Saturday, July 11, 2026

In which the pond does an epic "Ned" Everest climb, and yet still finds room for the Angelic one!

 

The pond reacted with fear, alarm, despair.

The pond knew what this top of the page splash meant in a heartbeat, in a cosmic flash of fatigue ... 



...and yet the pond couldn't look away. It was like stumbling on a car accident or an ancient mariner.

It might be the ruination of the pond for all time, as correspondents reeled away, a mingle of nausea and tedium jumbling in their agitated bowels, but it had to be done...



The header: Crisis of conviction: how the Liberal Party destroyed itself from within; three PMs in nine years had policy wins facing new challenges but Australia did not deliver its potential under a badly divided Liberal Party.

The caption for Sean's brave use of his digital finger: Liberal leaders, from left, Scott Morriosn (sic, so and thus, don't try to pin that one on the pond), Tony Abbott and Malcolm Turnbull, with John Howard in the background. Digital illustration: Sean Callinan

A full 13 minutes of "Ned" ferreting through ancient remains, allegedly to provide insight, but really acting as a glorified extended book promo? So be it, if it had to be done, it must be done.

It wasn't as if there weren't alternatives. Diligent reptiles faithfully kept up familiar reptile jihads.



Relax, the pond just threw in that yarn about the horrific eggs, but won't bother linking. 

Instead those who can't handle "Ned" can head off to the intermittent archive ...

EXCLUSIVE
Chalmers’ capital gains tax fix is a non-starter: start-ups
Jim Chalmers has been warned that Labor’s proposed capital gains tax exemption for start-ups has onerous hurdles that will make it too hard for most innovative companies to qualify.
By Greg Brown, James Kirby and Thomas Henry

It was way back on 12th May 2026 that the budget came down, and yet here the jihadist reptiles still are, jihadist egg beaters at the ready ...

BUDGET FALLOUT
‘Chasing their tail’: Renters caught in budget trap
Renters hit by soaring costs as federal budget housing reforms backfire
Weekly rents are outpacing savings, and house prices refuse to fall fast enough, economists warn.
By Mackenzie Scott and Marcus de Blonk Smith

Valiant snappy Tom stood in for the bromancer, and raged at the guvermint ...

Signs clear: we’re not match fit for perilous world
Labor’s approach to urgent challenges is bitsy; no wonder the simpletons are on the march
Our defence bill could hit $1 trillion, wages are shrinking and growth is stalling – yet the government’s answer is a tax tweak here and there.
By Tom Dusevic
Columnist

They were tempting in their own way, but the pond felt like King Lear ...

You do me wrong to take me out o' th' grave.
Thou art a soul in bliss, but I am bound
Upon a wheel of fire, that mine own tears
Do scald like molten lead.

It was past time to scald some ancient lead with "Ned" ...

The Australian project faltered in the early decades of the 21st century. This was not a singular Australian experience but part of the wider crisis of social and economic life conspicuous in Western democracies. A new phase of history was under way, shaped by stupendous global changes in economics, technology, energy and society.
The Liberal-National Coalition was in office over 2013-22 but its hold on power for much of that period was unconvincing. The grip the Liberal Party had long exercised on Australian psychology – exemplified by the success of Sir Robert Menzies, Malcolm Fraser and John Howard – began to fall apart during the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison era. The party of the established order lost its hold on the nation.
The great reform age that began with the 1983 Hawke-Keating election and continued under the Howard government had passed into history. This was the age of Australian Exceptionalism, when the nation was reshaped by bold governments and astute leaders.
The reform project spanning 20 years finally succumbed to generational change and mounting sclerosis in the political system. The Rudd-Gillard-Rudd era retreated from Hawke-Keating reformism, the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison era failed to capture the Liberal reformism of the Howard-Costello period, and the Albanese Labor government struggled to implement a convincing agenda in its first term.
Death knell for Exceptionalism
Australian Exceptionalism had entered the twilight zone.
By the early and mid-2020s the conclusion was obvious: Australia was no longer a global exemplar of reform, no longer leading the pack of industrialised nations in its performances.
Interviewed in late 2024, former treasurer Peter Costello argued that Australian Exceptionalism had terminated: “Australian Exceptionalism became a phrase used in the IMF (International Monetary Fund). We were considered a model by other Western nations. This process began with Hawke and Keating but the fiscal high point – 10 budget surpluses and the retirement of all commonwealth debt – was considered to be Australian Exceptionalism.
“What we have lost is the idea that Australia can be exceptional. The idea that Australia can lead the world has disappeared. I feel it is the end of an era, when Australia was exceptional but does not see itself as exceptional any more.”

Part of the process was to examine every little bit that the cat and "Ned" had dragged in ... In 2011, former Prime Minister Paul Keating implored Labor to ‘recognise what it has created’. Picture: News Corp




Sheesh, "Ned" and his cycles and his conundrums ...

Years earlier former treasurer and PM Paul Keating had told the author the meaning of the reform age had been the creation of a new idea of Australia. Looking back on the era, he said it was a time when the government and the public “strived to make Australia a first-rate country – a place with a powerful economic engine and a soul to match. What this added up to was the construction in Australia over these years of a socio-economic model which was unique in the world.”
History moves in cycles. In 2011 Keating implored Labor to “recognise what it has created”, saying Labor “has created a new society and it has to be the party of the new society” yet he was met with denial and incomprehension. The Hawke-Keating age was not reproduced; it was finished and consigned to history.
The conundrum of the 21st century was that the more successful nations became, the more problems they generated – expanding budgets, high debts, more carbon emissions, greater environmental damage, rising social divides, the loss of social mobility, the resentment of the disadvantaged, the greed of the elites, the decline in education standards and the relentless debasement of cultural life.

How soon before the reptiles did a bigly book cover plug? Pretty soon ... The Twilight of Exceptionalism by Paul Kelly.




The pond isn't exactly sure if this is the point the official extract began, not having read the original, nor ever likely to ... but in any case, the pond's feeble justification, yet again, is that it might have some interest for those refusing to part with their shekels, and those who realise the tome might take a while to hit a street book library ...

BOOK EXTRACT: THE LIBERAL CRISIS OF CONVICTION

‘The pervasive defect facing the Liberal Party in the 21st century was the demise of conviction – the party conducted three experiments under three different prime ministers, unable to agree among themselves about what they represented.
Tony Abbott, Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison had strong policy beliefs, but a party that cannot agree on its leader is a party that cannot summon conviction. Once the lack of conviction infects the party, recovery is slow and painful, at best.
The Liberal Party suffered a loss of conviction over much of its governing 2013-22 era. This culminated in opposition in 2025 when the Liberals endured the worst election defeat in their history – a defeat where the demise of Liberal conviction was the pivotal factor in the public’s rejection.
The warning pathway was brightly lit. The public detected a loss of party nerve after the 2014 Abbott-Hockey budget. Turnbull’s 2016 election campaign was devoid of persuasive Liberal values and beliefs. In 2022 the Morrison government was defeated because people were unsure of its beliefs – they saw a party conducting politics but confused about conviction.
The Liberal and Labor reviews of the 2022 election agreed on one point: Scott Morrison’s unpopularity drove the government’s debacle. But this missed the greater truth – the Liberals were years deep into an identity crisis.
Blaming Morrison was yesterday’s news. If Morrison had been the sole problem the solution would have been simple.
Over the nine years there were three decisive events with consequences for the conviction deficit.
The first was the September 2015 removal of Abbott, an elected PM in his first term, by a relatively narrow partyroom vote. The upshot was a permanently fractured partyroom with Turnbull, from the start, doomed in his effort to keep the Liberals fit for purpose.
The second event was Turnbull’s narrow re-election in 2016 after just the first term of office with a loss of 14 seats – the ruin of Turnbull’s claims as a vote winner or an exponent of Liberal faiths – setting a perilous second-term trajectory pointing to the government most likely facing termination in 2019.

Oh dear, not SloMo again ... Scott Morrison’s unpopularity missed a greater truth – the Liberals were years deep into an identity crisis. Picture: Getty Images



Apparently if you read "Ned", SloMo had "intellectual fuel", but ran out, a bit like the way the Russians are currently running short of petrol...

The third event was Morrison’s surprise 2019 election victory against virtually all predictions – a success only Morrison could have pulled off – that gave the government a belated chance to restructure and recover. The opportunity was there, but it proved beyond the capacity of the prime minister, with the 2022 defeat being a verdict not just on Morrison but on an unconvincing Coalition era.
After the loss of office, senior figures reflected on the malaise eroding the Liberal Party. John Howard said while longevity was a factor, the deeper issue in the 2022 defeat was “we had no plan for the future”. Elections are about the national direction. Yet, said Howard, “We had no manifesto. No statement of where we were going to take the country.”
After nine years of Liberal government the Morrison engine ran out of intellectual fuel.
But Howard saw a broader difficulty. Referring to the entire 2013-22 era, Howard said: “People lost sight of our enduring philosophy. This was obviously one of the reasons why we had changes of leader. Part of this was a lack of conviction over policy and identity.”

The lying rodent thought he had an enduring philosophy? There's no end to the capacity for delusion, and even worse, the reptiles decided to slip in a bunch of cracker barrel thoughts ...






Not the onion muncher again, as the downhill slide continued...

Howard believed the recent Coalition era had walked away from one of his strongest identity commitments as Liberal leader and PM: “Within the living memory of most people following politics, the Liberal Party had been identified with economic reform, in government and in opposition. Starting from the early 1980s, we turned ourselves into a party of economic reform. But that support for economic reform was missing in this most recent period.”
Former federal director of the Liberal Party and former minister Andrew Robb described the collapse of faith: “At the 2022 election defeat many of our people didn’t turn out. They had lost all confidence in the prime minister combined with the absence of any sense of future direction, rooted in policies people needed and expected from the Liberal Party.
“Since John Howard left, the party has been characterised by too much endless disruption, endless changes in its authority figures and the lack of consistency. The recent era has been characterised by the lack of consistency, unity and conviction.”
After the 2022 defeat, Abbott confronted the issue of conviction: “Our job is not to be a slightly less politically correct, slightly less fiscally irresponsible, and slightly less overbearing version of the Labor Party.”

Sheesh ... Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott. Picture: Getty Images




Why bother with this parade of dropkicks and losers contemplating their navels, while "Ned" busily gathered fluff?

Because it's there, and because that's what pro herpetologists do, no matter the pain ...

Abbott said that “we’re no longer sure quite what it is that Liberals believe and how that might translate into policy”. He said that “at the heart of our disquiet is the current difficulty distinguishing a Liberal government from a Labor one”. Referring to the party’s conservative/Liberal identity as a broad church, Abbott lamented that “too often, conservatives aren’t conservative and liberals aren’t liberal”.
The conviction malaise, in effect, was conceded in the official rev­iew of the 2022 Liberal election campaign conducted by Brian Loughnane and Jane Hume. It said: “The Coalition’s agenda for a fourth term appeared to be limited and unclear to the electorate. The sense the government had ‘run its race’ was allowed to develop as a result.”
Interviewed in 2023, opposition leader Peter Dutton tied the lack of conviction to the leadership eruptions: “It’s important to be honest with ourselves. From the time that Tony Abbott was deposed by Malcolm Turnbull the Liberal Party hasn’t stood for any substantive policy formulation. The Morrison government was defined by the response to Covid and by AUKUS and it did a sterling job in both areas. But there was no major policy offering at the 2022 election.”
The irony in these remarks is that Dutton was describing the central mistake he would make as Liberal leader before and during the 2025 election – this was a case of knowing the problem but being unable to avoid repeating it.
Asked about Howard’s critique that the party had no 2022 election manifesto to highlight Liberal–Labor differences, deputy leader and treasurer at the time Josh Frydenberg partly conceded the case: “There were points of difference. But it wasn’t enough just to say we had managed the pandemic as well as any other country in the world. We needed a couple of key battlelines with the opposition to highlight the differences between us and them. And that wasn’t present.”
From Frydenberg, it is a telling concession.

Then came three more from the cracker barrel ...






As Sartre notoriously said in his play Huit Clos (No Exit) ...

“So this is hell. I'd never have believed it. You remember all we were told about the torture-chambers, the fire and brimstone, the "burning marl." Old wives' tales! There's no need for red-hot pokers. Hell is ... either other people, or worse still, "Ned" blathering endlessly on about the Liberal party!”

Unsurprisingly, the most savage attack on the Liberal crisis of conviction came from Turnbull on the day of – and in the years after – his removal, his chief focus being climate change: “In terms of energy policy and climate policy, I think the truth is that the Coalition finds it very hard to get agreement on anything to do with emissions … (these) bitterly entrenched views are actually more ideological views than based in engineering and economics. It’s a bit like same-sex marriage used to be. Almost an insoluble problem.”
Turnbull approached the conviction issue from a different vantage point – as a progressive. The point is the Liberals were plagued not just by a lack of conviction but by differences over what constituted conviction. It was a double dilemma.
Turnbull said: “You get this madness that the party is being told by its media backers to move further and further to the right, focus on values issues, whether transgender kids or denying climate change, all of this craziness that had been infecting the party for years … it’s electoral catastrophe.”
Turnbull claimed that unless the Liberals found conviction on the climate issue, “it is difficult to see how the Liberal Party can ever win a majority in the House of Representatives”. This is a doom-laden statement about the party’s future. There was heavy irony surrounding these remarks given Turnbull’s leadership as PM was notable for its conviction malaise – witness the 2016 election. Indeed, the conservative wing typically assailed Turnbull as PM for the defect against which he was lecturing – a lack of conviction.

Not the mutton Dutton, anything but that ... Opposition Leader Peter Dutton concedes defeat during a Liberal Party election night event at W Hotel on May 3, 2025. Picture: Getty Images




By this time, some punters might be feeling a little Golding ...




There's a price to pay for that 'toon, a bigly gobbet of "Ned" ...

Dutton said: “Malcolm came in as a cult figure. He was rich, a quintessential liberal in the sense that he’d been financially successful, was a greater raconteur and one of the smartest people you’d ever meet. But the Liberal Party was just a party of convenience for his ambition.”
Abbott and Turnbull had conflicting beliefs on climate policy and fought over the issue for a decade. In this sense the conviction failure became an identity failure. The question became: conviction for what?
Abbott, Turnbull and Morrison – then Dutton as opposition leader – had different views on what the party should be convinced about. By the time of the 2025 election under Dutton the dilemma seemed to be solved – the party apparently settled on the absence of conviction.
In truth, Morrison’s defeat at the 2022 election transcended his personal deficiencies. The Loughnane-Hume review offered devastating conclusions, saying the result “is not comparable to any previous one in Australian political history”.
Losing control of the brand
The Liberal Party had been reduced to four out of 44 inner-metropolitan seats. The debacle had been years in the making. The party lost seats to the left and to the right – to Labor, the teal independents and to the Greens.
The review report said: “By the time of the election the Coalition had lost control of its brand.” The lack of policy projection meant the Liberals were “unable to frame the electoral contest” and the government was defined by its opponents.
A party that cannot define itself has no future. The problem was not just tactics and presentation but core belief.
The 2014 budget was a work of conviction. Abbott and Joe Hockey saw it as a statement of belief. But that budget became a turning point in the Coalition era, conceivably the turning point – by bringing down punitive savings for which a shocked public was unprepared.
Robb, a minister at the time, said of the first budget: “It killed Abbott, it killed Hockey, and it threw the government into disarray.”
Abbott and Hockey were believers. But their conviction in winding back the budget deficit triggered a collapse in government support and, unsurprisingly, a sustained retreat from conviction. Hockey said: “Turnbull weaponised the internal dissent and got away with it because of the lack of conviction in our ranks about the economic strategy.”
The lesson is that convictions can be dangerous. The wrong conviction can destroy a leader – witness Abbott with his first budget. Conviction can make a government but also ruin a government – recall Abbott again with his knighthood for Prince Philip.
Turnbull arrived with his new manifesto of cosmetic progressivism that would never be acceptable to the wider reaches of the party. He was exposed at the 2016 election when he ran a mediocre campaign.
The party’s internal review of that election, scathing and largely kept secret, criticised the government’s failure, saying there was no “clear plan with a clear narrative”. Decoded, there was no conviction. Turnbull demonstrated there was no necessary nexus between intelligence and conviction. He lost 14 seats and came to the brink of minority government. Turnbull survived but was permanently diminished.
Former federal president of the Liberal Party Richard Alston said, after Turnbull had left politics, that he should resign from the Liberal Party: “He should acknowledge the reality that he has no interest in party politics and no interest in the Liberal Party.”

On the upside, Malware was the last snap in the parade of dropkicks and losers... Former Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull. The party’s internal review of the 2013 election, scathing and largely kept secret, said there was no “clear plan with a clear narrative”. Picture: AFP



That seemed to inspire "Ned" to get even more prolix, in his ponderous, portentous, pedantic way ... as if mere words could turn SloMo into some weird down-to-earth pragmatic, rather than the clap happy clown he was ...

When Turnbull fell, Morrison arrived with his down-to-earth pragmatism. He was also a believer – witness his determination in fighting Covid-19, his resolution in resisting China’s coercion and his drive to launch the nuclear submarine program.
In 2019 Morrison won a narrow victory, a tribute to his tenacity, yet much of the victory reflected a negative campaign on Labor’s tax agenda while retaining just enough confidence in the Coalition to get across the line. Morrison’s win secured three parliamentary terms for this Coalition era, but defeat – when it came in 2022 – was devastating.
During the Coalition era the Liberals won three elections but lost the battle of ideas with the Labor-led progressive alliance on a range of economic, social and cultural issues.
Howard said competence is vital in politics. But he added that competence “does not really inspire people” – they “bank it and say ‘OK, that’s good, what’s next?’ and this was Morrison’s failure.” Howard said: “After a long time in government people wanted more and Morrison didn’t have that.”
Howard was astonished at the absence of resolve – that Morrison did not take a stand against identity politics, did not back economic reform, prosecute the religious discrimination bill far earlier or push the anti-corruption commission bill to a parliamentary vote. You can agree or disagree with Howard’s comments – the point is he was searching for signs of Liberal Party conviction.
Killing ground of conviction
Internal division is the killing ground of conviction. The list of Liberal and Coalition policy divisions over nine years was a litany: climate change, same-sex marriage, fiscal policy, tax policy, free speech, religious freedom and LGBTIQ rights.
In truth, Howard’s record as PM only highlighted the subsequent Liberal loss of conviction. He was far more defined by what he did than what he denied – sponsoring gun law reform, waterfront reform, the GST-led tax reform, budget surpluses, industrial relations deregulation, Work Choices, income tax cuts, private school funding, border protection, offshore processing, support for East Timor’s independence, deepening the US alliance, anti-terrorism laws, war commitments in Afghanistan and Iraq, and backing the constitutional monarchy.
Some of these stands succeeded and some failed – Work Choices set the Liberals back many years. The point is Howard, even more than Menzies, saw the Liberals as a party of political attack. By presenting the Liberal Party as a “broad church” embodying conservatism and liberalism, Howard widened his scope for political initiatives and attack based on conviction

principles. (sic, reptile layout, reproduced with uxorious pond fidelity)

The reptiles repeated yet again an AV distraction, yet somehow this time it ended up on YouTube as a freebie, as the reptiles tried to repair the damage of decades of intractable iron curtain paywall...

No apology: Howard fires up over Brittany Higgins in new Paul Kelly book
The Front
presented by Claire Harvey
Nation Loses 
Its Magic




Damned if the pond would link to something the reptiles were trying to give away for free, because by this point, the pond had begun to feel even more Learish ...

Where have I been? Where am I? Fair daylight?
I am mightily abused. I should ev'n die with pity
To see another thus. I know not what to say.
I will not swear these are my hands. Let’s see.
I feel this pinprick. Would I were assured
Of my condition.

At last the final gobbet arrived, the last extract a reminder sundry dental extractions...

Howard said: “We are a party that must care for both of those traditions.” Yet as the 2020s advanced, Liberal factions, disguised in these traditions, were largely at war with each other.
Former Institute of Public Affairs executive director John Roskam said: “The broad church has fractured. Conservatives have become more assertive and more defensive of their positions. At the same time progressives or moderates have formed a different view of society and are appealing to an entirely different demographic. The Liberal Party is lacking confidence. It hasn’t renewed ideologically or philosophically, and it doesn’t know how to achieve this.”
The Liberal Party over the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison era became an institution prone to identity experimentation. It embraced and discarded leaders but, in the process, undermined the concept of a party in control of its brand or political values. This defect evolved into a full-scale conviction and existence crisis in the following four years.
Howard had departed politics in 2007 – yet he remained ever-present. Abbott, Turnbull and Morrison sought his advice and invoked his name while seeking to promote their own vision for the party. They aspired to reinterpret Howard to fit the second decade of the 21st century. Each tried and each failed in his separate, distinctive way.
In the process, the sense of Liberal abiding conviction all but disappeared.’

Yes, yes, it's profoundly amusing to see the IPA blathering about the fracturing of the broad church, but the pond was more startled to be reminded that this was yet another step in the destruction of the reputation of the University of Melbourne ...

– This is an edited extract from Paul Kelly’s The Twilight of Exceptionalism: The Liberal and Conservative Era, published by Melbourne University Press, out on July 14.

Only three days to go before the book hits the stands, but will that put an end to this nonsense?

The pond couldn't help but wonder if the lizard Oz might keep on promoting the book for an eternity of suffering ...

Be comforted, good madam. The great rage,
You see, is killed in him. And yet it is danger
To make him even o'er the time he has lost.
Desire him to go in. Trouble him no more
Till further settling.

Speaking of time lost, and lost times...



The pond just had enough strength left to deal with a most heartbreaking tale from the Angelic one...



The header:  Tax changes mean it’s closing time for the bank of mum and dad; We had nothing from our own parents except good advice, which basically counselled frugality, to buy whatever you can and work your way up.

The caption for the incredibly moving snap: Sisters Isabella and Olivia Maxwell received a monetary gift from their family to help them get a joint property under the 5 per cent deposit scheme in September. Picture: Aaron Francis

The pond has saved a few reptiles for its Sunday meditation, but felt compelled to add this harrowing account by the Angelic one to "Ned's" Everest climb.

See if you are so insensible, so insensitive as to not suffer along with her ...

There has been a lot of talk about the government’s tax changes and how it affects investors. However, the most common type of investment and the most useful for ordinary families is the “bank of mum and dad”.
My husband and I are founding members of that bank.
We have been married for 50 years and have nine adult children. We had nothing from our own parents except good advice, which basically counselled frugality, to buy whatever you can and work your way up. We did. We bought and sold, and eventually in the fifth year of our marriage we bought a good three-bedroom house in a non-gentrified inner suburb of Sydney. Then over time we have been able to acquire some older investment properties and so have progressed to become the bank.
But it was difficult. We didn’t set out to be owners of more than one house. We had to move several times, which was when we discovered negative gearing. However, we almost lost our one family house in the 1980s when our interest rates went up to 18 per cent. My husband changed jobs and we moved to a regional town, I worked part-time and we lived on the family allowance while hanging on grimly to our Sydney house.

Oh the gruesome lot of being a landlord, the endless boot strap suffering, worthy of a stock footage snap... Unintentionally becoming the bank of mum and dad was far from easy. Picture: iStock




That banal image just about said it all ... yet for some reason, the pond was reminded of Mr Krook in Bleak House, notorious illiterate rag-and-bottle merchant and landlord, given to spontaneous combustion ... just the sort of chap who'd love to pick up a few more shabby old flats...

After things eased we moved to Canberra, where we rented cheaply, but did not sell our Sydney house. In Canberra, where property was cheaper, an opportunity arose to buy a couple of shabby old flats. We did using the equity in the house in Sydney, where prices had soared, so we weren’t afraid of debt. We stayed in Canberra and eventually bought a holiday shack with two advan­tages: proximity to the beach and an inside toilet.
We had our ninth child by this time and needed more accommodation, especially for the two eldest who were 18 and 19. It was cheaper and a better investment to buy two old flats than to put on an extension. The two eldest were at university and had part-time jobs, so instead of renting a flat to them we put one in their names. Ten years later, when our daughter married, they sold the flat and had a good return that enabled them to buy their own family houses.
I don’t understand the resentment towards people who can do this. After all, why do people think we struggle, save and buy other property? Just so we can sit around and tell ourselves how successful we are? No, we do it for our children and our possible future grandchildren. As for the young who buy and sell for a profit, so what? Like us, several of our children for whom we have been guarantor have bought, sold and renovated their way into very good houses.
What is more, they have housed going on nine grandchildren between them. So, our older children have all profited by our ability to go guarantor for them.

To help out those who wanted to join the landlord class, the reptiles provided these numbered points to summarise landlord despair.

Damn you Jimbo, damn you to reptile hell...





The Angelic one carried on, and the real point became even clearer ...

This wasn't just a tale of personal suffering and despair, this was a jihad ...

To acquire property, you need to be unafraid of debt. However, the tax changes mean younger children who have yet to buy may end up having the property ladder pulled away from under them.
Today’s young people are very mobile. Many who would have used negative gearing to buy and build equity in an old cheaper place they didn’t live in as a way to offset their mortgage repayments, increase their equity and use that investment as a means to buy a better, larger place to live, perhaps something in a better area where they could eventually have a family, now are almost denied that opportunity. Worse, with prices falling, many young people who bought to live in their place with a 5 per cent deposit, like the two sisters featured in The Australian (“Bank of Mum and Dad cuts funding”, 8/7) who were able to buy with a guarantee from their mum and dad, will end up stuck in negative equity.
Another aspect of all this is that since the advent of compulsory superannuation, older people have been encouraged to invest and prepare for their own retirement. Some may invest purely for their own retirement. However, every parent has an idea of what they can do to help their children while they are alive, or what they can leave their children after their death, as my parents eventually did. Hence the importance of the family home, which is also the basis of the bank of mum and dad.

The Angelic one was simply joining in the obligatory reptile jihad about the budget ... Anthony Albanese claims to be promoting generational equity. Picture: Getty Images



Oh the suffering, the endless reptile suffering, oh the horror, the lizard Oz jihadist horror ...

However, the Albanese government, using its often-repeated claim of promoting generational equity to squeeze the older owners of the family home and change rules for the younger family members, has all but made the striving to create some investment for one’s children too difficult for ordinary Australians. By abolishing negative gearing and changing capital gains tax for new young investors, the government has made investment in property not really a viable option any more for intergenerational help for ordinary families such as ours.
So, despite Labor’s mantra, by almost destroying mum and dad investment, it has torn out the heart of generational equity.
Anthony Albanese is the child of a single mother who lived in a housing commission home. As a good mother she had her son’s future welfare on her mind when, as the Prime Minister once told us in parliament, she gave him a salient piece of advice: “As soon as you can, buy a house.” He did. Doubtless he was able to benefit from negative gearing as property values soared in Marrickville. But it is a pity he didn’t think about the rest of us who were using those same legal mechanisms to help their own children, many now stuck with negative equity in a property with a mortgage they can’t afford.

Cry the pond a river.

The pond gave up an early morning Saturday for "Ned" and the Angelic one? 

Now that's almost like mad King Donald's speech on a stormy night being up there with doing a landing on a Normandy beach under Nazi fire ...

But at least mentioning mad King Donald allows the pond to close by doing a segue to the immortal Rowe ...




What a splendid tea party.

By golly, did he take the original and make something even richer out of it, or Tommy wot, and that sentiment comes from someone who lives their Tenniel and their Alice ...(and has just finished another toilet reading thereof, this time the centenary Penguin edition). See how the look on mad King Donald matches the look of the mad rabbit ...




And finally the pond knows all about the suffering of the rich, or at least the tempered olive class, and wants to share that knowledge ...






Friday, July 10, 2026

In which the narcissist onion muncher, encouraged by "Ned" barely leaves room for the beefy boofhead, Killer Creighton and Our Henry ...

 

With the Islamic Republic of Japan posing a dire, terrifying threat to security, the lizards of Oz showed a stoic indifference this day, and instead did what they do best - put the preening narcissist known as the onion muncher at the top of the digital edition ...



That left the poor old beefy boofhead well down the page, and more of that anon, but first the pond must go with the flow of "Ned's" natter, a relentless promo for his latest tome (the only word to properly evoke his propensity for ponderous pomposity) ...



The header, which somehow managed to suggest that the onion muncher wanted to be sociopathic genocidal ethnic cleanser with a taste for giving South Africa some nukes: ‘Sometimes you’ve got to be a bit Mossad’: Tony Abbott’s bureaucracy battle over borders, MH17 and Barack Obama; The former PM has reveals explosive clashes with Barack Obama over MH17 and defence officials, with his Border Force chief telling him he had to go a ‘bit Mossad’ in his boat turnarounds policy.

The caption for a thankfully uncredited collage, because even AI would struggle if blamed for it: Tony Abbott has revealed his biggest conflicts while prime minister.

The pond has no idea how long this nauseating series of "Ned" book promotions will go on, but offers it as a way of pandering to those who will never fling a shekel in the tome's direction.

Speaking of pandering, this set of insights seems to spend an enormous amount of time contemplating the overweening pride, and self-acknowledged greatness of the onion muncher:

Tony Abbott has revealed a series of conflicts he faced as prime minister including with public servants over his efforts to “stop the boats”, US president Barack Obama after the Russian downing of flight MH17, and the defence hierarchy over his proposal to deploy our troops to Ukraine.
In his interviews for my book, The Twilight of Exceptionalism – the Liberal and Conservative Era 2013-2022, Mr Abbott said the first task facing his government was stopping asylum-seeker boats, but some senior officials were “completely defeatist” and alarmed that Australia would risk conflict with Indonesia.
Mr Abbott said: “At numerous stages, Operation Sovereign Borders could have floundered. The message was, you know, this risks conflict with Indonesia. And I said: ‘Well, so what? That is just the risk we have to run.’ But if that’s your concern, avoiding conflict, you can’t do anything.

Inevitably there had to be a huge shot of the tome's cover, here downsized, The Twilight of Exceptionalism by Paul Kelly.



The pond would have made it smaller if it could have. Won't someone think of the eyeballs!

Now on with the self-congratulations ...

“I mean, this is the problem, you know. Most government policy fails because there are red lines that different people put around it that means it cannot succeed. The red line the officials put around this operation – around this whole desire to stop the boats – meant that you couldn’t actually do it.”
Mr Abbott didn’t want war with Indonesia but he wanted the official mindset to shift in order to commit to his radical military-orientated policy, devised by Scott Morrison as shadow minister. Mr Abbott’s national security adviser, Andrew Shearer, said: “I think there was widespread scepticism whether the policy would work. In parts of the bureaucracy there was a more active level of resistance particularly among some of the government lawyers. For Abbott, this was an existential policy problem, nationally and politically.”

Once again the reptiles interrupted with the very same promotional video, as they kept up the job of separating punters from shekels ...

PREMIUM
No apology: Howard fires up over Brittany Higgins in new Paul Kelly book
Become a member to access our premium video content




Nah, not really, it's more than enough to endure this portion, as the sucker on the teat of Viktor Orbán continued his idle boasting, and "Ned" indulged him ...
Mr Abbott said: “I thought to myself, what would Indonesia do if the boats were coming from Australia to Indonesia illegally? They would just sink them. We just turned them around. But, by hook or by crook, we were going to stop this damn thing. If you don’t have a border, you don’t have a country.”
As PM, Mr Abbott saw OSB as a test of his government’s viability. He wanted all organs of government – civilian, military and intelligence – active participants to achieve the goal. This is what Mr Morrison delivered as minister for immigration and border protection. It was an unorthodox policy with a military commander in charge – Lieutenant-General Angus Campbell – reporting direct to Mr Morrison with strict operational secrecy about events on the water and the boat turnarounds.
Mr Morrison said: “Operation Sovereign Borders was arguably the most compelling aspect of the change of government in 2013.”
In Mr Abbott’s view, he was faced with varying advice from senior officials. The chief of the Defence Force, General David Hurley, later governor-general, felt obliged to tell Mr Abbott the operation must be consistent with international law, provide for safety at sea and ensure that asylum-seeker boats could be safely turned on the water, as well as warning about ties with Indonesia.
“PM, we can do this, but it is not cost-free,” Mr Hurley said. “I cannot guarantee this can be done in a risk-free way.” That was responsible and prudent advice but frustrating for a PM determined to reverse the existing order. 

Then came this startling confession ...

But the official who made the greatest positive impact on Mr Abbott was then Customs and Border Protection Force head Mike Pezzullo, who told Mr Abbott the policy could work, saying “sometimes you’ve got to be a bit Mossad”.

For those who came in late to the story, the disgraced Pezzullo was, in his hey day, a shocking piece of work.

Powerful Home Affairs boss Mike Pezzullo sacked after investigation into backchannel lobbying

Here, have a snap of the miscreant ... Former Customs and Border Protection Force head Mike Pezzullo. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman



Apparently under the Pezzullo "positive impact" and influence, the onion muncher stomped around like an ill-tempered loon...as "Ned's" final gobbet ran on at great length, and the pond decided it would be best left uninterrupted, so other business might eventually get a look in ...

Mr Abbott said: “At one stage we were advised by some sections of the bureaucracy that something we were doing was illegal. I just said to (attorney-general) Brandis, ‘Well, go and get better advice, simple as that’.”
Recalling his visit to Indonesia and meeting with president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Mr Abbott said: “I said to him ‘you know, we are going to turn boats around’, and he didn’t respond one way or the other. He just gave me a benign look, as if to say ‘Well, you do what you must’.” Obviously, Indonesia’s president did not give Australia the green light.
Referring to the boat turnbacks, Mr Morrison said: “Angus Campbell’s advice had been, ‘Once you start this, you can’t stop and you need to get it right; if the first test doesn’t work, it’s over.”
Insiders told the author the covert operations by the Australian Secret Intelligence Service, headed by Nick Warner, involving the disruption of the people-smugglers in Indonesia were as effective as the boat turnarounds in halting the trade. In June 2013, before the change of government, Mr Abbott met Mr Warner and raised the issue of what he called “the black arts” – with Mr Warner explaining ASIS did not do assassinations since such activity was outside its defined scope. ASIS was not Mossad. As PM, Mr Abbott raised with officials the capability for final resort action to “take out” the people-smugglers if policy on the water had failed and this was the only means left. Such discussion became academic once the boats were stopped, but Mr Abbott had been interested in a power that ASIS did not possess.
Our intelligence agencies monitored the Indonesian military closely. An official said: “We watched the Indonesian military. At no stage did Indonesia take any military action to counter what we were doing. They never came near the drop-offs for boat turnbacks.” By February 2014 the asylum-seeker boat trade had ended.
But Mr Abbott’s most intense clash with defence and security advisers came after the shooting down over Ukraine of a Malaysia Airlines plane by pro-Russian rebels, with the loss of everyone on board including 38 Australian citizens or residents. Mr Abbott was determined to recover the bodies and soon demanded that Australian troops be sent to the crash site in a joint mission with the Dutch, given a majority of passengers were from the Netherlands.
Three days after the attack Mr Abbott said: “The site is chaotic, it’s absolutely chaotic. The Ukrainian government does not control the location.” During his head of government phone calls, Mr Abbott was frustrated by President Obama, who gave him a briefing.
Mr Abbott said: “I said: ‘Well that is great, Barack, but what is going to happen? A Russian missile has shot down a civilian plane.’ And he said they were following it closely. I couldn’t accept this. I said: ‘This is not good enough, this is an atrocity and what you’re giving me is a whole lot of excuses.’ He got quite miffed and said: ‘No, no, we are doing stuff.’ And I said: ‘Well come on, you know this is just outrageous.’ ”
The bodies were being treated with indifference. Mr Abbott regarded the defiance of the pro-Russian rebels as intolerable: “I kept saying to the National Security Committee: ‘You know, if they were American what would be happening? And they would say: ‘Oh well, the 82nd Airborne would be there by now’.”
When Mr Abbott made his case in the NSC for a Dutch and Australian troop commitment, he met strong resistance from both the new defence force chief, Mark Binskin, and veteran Defence boss Dennis Richardson. Mr Abbott said: “But to me these bureaucrats in uniform, they are not warriors. He (Binskin) was very, very unhappy about the whole thing.”
Air Chief Marshall Binskin had reason to be unhappy since NATO was telling him: “Don’t do anything silly and don’t escalate.” Yet he was facing a PM determined to escalate, saying: “I need a military plan and a military option.” Mr Abbott found it intolerable being told by the defence chiefs there was little Australia could do. An impatient Mr Abbott challenged Air Chief Marshall Binskin directly. Mr Abbott said: “If hostile forces are preventing the recovery of your dead, you have got to go and take them back by force.” Mr Abbott complained in his office about spending $30bn annually on a military budget for no impact when it mattered. At the heart of this dispute was Mr Abbott’s conviction that the defence force must be used more readily and more effectively when faced with a strategic or moral crisis. Describing Mr Abbott, Mr Richardson said: “Tony Abbott was very much a person of action. His first instinct was: What can I do? He was not inclined to stand on the sidelines. That sometimes led him to jumping to a conclusion that was unrealistic.”
Air Chief Marshall Binskin’s caution was warranted. The crash site was controlled by pro-Russian forces located near the border and Mr Abbott was proposing a military intervention in a potentially hostile situation. Mr Shearer said: “There was one meeting where Abbott made it clear he felt he was being stonewalled and was not taken seriously by the defence and military chiefs.”
The proposal was for an Australian-Dutch light armoured brigade to enter the conflict zone and secure the site for the removal of the bodies. The debate within the NSC extended over three days.
But Mr Abbott faced resistance from virtually all defence and military advisers. Throughout the process Mr Richardson systematically outlined the problems with the military option and provided sustained advocacy for Mr Abbott to pull back. At the peak of the debate Mr Abbott rang former defence force chief Angus Houston, whom he had appointed as the government’s envoy in Ukraine. As dawn was breaking over Kyiv, Air Chief Marshall Houston strongly advised Mr Abbott against a troop commitment: “I said a better option is a police commitment – it would be acceptable to all parties and would be able to recover the bodies. I said it was important to eliminate the risk of a miscalculation. We had a long discussion; it was robust but respectable. I was very concerned the Russians would see it as provocative by Australia while a police contingent would be non-threatening. At the end of a long conversation, Tony said ‘okay, Angus, we’ll go with the police option’.”
Mr Abbott was relieved. He said the trauma led to his “most difficult night” as PM. He said: “I kept thinking: Do I really want 1000 Australians to be within 25 miles of the Russian artillery? Thank God, the bodies started moving the next day.”

Sheesh, that's way more than enough, that ensures the pond won't even bother to pick it up at a street library ...

The Twilight of Exceptionalism – The Liberal and Conservative Era, published by Melbourne University Press, is out on July 14.

The pond felt its strength failing ...



Onwards and upwards, but as noted at the start, where did all that onion muncher narcissism leave the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way? 

Almost as a lizard Oz side note, a curiosity, what with his toothless attack on Pauline not nearly as grand as the onion muncher demolishing of Indonesia and the Kenyan socialist ...

COALITION
‘Eternity of pain’: Taylor takes on Hanson in major speech
Opposition Leader Angus Taylor says One Nation is a ‘column of smoke’ that will send the country broke, in his biggest attack yet on Pauline Hanson.
By Greg Brown

Oh they tried to make up to him by giving him a slot on the extreme far right, but even here he was at the bottom of the page, what with Killer Creighton top dog...

One Nation wants to fix our country by blowing it up
If you’re considering supporting One Nation, there are at least three reasons to think again.
By Angus Taylor
Contributor

It was just a rehash of a gig at Polonius's palace ...

Angus Taylor is Leader of the Opposition. This is an edited extract from a speech he delivered at The Sydney Institute on Thursday evening.

The speech was constructed in the manner of a school essay, with the beefy boofhead plodding his way through three key points.

As it's in the intermittent archive, the pond contented itself with a teaser trailer ...




By golly, it's not just a hatred of windmills, he's keen to let horses f*ck up the country (*google bot sentient).

No wonder that lettuce is keen to get back in the game ...

What else? Well there was a bog standard contribution to the never ending jihad against the ABC...

Aunty’s man Gavin Fang plays ‘word bingo’ at royal commission
ABC editorial director Gavin Fang dropped every buzzword in the book at the royal commission into antisemitism – but one candid admission cut through the corporate spin.
By James Madden
Media Editor

And Ben was packing it in his usual way, with Albo at last scoring a reptile nod for doing the dance with an authoritarian Hindu nationalist ...

PM’s all the way with Mr India
Anthony Albanese is all the way with Narendra Modi, as the PM puts faith in Indian leader
Australia needs all the friends it can get right now in a more uncertain and dangerous world. The same goes for India.
By Ben Packham
Foreign affairs and defence correspondent

The immortal Rowe had some thoughts on that one ...



But the pond didn't have the time for any of that because Killer was on the loose, and he wasn't having any of that furriner nonsense, whether curry eater or otherwise ...




The header: How Labor exploits the economic myth of skilled migrants; The greatest mystery is why this economically damaging system, built on the myth of skills, has carried on for so long.
The caption: Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Killer could only manage three minutes but he was at his devastating IPA best.

All the current talk of the joys of having an Indian diaspora in the country clearly sent Killer right off, and he went full nativist, as if born to become member of the Know Nothing party ...

When Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan greeted Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at Melbourne Airport on Wednesday night, she probably felt a little more confident about her chances at the ballot box in November.
No doubt her confidence was also boosted by the sight of some 40,000 Indian-Australians – a lot of potential and actual marginal seat voters – who packed into Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium on Thursday evening. As one of Labor’s most prominent political strategists, Kos Samaras, pointed out this week, in Victoria “birthplace has become one of the sharpest predictors of the Labor vote”.
“Among Australian-born voters, Labor sits on 24 (per cent). Among voters born overseas, it’s 35. That 11-point gap is Labor’s firewall. Note, that’s 35 with the UK included, which means it’s higher within non-English-speaking background cohorts,” he explained.
It’s no wonder the Premier boasted of how proud she was that Victoria is home to the largest Indian diaspora in the country, at 370,000 strong. Last September she spent a week in China reportedly to demonstrate her solidarity with the similarly electorally powerful Chinese community.

Damn you, you bloody furriners, don't imagine you're welcome, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan's original post welcoming the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi misspelled his name.



Killer decided he'd offer a nativist cold shower, an IPA braying of the first water ...

Perhaps our leaders would be justified if Australia’s immigration program were delivering the economic benefits repeatedly promised by governments of both persuasions. The evidence increasingly suggests otherwise.
“Economically, we need immigration. We need the skills,” Immigration Minister Tony Burke said in May, while extolling the nation’s “well-targeted immigration program”. It turns out this oft-repeated claim has been a gigantic misconception for years.
Of 2.4 million permanent visas issued between the 2012 and 2025 financial years, fewer than 779,000 (32 per cent) were actually allocated to skilled migrants, according to new Institute of Public Affairs research, published this week.
That’s because around half of the so-called “skilled” intake – which is around two-thirds of the total – is made up of the spouses, partners and children of the skilled immigrants themselves. In other words, the vast bulk of immigrants coming to Australia were never chosen for their skills beyond choosing dependency wisely.
Job vacancies were 45 per cent higher in May than before the pandemic, according to ABS data out earlier this week, suggesting the massive influx of non-skilled labour over the past few years has done little to plug alleged shortages. Vacancies were 90 per cent higher in healthcare and social assistance than before the pandemic, making a mockery of South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas’s claim immigrants were necessary to “wipe your bum”. That logic would be news to Japan, of course, whose elderly population is doing just fine.

Say what, the elderly in the Islamic Republic of Japan are doing just fine?

The pond had to reach back some considerable time for Norimitsu Onishi's poignant, award-winning story in the both siderest NY Times ... A Generation in Japan Faces a Lonely Death (*intermittent archive link)

Talk about bleak ...




Sheesh, the pond would settle for a foreign born carer every day of the week, in much the same way that the pond's mother discovered that an Islamic from the Philippines came in mighty handy, and was a nice person to boot, in her hour of need.

Quick, a distracting snap ... Immigration Minister Tony Burke addresses the House of Representatives. Picture: Hilary Wardhaugh / Getty Images



Killer carried on with the No Nothing vibe ...

“The end result was that you had a lot of people coming in who there was no way you could describe as highly skilled,” conceded former Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet head Martin Parkinson earlier this year.
Is it any wonder, then, that Australian living standards have begun to rapidly decline? It’s entirely possible a significant chunk of Australia’s non-skilled immigration is a net drain on local taxpayers.
The OECD’s International Migration Outlook from 2021, which included Australia, found the economic contribution of immigrants was “persistently small during the 2006‑18 period … for most countries” and could be negative.
About half a dozen European nations, including Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland, have introduced voluntary financial incentives for some migrants to return home.
“It would be highly unlikely” Australians would ever have agreed to an immigration system that’s led to more than 10 per cent of the population living here indefinitely on temporary visas, Parkinson added.
The idea bureaucrats in Canberra can determine “shortages” of various occupations at all let alone in a timely manner is ludicrous. Auctioneers are on the current immigration “skilled occupation” list, while home building trades are not, despite the supposed housing supply crisis. Only half of skilled immigrants were still working in the occupation they nominated one year after they applied for their visa, according to 2024 Grattan Institute research.

The reptiles slipped in a snap of said Martin Parkinson ...



...but the pond would have much preferred something visual in line with the Killer's No Nothing vibe, such as an 1854 Boston poster found here...



That's more like it, and it was downhill for the Killer after that, with those bloody pesky, difficult, uppity furriners sent packing...

The greatest mystery is why this economically damaging system built on the myth of skills has carried on for so long. Housing costs have increased and the quality of university education has eroded significantly. Polls show large majorities of Australians want a major reduction in immigration numbers.
To borrow from outgoing British Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer, native-born Australians, especially in the capital cities, appear to feel increasingly like strangers in their own country at the same time as record inflation saps their purchasing power.
The interests of big business and the higher education sector (which profit from ever larger immigration) appear to have overwhelmed the national interest. But mass immigration changes political incentives too.
Brisbane City Council, the largest in the country, has come under pressure from Canberra in recent months to speed up citizenship ceremonies, according to a very well-placed source. Let’s hope that has nothing remotely to do with locking in votes.
Adam Creighton is chief economist at the Institute of Public Affairs.

Exactly so ...



Shouldn't that be "in the marinade in which they come"?

That left the pond with just one final duty, it being, as every herpetology student and Molesworth knos, Our Henry day.

Unfortunately this day the hole in bucket man went for Jew v. Jew action, which while entirely suited to the Australian Daily Zionist News, left the pond indifferent, with the chance of references to Thucydides much reduced ...



The header: Louise Adler distorts history and betrays the Jewish cause; Adler recycles Soviet lies, misrepresents her own father’s work and replaces historical truth with crude left wing ideology.

The caption: Louise Adler appearing on 7.30 following her resignation from Adelaide Writers' Week. Picture: ABC

Ah, it's the old Commie swine Soviet slur ...

Our Henry indulged in a furious five minute fulmination, which might well have pleased Benji and the far right fundamentalists currently in charge of the government of Israel, and which served as a most excellent distraction from the ethnic cleansing currently going down ...

Two days ago, Louise Adler posted to Instagram a 1997 Shoah Foundation clip of her late father, historian Jacques Adler, recalling his participation, aged 15, in the Communist resistance in occupied Paris. The clip, she declared, “testifies to the long history of Zionist collaboration and collusion with Nazis; and the always closely-related tendency to distort and exploit holocaust history”.
Adler clearly believes she is dealing with ignorant fools. But historical reality is less accommodating. For what Adler advances is not a stray remark; it is a categorical claim, stated as settled fact – one serious historians of the Holocaust have spent decades investigating. Their conclusion is unequivocal: Adler’s assertions of “Zionist collaboration and collusion with Nazis” are demonstrably false.
It is undoubtedly true that Jewish organisations, including those of the Zionist movement, had contacts with the German authorities throughout the 1930s, and even during the war, some of which produced formal agreements.
The best known is the 1933 Haavara Agreement, under which German Jews emigrating to Palestine could transfer part of their assets in the form of German export goods.

The reptiles stirred up Our Henry ... A social media post by Louise Adler. Picture: Instagram



The hole in bucket man went historical, but as for Thucydides, forget it, not this time ...

But none of that can be understood outside its historical context. Those who dealt with the German authorities in the 1930s – Zionist and non-Zionist alike – did so believing the Nazis’ objective was to dispossess Germany’s Jews and drive them out of Germany, not to exterminate them. As Frank Nicosia, the leading historian of these pre-war contacts, has shown, Nazi Jewish policy before 1941 was one of “emigration and expulsion”; and given that policy, the Zionists’ aim was to help Jews escape, if possible to the land of Israel.
The alternative was to leave them in a situation where all of their rights were being removed, their livelihoods shattered and their magnificent cultural heritage demolished.
Those negotiations always took place under conditions of overwhelming coercion. The Jewish organisations had no bargaining power: they confronted a regime that could confiscate their property, imprison their leaders and destroy their communities at will. As Nicosia puts it, “to suppose that any Jewish organisation in Hitler’s Germany prior to the ‘final solution’ had the option of refusing to work on some level with the state is fantasy”.
That is why Adler’s language of “collaboration” is not simply inflammatory but analytically incorrect. As historians have repeatedly argued, accommodation – concessions extracted under duress, in the hope of limiting catastrophe – is one thing; collaboration, which presupposes a measure of freedom, a shared objective, or an anticipated benefit, entirely another.
The arrangements Jewish organisations reached were “an avoidance response to threat”, wrote Helen Fein in her classic study of the determinants of Jewish survival during the Holocaust; they were, in that sense, quite different from collaboration, which requires “reward, incentive, or mutuality of goals”. To negotiate with a gunman threatening your life is not to be his accomplice.
Whatever moral anguish those negotiations entailed – and the Zionists involved repeatedly recorded the torment of bargaining with their persecutors – the plain historical fact is that they saved lives. The Haavara Agreement enabled some 60,000 German Jews to leave the Reich, taking with them at least part of their assets, in the years before escape became all but impossible. Likewise, the Kasztner-Becher negotiations, Raoul Wallenberg’s protective passports and the international pressure that halted the Budapest deportations in July 1944 are widely credited with saving tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews.

The reptiles slipped in an AV distraction which continued Our Henry's pogrom (and which offered another chance to add to the reptiles' never ending ABC jihad): Former ambassador to Israel Dave Sharma says he thought the ABC’s interview with Adelaide Writers’ Week Director Louise Adler was “one-sided”. Ms Adler – a Jewish woman herself – discussed Israel’s military operation against Hamas in Gaza on the ABC, saying it is “incumbent upon humanity” to look at what’s happening in Gaza and to say, “we will not accept this, we will say no, not in our name”. “It didn’t present different perspectives on this conflict,” Mr Sharma told Sky News host Sharri Markson. “I thought the analogy of the Holocaust was incredibly distasteful and entirely wrong, factually. “There is one party to this conflict who does want to commit genocide, and that is Hamas.”




Actually Hamas is too inept, too incapable to put together a decent genocide. 

For that you need a proper theocratic state apparatus of the kind available to the current fundamentalist government of Israel, and are they doing it in style, or what?

As for the highly esteemed, full disrespect Sharri? 

Isn't she better off peddling nonsense in relation to restaurant stings?

What to say? All the pond can note is that Jew on Jew action is much more virulent than the average bout of anti-Semitism ...

None of this resembles the “collusion” Adler alleges. It is instead the history of desperate people, stripped of every real source of power, extracting what little safety they could from murderers who relished their absolute control over life and death.
So where does the accusation of “a long history of Zionist collaboration and collusion with Nazis” come from, if not from the historical record? It comes from the Soviet campaign to delegitimise Zionism.
That campaign began in the early 1950s, but, as William Korey and Izabella Tabarovsky each meticulously documented, it gained fresh momentum as the 40th anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany approached. It had a clear purpose: to neutralise the inconvenient fact of Stalin’s pact with Hitler, divert attention from Soviet antisemitism and strengthen the Soviet links with the violently antisemitic Arab states.
Spearheaded by the USSR’s Anti-Zionist Committee, the campaign – which featured pamphlets with titles such as The Criminal Alliance of Zionism and Nazism – was conceived, financed and exported by Moscow through allied organisations across the West, including Australia. Robert Wistrich described the resulting propaganda for what it was: “grotesque Soviet libels”.
It is no accident that one of the campaign’s most prominent advocates was Mahmoud Abbas, the head of the Palestinian Authority. His 1983 doctoral thesis, submitted in Moscow under Soviet auspices, advanced the claim that Zionist leaders had encouraged the Holocaust for their own political ends – a central theme of Soviet propaganda that he helped transform into an integral part of Palestinian rhetoric.
Adler is therefore once again repeating falsehoods manufactured by the Kremlin, transmitted internationally through the Soviet anti-Zionist apparatus and, from there, infused into the zeitgeist of contemporary leftism.
What makes this grotesque, however, is that Adler’s claims are contradicted by her own father. Jacques Adler’s scholarly account of the Jews of wartime Paris shows that Zionist responses to the Nazi occupation ranged from Hashomer Hatzair’s determination to fight alongside the Resistance to Kadmi Cohen’s attempt to secure legal recognition from the Germans.

Cue a distracting snap, A picture taken just after the liberation by the Soviet army in January, 1945 shows a group of children wearing concentration camp uniforms. Picture: AP Photo



Cue a final blast ...

But he is equally clear that Cohen represented a minute fringe wholly disconnected from the major Zionist organisations. And he states, without ambiguity, “no Jewish organisation ever tried to justify ideological ‘collaboration’ with the Germans, nor were they tempted by the rewards promised for such ‘collaboration’â€Å ”. (sic)
That Adler would misrepresent her father’s overall finding – which bears no relationship to the sweeping indictment of Zionism that his daughter now advances in his name – is truly extraordinary.
Yet it is no accident. For what this charade exposes is not Zionism. It is a habit of mind. Adler accuses others of distorting Holocaust history. But she does precisely that herself. She flattens those trapped in the machinery of destruction into ideological caricatures, instead of recognising them as human beings desperately improvising under a gun. Hers is judgment delivered from an armchair upon people in a furnace, by someone who will never have to discover, as Conrad’s Lord Jim puts it, what “can be wrung out of us only by some cruel catastrophe”.
Nor is this an isolated lapse. It is a recurring feature of the left-wing political culture Adler epitomises: the reduction of history to moral theatre, in which what actually happened matters only insofar as it can be mobilised in today’s ideological struggles. History, in this mindset, ceases to be a factual inquiry into the past and becomes a weapon in the politics of the present.
The Holocaust – the greatest catastrophe ever to befall the Jewish people – deserves better. Its realities must be confronted, not conscripted, remembered, not rewritten. That is the obligation its horrors impose on us all. In choosing to ignore it, Louise Adler has not merely devalued her own father’s lifework; she has betrayed the ideals she so loudly purports to embrace.

The pond realises that once Our Henry, a devoted Zionist, gets on his hobby horse for the Australian Daily Zionist News, there's no stopping him.

Sure, it makes risible his blather about being keen on factual inquiry, but whatever ...

Meanwhile, the ethnic cleansing of Gaza and the West Bank goes on, a new genocide is being conducted, and the Greater Israel project continues unmolested, and Our Henry shows an almost infinite taste for the sort of splintering schismatics that made for a great Monty Python sketch ... and all the pond can do is mourn the way that yet another chance for genuine entertainment has gone missing in the lizard Oz:




And now, in the search for mindless, meaningless entertainment, this ...