The pond should properly open with a tip of the hat to the correspondent who noted silly Hugh Marks attempting to befriend the reptiles, as reported by the venerable Meade yesterday, with a reference to the fable of the frog and the scorpion: Top Marks for cosying up to News Corp – but Hugh knows if it’ll stop constant attacks on the ABC? (as told by prime ham Orson Welles in Mr Akradin)
Sadly, as the pond can personally testify, Marks is one of those snowflakes who has risen to the top to prove that the Peter Principle remains solidly in place and working as well as it's ever done.
Now back to the war ...
As King Donald celebrates the spirit of the season by promising to commit war crimes - attacking power plants in the same way that Vlad the Sociopath has been doing to Ukraine - what could the reptiles do, but send out the Angelic one to lead the county in prayer?
The header: ‘Huge miscalculation’: Easter prayer amid widespread fears of food and medicine shortages;Easter hope takes a hit as war in the Middle East threatens potential shortages of everything from fertiliser to lifesaving medications.
The caption for a sight that has no meaning to EV owners: Cuts to fuel excise have been welcomed as 'better than nothing' but the bigger picture remained surety of supply, said trucking company owners. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman.
Why the Angelic one?
Well, she can cluck and commiserate ...
The war in the Middle East may do something few other wars have done to Australia: cause the collapse of our much-vaunted national complacency. The war’s consequences are not short-term, no matter where you live in our country: the city, the suburbs or the bush. People are rightly nervous.
The latest Newspoll is proof of this. Asked whether they approved or disapproved of US military action against Iran, 72 per cent of voters said they disapproved (including 50 per cent who strongly disapproved) compared with 23 per cent who approved and 5 per cent who said they didn’t know.
The reptiles quickly jumped to an AV distraction, and some sign of hope ... Foreign Minister Penny Wong was among ministers from around 40 countries who met virtually overnight to discuss reopening the Strait of Hormuz. The vital shipping lane has been closed to most marine traffic since the outbreak of war in Iran. The meeting was held after Donald Trump's comments that securing the waterway was for others to resolve. The UK is leading the response. Leaders from France, Germany, Canada and the United Arab Emirates were among those who attended the meeting. But France's President Emmanuel Macron told reporters in South Korea it was “unrealistic” to open the Strait by force.
The Angelic one was still stuck on the job of reporting the bad polling ...
If you think this is just a leftie position, think again. More than two-thirds of every age group disapproved of the US military action in Iran. However, proving that their focus is the narrowest of any voting group (and heralding a possible decline in the Hanson party’s sudden popularity as the war continues), only One Nation voters were likelier to support the war in Iran.
So, one aspect of the response from the public to this war is that it does not divide into obvious left and right camps, although the media is a different story. It is fairly obvious to most – whether they be average readers and armchair critics or distinguished overseas academic political theorists such as John Mearsheimer – that by closing the strait, Iran holds all the cards.
Uh huh, quick, turn to the pastie Hastie before all this leftie talk radicalises the pond ... Andrew Hastie addresses a press conference at Eze Steel in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Pretty desperate if you read the Daily Terror ...
Commiserations to the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way, as the Angelic one pressed on ...
The Trump administration’s attempts to extricate itself from this expanding imbroglio with a 15-point plan that the Iranians have ignored is widely regarded as nothing more than face-saving grandstanding for the US president. To paraphrase that old saying, you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. The lack of hope, or at least a strong feeling of pessimism, pervades the commentary.
In Australia, the government’s marked lack of preparedness is a big part of that. It is true there was almost no warning about this disastrous war. We’ve had one shock, in the Covid pandemic, which we know will probably happen again, so the lack of preparation of this government for another long-term economic shock infuriates many.
The short-term thinking is stark. A piffling halving of the fuel excise is hardly reassuring and what is galling for most Australians is that we know we have huge untapped resources, especially coal and gas, and gave up drilling for our own oil years ago.
At least there's a chance to remind the hive mind of the real villain ... Energy Minister Chris Bowen. Picture: NewsWire / Damian Shaw
The Angelic one finally remembered her duty and launched an obligatory attack on renewables and cockamamy talk of actual climate science ...
But life goes on and checking out the prices of electric vehicles and cancelling plans to travel to Europe are minor problems caused by the oil shortage.
Throw in a snap of a ship and the reptile terror was complete ...Supply chains are being stifled by the blockade of one of the world’s most important shipping routes, the Strait of Hormuz. Picture: AFP
Please, long absent lord, slake the Angelic one's thirst for oil ...
In our part of the world, where we are used to having what we need at the local shop, this could be an inconvenience. But Australia exports two-thirds of the food it produces and an irksome difficulty for us is a looming disaster for other parts of the world where disruptions in food supply and distribution have serious consequences, such as famine and wars.
But who could have encouraged this apocalypse? As the fuel crisis deepens, farmers in regional Australia warn that it may bring their businesses to a halt.
Britain’s National Health Service is already running out of supplies. Australia imports 90 per cent of our medications. An interruption of these drugs is dire for people who have chronic and life-threatening conditions, as do some of my children whose medicines were sometimes in short supply during the Covid crisis.
Some of us are right to be pessimistic. We are acutely aware that this war is going to have consequences in more ways than petrol prices at the bowser. I may be accused of being a catastrophist – perhaps I am – but this Easter, this suburban mum will do the only thing she or any of us can in the face of this war. Pray – hard.
Prayer?
Hard prayer? Die hard praying?
That's the best the Angelic one can offer?
How about leaving News Corp?
Rupert Murdoch, Netanyahu ‘pressed Trump’ to strike Iran (caution: intermittent archive link)
Those privately pressing Trump to strike Iran included Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, media mogul Rupert Murdoch and some conservative commentators, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.
The News Corp founder communicated with Trump several times as he urged the president to take on Tehran, according to one person briefed on their interactions.
On what known planet should the pond be forced to agree with Megyn "white Santa, white Jesus" Kelly?
The onetime Fox News headliner ripped Murdoch and other Republicans who've egged on Donald Trump's war against Iran.
And yet here we are ...
The pond really should have saved that one for the bromancer, who will appear tomorrow in the pond for an Easter Sunday homily, but it suits the Angelic one just as well ...
Meanwhile, the reptiles continue to amaze by dodging and ducking and weaving, and who better at that art (or sport) than the Ughmann?
Why he was so hot to trot that the reptiles stuck him at the top of the digital page early on Saturday morning ...
It was a seven minute read, so the reptiles said ...
The header: The ship that proves Australia is losing global fuel security game; A ship from Kuwait on an unprecedented route to Botany Bay exposes a supply chain so fragile it could bring the nation to a standstill. If the fuel stops, Australia stops.
The caption for the uncredited work of art: Australia’s future now hangs on a complex international chess game involving ships carrying liquid fuel from distant refineries across the oceans to our shores.
The pond was delighted to see that the reptiles have at last discovered the sort of service to be found at the likes of Maritime Traffic, and mortified that they didn't feel the need to provide a link. (You can waste hours finding your vessel)
The pond's correspondents know what's coming.
The Ughmann loves the war, loves the chance to celebrate the importance of oil, loves the chance to denigrate renewables and deny climate science yet again ... all the more exciting because he can use arcane new shipping ways to make his points:
Quick, another graphic if you please ... The STI Solace’s green-line progress of its fuel shipment to Australia. Picture: Kpler
Time, please, gentlemen, for a plug ...
Kpler is a global trade intelligence company that sits at the nerve centre of the physical economy, stitching together billions of data points to show how energy and commodities are actually moving around the world. It has generously given this column access to its data.
And so to make sundry ponderous points:
The notable recent shift in the fuel trade is the emergence of long-haul supply. Four ships have crossed the Panama Canal after loading on the US Gulf coast. Two more have sailed from a refinery in Washington state and another was loading there on Thursday. Historically, fuel imports from the US have been rare, so a distant and more expensive supply line has been tapped to keep Australia moving.
But one cargo now slowly tracking down the west coast of Africa stands out, and its journey here tells the story of a nation scrounging around the world to fill supply gaps at any price.
The STI Solace set sail from Southwold Anchorage, off the Suffolk coast, on March 19 and is due to dock in Sydney on April 29. It is a mid-sized tanker carrying nearly 654,000 barrels of fuel, or about 104 million litres. It sounds like a lot but Australia uses about 173 million litres of refined fuel every day. So the STI Solace has enough fuel in its tanks to keep the country running for little more than half a day.
How about a snap of the ship? Done: The STI Solace – the drude oil oil tanker bound for Botany Bay. Picture: VesselFinder
The proud possessor of arcane knowledge ploughed on ...
Another tanker, the Oslo Star, loaded this cargo from a refinery in Kuwait in mid-February and sailed out of the Gulf before the shooting started. It then tracked west into the Red Sea and up through the Suez Canal, emerging into European waters in early March. As it crossed the Mediterranean and entered the Atlantic, its destination shifted repeatedly, first towards North Africa, then Rotterdam and finally to an anchorage off the Suffolk coast.
When it reached Southwold on the morning of March 19, the cargo was transferred ship-to-ship on to the STI Solace, which set sail that evening and is now carrying it halfway around the world to Australia.
Kpler’s data goes back to 2014, and this is the first time the company has recorded such a trade.
The complex logistical dance was choreographed by the Scorpio Group, a Monaco-based company that operates large fleets of tankers moving fuel between continents. Firms such as this do not produce energy. They move it, trade it and, since the war in the Gulf kicked off, redirect it in response to price and scarcity.
Forgive the blizzard of detail, but it reveals something important. This was not a shipment planned for Australia. It was a cargo looking for a buyer and in the end Australia paid the highest price. So this is not a straight supply chain, it is an expensive relay where each baton change adds costs and complexity.
Enough of all that, bring it home ... Signs cover petrol bowsers at a closed petrol station in Sydney on March 30, 2026. Picture: AFP
And with all that dancing done, the Ughmann could get down to the denialist gritty:
The world entered this crisis with good supply and a significant volume of oil, including a black fleet of sanctioned Russian cargoes, sitting on the water in tankers. That floating stock is now being rapidly drawn into the market at higher prices. No one is knocking back Russian fuel any more. But this is a limited buffer. As those cargoes are absorbed, the global chessboard will start to lose pieces and supply will tighten further.
In the gap between supply and demand lies the risk. The longer the Strait of Hormuz remains constrained and under the control of Iran, the more precarious this market becomes. It should be noted that Iran is still shipping oil and making a hefty profit on it.
In the supply chain chess game the Albanese government is a bystander.
Band-Aids on supply
That was writ large in the Prime Minister’s address to the nation and his speech at the National Press Club. When asked about the fuel crisis, Anthony Albanese talked about tempering demand by travelling less or lowering costs by cutting the heavy vehicle duty, the fuel excise and the GST.
These are price and demand Band-Aids on a haemorrhage of supply.
The government’s only supply-side moves have been to change rules to allow the limited amount of fuel we refine to stay onshore and to let the Export Finance Corporation underwrite additional fuel shipments. This is to provide comfort to the big energy companies that source the fuel.
The cargo on the STI Solace would have come at a premium. If the price drops in the month it takes to get here, the taxpayer will wear the cost.
When asked about his long-term plans to secure supply, the Prime Minister said everything was on the table but then ran through the usual bureaucrat’s list of reasons that most of it would be too hard, take too long or be too expensive.
It should be self-evident to even a casual observer that our future depends on becoming self-sufficient in liquid fuels as rapidly as we can. It will not be quick, cheap or easy, but contemplate the alternative. If the fuel stops, Australia stops.
If the pond might interrupt at this point, it should be self-evident that becoming self-sufficient in "liquid fuels" is a ludicrous proposition, and that moving towards self-sufficiency in energy might be more to the point, and that the best forms of energy are now coming from the renewables sector, what with King Donald having put the strait in dire straits, and possibly for some considerable time.
But that sort of thinking doesn't sit well with an unreformed seminarian:
Energy security is national security and our security is now out of our hands. This was a wilful, catastrophic failure of the political class more than 20 years in the making. This crisis should be the catalyst to fix it but the early signs are not good.
Anyone who says electric cars are the answer is not serious. They have a role, but truck traffic between Sydney and Melbourne on the Hume Highway alone runs at 1900 B-double equivalent trips a day. That is 700,000 trips a year. The technology to rapidly replace all that traffic at the same cost and efficiency as diesel does not exist.
Pond correspondents have already noted that new technologies are rapidly being developed.
The question is whether we want to join King Donald and revert to the1950s, or wake up to the way that China has stolen the renewables and EV race from the United States ... Oil tankers and high speed crafts sit anchored at Muscat Anchorage near the Strait of Hormuz on March 30, 2026 in Muscat, Oman. Picture: Getty Images
King Donald, in his almost infinite fatuity, and his singular failure to understand the way world markets have worked, has dropped the world in it... and the Ughmann, with equal fatuity, thinks he can get away with it.
He is right. After decades of declining oil production, something extraordinary happened to US energy supplies from 2010 on. The shale oil revolution turned the US into the world’s biggest producer of oil and natural gas.
Trump can walk away from the war with Iran and his country will absorb the shock. Prices may rise. Consumers will feel it. But the system holds. The US has choices. Europe and Australia do not.
He's right?
No he's not, he's a demented, clueless old king, in the last stages of reign and life.
He can walk away from it, and all will be well?
No, he can't. To paraphrase, no man or country is an island, entire of itself, every country is a piece of the world, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, the United States is the less ...
Right now, the system in the United States is being torn apart, fragmented, destroyed, with the country at war with itself, and no solution to hand.
Every day is spent in speculation about who will next get the knife, as the demented, mad king seeks ever diminishing ways to shift the blame from him.
Who knew that a desire to avoid the Epstein files would lead to all this?
This is a world News Corp has helped shape. This is why the moment is so stark:
The world is organised around energy. As the world’s best energy analysts at Doomberg argue, power, prosperity and security flow from those who produce it. For decades, globalisation obscured that reality. Oil moved freely, trade routes were protected and supply chains, though complex, were dependable. The Gulf war has exposed how fragile the old system was.
Supply is no longer guaranteed. It is contested, disrupted and increasingly weaponised as the global energy market fragments into competing spheres of influence. That world is breaking and will not return to business as usual.
In the emerging world order, geography and resources matter again.
The US, Russia and China are well placed in the new order. They have energy within their borders or within their reach. Europe does not. Australia has it but has chosen not to use it. Both have come to rely on long supply chains in a world where distance is now a vulnerability. Both have demonised the fuels on which their societies run. This virtue signalling is a vanity we can no longer afford to indulge.
Doomberg’s central insight is that energy systems do not evolve gradually. They appear stable, then shift suddenly when a shock hits. When that happens, the system does not return to what it was. It reorganises around new realities.
For exposed, import-dependent nations such as Australia, the implications are profound. Energy is not just another commodity. It is the foundation of economic life and national security.
We can ignore that truth or we can act on it. Because if we do nothing and that thin green line breaks, so do we.
Oh go yap to the Emeritus Chairman and get him to explain his grand plan, and what he was thinking when he encouraged the mad king in his folly ...
And after all that the pond will only briefly note garrulous Gemma, attempting to take the pond back to the days of "they're eating the cats, they're eating the dogs."
Frankly the pond almost ground to a halt the moment that "furries" turned up in the header.
Hasn't Gemma been keeping up?
The new trend is "looning"...(the pond thinks there should be a copyright claim in that, and at least some decent royalties ...
Forget that cornballl cute image of a furry clutching its cheeks, like a zillion football and other sporting mascots around the world.
Dare the pond urge students to go doggies?
Nah, if you're going to have a kink or a fetish, do it in style ...
Besides, the intermittent archive is working at the moment, so correspondents can head off there if they want to be grated by Gemma ...
Good luck turning up to class in Italy and barking at classmates. Australia’s education system cossets kids, Italy’s fosters resilience, not furries.
By Gemma Tognini
Columnist
The pond couldn't believe that in a time of war and pending calamity, this was the best that garrulous Gemma could serve up ...
In Australia, the education system shields and mollycoddles. Reading lists come with trigger warnings. Feelings take precedence.
I recall a few years ago chatting with a friend whose child was at a private school in which some students were identifying as animals. Furries. Read about it, it’s ridiculous. When I laughed and asked how long they were suspended for, she told me they were being “accommodated”.
An article I found from 2023 quoted an educator who offered this solution: “It is important to build a safe environment for them (the student) based on trust, where they feel comfortable expressing themselves to you.”
‘Hey kid, you’re not a dog’
No, it’s important to say, “Hey kid, you’re not a dog.” This absence of any kind of line in the sand is what I’m talking about.
Good luck rocking up to school in Italy in a pair of ears and barking at your classmates.
Is our system robust and focused on critical thinking or is it about constantly lowering the educational and behavioural bars? Some stats are telling, such as the number of kids being homeschooled.
In Queensland, as of August 2025 just shy of 12,000 students were being homeschooled. Between 2021 and 2025, primary school registrations grew by 110 per cent. In high schoolers, it was 167 per cent. A fraction of the millions of Australian kids in school perhaps but, as they say, it’s about the trend.
Education should be a preparation for life. It should absolutely be hard sometimes. Ditto challenging. Critical thinking, learning, should be valued and prized. Rough edges on young minds should be sloughed off over time, in class, not indulged.
I often wonder what it will take for various things to shift. To recalibrate. This is no exception. Perhaps it’s time for those in charge of the education sector in Australia to look beyond the Hills Hoist and understand what’s at stake. Maybe then something will change.