Tuesday, February 24, 2026

In which the pond romps helter skelter though the hive mind, with the Royals, ancient Troy, Petey boy, Jennie's jihad and a dinkum Groaning all in the mix...

 

This is the sort of headline that causes the pond much amusement ...



Puzzled?

It appeared in WaPo, and it reminded the pond of the parable of the wise men gravely contemplating the matter of an elephant.

WaPo gravely assured the world that leaders were puzzled, what with Greenland having universal health care and no hospital ships being available (though that could only be called "appears to have"), and yet the president - a narcissist horse's *rse in any sensible language - had talked of sending a hospital ship, and so, him being the president n'all, y'all, it must be gravely considered. 

But it's just a momentary distraction, always with the Trumpstein files distraction, and who knows, perhaps yet another small step on the imperial way.

Next, bermb, bermb, berm Iran, and Nancy A. Youssef in The Atlantic, trying to decipher the runes, read the tea leaves, fossick through the entrails in What Would War With Iran Look Like? How the U.S. conducts any attack will depend on what goal Trump is trying to achieve.

What goal is he trying to achieve? 

You might as well ask a toddler in a wild-eyed tantrum why he smashed up the agreement to eat his veggies and then insisted on a new agreement or he'd bermb his Lego.

Or tax the penguins ...



The pond frequently feels the same way in the company of the lizard Oz's hive mind. 

There's no sense to it, it simply is ...

Oh sure there can be fun snipes...



... but ultimately it's impossible to make sense of any of it.

Why, for example, do they keep exhuming notable failures of the past, men who notoriously lacked the ticker?

Okay, it's sometimes women offering an EXCLUSIVE insight ... (archive link)



They had to go the "widow" route? That's her only claim to fame?

So she's just there to channel the man, and who needs the ghost of the steam-train lover to emerge from his grave to warn the world that One Nation is a pack of loons, except perhaps the reptiles, because the lizard Oz has long cultivated the sort of extreme right wing ideology that Barners and Pauline are now cashing in on ...

The latest example of this inclination to grave robbing is the EXCLUSIVE revival of Petey boy ... given the bizarre patented reptile double act treatment ...

On the "news" side, there's the EXCLUSIVE ...

EXCLUSIVE
No net debt to no net worth: Costello’s devastating economic warning
Former treasurer Peter Costello warns that the Albanese government has ‘softened up’ young Australians for tax hikes to fund unsustainable spending.
By Matthew Cranston


Five bloody eternal minutes echoing the current lizard Oz jihad ... and to get the double bunger treatment going, the source of the EXCLUSIVE was over on the extreme far right ...



Note the way that the rant starts with a classic Emilia collage, replete with snarling, grimacing Albo, and sinister Jimbo lurking on the right, though here the pond should be fair, because the reptiles immediately followed that first gobbet with a snap of Petey boy looking like a man just out of a Monty Python sketch ...



Sheesh, way more than enough already, and if you want to see rest of this ancient loon conducting his jihad, consult the intermittent archive. 

There's nothing to learn from these ghosts, except the art of seeing dead people, while resting easy that there are more important matters than the economy for those with a sixth sense ...



What else (though the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way is usually a show stopper)?

Well the news of Mandelson's arrest eventually landed in reptile HQ:



It was old news to the pond, what with the pond waking the Beeb in a flap and the world service wondering why the Poms had a different way of doing things, and coming up with the notion that they loved a decent scandal, while at the same time trying to reassure listeners that there was no way the man formerly known as Prince could ever reach the throne, whether or not formally disbarred.

This isn't true. The pond recalls watching a documentary, Kind Hearts and Coronets, in which a convivial lad with a sense of grievance managed to remove a number of obstacles from his securing of his inheritance, and it was only a momentary memoir lapse that brought him undone.

What is true is that the reptiles have relentlessly mined the hapless Poms for scandal, while ignoring the many scandals surrounding King Donald and his minions...

John Hanscombe in The Echnida (sorry, newsletter, no link) had some thoughts on this ...

...compare the reactions to the arrest from two heads of state. On the eastern side of the Atlantic, King Charles issued a statement before he carried on with his scheduled public appearance at London Fashion Week.
"I have learned with the deepest concern the news about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and suspicion of misconduct in public office," the King's statement read.
"What now follows is the full, fair and proper process by which this issue is investigated in the appropriate manner and by the appropriate authorities.
"In this, as I have said before, they have our full and wholehearted support and co-operation."
On the western side of the Atlantic, another head of state said this: "Well, you know, I'm the expert in a way because I've been totally exonerated. It's very nice. So I can actually speak about it very nicely," Donald Trump said. "I think it's a shame. I think it's very sad, I think it's so bad for the royal family. It's very, very sad. To me, it's a very sad thing. When I see that it's a very sad thing."
One head of state dignified and reassuring in a message that implied no one - not even his brother - was above the law. The other, as always, making the conversation about himself, proclaiming his innocence, and then saying the whole affair was sad.
Not bad. Sad.
The two responses brought into sharp focus the differences between the two political systems. In the UK, the head of state made clear the primacy of the rule of law. In the US, the head of state, a veteran of many run-ins with the law, claimed he'd been exonerated in the tawdry Epstein affair - a claim still contested because half the files haven't been released and those which have are heavily redacted.
Watching this play out and then witnessing Donald Trump's tantrum at the Supreme Court which had ruled he's overstepped his presidential powers with his Liberation Day tariffs, the constitutional monarchy seemed to be working while the American republican model did not.

Well yes, and even if it's a fair bet that the Poms will somehow keep the man formerly known as a Prince out of clink, it is fair to ask that obvious question, make that obvious point - why are the Poms in a flap and in a state of high anxiety while King Donald's court sails on regardless? 

Ancient Troy was to hand to show how the reptiles routinely manage to ignore King Donald and his deeply corrupt and perverse court.

Take it away ancient Troy, show how it's done ...



Because the pond has done a screen cap, it's not easy to do a quick "find" for King Donald's name, but the pond can reassure readers that not once - nihil, nada - did the name "Trump" intrude on ancient Troy's thinking, odd because it's on almost any building you can look at, and might even be coming to the Gold Coast.

Did ancient Troy turn a blind eye to the behaviour of King Donald and his minions? Of course he did, but then the Murdochians have consistently turned a blind eye to King Donald's laddish cavortings ...

Instead ancient Troy kept his blind eye in working order ...

It is more significant than the abdication crisis in 1936 when Edward VIII handed over to George VI. Or the tragic death of Diana in 1997 and the unfeeling response of her in-laws. Or Queen Elizabeth’s so-called “annus horribilis” year of humiliations in 1992. Or Harry and Meghan Markle’s “Megxit” in 2020.
The risk is that this scandal metastasises, embroils others in the royal family and irreparably damages the British monarchy.
The survival instinct of the House of Windsor should not be underestimated. The British royal family has endured as monarchies across Europe have fallen, been executed or reduced their size and scope to remain standing. This is largely due to the wise rule of Elizabeth II. But now The Firm is challenged like never before.
Andrew’s utterly grotesque, likely illegal, behaviour is unlike anything the royals have faced. He had a long association with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and is accused of having sex with under-age women, including committing sexual assault. The trove of Epstein’s emails and photos provides vital evidence. Yet Andrew lied about his relationship with Epstein and his involvement with younger women. That was evident in his interview with Emily Maitlis on the BBC’s Newsnight in November 2019. Much of what he said was false or misleading. Andrew has long had a reputation for being rude and arrogant, sustained by a culture of entitlement and a belief that he was above the law.

The reptiles paused for an AV distraction...Spiked Online Editor Tom Slater claims there is little sympathy for Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor because he “was seen as a bit of a playboy”. “From what I can measure, it doesn’t seem like the sympathy goes particularly far or particularly deep," Mr Slater told Sky News host Caleb Bond. “I don’t think there has ever been a tremendous amount of sympathy or affection for prince Andrew.”




But what of the tremendous amount of sympathy and affection for King Donald and his court in the likes of Faux Noise?

Though knowing there was no point, the pond kept searching for a single reference to King Donald ... just the slightest hint that the disunited states should be in the same ferment, the same turmoil as the hapless Poms and Royals ...

Andrew’s behaviour was notorious while he was UK trade envoy (2001-11), and before and after, yet only now has an investigation into his sordid activities begun. His relationship with Epstein was known in the 2000s. He continued meeting Epstein after he was released from jail. It was known more than 10 years ago, through court filings, that Andrew was accused of engaging in sex with under-age women trafficked by Epstein.
The response from King Charles III and his son, William, the Prince of Wales, has been reassuring. Their public statements disassociating themselves from him, offering sympathy to victims and co-operating with police are welcome. So was removing Andrew from public duties in May 2020 and stripping him of honours, titles and his peerage in October last year. “The law must take its course,” Charles said last week.
But they were not quick enough to condemn their discredited brother and uncle. Andrew’s connections to Epstein have been known for more than two decades. Andrew says he was introduced to Epstein in 1999 by Ghislaine Maxwell. Epstein attended Andrew’s 40th birthday at Windsor Castle in 2000. The photo of the two of them walking through Central Park, New York was snapped in December 2010.
We don’t know what the King knew and when he knew it, or what Queen Elizabeth II knew and when she knew it. Charles and Elizabeth likely did not know the extent of what was going on but they or their staff must have been aware of the sexual assault accusations made by Virginia Giuffre more than a decade ago. If they knew even some of Andrew’s activities, what steps did they take in response?

Instead of King Donald, poor old King Chuck, the talking tampon, hugged the limelight with his sibling, King Charles III has been left wrestling with a new test after the arrest of Andrew, the latest in a series of shocks to mar his reign.



Andrew paid a reported £12m ($23m) settlement to Giuffre to end the civil sexual assault lawsuit in March 2022. We don’t know precisely where all of that money came from, but the queen provided £7m and £3m came from Prince Philip’s estate. This was characterised as “hush money” to cover up their son’s crimes. The case was settled even though Andrew said he had no recollection of meeting Giuffre.
There is so much more we don’t know about royal finances, including revenue and expenditure of the ancient Duchy of Cornwall run by William and Duchy of Lancaster run by Charles.
Andrew was allowed use of the Royal Lodge in Windsor Great Park under a 75-year lease with a “peppercorn” rent until he was evicted in February. This was not known when the lease was signed in 2003. The notion that Charles and William, his heir, can just “keep calm and carry on” is untenable. Not only must there be full co-operation with the investigation into Andrew – a commitment that has been given – but the King should also address the nation and his realms to completely repudiate Andrew and begin restoring trust in the royal family.
The UK government is reportedly preparing legislation to remove Andrew from the line of succession. This should have been done long ago. It requires all 14 Commonwealth countries to agree and likely pass their own laws to give it effect. When the order of succession was last changed in 2015, each state also had to enact the Succession to the Crown Act.
All of this underscores the continuing nonsense that Australia’s head of state needs no skills or abilities, or integrity and credibility, but only to be born into one family, observing one religion and living on the other side of the world. We can only live in hope that one day we will be a republic with a head of state who is one of us.

The pond decided to provide an intermittent archive link, so that ancient Troy's links could be checked in the archive, because the last line contained a doozy of a link...

It turned out that ancient Troy has always been a fervent republican ...



So bashing the talking tampon was easy game.

It smply wouldn't do to wonder why the Royals are compelled to show some semblance of decency while US repuglicans show not the slightest sense of shame ...

Oh sure the lizard Oz and the emeritus chairman purported to be republican, but there were backsliders, such as the bromancer, in a fit of Liz rapture a few years ago ...



Oh dear ... he did but see her passing by, and yet ...

We might not have known what she was thinking, but we did know that she was very loyal to the man formerly known as Prince, and no doubt helped him out when paying out an extravagant amount of loot to help conceal his perversions. 

The pond would have liked to report on the bromancer's current state of mind, but he's been MIA since the 24th January, and so it's off to consort with energy jihad Jennie ...

Sure it's like donning an old, worn-out slipper, but what the heck ...



After that opening gobbet, the reptiles cunningly slipped in a snap designed to get Jennie even more carried away on her jihad ...



Ah, Malware's curse ...so naturally it's all the fault of renewables ...

When Bowen rightly says there’s no transition without transmission, he doesn’t acknowledge the risks of every project running years late and billions over budget. The cost of transmission lines increased by up to 55 per cent last year. Eventually these costs will be passed on in network charges, the largest component of domestic power bills.
There’s no end in sight to the rising cost of energy. Without the billions in taxpayer subsidies, the energy transition to renewables would have collapsed. Yet we’re kept in the dark about the extent of the whole-of-system costs from the public purse. Labor needs to be held to its promise of transparency and accountability.
Then there’s Snowy 2.0, our largest long-storage project, critical in the transition to renewables. In 2023, after a “reset”, its cost tripled, from $3.8bn to $12bn. This was to cover the project until completed but $12bn is now not enough. Further price shocks loom. As the black hole deepens, the greater the effort to keep the cost blowouts away from scrutiny.
Almost $600,000 was spent in legal proceedings to this end. It’s hard to understand why it’s taking nine months, until June, to finalise a new cost “reset”, while at the same time being assured Snowy 2.0 will be operational by December 2028. Perhaps they’re waiting to see the ANAO audit results in May? It’s assessing whether Snowy Hydro is “effectively managing contract performance to achieve value for money and to deliver the outcomes required of the project”. Experts estimate the cost of the project, with transmission, is now around $25bn.
It begs the question: Is Snowy 2.0 too big to fail? With alarm bells ringing, the shareholder ministers, Bowen and Senator Katy Gallagher, recently appointed the former secretary of Bowen’s department and the ex-AWU secretary as directors of Snowy Hydro Ltd. It’s wholly owned by the Australian government, after buying out the shares of NSW and Victoria for $6.2bn. Originally, Snowy 2.0 was to cost $2bn and be completed in 2021.
By the time of the 2024-25 budget it needed $7.1bn in financial support; $4.5bn in concessional loans and $2.6bn in equity, on top of an initial $1.38bn. Snowy 2.0 has been a costly debacle.

Usually the pond would slip in a note on the current state of climate change and climate science, but the pond has already gone on too long, and there's still a gobbet of Jennie's jihad to go after this snap of a mortal enemy, Senator Katy Gallagher speaks in Senate Estimates at Parliament House on February 10, 2026 in Canberra, Australia. Picture: Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images




It was time to end with a rousing assault on renewables and yet again demand the nuking of the country to save the planet, even though there's no sign in the hive mind that climate change is actually happening...

The problems in transitioning to a weather-dependent renewables energy system are now clear. Labor’s promotion of renewables has come at the expense of acknowledging the multitude of risks in that transition. The consequences can’t be avoided by resorting to false narratives, spin and cherrypicking figures.
The energy trajectory we’re on must change. Electricity demand will increase with population growth and the needs of new power-hungry industries such as data centres. This will coincide with the announced closure of most coal plants and with gas supply remaining uncertain. What then? What is Labor’s Plan B?
It’s the responsibility of governments to ensure reliable and affordable power. Growth in energy demand requires certainty of supply. That’s best achieved by adding emissions-free technologies such as small modular nuclear reactors to our future energy mix. It’s time to lift the nuclear ban and begin testing the market.
Jennie George is former ACTU president and Labor MP for Throsby.

Is there an upside to all of the above? 

Well in all the helter-skelter, the reptiles' most recent jihad has slid down the totem pole ...



The pond will now briefly pause to note Natasha gnashing her teeth at Barners ...



Wasn't this what the reptiles wanted?

Haven't they always been keen on rogue government interventions if it's done by the far right for the wrong reasons? 

Sheesh, back in 2016, when the dirty deed was done by Tamworth's back scratching, log rolling shame, he was deputy PM and treasured reptile pet ...

Any rudimentary examination of the Australian-trained aspiring GP workforce reveals that those entering the profession are predominantly women. Many of them are working mothers with young children for whom upping sticks to perform a stint in the bush is not possible. Joyce’s plan would thus almost certainly ultimately reduce the overall workforce.
The nation’s GP college has pointed out that any geographic restriction on Medicare provider numbers exposes rural communities to harm by flooding them with inexperienced doctors in regions that have the least capacity to educate and supervise them.
There is one outstanding success story, however, in rural medicine. That is the Rural Generalist training pathway, which has been oversubscribed and highly popular for several years now. It works by attracting GPs who want to work to a stimulating and interesting scope of practice, performing surgery and delivering babies. It’s successful because it operates on attraction, not coercion.
It’s fair to say Joyce’s record on coercive policy isn’t good. His insistence that the entire workforce of the nation’s chemical regulator, the Australian Pesticides and Veterinarian Medicine Authority, be shifted to Armidale, which occurred in 2019, resulted in only 15 public service employees moving and led to the governance demise of the entire organisation.
Perhaps Joyce can see no ­parallels here with his Medicare restriction plan. If so, his powers of self-reflection have deserted him, as well as his capacity to formulate anything resembling reasoned policy.

It's fair to say?

It was completely useless pork barreling, Armidale snout in trough.

I's all very well to push back against Tamworth's eternal shame now, but where were the reptiles when it mattered, when the disaster was unfolding? 

MIA like the bromancer ...

And so to the final treat for the day for cultists - so many reptiles, so little time to wade through a vast hive mind - though the pond must report a feeling of disappointment, because the old biddy has arrived late on the scene, only to belatedly join in yesterday's Caterist jihad ... because there must always be a murmuration of like minds in the hive mind...



The old biddy got quite hysterical - this was a "we'll all be rooned by noon" rant for the ages ...

...We are talking violence and threats of violence; infiltration of outlawed motorcycle gangs and other criminal elements; drug dealing on sites; paid strippers; ghost shifts that were funded twice; cash payments for CFMEU-endorsed enterprise agreements; gifts paid to those awarding contracts and shifts; subcontractors and labour hire companies run out of business, and the list goes on.
The net effect of the wrongful conduct that occurred on Victoria’s large infrastructure sites was to impose a cost on taxpayers of at least $15bn, which was essentially transferred either directly to the CFMEU or to interests connected with the union. The figure could even be higher, up to $30bn.

But again the pond was disappointed.

When the Caterist went on his jihad, the illustration of the demonic threat was quite fine ...




The reptiles stiffed Dame Groan with this portrait of the beast, Ex-CFMEU boss John Setka, right, outside Melbourne Magistrates Court in January. Picture: NewsWire / Josie Hayden




Even worse, there was no snap of Mick Gatto ...and not a single mention of the Mafia, and so no chance for the pond to reference that TV miniseries Portobello.

No chance to make a parrot joke?

It's a deplorable state of affairs when the Caterist makes for a more lively read:

And in case you think the $15bn sounds a tad high – it’s more than $5000 for every household in Victoria – the general manager of the Fair Work Commission confirmed its accuracy. So, what has been the response of the Victorian government to these revelations? Denial and attacking the messenger have been the essence of the completely unconvincing reaction. Whenever a politician starts a sentence with the phrase, “let me be clear”, we know that the person is offering up some sort of lame excuse. But according to Allan, “those claims (about the cost of $15bn) are not well-tested or properly founded.”
She did have to concede that “it’s a deep concern to me that there was a rotten culture that took hold”. At the same time, an unidentified Victorian government spokesman made the astonishing claim that “here’s what this is really about: in Victoria, we pay workers properly and some people do not like that”.
In desperation, Allan revealed that she had sent a letter of concern about the conduct of the CFMEU to the state anti-corruption agency, knowing full well the matter was outside that body’s scope. Unsurprisingly, Allan has been keen for her lieutenants to step up to the plate. Police Minister Anthony Carbines made the remarkable claim that the chapter was “lots of florid ramblings … but not a lot of evidence”. One wonders whether he has read the document because it is packed with case studies and a very long appendix with instances of gross misconduct and criminal behaviour by the CFMEU.
Indeed, my only beef with it is that Watson is too kind in parts. He maintains that 99 per cent of CFMEU members are good people. This is a strange statement given the need for collective action and enforcement when extortion is the name of the game.
At a minimum, far too many CFMEU members were going along with activities they knew to be wrong.

Instead of the likes of Gatto, the reptiles offered up a suit ...Minister for Police Anthony Carbines. Picture: Josie Hayden




To be fair, Dame Groan studiously avoided the deep corruption in the building industry on the developer side, but what does it matter when an entire apartment block becomes unusable?

It's just a chance to demolish it, and generate more employment and nice moola off the top while building a new one ...

Watson also makes the mistake of simply linking the rise of John Setka, the former Victorian secretary of the CFMEU, and several other individuals to the emerging problems. In fact, the old CFMEU under the name of the Builders Labourers Federation engaged in similar tactics under dubious leaders.
There was a great deal of strife on building sites in Victoria and a number of officials were able to enrich themselves inappropriately. It was the Hawke government that ordered the deregistration of the BLF. But the culture of the union never really disappeared.
One of the most disturbing stories relates to an Indigenous labour hire company, Marda Dandhi. One of the aims of the company was to provide jobs for Indigenous people, including those who had been in jail. The short of it is that the CFMEU was not having a bar of it and simply refused to sign an enterprise agreement with the company. Without an agreement, the company could not secure any work.
In fact, there was a directive given by the state infrastructure authority that all Big Build workers must be covered by CFMEU agreements, something Allan would have known and probably condoned.
The owners of Marda Dandhi raised their problems with Victorian minister Sonya Kilkenny four years ago, but didn’t receive a response. In all, 80 emails were sent to 15 Labor state politicians but the pleas for a fair deal went completely unanswered. The company was placed in receivership over two years ago.

The reptiles interrupted with an AV distraction, and the pond was pleased to see that Sky Noise Down Under was still the correct title ... Queensland Labor Senator Murray Watt has criticised the appointment of Stuart Wood to conduct an inquiry into CFMEU wrongdoing, according to Courier Mail columnist Des Houghton. “It’s a bit rich for Murray Watt to do this because he of course was chief of staff to Anna Bligh and director of policy in the premier’s department in Queensland during a period of great CFMEU troubles,” Mr Houghton told Sky News Australia. “At the same time, the Labor Party was only too happy to take funding from the CFMEU so Murray Watt’s own comments need some examination.”



And so to the final gobbet, and the news that the Queensland Olympics would be a disaster, as if the staging of any Olympics in recent times has been anything other than a financial disaster ...

Should the federal Labor government bear any responsibility for what happened in Victoria? No doubt, the relevant ministers will be ducking for cover, pointing to the administration of the CFMEU and the refusal of federal Labor to accept direct donations from the CFMEU. But note here that Victoria handed over its industrial relations powers to the federal government decades ago, and that the only statute that matters is federal. The provisions in the Fair Work Act that allow for the establishment of an effective black market for enterprise agreements are part of the story. At one stage, CFMEU agreements in Victoria were effectively being sold – $100,000 to $250,000 was the typical range, cash preferred.
The bottom line of this sorry saga is that the rationale for a well-considered infrastructure plan made necessary by high rates of population growth is quickly undermined when compliance with the law and moral norms is missing. Leaving aside the direct financial costs, the ultimate outcome is a large construction sector that is now less productive than it was 10 years ago, and much more expensive. And the impact is not confined to Victoria.
With Queensland due to host the Olympic Games in 2032, the outlook is bleak for the preparations without major changes to the way industrial relations are conducted.

What a marathon, what a journey of despair, what a relief to turn to the immortal Rowe to celebrate ...




We are all redheads now, we are all Spartacus, we are Tamworth's undying shame, we are reptiles ...


Monday, February 23, 2026

In which the pond not only offers Lord Downer and the Major, there's the Caterist too ... and at least there's a link to the liar from the Shire ...

 

Elbows up Canada. It's not the end of the world. Remember Kitchener's Wood. Remember Passchendaele.

Don't let General Bonespurs get you down! Or those boofheads who escaped from Slapshot.

As usual, they only turned up in 1918 for the Battle of Kemmelberg after everybody else had done the hard suicidal yards.

The pond faced its own challenge this day and almost dropped the puck in fright and horror.

A rude awakening for Europe only strengthens Western security
If Europe believes it is being unfairly singled out, don’t fret; the US is asking similar questions of us in Australia as an Indo-Pacific ally at the centre of the century’s decisive theatre.
By Scott Morrison
Former Prime Minister

There was simply no way the pond could handle the liar from the Shire, not on a Monday morning. 

All the pond did was search for a reason and it became clear at the bottom of the intermittent archive's link:

...While stressing that alliances are valued, the US makes no apologies for making greater demands on them. That is not cynicism or abandoning a world order that favours freedom. It’s realism. And a realism that will keep free nations free. Yes, the Trump administration’s execution has been rough at times. Some statements have been needlessly provocative.
But don’t confuse style with substance. The strategic intent is clear: strengthen the alliance by forcing burden sharing, rebuild industrial capability and prioritise the theatres that will decide the next century.
In time, the noise will fade. The structural shift will remain. Europe will spend more. Build more. Produce more. Field more. And take more responsibility. That will make it a better ally, not a bitter one, with shared civilisation providing every reason for it to stand together with the US.
The West isn’t ending. It’s being tested. And tests, if met, are how strength is renewed.

There it was ...

Scott Morrison was prime minister from 2018 to 2022. He is vice chairman of American Global Strategies, a Washington-based geopolitical advisory firm.

The grifting for born again speaking in tongues types never ends.

The pond never thought it would yearn for the return of Lord Downer, but here we are, and lo, there he was ... in mourning for the Royals ...




His Lordship discreetly avoided any mention of King Donald and his nutlick minions, preferring to make plans for Nigel, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage delivers a speech in London. Picture: Getty Images




At least the Poms are trying to deal with the revelations in the Trumpstein files, but His Lordship was moved by the sight to a form of treason:

That seems to have come to an end. The Conservative Party under Rishi Sunak disastrously lost the last election in July 2024, winning only 24 per cent of the vote. Labour ended up with a huge majority, with a slightly more impressive 34 per cent.
What has happened since is remarkable. The new Labour government has plunged from crisis to crisis. It has increased taxes and substantially increased government expenditure. I suppose that’s what you would expect from a Labour government.
The result of these policies is unsurprising: anaemic economic growth, sticky inflation and rising unemployment. The public is unimpressed. Labour support has now sunk to below 20 per cent and Starmer’s personal approval rating is at historic lows.
You’d think in those circumstances voters would swing back to the Conservatives but they haven’t. The Conservative vote is now level pegging with Labour at about 18 or 19 per cent. The party that has been mopping up the disillusioned voters is Farage’s Reform UK.

Did the pond say a form of treason?

Most voters think the Conservatives delivered poor government and were divided and unstable. 

Eek, heresy, as His Lordship rambled on ...

They’re not prepared at this stage to give them another chance. Reform is a protest party. It’s led by an articulate and politically savvy Farage but it doesn’t have a coherent set of policies to address the country’s struggling economy and divided social environment.
Three things have happened in Britain across the past couple of decades that are illustrative of what could happen in Australia.
First, the public service and statutory authorities, not the politicians, have effectively been running the country. Perhaps as a consequence, policy has been unimaginative and ineffective. As you would expect from public servants, it has been very cautious and the Westminster bubble, as they call it in Britain, is divorced from the reality of small and medium-sized businesses.

At this point the reptiles doubled down with visual distractions, Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Picture: AFP; Former UK ambassador to the US, Peter Mandelson. Picture: AFP



His Lordship resolutely refused to mention King Donald, and the way that the GOP has given him a free pass ...

He was moving ahead with his numerical listicle...

Second, there is a surprising lack of coherent economic debate in Britain. With growth flat and unemployment rising, the political class should recognise the vital impor­tance of stimulating investment. You’d think it would recognise that economic growth comes out of profitable investments, not loss-making government expenditure on fantasy programs. Yet company and business taxes have been rising inexorably to pay public sector workers substantial wage increases. Government debt has steadily been growing and is approaching 100 per cent of GDP. Forty-four per cent of the government budget is spent on the deplorable socialised health system known as the NHS.
And then there’s energy prices. Britain, under both the Conservatives and Labour, became entranced with the idea that by closing gas-fired power stations and replacing them with windmills and solar panels this would somehow change the climate. Not only has it had no effect whatsoever on the climate but it also has pushed energy prices to close to the highest in Europe. As a result, industries have been closing and relocating to China and India, and instead of manufacturing in Britain, Britain has been importing manufactured goods from countries that have cheaper energy.
It’s hard to see what positive impact any of this is having on the environment, but it’s barely part of the debate there until now. Members of the public are gradually waking up to the absurdity of this policy but they know both the Conservatives and Labour have been promoting it.
Third, the explosion of social media has made the public more politically aware and more politically active. People are substantially more focused on and emotional about political issues than they were in past decades.
As Gabriel Almond and Sidney Verba argued in their classic 1963 book, The Civic Culture, political stability comes from a public that, on the whole, is a passive observer of politics and respects its institutions. These days, because of the explosion of social media, members of the public no longer are just passive observers but are much more inclined to participate. They are much less accepting of the credibility of their institutions.

There was a reminder of the man formerly called Prince,  Police officers block access to the church graveyard on Saturday in Sandringham, England. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on Thursday morning on suspicion of misconduct in public office following a police investigation into the Epstein files. Picture: Getty Images



His Lordship concluded in a right royal funk ...

In Britain there has been a steep decline of trust in institutions. Let’s face it, that will be further eroded by the Epstein scandals, which have embraced both the current government and the monarchy.
It’s hard to be optimistic about a plan to fix these problems. The public may be inclined to support Reform because of loss of trust in the Conservative Party and the Labour Party, but Reform is likely to lose the public’s trust as well because Farage’s party doesn’t have a credible program for government.
For Australians the question is whether there are lessons in this for us. I think there are. We are going to have to deal with a more politically active and engaged public that has less faith and trust in traditional institutions. We are going to have to put up with an era of greater political instability than we have been used to.
The challenge is for the major political parties to come up with coherent, costed and effective programs instead of just polling the public to find out what’s superficially popular. And above all we’re going to have to start to embrace commonsense economic policies that stimulate investment in profitable activities rather than splurging borrowed money on windmills and welfare.
The more politically active and engaged public will understand that and may well appreciate it.

Indeed they will, it takes more than a shapely leg to cruel a career ...



And dammit, speaking of meaningless noise, useless blather and rude awakenings, Lord Downer didn't even mention the hustling Huckster's plans for the middle east. Forget that fundamentalist Zionist talk of "from the river to the sea".

These days, it's from the Nile to the Euphrates...

...In a jaw-dropping interview with Tucker Carlson that aired Friday, U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee appeared to endorse the idea that Israel has a biblical right to much of the modern Middle East, triggering swift condemnation from Arab and Muslim nations.
Carlson invoked the Book of Genesis and told Huckabee that God’s promise to Abraham would today encompass land stretching “from the Nile to the Euphrates”—essentially everywhere across Israel, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and large swaths of Saudi Arabia and Iraq.
Carlson pressed: Did Israel have a right to that land?
Huckabee’s response: “It would be fine if they took it all.” He later added that Israel was not looking to expand and has a right to security in the land it “legitimately holds.” But the damage was done.
In a statement posted on X, Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry blasted the comments as “extremist rhetoric” and “unacceptable,” and demanded clarification from the U.S. State Department.
A joint statement by at least 14 Arab and Muslim nations, including Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bahrain, Turkey, Lebanon, and Egypt—along with the 57-member Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the League of Arab States, and the Gulf Cooperation Council, also condemned the remarks. (Beast)

Sadly this passed the reptiles by, and reptiles didn't have much else to offer.

At the top of the page, the fear still pulsated ...

EXCLUSIVE
One Nation’s threat to city-based doctors as party considers flat tax rate
One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce has proposed barring metropolitan GPs from Medicare unless they first serve in regional areas, while flagging support for a flat income tax rate.
By Greg Brown

Talk about a gaily laughing triptych of reptile terrors...



And what's the point of featuring this "disaster" and "economic madness" at the top of the digital edition of the "news" as an EXCLUSIVE?

Why every little bit helps in pushing the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way further to the hard right. 

Soon enough he'll have to agree that the earth is flat (he probably thinks it already, but can't say the quiet bit out loud). 

And it was good for the reptiles to revert to its Australian Daily Catholic News format with an EXCLUSIVE yarn of tykes in trouble ...

EXCLUSIVE
Industry super funds persuaded to stand by Apollo after Epstein files
Billions of dollars of Australia’s retirement money is managed by alternatives giant Apollo Global, which is in fresh strife following the latest tranche of the Epstein files. Its clients include Hostplus, Care Super and Catholic Super-Equip Super.
By Cliona O'Dowd



Well played reptiles, yet another story about the Trumpenstein files with nary a mention of King Donald or his cabinet nutlicks... and what a relief to be able to carry on business as usual.

The pond also baulked at the thought of dealing with simpleton Simon ...

How Labor forgot the legacy of ‘Dr No’
Peter Walsh succeeded by doing not what was popular but what was right. This resulted in Labor enacting a discipline to its budget process. Unlike today’s ALP, he wasn’t afraid of making hard decisions in the interests of the nation.
By Simon Benson
Political analyst


That's more than enough of that. 

It's a lonely business, archiving the reptiles in an often failing archive, but it beats having to deal with them.

All the same that left the pond in need of content, and how the pond yearns for a dinkum Nazi story...



Instead what dismal choices there were this day.

For some strange reason, the reptiles' alleged "media coverage" refused to even mention the astonishingly clever rebranding of Sky Noise down under as "News 24".

Instead there was just routine ABC bashing and bits of this and that ...

Media Diary: ABC reporter Sarah Ferguson ‘dictated’ managing director Hugh Marks’ response to her story
Astonishing emails show how reporter and host Sarah Ferguson wrote key parts of managing director Hugh Marks’ response defending her own Four Corners series on Donald Trump.
By Steve Jackson

Got to do better, Stevo, they were wildly excited over at Sky Noise ... (warning, actual Sky Noise link for the last time), as predicted by the Weekly Beast, heralding the new dawn last Friday... (now email extortion free for the moment).

Worse, Major Mitchell was on the same bandwagon as simpleton Simon ... and even worse, he spent a bigly five minutes on his rant ...



And even much worser, it seems that this useless government couldn't even manage to take the reptiles back to the 1950s, their preferred golden era of picket fences and decent raw farm milk (with cows working out with their jeans on).

After that initial flurry, it was past time for a comical snap of Jimbo, lips pursed in whimsical way ... Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ claim he is emulating the Keating-era economics doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. Picture: Adam Head




The Major proceeded to dump a jumbo sized set of grievances on Jimbo ...

Government spending has not slowed and now the IMF has warned the government may have to bail out big-spending Victoria and the Northern Territory.
John Kehoe in The Australian Financial Review warned on February 15 that Victoria’s debt would “surpass $240bn by 2028-29 and eclipse $30,000 for every Victorian”. The NT was on track to “blow past $50,000” for every Territorian.
Labor won the election by giving away free money, starting with power price rebates. It added $8.4bn to boost Medicare, forgave $19bn in student debt, and offered first-home buyers access to a 5 per cent deposit scheme.
As opposition leader, Peter Dutton did not criticise the spendathon, but new Opposition Leader Angus Taylor has.
Chalmers hopes to pay for more social programs by tapping the one group he always looks at – Baby Boomers. It helps that most of them don’t vote Labor.
Chalmers’ latest gambit is a discussion about the 50 per cent capital gains tax discount on investment properties held for more than 12 months. The Coalition hates the plan but the left loves it, even though many prominent lefties – the Greens’ Nick McKim and Mehreen Faruqi, and Labor PM Anthony Albanese – once benefited from extensive property portfolios.
The best argument against high government spending is the inflationary spike that excess public demand injects. Labor is spending at post-Whitlam government highs with outlays as a percentage of GDP up from 24.4 per cent before the pandemic to 26.9 per cent now.
Where once the Business Council of Australia was at the forefront of campaigning for tax reform, the debate today is driven by the left-wing Grattan Institute and the even more left Australia Institute, both beloved by the ABC and the Nine newspapers.
The Coalition defends older Australians while Labor and the Greens argue they are championing home ownership for the young. Ownership rates for Gen Xers and younger are at historical lows.
Kos Samaras, from the RedBridge polling group, says this is the age group defecting to One Nation. He says Xers feel the national social contract has not kept faith with their generation.
Boomers have since 2025 been outnumbered by Millennials and Gen Zs, so the tax debate is tricky politics for the Coalition. The Coalition is right that retirees who complied with the super and tax policies of successive governments of both persuasions can’t start again when governments change course retrospectively. Yet it’s not that simple.
The debate over generous tax policies favouring Baby Boomers was already front and centre during Tony Abbott’s prime ministership.
As editor-in-chief of The Australian at the time, this column was extensively briefed ahead of then treasurer Joe Hockey’s 2014 “lifters and leaners” budget about high net worth retirees who had tens and sometimes hundreds of millions of dollars in property in concessional super accounts.

The reptiles then managed to slip in a snap of jolly Joe, Former federal treasurer Joe Hockey. Picture: Martin Ollman



Why couldn't they run a snap of the puffing grifter in his hey day?



Luckily, after all that doom and gloom, the Major donned his Dame Groan thinking cap, and came up with an array of answers that will please devotees of the old biddy ...

So what’s the answer?
First, governments do need to rein in spending because, as Warren Hogan argued in the AFR last Wednesday, the public sector is crowding out private investment, too many people are now employed directly or indirectly by governments (via wages top-ups), and the government sector is leading the collapse in national productivity.
Chalmers has bragged only Labor understands the productivity opportunities of the care economy. There are none. Aged homes and childcare are imposts we have to deal with but they are holding back public sector productivity and forcing up private sector labour costs.
Governments should reduce personal and company tax rates to rekindle aspiration. They should focus on increasing indirect taxes such as the GST while compensating the poor.
Negative gearing should be looked at. This column is aware of wealthy individuals with dozens of negatively geared properties used for tax minimisation.
Sure, lots of teachers and police also own negatively geared property. But there is no reason taxpayers should subsidise more than, say, two investment properties per family. Nor is there a public interest in allowing very high income earners to minimise tax through negative gearing – unless they are investing in productive businesses.
The capital gains tax discount is different. The Greens will be disappointed when they do the hard work on this: scrapping this concession for the old inflation adjusted model will raise little money.
Owners who do not live in investment properties will simply increase rents to offset potential changes. Yet there may be a case for reducing the capital gains tax discount on existing properties while maintaining or increasing it for new properties if increasing housing supply is the goal.
On superannuation, there may be a case for change. This column believes retirees with balances over $3m are surprised how little Chalmers’ new tax changes will affect them.
The superannuation guarantee levy was introduced by Labor in 1992 to secure retirement incomes. Super is not about estate planning and people with hundreds of millions in superannuation should pay tax at normal marginal rates rather than rely on young taxpayers to fund services older Australians mainly use.
On spending, Labor needs to do much better than limit the growth of the National Disability Insurance Scheme to 8 per cent a year. The NDIS is on course to be the budget’s single biggest line item and even its architect, former opposition leader Bill Shorten, admits it is being rorted.

Just to make sure the tour was complete, the reptiles flung in a snap of comrade Bill, just to remind us that it wasn't just jolly Joe that was a compleat doofus, Bill Shorten is considered the architect of the NDIS. Picture: Martin Ollman



The Major ended with a rousing plea to tax the rich:

Labor should ditch its plan for three days a week subsidised childcare for all Australians up to an annual family income of $530,000. Welfare needs to be targeted to those who cannot pay themselves.
Chalmers should know such taxpayer support will only turbocharge childcare fees and profits.
While it might be politically unpalatable that real wages fell last Wednesday, the real issue, as Judith Sloan argued in The Australian on Thursday, is the government crowding out the labour market with low productivity jobs.

At this point, the pond almost considered giving up there and then. 

With the Major fixing the economy lickety-split, what more did there need to be done?

Alas, the Caterist hovered into view, and with gritted teeth the pond got down to some standard union bashing, something which has been remarkably absent from reptile coverage in past few weeks ...



Just because the pond had dared to go careening Caterist - who knows when it will come in handy when next dealing with waters flooding a quarry? - it didn't mean the pond had to provide an exegesis, especially as the yarn featured a favourite reptile piñata, Former CFMEU boss John Setka in Melbourne. Picture: Jason Edwards




The extended Mafia riff at least allowed the pond to mention the way that it's currently in the grip of Bellochio's mini-series Portobello ...

Who said that the Mafia didn't do comedy? And speaking of difficult parrots ...

The CFMEU’s criminal history and connections with bikie gangs and organised criminals were no secret. Yet the extent of the corruption in the Victorian division under Setka, as revealed in the administrator’s report, beggars belief. Why Victoria? For the same reason the Mafia thrived in post-unification Italy in the 19th century. Weak government and lack of trust in formal legal institutions and law enforcement are the conditions under which criminal business empires thrive.
Mafiosi-style unions flourished in Victoria under Labor for the same reasons the Cosa Nostra prospered in Sicily after World War II. The Cassa del Mezzogiorno (“Fund for the South”) channelled money into public works and infrastructure, which were quickly captured by criminal syndicates that formed cosy relationships with government officials.
Andrews’ Cassa del Mezzogiorno was Big Build. It began as four projects: the Westgate Tunnel, the Metro, the replacement of level crossings and station improvements. At the 2022 election it added two more: $10bn to build hospitals and the $70bn train to nowhere, the Suburban Rail Loop.
This stream of money bought votes and helped Andrews repair his relationship with the union that had soured during Covid. The CFMEU authorised a poster at building sites that read: “Dan might be a prick, but he’s a prick who’s delivering for construction workers. Labor will keep you in work for another 30 years!”
A steady flow of public capital, with fragmented oversight and a complex system of subcontractors, was an invitation to cartel arrangements, just as it was in New York during the public infrastructure boom of the 1950s and 60s under urban planner Robert Moses, the city’s long-serving urban planner.
Construction unions and the Teamsters went into partnership with the Mafia to form the Concrete Club, selling stability and protection to developers.

Next came a local version, Mick Gatto




The Caterist was now in full froth mode ...

Victoria’s concrete club is a joint venture between the CFMEU and gangland. If there is a godfather in this drama, it would be Mick Gatto, Setka’s best mate, who describes himself as a “mediator and arbitrator”. Others, including a federal judge, say he is “a standover man and a gangster … closely associated with a number of violent and dangerous criminals” in Melbourne and Sydney.
The CFMEU and hardened criminals control choke points created by government legislation. The Victorian enterprise bargaining agreement system has become an old-style “pay to play” corruption in which the CFMEU is the gatekeeper. Its value to the company is awarded, and EBA is subject to a private tax or bribe.
CFMEU EBAs were bought and sold as commodities in a black market, sometimes through third-party brokers, where different types of EBAs had different values. Labour-hire and traffic-management EBAs are said to cost $1 million.
The CFMEU and its cronies abuse the Social Procurement Framework legislated by Labor, which gives priority in awarding contracts to businesses owned by Aboriginals or other groups deemed to be disadvantaged.
The administrator found numerous examples of dummy directors and shareholders installed to disguise the true ownership of a company, a system known as “black cladding” including Jarrah Resources, reportedly established by Gatto.
State and federal Labor leaders must answer their own consciences for decisions that have betrayed their party’s legacy. A movement that began by protecting workers’ rights in the 1890s depression has evolved into a vertically integrated criminal enterprise, extracting rents from both legal and illegal markets.
Albanese’s abolition of the ABCC has played no small part in the proliferation of industrial action since 2022, with the construction sector leading the way. In the September 2022 quarter, just before the ABCC was abolished, 3.1 working days were lost per 1000 construction workers. In the September 2025 quarter, it was 12.3.

And the reptiles made sure to visually associate certain types with Mafia gangsters ...Mark Irving; Sally McManus



The Caterist sustained the rage in his final gobbet ...

The Andrews-Allan government deserves most of the blame. Cronyism, extravagance and administrative incompetence combined to create the conditions in which organised crime become inevitable. It has done almost nothing to police this behaviour or bring the perpetrators to book.
Even now, almost two years after the CFMEU entered administration, industrial relations in Victoria retain the features of the wild west culture, beyond the reach of law.
The CFMEU administrator, Mark Irving, has required permanent personal protection since August 2024. Australian Council of Trade Unions secretary Sally McManus and former Federal Minister for Workplace Relations, Murray Watt, also required their own personal security.
Nick McKenzie, the investigative journalist whose reporting exposed many of the abuses under Setka’s leadership of the CFMEU, has on two occasions been driven from his home by credible threats to his safety.
Yet the Victorian police appear to be missing in action, seemingly incapable of investigating these crimes and restoring law and order in the construction industry.
Meanwhile, Allan has rebuffed calls for a royal commission, leaving loose and malodorous threads dangling from this sordid episode – another chapter in the story of a government at once morally compromised and administratively inept, presiding over a state showing unmistakeable signs of institutional decay.

What really surprised the pond in this tale of skullduggery? 

There wasn't a credit at the end of it, citing the Caterist's affiliation to the Menzies Research Centre ... you know, speaking as he was of assorted gangsters and stand-over merchants.

What a relief to find he was still there ... beaming away like a cat that had eaten a rat ...



And having done all that, the pond could at last relax with a closing immortal Rowe, looking at an angle, an insight into the tottering demented toddler, that was too hot for the hive mind to handle this day ...