William the Conqueror (1066) was a very
strong king he was eventually stumbled to death by a horse and was
succeeded by his son Rufus.

Questions will be asked:

1. Give the dates of at least two of the following:
(1) William the Conqueror.
(2) 1066.

Quite so, and a goodly break from Joe.

Joe used polling to celebrate the one-time fish and chip shop owner as an "almighty warrior queen", which means that the pond could possibly claim the title of being the new Virginia Woolf: New polling has confirmed One Nation, led by the almighty warrior queen that is Pauline Hanson, has become the party of choice for blue-collar voters, as Labor faces a ‘two-front war’ threatening its working-class base.




Dear sweet long absent lord, the Daily Terrorists do even worse AI memes than the lizards of Oz.  What on earth possessed them to do this, with bonus lightning ...




What did she do to deserve this kind of humiliation? Even the pond thought it went too far ...

Joe kept on with the metaphor, and whatta you kno, being a reptile, or possibly a bear of little brain, the pond began to think of Molesworth:

There he met his end with the apocryphal arrow in the eye. England’s government fell and its ruling class was quickly overrun by people speaking French.
Labor’s current dilemma is the same. It needs to defeat the almighty warrior queen that is Pauline Hanson coming at it straight from the heartland of its working-class base.
But even if it wins that victory it still needs to fight off an army of Frenchified show ponies in its rear.
Today we call them “Teals” or “Greens” but they are every bit as elitist and dangerous as the Francophile Scandinavians that hollowed out the power structures of England a millennia ago.
So let’s cut straight to the modern day. It is now beyond doubt – it has been quantified, analysed and verified – that working class people are fleeing Labor for One Nation.

Read that line again and weep at the idiocy of it:

Today we call them “Teals” or “Greens” but they are every bit as elitist and dangerous as the Francophile Scandinavians that hollowed out the power structures of England a millennia ago.

The pond did warn that Joe wasn't the shiniest penny in the jar, especially as he decided to go off on a crow eater jag ... South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas just won a record majority but his most working-class electorate swung heavily towards Pauline Hanson. Picture: Eleni Tzanos



The only thing the pond noted recently about the crow eaters is that they have a considerable number of loons in the upper house ... Sarah Game's bill restricting late-term abortion access voted down in lower house

And who supported the bill in the lower house?

Only three lower house Labor MPs — Mr Malinauskas, Mr Koutsantonis and Michael Brown — supported the legislation. From the Liberal Party, Ms Hurn and Sam Telfer voted in support.

Say no more, or more to the point, sayeth on Joe:

Polling shows that One Nation is now the party of choice for a majority of blue-collar voters.
Even at the South Australian state election, where the mighty Peter Malinauskas just won a record majority, voters in Adelaide’s most working-class electorate swung heavily towards Pauline Hanson.
Malinauskas, a former supermarket shelf-stacker, is the epitome of a working-class boy made good, unabashedly mainstream and – as the rest of the result showed – overwhelmingly popular with everybody else.
So why not with blue collar voters? In fact it’s not Mali at all. It’s ordinary battlers sticking their finger up at the establishment because they feel they are not being listened to or getting a fair deal.
We know because we have seen it before. In Trump. In Brexit. In SA.
In fact Pauline Hanson’s policies would be terrible for workers but that doesn’t matter – any more than it matters that immigration isn’t even a state issue. It is simply an up yours to the elites.

The reptiles kept on trying to persuade the pond to pay a PREMIUM:

PREMIUM
James Morrow’s take on Hanson’s press club address
Become a member to access our premium video content



Nah, not if that meant a cent going towards Joe blathering on about 'leets ...

And that is not even the supposed “top end of town” – they clearly have no problem with Gina Rinehart – it is the cultural elites that they feel are determining the nation’s priorities and governing for themselves as well as the activist elite who dominate political debate with ideological crusades to the exclusion of bread-and-butter issues.  Just look at the self-appointed standard-bearers of progressive politics and you are instantly drowned by an endless sea of grievances that are incomprehensible to the average wage earner just trying to stay afloat.
Pauline Hanson and One Nation have launched a new attack ad aimed at Anthony Albanese and the Labor party.
Now it might not be the ALP actually saying these things, but if Angus Taylor reckons the Libs are being punished by association with Labor, just imagine how much Labor is being punished by its association with the left.
That is why, as Right faction supremo Don Farrell warned in The Australian on the weekend, wokeness is death.

Okay, the pond resisted earlier iterations of Joe's "woke" salad, but finally the pond could take no more ...




And then Joe ended by pretending the reptiles cared about the workers ...

It is not enough for Labor to simply ignore the toxic tropes driving workers away, it must actively condemn them and cast them out of its own ranks.
In the end the English lost and the Normans not just invaded England but remade it politically, culturally and economically.
Labor cannot allow the same thing to happen. It cannot allow its blue-collar base to be effaced by woke white-collar whingers and become a Labor party in name only. Not for its sake, and not for the workers’.

Pull the other one Joe.

Now please enjoy a Python moment ...




It wasn't much of a break, but it'll have to do, as this Joe double bill unfortunately doubled down on Pauline ... so much Hansonification, so little time...



Joe Hildebrand: How the ‘stupid’ GetUp stunt is driving voters to Pauline Hanson; GetUp’s anti-Hanson stunt at the National Press Club has backfired, casting her as a victim and accelerating blue-collar voters’ historic shift toward One Nation, writes Joe Hildebrand.

The caption for the AV distraction, of a kind that apparently is used at the start of all Daily Terrorist "think" pieces (the pond realises that's an abuse of the English language): Sky News host James Macpherson believes activists gaining covert access and remotely triggering a device near One Nation Leader Pauline Hanson exposed alarming security vulnerabilities. “GetUp were able to gain prior access to a venue where a well-known right-wing speaker was to give an address, then used a remote control to activate a device within metres of the podium,” Mr Macpherson told Sky News host Andrew Bolt. “Thank God it was only a banner, but it just goes to show the more Pauline grows … the more seriously they’re going to need to take security.”

Still no rebrand for the home of hysterical nonsense?

The pond realises that it's already been down this path with lovely Rita, meter maid, and sundry other reptiles, but to drive the metaphor home, this is yet another reminder of how the reptiles resemble a murmuration of starlings, or perhaps a chattering of cockatoos.

By golly, they've learned their lines, and they're all going to write them down:

The stupidest thing about GetUp’s Pauline Hanson stunt – from an outfit that specialises in stupid – is that it was a real-time, real-world display of exactly why voters are deserting the left for One Nation.
The best that can be said about it was that instead of just calling her a racist, the banner highlighted Hanson’s hypocrisy on better wages for working people.
But of course that didn’t matter because, instead of getting people talking about One Nation’s non-existent record in helping workers – which Labor has been valiantly attempting to prosecute – everyone was suddenly just obsessed with the fact of the stunt itself and the subsequent whodunnit as to the person behind it.
Thus the first cardinal rule of PR was broken: Never let yourself become the story.
It was also the first time Hanson had addressed the National Press Club, leaving her wide open to lengthy and long-awaited scrutiny of her party’s paper-thin policies.
Instead, all of that interrogation was buried by GetUp’s undergraduate attention seeking, thus breaking the first cardinal rule of warfare: Never interrupt your enemy when he – or she – is making a mistake.

Pauline was making a mistake?

In all the reptile coverage of the press club event, Joe was the first to introduce this as a variant, but it didn't last long, with the caption for the next image righting the ship, The best that can be said about it was that instead of just calling her a racist, the banner highlighted Pauline Hanson’s hypocrisy on better wages for working people – but it instantly once more cast Hanson as the victim of the angry activist left. Picture: Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images




Way to go Joe, way to remove all memory of Gina from the hive mind.




Joe was all in on Pauline, a veritable Hansonite of the first water:

But the dumbest thing by a country mile is that it instantly once more cast Hanson as the victim of the angry activist left that is driving traditional blue-collar voters into her arms.
It is not GetUp’s banner that the working class is flocking to, it’s One Nation’s. And why wouldn’t they? For decades now the loud and trendy left has been obsessed with almost everything but the economic advancement of working people.
If Angus Taylor can blame voters’ desertion of the Coalition on Labor, then Labor can surely blame workers’ desertion of them on the shouty overprivileged tosspots who dominate debate on the left.
The toxic scourge of identity politics, with its twin obsessions of race and gender cooked up on university campuses where blue hair outnumbers blue collars, has become the modern left’s fundamental cornerstone. Little wonder working-class people think the left has nothing to offer and a majority back One Nation for the first time in history.
Meanwhile, Palestine has replaced Vietnam as the cause du jour to such a white hot extent that anti-Semitism – trussed up as anti-Zionism – runs rampant, while the radical Islamism that ended 15 lives in Bondi is wholly ignored.
Little wonder Barnaby Joyce recorded the slaughter that day as the moment when One Nation’s vote exploded. This is the tectonic shift causing the political earthquake we are now experiencing, and yet still the oh-so educated smart arses of the inner-city activist class are too stupid to see it and too far removed from ordinary people to feel it.

Trust Joe to celebrate Barners, Tamworth's eternal shame, and for some reason, after that rhetorical flourish, the pond felt some sympathy for a loon berating the oh-so educated smart arses of the inner-city activist class as too stupid, while imagining Barners as some kind of rustic rocket scientist.



The pond takes it back, what a comfortable way to make a phone call ...

The next Daily Terrorist snap had the pond thinking it was seeing double, or perhaps somehow Pauline Pantsdown had made it into the picture, We are now experiencing a political earthquake, and yet still the oh-so educated smart arses of the inner-city activist class are too stupid to see it and too far removed from ordinary people to feel it. Picture: NewsWire/Martin Ollman




At last Joe wrapped up his uxorious paean of praise for Pauline:

Labor, however, is feeling it like a punch to the guts. It may well survive the One Nation juggernaut but if it does not counter this shift it will be left as a party unrecognisable from the noble working-class origins that forged it, formed it and should be its most fundamental foundation.
Ironically, the Budget was meant to be a step in the right direction: Giving more money to workers while launching a populist tax grab from the supposed “top end of town”.
In fact it was two steps back, as anyone with any memory of Bill Shorten’s infamous 2019 campaign – with the exact same policies and the exact same rhetoric – should have known in their bones.
Instead, they should have borrowed the playbook of the great Neville Wran, who famously said: “Everyone aspires to do a little better. That’s what being in the working class is all about: how to get out of it.”
He should know. The Boy from Balmain became a lawyer and a statesman. And that is what every worker wants, to get ahead and provide a better life for their family than the one they had.
Anything that stands in the way of that aspiration is anathema to the wants and needs of ordinary people. They do not want wealth redistribution that keeps them on life support, they want pathways to the life they aspire to.
Thus to his credit, and as predicted by yours truly, the PM has now reversed some of his Treasurer’s most contentious Budget measures and reinstated more tax relief for small businesses and start-ups.
Tellingly, Albo also rightly condemned GetUp’s dumb stunt as “counter-productive”.
His next task must be to divorce himself from the pretentious whims and pearl-clutching protests of the activist class and focus entirely on the everyday needs and dreams of ordinary mainstream Australians.

Really Joe, the best you've got as idle abuse is blathering about pearl-clutching by the activist class?

You really are keen to make 1066 and All That and Molesworth sound like a deeply intellectual read. Get serious Joe, “a red-headed chiz is a swiz or swindle as any fule kno.”

Hey, Joe
Where you going with that devastating wit in your hand?
Hey, Joe
I said, where you going with that devastating wit in your hand?

I'm going down to bring the ladies down
You know, ain't be gunna clutch them pearls
Once they hear the line I lay down
You know, ain't gunna be messin' with other men
Huh, not with me being so cool...

Never mind, as the pond mentioned the pool at the start, the pond bets this remains an ongoing joke, days into the saga ...