Saturday, February 21, 2026

In which the reptiles offer sundry news items, including Tamworth's eternal shame, before the pond turns to the Ughmann for an abysmal closing ...

 

The reptiles went big with ISIS brides this day, as any dinkum fear-mongering foreign-owned corporation would do:



Taking a break from her MAGA cap, climate science denialist, court and judge bashing themes, Dame Slap led the way ...

How Tony Burke’s electorate politics sparked ISIS brides national security debacle
How much longer will Australians tolerate Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke reacting to political pressure rather than making considered decisions in the national interest?
By Janet Albrechtsen

Fundamentalist Catholic, the Angelic one, chipped in ...

Our values on trial: The ISIS brides, their children — and who we choose to be
As debate rages over the return of Australian ISIS brides, sympathy flows to their children but rarely their mothers. The controversy exposes deeper fears about Muslims — and tests what we mean by ‘our values’.
By Angela Shanahan

The pond thanked the long absent lord for the intermittent archive, which allowed the pond the chance to present this dross to correspondents, without having to do anything more with it ...

It was only down the page that the reptiles were reluctantly forced to pay attention to King Donald and rats in the Supreme Court ranks ...



Joe Kelly, lesser member of the Kelly gang, was on hand to observe the folly ...



Joe was full of gloom, as the war with China surged to the surface ...

...Initial reports suggested that Trump was enraged by the news, with sources saying he attacked the Supreme Court and its ruling – labelling it “a disgrace” – during his White House breakfast with governors on Friday morning local time.
Posting on his Truth Social platform last year, Trump warned that an unfavourable decision by the US Supreme Court would be “1929 all over again” and plunge the country into a second “great depression.”
The Supreme Court decision now overturns the basis on which the US President was able to negotiate his sweeping global trade deals and obtain leverage over a host of other countries including China, with the ruling leaving America vulnerable should the trade war with Beijing reignite.
Trump, who is visiting Beijing in April, will meet with Xi Jinping from a position of weakness with his trade policy in tatters after China emerged as the sole nation last year to retaliate against the US President’s trade war.
The Supreme Court on Friday local time found that the IEEPA tariffs were illegal because they gave the US President no grand authority to impose tariffs and that this authority would need to be granted by the US Congress.
Writing the majority opinion of the Supreme Court decision, Chief Justice John Roberts said that the President “asserts the extraordinary power to unilaterally impose tariffs of unlimited amount, duration, and scope. In light of the breadth, history, and constitutional context of that asserted authority, he must identify clear congressional authorisation to exercise it.”
He said that while IEEPA did grant the President the authority to “regulate” importation, this was not sufficient to justify the sweeping tariffs that had already been implemented.

This is a China war crisis of the first water for the reptiles, yet where was the bromancer? Still MIA ...

He was last sighted on 24th January, furiously scribbling...

A tale of two Trumps: good, bad and bluster
The US President seems to value NATO’s vast security network at nothing. That’s not only insulting, it’s untrue.
By Greg Sheridan

Not a peep since.

Sorry world, we're on our own, and what a sorry mess it is ...

“The Constitution lodges the Nation’s lawmaking powers in Congress alone, and the major questions doctrine safeguards that assignment against executive encroachment,” Gorsuch said in his opinion. “Under the doctrine’s terms, the President must identify clear statutory authority for the extraordinary delegated power he claims. And, as the principal opinion explains, that is a standard he cannot meet.”
“Whatever else might be said about Congress’s work in IEEPA, it did not clearly surrender to the President the sweeping tariff power he seeks to wield.”
In his dissenting opinion, Brett Kavanaugh warned that the “United States may be required to refund billions of dollars to importers who paid the IEEPA tariffs, even though some importers may have already passed on costs to consumers or others. As was acknowledged at oral argument, the refund process is likely to be a ‘mess.’”
Earlier this month, The Tax Foundation – a Washington based think-tank – estimated that the tariffs imposed by President Trump had raised a total of $132bn in net tax revenue over 2025. Over the decade, the group said the tariffs were forecast to raise $1.6 trillion.
The decision by the Supreme Court now means the administration will need to resort to fallback options to salvage its trade policy and preserve its revenue stream – but the back-up options do not offer the President the same level of flexibility.

That's enough of that - the intermittent archive will sometimes provide, if it happens to be in the mood...



Besides, there are plenty of other non-paywall sources to have a chuckle over King Donald's dismal day with the rats, as he laughs all the way to the bank ..

As a result of these shenanigans, the former prince now known as randy Andy slipped way down the page ...

The malignant Magnay could only summon up three minutes of brooding about what the monarchist rag had helped FAFO into the ether...

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor: Caught in headlights, downfall complete ... nightmare just beginning
After 12 hours in custody, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor faces an expanding misconduct inquiry tied to Jeffrey Epstein emails —plunging the monarchy into fresh turmoil.
By Jacquelin Magnay



Over on the extreme far right, Fergo decided he had to drag Queen Liz into the action ...

Did Queen Elizabeth II think Andrew was above the law?
No senior British royal has faced trial in 500 years. Now Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor stands accused, friendless and titleless. Elizabeth I put the Crown before family. Elizabeth II could not. Her legacy is now on trial too.
By Richard Ferguson




It was doom and gloom all around...

...We all want to remember Elizabeth in the best possible light. She was the last great link to the world before World War II and after it. The last stateswoman everyone respected. But Elizabeth was not just some Mother Earth who appeared in delightful skits with Paddington Bear and James Bond. This was a powerful, savvy head of state who knew her deeply flawed children were often the greatest threat to the monarchy’s survival.
The queen had access to enough damning information about her favourite son and Epstein, and did next to nothing. While she retired Andrew from public duties, she never considered taking away the protection of the titles. Andrew still stayed with her and went to church. She even left his disgraced ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, some of the corgis in the will.
What else was a mother to do, you may ask. But if anyone knew she was queen before she was a mother, it was Elizabeth. Her namesake, Elizabeth I, didn’t want to punish her Scottish Catholic cousin Mary either. Good Queen Bess feared spilling the blood of another anointed queen would send her to hell. But the last of the Tudors ultimately put the institution before the family and silently allowed Mary’s trial and execution.
It is now clear Elizabeth II could not summon up the same steeliness when it came to Andrew. At best she was soft. At worst, she thought her son of royal blood was above the law. This trial may yet prove her critics right, that Elizabeth acted more as if she were the last great monarch than a queen who cared about securing the monarchy’s future.
For her not-so-favourite son and successor, Charles III, time will tell what this trial will mean. This King has had enough personal dramas in his short reign already: his cancer battle, his daughter-in-law Catherine’s cancer issues, his never-ending feud with his youngest son, Harry.
Maybe this will allow Charles and his heir, William, to move on. But it is likelier that it will cement the idea that Charles’s short reign has been defined by turbulence and trouble.
When Mary Queen of Scots and Charles I were on trial, even their greatest haters were impressed with them. They were both doomed to die, and dreadful in their own ways, but during their trials both monarchs were eloquent and dignified.
Eloquence and dignity are not two concepts associated with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
Andrew’s peers will now judge him, as will God. But the legacy of his mother, the future of his brother and nephew, and the fabric of Britain are about to go on trial alongside him.

Great days ahead ...



After indulging in that republican fantasy - there's always a Cromwell to follow - the pond was more more than bemused by this item ...

Mortified, as Jason pandered to the Australian Daily Zionist News ...



The federal government seemed determined to enhance the traditional Australian value ... of chucking the useless bludgers out on their ears ... especially preening gooses caught in a pose-down ...



The pond knows all about the fair go ...



Will they be teaching about the current ethnic cleansing going down in Gaza and the West Bank, or the way that the some of the key founders of the state of Israel were judged terrorists by useless British colonisers?



Yes, and idle propaganda can turn up in the ballot box, and bring down governments that fancy themselves as untouchable.

Speaking of FAFO, the reptiles also went out of their way to celebrate Tamworth's undying shame ...

Barnaby Joyce demanded Pauline Hanson ‘stop the stunts’ in secret One Nation deal
The former deputy prime minister thought he could tame Pauline Hanson’s controversial antics, but colleagues warned this political marriage was doomed from the start.
By Jamie Walker and Sarah Elks



Say what? The reptiles had begun dumping on Tamworth's least favourite son?

The pond apologises, but what with having been born in the same hospital as Barners, the pond is always interested in the effects of the Tamworth sun on mad dogs and stray dinkums ...

The New England MP’s unease with her language was evident this week when he refused to endorse her blanket denunciation of Muslims. In a late-night discussion on Sky News on Monday about the ­Islamic State brides seeking to return to Australia from Syria, she said: “You say, ‘well there’s good Muslims out there’. How can you tell me there are good Muslims?”
Hanson subsequently issued a partial apology, saying she was sorry if she offended anyone who “doesn’t believe in sharia law, or multiple marriages, or wants to bring ISIS brides in, or people from Gaza that believe in a ­caliphate”.
The Australian Federal Police has now received “reports of crime” in relation to those comments, and is assessing them. The agency did not offer any further comment.
Joyce on Thursday suggested that Hanson’s interpretation of what constitutes a “good” Muslim had been misunderstood.
“I do believe there are good people who are Muslim,” he said. “The problem you’ve got is, if people are literal in their religion and that is defined by good as following a literal interpretation, then that is incompatible to Australia.”
His former colleagues in the federal Coalition partyroom and its merged Queensland division, the Liberal National Party, said Joyce’s move to One Nation was always going to be fraught.
“I told him ‘you’ve got to keep her (Hanson) on a leash or the wheels will fall off,’” said another Coalition MP who still talks to Joyce after his defection.
“And there we are, this is not unexpected. Pauline and Barnaby are both chronic narcissists. Most politicians are, but for both Barnaby and Pauline, ‘it’s all about me’. It’s only a matter of time before they clash egos.”

Chronic narcisssists? (To go the full Susssan)

One sure way of telling if the reptiles are intent on a hit piece is to look at the illustrations, and sure 'nuff ... Barnaby Joyce. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman; One Nation leader Pauline Hanson. Picture: Martin Ollman




There's Barners looking like a sunburnt prune who has spent a little too long in the pub and the sun, matched by a classic snap of Pauline, looking like a wrinkled, bitter, shrewish, pursed lip stewed prune.

It was on for young and old ...

Another Coalition MP who remains close to Joyce said his former colleague had been appalled by Hanson’s burqa ploy, the second time she had worn the garment in parliament. She was suspended for seven sitting days and formally censured.
It happened at a time when speculation was rife Joyce was preparing to jump to One Nation, and his then friends and colleagues on the Coalition side were trying to talk him around.
“She did the second burqa thing and he didn’t like it at all,” the MP said.
“I was trying to get him to – at least – postpone his decision for a few months. Get some distance,” the MP said, noting that Joyce’s relationship with Nationals leader David Littleproud had broken down.
“I think that was weighing him down more than it should have.”
The MP wasn’t surprised that Joyce would want Hanson to tone down her language.
“But any person with half a brain cell knows that’s not going to happen,” the MP said. “Pauline is Pauline. She is not going to change.”
The irony is that Joyce – on the outer with the ­Nationals due to his own antics, including the infamous 2024 incident in Canberra where he was videoed lying drunk on a footpath, and his barely concealed contempt for Littleproud - was clearly wary of Hanson and her crew. It took One Nation fully a year to woo him.

There was a lot of goss going down, and a snap of that staffer ...Pauline Hanson and her chief of staff James Ashby. Picture: Jane Dempster




The pond understands what it's all about.

To mix metaphors, the beefy prime Angus boofhead from down Goulburn way is a bear of little brain, and will struggle, and the threat comes from Pauline's mob, and so the reptiles know their duty ...

One conduit for Hanson was her chief-of-staff James Ashby, who gets on well with Joyce’s wife, Vikki Campion, a former journalist.
Ashby, 46, also has a media background. He has been at Hanson’s side since she entered the Senate in 2016, capitalising on the break then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull cut her by calling a double-dissolution election that halved the Senate quota.
Ashby has political ambitions of his own, having run unsuccessfully for Queensland parliament in 2024, and is seen as a likely ­successor to the 71-year-old were she to relinquish or lose her seat in the red chamber.
His relationship with Joyce will be intriguing. Ashby is used to running his own race as his ­mistress’s voice, the power behind the throne in One Nation, and so is Joyce, 58, reborn as a player in Canberra.
If the party’s surge in the polls stretches to the next federal election due in May 2028 – a big if – there might be room for both of them in the parliamentary team. If not, their jockeying could well add another layer of volatility to the mix. It was ever thus in Hanson’s orbit.
Joyce seems to be aware of the risks. A fourth former Coalition colleague told The Australian Joyce was warned by friends that he needed to “change One Nation’s business model”. This person said: “We told him they needed to look like someone who could govern and not someone to just throw protest slogans around.”
Another longtime Nationals identity, now out of politics, but who had cordial dealings with both Hanson and Joyce, said neither was a team player and that spelled trouble.
“When Barnaby was leader it was the Barnaby party, not the National Party,” the identity said. “Pauline runs the Hanson party, and good on her. I can’t see this ending well.”

How desperate were the reptiles in their desire to please the beefy boofhead's mob?

Why the even turned to the Canavan caravan ...Matt Canavan and Barnaby Joyce at the state funeral service to celebrate the life of former Nationals Senator Ron Boswell in Brisbane. Picture: Tertius Pickard




He should have been shown holding a shiv ...

Joyce’s former chief-of-staff, Matt Canavan, a one-time cabinet minister regarded as being one of the shrewder operators in the Senate, wonders what happened to his old boss. Writing in The Courier-Mail on Friday, he recalled how Joyce had taken on Hanson when she proposed ­banning Muslim immigration 10 years ago.
“Barnaby pushed back saying that ‘every group has their ratbags, even Catholics. We had, in the past, the IRA, but if someone says every Catholic is a member of the IRA, I’d say no. They have nothing to do with the religion that I practise. Islam at the moment also has a lunatic fringe’,” Canavan wrote, quoting Joyce.
He continued: “That was Barnaby speaking plainly and sensibly. It is disappointing that One Nation has now locked that Barnaby away.”
But for how long?

Pending the great rupture, the reptiles slipped in a snap of the rogue pair gone wild in the deep north ... Pauline Hanson and Barnaby Joyce touring flood affected north-west Queensland.




Just to wrap up, there was time for a little Shakspere ... uneasy lies the head that wears a Tamworth crown ...

Canavan tells The Australian he was pleased Joyce had eventually sought to separate himself from Hanson’s comments. “Clearly, Barnaby’s the one with the experience and common sense, so if One Nation wants to become a serious alternative government they should make Barnaby the leader,” he says.
As for any second thoughts Joyce might have about joining One Nation? Canavan says it’s too late for that.
“I can’t see Barnaby changing now,” he says. He’s made his bed, he’ll have to lie in it. It might not be a restful sleep.”

Barners has murder'd sleep,
Shall sleep no more, Barners shall sleep no more

But enough of all that, because all these yarns qualify in their own way as reptile "news" stories, as the reptiles try to cope with the consequences of sundry monarchist, bigoted follies, and their own cultivation of the extreme far right ...



The pond's beat requires it to focus on certifiable loons, and who better qualifies than the Ughmann for an abysmal closer?



The header: Our past is not set in stone but chalk; From Arthur Stace’s chalked ‘Eternity’ to a Prime Minister’s silence on Lent, a meditation on memory, faith and the fight to reclaim Australia’s story before it fades from view.

The caption for just one of two illustrations designed to relieve the burden of the verbal sludge: The copperplate “Eternity” written by Arthur Stace on a Sydney pavement – a humble act that became a city legend. Picture: AAP

Here the pond must introduce a qualifier for this five minute ramble.

Australia is Sydney, and the Ughmann's memories of himself and the quaint old town ...but absolutely no more.

Anyone outside Sydney need not apply ...

The childhood memory may be unreliable but it is vivid: a chalk inscrip­tion of a single word slashed on the pavement in Sydney – Eternity.
Our family was usually a long way from Sydney in the 1960s, traversing the country following my soldier father’s postings. But between 1964 and 1966 we were within striking distance, living on the outskirts of a then embryonic Canberra, just a five-hour drive from the Emerald City along an old Hume Highway that used to weave through every town.
My maternal grandmother lived in a Housing Commission home in Malabar on the edge of the eastern suburbs and we visited her twice: once to go to the Royal Easter Show and once for Christmas. We made several journeys into the city on green and cream double-decker buses.
Everything in Sydney seemed big, brash and vibrant. On one of those trips, I recall Nanna drawing our attention to the word Eternity chalked in fading, fluid copperplate on the pavement and passing on the lore that no one knew who the mysterious draftsman was or why he scrawled this one word everywhere.
We do now. Illiterate reformed alcoholic and World War I veteran Arthur Stace converted to Christianity in the 1930s and spent the next 35 years writing the same word on walls and pavement in the hope that passers-by would turn their thoughts to heaven. Prosecuted in his day for defacing property, he was celebrated at the 2000 Olympics when Eternity lit up the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
Stace’s Sydney and the mark he left on it are long gone, eroded by the ruthless footfall of time.

Actually it's never gone away, not since Martin Sharp became obsessed with it back in the 1970s ... and produced all sorts of images to match ...




.. and they've been flogging it ever since to hipsters, in the Sydney way ...




And that's just the half of it ... as the Ughmann turned Xian, as he always does ...

These memories of an exciting, optimistic and vanished Australia came flooding back on Ash Wednesday. The news was awash with stories about Ramadan and the Chinese Lunar New Year while Lent barely rated a mention. All three of these events move with the moon, and surely this rare convergence was noteworthy.
Anthony Albanese, had posted a video for the Chinese Lunar New Year and released a statement to mark the beginning of Ramadan. Again, there was no word about Lent from our culturally Catholic leader. Perhaps he had boned up on the scripture readings of the day, which cautioned against pompous displays of piety. Perhaps he just forgot.
But forgetting, too, tells a story.
It is good that the Prime Minister offered his best wishes to the Chinese and Muslim Australian communities, but surely the most important season on the Christian calendar also rates a mention. It is the tolerance of the Western tradition we inherit, with its deep roots in Judeo-Christian beliefs, that allows all faiths, and none, to flourish here.
You can over-read these things, but it is easy to place this wilful forgetting within the canon of a creed that deems white settlement an irredeemable stain on the national soul. Yet the fault is not shared. The burden of guilt falls only on what we might call, borrowing an old colonial insult, the currency lads and lasses. These locally born children of settlers were seen as lesser beings than the British-born “sterling”. The crime of dispossession is thus laid solely at the feet of the descendants of the various waves of largely British, pre-World War II settlers. Later migrants enjoy a kind of automatic absolution, despite sharing fully in the benefits of colonisation.

Sheesh, he's even worse than nattering "Ned", and for some reason, he had to drag Kenneth Slessor into it ... Poet Kenneth Slessor, whose work captured the shifting light and shadow of Sydney Harbour.



On and on he went in a way only an unreformed seminarian could manage...

This dismal doctrine of hereditary sin pervades our academic, bureaucratic and cultural institutions and stains our national discourse. It is a joyless, nihilistic cult with a discipline of endless penitence that is robbing us of hope. A once optimistic Australia seems trapped in a permanent Lent with no promise of Easter.
This caricature of our history is deeply damaging and our national story is sorely in need of resurrection. Former prime minister Tony Abbott has done the nation a great service in producing his short history of Australia, which does not shy away from the stains on our past but does seek to reclaim the good in it. And there is much good.
It is past time to redeem the stories and storytellers of the currency lads and lasses who built one of the fairest and freest nations on Earth. Among those storytellers was journalist and poet Kenneth Slessor. There is no one working in the media today who matches Slessor’s gift with words.
He was highly cultured, steeped in literature, and loved Sydney, warts and all. Save for a couple of “vexing intervals”, Slessor lived on the margins of Kings Cross for 40 years, with the harbour “never out of my window”. In a poem on the hidden virtues of a seedy William Street, his refrain is, “You find this ugly, I find it lovely.”
In an essay on the city he wrote: “The character and the life of Sydney are shaped continually and imperceptibly by the fingers of the Harbour, groping across the piers and jetties, clutching deeply into the hills, the water dyed a whole paint box’s armoury with every breath of air, every shift of light or shade, according to the tide, the clock, the weather and the state of the moon. The water is like silk, like pewter, like blood, like a leopard’s skin, and occasionally, merely like water.”

There's a lot more to Slessor than serving in the Ughmann's ranks ...

...Slessor remained agnostic to the end of his days.
He dismissed the poems of 'Banjo' Paterson, Henry Lawson and all the bush balladists. To Slessor, poetry had only begun 'any consistent growth in Australia' 'with the publication of McCrae's Satyrs and Sunlight' (1909). In 1923-24 he helped Jack Lindsay and Frank C. Johnson, a bookseller, to edit Vision: a Literary Quarterly, which ran for only four issues. It was strongly influenced by Norman Lindsay; it tried to jolt Australian writing out of the bush and into the city; and it promoted Nietzschean ideas, discussion of sexuality, debate about aesthetics, and writing about the inner life. Allied to the magazine, and creating the same sort of stir, was an anthology edited by the trio, Poetry in Australia, 1923. (ADB here)

It would have been fun to see Slessor dishing it up to the Ughmann in the roughhouse Smith's Weekly, but alas, instead, we're confronted with one of those mystifying, and so far as the pond can see, utterly meaningless interruptions ...




At this point the Ughmann reminded the pond that there was a whole world of alternative reading available in the real world, none of which included him ...

The harbour looms large and foreboding in his masterpiece Five Bells. The poem meditates on time and the death of his friend Joe Lynch, a tall, gaunt, red-headed “mad” Irish cartoonist.
One rainy Saturday night, Slessor and Lynch heard there was a party in Mosman and jumped on a ferry. Lynch had his coat pockets stuffed full of beer bottles and, when the wake of a big liner hit, Joe fell into the water near where the Sydney Opera House now stands and drowned. His body was never recovered.
In Five Bells, Slessor says time “moved by little fidget wheels is not my Time”. He recalls when time on the harbour was measured by the tolling of ships’ bells and says he has lived many lives, including this one life “Of Joe, long dead, who lives between five bells”.
He is haunted by the memory of his friend, who has gone from earth, “Gone even from the meaning of a name”.

“Yet something’s there, yet something forms its lips
“And hits and cries against the ports of space,
“Beating their sides to make its fury heard.”

I remember a lunch with renowned Australian artist John Olsen who, even in his 80s, radiated delight as he retold the story of discovering Five Bells and of finding an ageing Slessor playing pool at the Sydney Journalists’ Club. The poet and his poem inspired the mural Olsen was commissioned to create, which now sweeps across the Northern Foyer wall of the Sydney Opera House. An echo of Joe Lynch can be heard there.

The reptiles couldn't be bothered showing a snap, even though they had one in their own files?




So quickly they forget ...

The poet and the artist are both dead. The old Journalists’ Club is long gone. But their stories remain, for those who care to look.
Memory is a strange custodian. It preserves, it disturbs, it distorts, softens and erases. Without actively working to protect memories, they can fade, and a nation’s understanding of itself can blur.
But forgetfulness is never neutral. If we do not reclaim our past, others will decide what is remembered. It falls to us to beat against the ports of space to make our story heard.
Or, like chalk on concrete, what was once vivid will vanish. 

Speaking of forgetfulness, of not paying attention, of not remembering, of wilfully distorting and avoiding and shamelessly hiding and erasing the past ... let the immortal Rowe wrap up with a reminder of the many ways that the reptiles have refused to dig into the Trumpstein files ...




Friday, February 20, 2026

In which Our Henry is again sent to the archive, with Penbo, Killer of the IPA and the onion muncher filling the void with more void ...

 

It was inevitable that the fate of the former prince now known as randy Andy would preoccupy the reptiles early this morning, with much navel gazing.



What struck the pond isn't so much the way that the Trumpenstein files have roiled the Poms as the way that King Donald and his deeply corrupt band of courtiers have merrily rolled along.

The reptiles do love a Royal scandal, what with King Donald just being a poseur, low rent, naff monarch ...



Typical of the reptile coverage was cackling Claire's celebration, The lonely courage of a woman who brought down the Establishment, which, in heroic Jack the Insider style, managed to make not a single mention of King Donald or his merry band of Nutlicks - and no matter all the fuss about Giuffre working at the King's Mar-a-Lago spa.

Luckily, as an unrepentant republican, the pond can duck and weave around all the reptile hysteria. 

That the House of Windsor is depraved is hardly news for those who remember the good old days of that unrepentant Nazi, the Duke of Windsor, dodging out of being King Edward VIII for a bit of American divorcee crumpet.

Instead the pond's tour of duty on a Friday takes in Our Henry, but there's a problem.

Each week of late there's a tendency for Our Henry to go full, blaring Zionist, and so it is this day.

A taster shows him at work:




That's more than enough already, especially with that wretched uncredited collage setting the tone at the get go ...

The pond usually resolves to send the hole in bucket man off to the intermittent archive, limiting itself to recording the moments when the pompous hole in bucket man swallowed an encyclopaedia of classical and philosophical references ...

This week's outing was very low key, but included ...

As the great German intellectual historian Reinhart Koselleck observed, “historically prototyped” words are natural Kampfbegriffe (battle-concepts), readily wielded not for dispassionate description but for combat.

And ...

Nothing more starkly illustrates this dynamic than the increasingly widespread use of the term “Zio”. Its rise directly reflects the constraints under which the hatred operates, specifically the fact that its target – Jews as Jews — cannot be openly identified without social cost. As with Harry Potter’s Voldemort – an embodiment of absolute evil who can be referred to only as “He Who Shall Not Be Named” – the word itself becomes unsayable.

Say what? Harry Potter? 

While some might think this lowers Our Henry's tone, surely it proves that the great polymath is comfortable with the highest of high culture, and the lowest of the low ...and so can always Sauron on to new trans-loathing highs.

And that's why Our Henry can show roam from potted Potter to showing his Orwellian chops...

That it comes in the throes of demonstrations eerily recalling the “Two Minutes Hate” sessions in George Orwell’s 1984, where “a hideous ecstasy of vindictiveness, a desire to kill, seemed to flow through the whole group of people like an electric current”, only raises that menace to even greater heights.

But limiting Our Henry to this sort of smug display of his superior, neigh Nietzschean, embrace of a master intellectual morality leaves the pond struggling to fill up the space.

Cue some counter-programming.

If you'd said the pond would be quoting Thomas L. Friedman in the NY Times, the pond likely would have sued you for defamation, but here we are ... Netanyahu Plays Trump and American Jews for Fools — Again (*archive link)



That's just a taster. In his usual way, Friedman goes on and on and on, but it's all there at the intermittent archive.

Amongst the many links in the Friedman piece, there was a reference to a relatively recent pond favourite in Haaretz, by Ehud Olmert, living PM level proof that referencing ethnic cleansing isn't being anti-Semitic  ... A Settler Drive to Ethnically Cleanse Palestinians Is Underway in the West Bank. Israel's Security Apparatus Is Complicit (*archive link)




Again it's just a taster, though anyone who goes the full hog can experience the weird sight of Olmert proposing there were no discernible war crimes in Gaza, while calling out the West Bank's assorted war crimes and unfolding ethnic cleansing.

As a result of these distractions, the pond also consigned Vic Alhadeff's Jewish Australians no longer feel safe in this country to the intermittent archive.

The best Vic could manage was decidedly middle-brow, the sort of reference you might pick up from an ancient school reading list:

In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird, Atticus Finch says: “You never really understand a person until you climb inside his skin and walk around in it.” In other words, understanding that when Jewish Australians call out the surge of antisemitism, it stems from generations of historical trauma and learned experience.

Give the pond a call Vic, when you've come to an understanding of ethnic cleansing, stemming from generations of historical trauma and learned experience, and please, in the meantime, do your best to emulate Our Henry and read some Potter.

And with that clearing of the decks, the pond could turn to other Friday pleasures ...

First up was croweater Penbo, foreseeing doom and gloom in the state with a deep fear and loathing of eastern staters...

Penbo could be swallowed in just two chunks ...



Does this mean that the Adelaide Writers' Festival can go on to more glorious episodes? Seems so ...

Of course the pond only takes an interest of the thoughts of the great aunts still stuck on the verandah as a way of pandering to the regions ... suffice to say, it all felt eerily familiar ...



Take it away Penbo ... celebrate cancel culture in the land of the crows ...



And so to Killer of the IPA, and the pond wanted to use Killer to make a couple of observations about the new form of reptile representation.



Firstly the reptiles have taken to putting the author's name at the very top of the piece, for no apparent reason, except that it's change and this sort of window dressing must be good.

And immediately down below the uncredited wretched collage, which likely should be blamed on AI, there's now a new space for the comments and for Google ...

This means you could just click on the comments and not even bother reading Killer of the IPA, which must be a win-win for the hive mind.

Killer can't be blamed for having 0 comments at time of writing - the pond is sure devoted members of the hive mind will join in his bizarre celebration of freedumb boy.

What's revealing is the desperate new desire by the reptiles for engagement via Google.

Didn't anyone tell them that with a strict paywall, there's no point having the lizard Oz as a preferred source on Google unless you're a paid up member of the hive mind?

So Google is going to drive recruitment for the hive mind?

Too tragic ...

And so to the rest, in copy and paste form ...

And yes you can begin a sentence with "and", and especially when Killernomics is your game ...

And as Sydney University economist Christian Gillitzer recently pointed out, the top rate is a driving force behind the nation’s infatuation with negatively geared property, as high earners rationally flock to what is practically the only tax strategy left to reduce their taxable income.
The top rate also snuffs out opportunities for foreign investment, as big multinationals learn what their highly skilled staff would face if they relocated.
When I lived in Washington DC, Americans were shocked when I explained that not only was our top marginal income tax rate 47 per cent but it applied for every dollar above $US125,000 ($177,280) a year. A similar earner in high-tax DC faces around 34 per cent marginal rate, and only 24 per cent in zero state income tax Florida and Texas. The top US federal income tax rate of 37 per cent doesn’t apply until income reaches $US609,000.
As a measure of redistribution it’s a fool’s errand. “Many of the wealthy don’t pay the top rate, it’s actually mainly the wage earners who can’t manage their tax affairs to reduce their taxable income,” Robert Breunig, an economist at ANU, tells me.
And it doesn’t even raise much money. “If you cut the top rate you’d actually raise more tax from around 15 per cent of taxpayers who are currently on the top rate on our estimates,” Breunig adds.
One of many empirical examples; the British Labour government increased its top income tax rate on capital gains to 24 per cent in 2024, only to see receipts tumble more than 20 per cent.
The federal government will attack Wilson’s suggestion as “looking after the big end of town”. If it is, the town is now an entire city. The number of top-rate taxpayers has exploded from fewer than 300,000 in 2008, when the top rate first settled at $180,000, to around a million last financial year. And inflation near 4 per cent is pushing tens of thousands of additional taxpayers into the top bracket every year. If the top threshold had been indexed to inflation since 2008 – a dignity many Western governments afford their voters – it would sit around $280,000 today.
The government will trot out the tired claim that Australia’s top rate is reasonable by OECD standards, which tendentiously includes numerous economically sclerotic European nations in the list that should, economically, be treated as one. That same list of nations also reveals the federal government’s reliance on income tax is, alongside Denmark, the highest in the world.
In the Asia-Pacific region, which matters to us, Australia’s top rate is the highest, embarrassingly even besting supposedly communist China’s 45 per cent. New Zealand has a top rate of 39 per cent and doesn’t even tax capital gains.

Excellent stuff, and we're likely to see many more tales of woe and talk of the suffering of the filthy rich, and the urgent need to follow the disunited states down the rabbit hole of profound economic inequity ...

Don't just trust the pond, read Forbes' Income Inequality Is Surging In the U.S., Oxfam Report Shows...



Very tasty, as the reptiles interrupted Killer of the IPA with an AV distraction ...

Chalmers ‘in denial’ as ex- RBA boss criticises Labor’s inaction on boosting the economy
Shadow Treasurer Tim Wilson discusses former Reserve Bank of Australia governor Philip Lowe...
more




The pond confesses it didn't have the first clue who this Laura was, but she did the right thing by featuring Freedumb Boy and that Lowe aiming low ...

It set Killer off on a final gobbet of Freedumb rapture ...

Loosening the income tax noose doesn’t require lifting the GST, among the most annoying refrains in Australian public debate. Cutting federal government expenditure, the fastest growth since the 1970s outside the pandemic, offers plenty of scope to entirely “pay for” income tax cuts, including streamlining the out-of-control NDIS, which Wilson admirably noted.
IPA research last year found emissions reductions-related programs were chewing up at least $9bn a year, alone enough to fund sizeable cuts to the top rate, and surely a ripe political target for a Coalition that has recently disavowed “net zero”.
The traditional definition of recession – back-to-back quarters of declining GDP – isn’t relevant in a nation that annually floods its labour market with hundreds of thousands of new workers. GDP per capita has shrunk in 10 of the past 13 quarters: this is a severe recession already, on the measure that actually matters.
Revelations this week that real wages have fallen “for the first time in two years” hide the true extent of the decline. The CPI doesn’t include the cost of bracket creep, home loan interest rates or even the price of dwellings.
If the government wants to improve living standards and encourage more productive investments, the most obvious lever it has is trimming the top rate of income tax.
Not many Liberals have had the guts to start a fight over the top marginal tax rate. Wilson has admirably helped defeat proposals to increase tax on super and dividends; his arguments to cut income tax are even stronger.

Meanwhile, the poor lad has already begun to learn walking backwards... (here's an intermittent archive link as a way of avoiding the Graudian's campaign for email addresses with menaces):



There's going to be great fun in the next few months ...

And so to a final note. The pond wanted to draw attention to this outing by Anne Applebaum in The Atlantic ...

That link should work as a share, let the pond know if it doesn't, because this is only a taster ...

Just like last year, I watched the most important American speech at the Munich Security Conference in the overflow room, sitting on the floor, underneath the speakers. This is the best place both to hear the speech (otherwise the room is too noisy) and to watch the faces of people gathered around the screens. The prime ministers and presidents sit in the main hall, but plenty of other people attend the conference: security analysts, lieutenant colonels, drone engineers, deputy defense ministers, legislators, and hundreds of other people whose professional lives are dedicated to ending the war in Ukraine, bringing peace to Europe, and projecting security in the world.
Just like last year, this group was hoping to hear how the U.S. administration is planning to contribute to these projects. And, just like last year, audience members were disappointed.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Saturday’s key speaker, was more civil than Vice President J. D. Vance, who in 2025 attacked and insulted many of the European governments represented in the room. But Rubio’s speech had many of the same goals. He did not mention the war, or imply that America would help Europe win it. He did not express the belief that Russia can be defeated. He did not refer to the democratic values and the shared belief in freedom that once motivated the NATO alliance, and that still motivate its European members. Instead, he offered a vision of unity based on a misty idea of inherited “Western civilization”—Dante, Shakespeare, the Sistine Chapel, the Beatles—which would fight against the real enemies: not Russia, not China, but rather migration, the “climate cult,” and other forms of modern degeneracy.
The speech worked like a Rorschach test. If you wanted to hear some positive news, you might have been satisfied by the emotive expressions of unity. But one of my German friends clearly heard a “dog whistle” to the German far right. I spoke with a couple of Poles who noticed that the list of great men and great artworks failed to include anyone or anything from their half of the European continent. An Indian colleague was alarmed by the praise for colonialism. In Rubio’s repeated references to Christianity, a lot of Americans heard a shout-out to Christian nationalists. And many, many people noticed the oddity of the attack on migration, coming from a son of migrants.
In the hours and days afterward, I did not meet a single person of any nationality who thinks that the American-European relationship is returning to business as usual. Rubio did not say that, and obviously did not want anyone to believe it. Neither did Elbridge Colby, the U.S. undersecretary of defense for policy, who also appeared in Munich. Colby, speaking at a public event, instead promoted the emergence of a “Europeanized NATO” that can defend itself, by itself, with America perhaps offering a theoretical nuclear umbrella. He dismissed the “cloud-castle abstraction of the rules-based international order.” He said that no one should “base alliances on sentiment alone.” This is the message that the Trump administration has been sending all year, and it has not changed.
That message comes with some profound contradictions. Just after Munich, Rubio flew to Bratislava and Budapest, where he heaped praise upon Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian prime minister. President Trump, he told Orbán, is “deeply committed to your success,” a clear reference to upcoming Hungarian elections that Orbán is on course to lose, if the vote is conducted fairly. Many have noted that Orbán has a record of corruption and electoral manipulation, that he puts pressure on judges and independent journalists (hardly any of the latter are left in Hungary), and that Rubio himself signed a letter denouncing the Hungarian prime minister for “democratic erosion” back in 2019.
But in the light of the American message delivered in Munich, the visit was also inconsistent. Orbán, like the far-right leaders in Germany and France who have close ties to Vance and the MAGA establishment, opposes European rearmament. Orbán is not merely seeking to block the emergence of a “Europeanized NATO”; he operates as a de facto spokesperson for Russia inside the European Union.
In practice, Orbán’s Hungary creates a major security headache for everybody else. Russians are waging a horrific, damaging, costly war on Ukraine. They have sent drones into Europe, staged regular cyberattacks, and cut undersea cables in the Baltic Sea. Does the United States really want Europe to unite and fight these threats together? If so, why is the Trump administration supporting someone who opposes this project? Europeans can’t help but wonder if the American goal is rather to encourage a divided Europe that can’t defend itself against anyone...

Stop right there Ms Applebaum. 

All that talk of Orbán’s authoritarian Hungary reminded the pond of a reptile favourite.

Recognise this lickspittle fellow traveller with authoritarians?




The pond doesn't have time to go into all the servile, self-serving pandering and sycophantic Orbán worship indulged in by the onion muncher over the years, and will instead just note Benjamin Clark in Crikey in May last year ...


Inter alia ...

Last year, it was revealed by Hungarian media that BLA has “spent more than half a billion forints [A$2.16 million] of public funds to pay foreign guest lecturers and writers” and that “several guest lecturers were asked to write articles that would positively portray the Orbán government in the United States”. Crikey makes no inference that Abbott has received such payments or that his writing or public statements have been influenced by them. Abbott has registered his Danube Institute role, among other activities, on the Australian government’s foreign influence transparency register.
Even so, Abbott’s position with the institute, and his repeated praise for Orbán, ought to be scrutinised by the Australian media far more often. Morally, any association with such an illiberal, increasingly undemocratic regime is highly suspect. And is it appropriate for him to serve on the Australian War Memorial board, an institution dedicated to celebrating those who fought for democracy and freedom, while simultaneously getting into bed with a state apparatus that increasingly represents the opposite?
Last week, Orbán’s party Fidesz introduced legislation to the Hungarian Parliament that would empower the government to monitor, penalise and ban organisations it designates as a threat to national sovereignty. Critics have suggested that, if passed, the bill could shut down all independent media and politically engaged NGOs in the country. Is this company you really want to keep, Tony?
Abbott’s affiliation is particularly hypocritical given his staunch support for Ukraine. He once threatened to “shirtfront” Vladimir Putin, and while he might have misspoken, no-one questioned his sincerity in repudiating the Russian warmonger’s imperial landgrab. Abbott has recently criticised Donald Trump’s embrace of Russia, accusing the president of living in “fantasy land”, and urged Europe to step up its support to Ukraine.
Yet Orbán is now the key blocker in Europe for doing so. He is holding out against progressing Ukraine’s application to join the European Union, among other roadblocks. Other EU states are now seeking ways to sideline his recalcitrant regime to put further pressure on the Kremlin.
While I was in Budapest, tension over Ukraine’s EU ascension question was palpable. The government is holding a referendum, a frequent tactic of Orbán as he knows his older voting base is more likely to turn out, on whether to continue holding up Ukraine’s application. Fidesz has put up propaganda posters across the city, which are being graffitied by young locals.
This puts the Western conservative coterie that has coalesced around the Danube Institute in an awkward position. Most of them are purportedly pro-Hungary and pro-Ukraine. Murray has called out Joe Rogan for not sticking up for Zelenskyy. O’Sullivan’s X posts suggest he is sceptical of Trump’s “peace” agenda.
But with Orban increasingly running cover for Putin in the EU, how long can they square their circle of affiliations? How can Abbott threaten to “shirtfront” Putin while bear-hugging his new pal Orbán?
Crikey put a series of questions to Abbott, including whether he had received payment or payment in kind for any of his activities with the Danube Institute and/or Hungarian Conservative, whether he had any concerns about Hungary’s role in blocking EU support for Ukraine and, if so, whether this raised any concerns regarding his continued affiliation with the Danube Institute. We did not hear back before deadline.
If respect for democracy, free speech and the rule of law isn’t enough to dissuade them, perhaps a commitment to what remains of Atlanticism and Western security cooperation could. Abbott and his international pals should resign from the Danube Institute on principle, if not in disgrace.

And yet, thanks to all the supplicants in the Murdochian hive mind, the onion muncher keeps on getting away with it.

And so, feeling deeply soiled, and suffused with self-pity with having waded yet again through the reptile sewers, time to wrap up with a few celebrations of Albo's mob ...





Thursday, February 19, 2026

In which petulant Peta goes full Pauline, there are surprising dissenters, and Dame Groan lands with yet another "we'll all be 'rooned" to help out Freedumb boy ...

 

"What fresh hell can this be?", to conscript a possibly real quote from the real Dorothy Parker.

Thursday in the lizard Oz is always a special form of hell, but to mangle the quote into discernible reality, it should have read "what stale hell can this be?"

There was petulant Peta, top of the world ma on the digital far right of the lizard Oz, sounding triumphantly Pauline...

Liberals’ turn is right on track with voters’ views on immigration
New research reveals voters have shifted right on immigration and other key issues, backing Liberal leader Angus Taylor’s focus on protecting Australian values
By Peta Credlin
Columnist

As stale as the onion muncher blathering on about the Judaeo-Xian tradition.

No need to recycle the hate, fear mongering, bigotry and dog whistling, the intermittent archive can take care of that ...

Spoiler alert, the pond ruins the ending, as the petulant one sounded triumphant in her final flourish ...

...What this tells me is that election results have more to do with how people view leaders and leadership; it’s leadership after all that most shapes most people’s views on most issues. For the Liberals, in other words, the problem is less that voters have moved away from them but that they have not provided much leadership on the issues voters care about.
Quite apart from the fact that the Liberals in 2025 inexplicably failed to campaign for their energy policy or against Labor’s unrealised capital gains tax policy, plus failed to hammer the fact that government policy had exacerbated the worst fall in living standards in the developed world, the key factors in their humiliation were the collapse of TV in shaping people’s political perceptions, the rise of social media (in which the Coalition was largely MIA) and antipathy towards Dutton who, however unfairly, the study showed had the least voter appeal in its history.
Far from needing to persuade the Australian public that migration numbers are too high and that all migrants must accept Australian values, what this says to me is that on immigration, Taylor is pushing on an open door. Based on the best available data, promising to protect the Australian way of life is exactly what voters want – as well as what our country needs, as the Bondi massacre has put up in flashing neon lights.
Meaning that far from being too right-wing for the electorate, for the first time in years the Liberals are actually taking voters where they want to go.

In short, and in essence, go on beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way, go the full Pauline, go in hard, boots and all, rage at furriners, take the hate ball from her and run with it up the guts...

Why is this deeply ironic?

At this very moment, even Barners was trying to hide ... in plain sight, in a lizard Oz EXCLUSIVE.

EXCLUSIVE
‘What are you asking me for?’: Joyce swerves from Hanson
Barnaby Joyce has refused to endorse his leader Pauline Hanson’s broad criticism of Muslims, in the first sign of division within the new One Nation team.
By Greg Brown and Elizabeth Pike



That's more than enough of that from Tamworth's enduring, ineradicable shame, but you could have knocked the pond over with a feather when the Canavan caravan joined in the cock-crowing chorus ...



(In view of the Graudian's desire to extort email addresses, here's an intermittent archive link)

And Brownie took to the extreme far right of the hive mind to cry to the clouds, even though petulant Peta was posing as Pauline in drag ...

Leader’s true colours? A nasty shade of prejudice
Hanson shows conservative voters her true colours with Islam smear
Hanson’s latest controversy is hardly surprising given her record over a 30-year political career, but it carries far more weight given the extraordinary rise in One Nation’s popularity.
By Greg Brown
Chief political correspondent




It was only a two minute read, and Brownie ended with a note of caution.

It seems that, thanks to the likes of petulant Peta egging on the fuss - let's not forget the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way trying to match the mutton Dutton's electorial triumph - Pauline will thrive:

Hanson’s latest controversy is hardly surprising given her record over a 30-year political career, but it carries far more weight given the extraordinary rise in One Nation’s popularity. The latest Newspoll showed the grievance party had a primary vote of 27 per cent.
New Liberal leader Angus Taylor has made a solid start in moving to win back the Coalition’s conservative base without veering into the same rhetoric of Hanson, arguing migrants need to support Australian values and making the point that most do.
Anthony Albanese’s tough language on ISIS brides this week is perhaps a sign he is aware of the need to reassure voters he is putting Australians first, given Hanson’s resurgence. The major parties have historically served Australia well and both Labor and the Coalition must ensure they are responding to the concerns of voters or there is every chance One Nation will continue to thrive.

But not in Melbourne?



What else? Well the headlines were all about the ISIS issue, but a 'toon will take care of that ...



Only Jack the Insider bothered to take a dive into the Trumpenstein sewers ...

The Epstein files: Snorkelling with the great and the good-for-nothing
From British ambassadors to tech billionaires, the Epstein files reveal an extraordinary roster of influential figures who crossed moral lines to socialise with a convicted child abuser.
By Jack the Insider
Columnist

Jack did an incredible job ... of avoidance.

Jack's singular success, his astonishing achievement?

Many names were mentioned, and yet when the pond did a word search for King Donald, there was nary a single mention. It's there in the intermittent archive for anyone wanting to check ...

Not one ... and yet ...



Well played Jack, your kissing cousins at Faux Noise are likely full of admiration and feel free to swim in the sewer with them, you won't smell a a thing ...

What else? Well the pond has already had the pleasure of seeing the weird spectacle of freedumb boy promoted to a pay grade above his level, and there he was in the lizard Oz ...

BOLD AGENDA
Top income tax rate ‘punitive’, Wilson declares
The Coalition’s new Treasury spokesman Tim Wilson argues the nation’s economic settings need a ‘complete reset’.
By Greg Brown

Bold? 

Just look how startled he looks in that wretched graphic illustration at the top of the "save the filthy rich" yarn, typical of the decline and fall of the lizard Oz graphics department ...



That's more than enough of that. The intermittent archive can take what's left of the little remaining.

But do pause to admire that look. It says he doesn't quite believe where he's landed, and the pond couldn't believe it either.

Perhaps it was an ancient reflex, inherited from ancient stone age times, but the pond found it completely implausible ... though to be fair, freedumb boy was looking after the rich ...

Once again the immortal Rowe was present with a prescient portrait, if inclined to be a tad cruel ...(the pond simply couldn't bear to note the rat tail details in those in and out trays, or the beefy boofhead at the door, seemingly interrupted in mid-consort with a redhead).



The major surprise? How little attention the reptiles paid to that other scandal, one right down their jihad alley but surprisingly absent at the top of the digital edition ...




Never mind, if the pond wants a denunciation of the satanic Jimbo, it will always turn to a beloved professional, one with a cult following amongst pond correspondents ...



The header: Jim Chalmers’ mowing your grass: real wages shrink while the Treasurer talks them up. It’s becoming increasingly clear that the Anthony Albanese government’s economic strategy is heading off the rails.

The caption for the miscreant, looking all smirky and shifty, caught on the hop in the snap: Treasurer Jim Chalmers at a news conference in Logan in Brisbane’s south on Wednesday after the national wages data was released. Picture: Adam Head

It's only becoming clear now that we're heading off the rails?

Hasn't the old chook been groaning about how we'll all be 'rooned for months and months? Did she have little faith in her prognostications?

Bizarrely, considering it was a heralding of disaster of train crash proportions, Dame Groan could only muster three minutes for this assault.

Apart from celebrating her evocation of Winnie, there's no need to put a gloss on it, what with the Groaning being very standard and best left to pond correspondents ...

It was not the result the government was hoping for.
The fastest-growing sector for wages was health and social assistance. For the December quarter, public and private wages grew at the same pace. But over the year, public wages growth significantly outstripped private sector wages. In fact, public sector wages have been outstripping private gains for some time.
According to the Treasurer, Jim Chalmers, the result was a tad disappointing, but it had been worse under the Coalition – that is, if the figures are very carefully cherrypicked. There must come a time when Chalmers gives up the faux, odious comparisons with the performance of the previous government that was voted out nearly five years ago. But just not now. Jimbo is the living and breathing example of that famous saying of Winston Churchill: “Success is stumbling from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.”
The release of the December quarter figure for the Wage Price Index pointed to annual wage growth of 3.4 per cent in 2025. Over the same period, headline inflation was up to 3.8 per cent, depending on which figure you used. In other words, real wages fell over the year and by a significant margin.

How could the pond resist? Come on down Winnie, sock it to the pond:

Quote Origin: Success Is Going from Failure to Failure Without Losing Your Enthusiasm

Inter alia ...



Thanks honest Abe, and the pond moved to the rest of the groaning with a full loss of enthusiasm ...

It’s becoming increasingly clear that the government’s economic strategy is heading off the rails. The Treasurer held the truly naive and unsubstantiated view that real wages could be dictated by the government because the labour share of output was too low and needed to be adjusted upwards.
Generous award increases granted by the Fair Work Commission as well as substantial pay rises in agreements for public sector workers would set the pace for higher real wages. The fact that productivity has gone backwards since the election of the Labor government in 2022 is seen as largely irrelevant.
But we need only look at what’s been happening to unit labour costs – real unit labour costs rose by 1.5 per cent, according to the most recent National Accounts (September quarter 2025) – to understand why the Reserve Bank is worried about what is going on in the labour market and the inflationary pressures that are around.
Of course, Anthony Albanese, is working from the same talking points as Jimbo. He declared last year that the period of high inflation was over and it was plain-sailing from that point – oops, spoke too soon.
He’s not having a bar of the patently obvious proposition that government spending is contributing to the uptick in inflation – and the associated fall in real wages – and objects to anyone making the obvious point. Evidently, former RBA governor Phil Lowe is so yesterday’s man that we shouldn’t take any notice of his warnings on the dangers of excess government spending.

The reptiles did provide one visual interruption, but it was only that mystifying message that haunts the reptile pages like a Sydney cockroach, or rat tails in the in-tray ...



It was but a brief, entirely meaningless pause as Dame Groan headed into triumphantly teary gloom, as she always does ...

Albanese even fell into the trap of claiming that “when it comes to savings, we’ve produced $114bn of savings, including $20bn of savings in the mid-year forecast – that makes a substantial difference.”
If he had been paying attention to last week’s Senate estimates (and Senator Paterson’s grilling of Finance Minister Katy Gallagher) he would have realised that this is a gross figure and the net figure entails additional spending of more than $114bn. There has been some reallocation of spending, but overall, the public sector is pumping more dollars in and adding to aggregate demand.
The labour market is looking decidedly unbalanced. Too many unnecessary or low-value jobs being created in the public sector or funded by the taxpayer. Public sector wages being driven up by fiat – think childcare and aged care workers. Difficulties for private sector firms, particularly small ones, recruiting staff and being forced to increase pay offers to attract anyone. Rising rates of business failure. All up, a recipe for low productivity, inflationary pressures and higher interest rates.
This was never a good plan by the government, and it looks as though it will end in tears.

Oh yes, we'll all be 'rooned ...

And so to end with with a note on the Streisand effect, and a host that YouTube's sub-titling insists should be known as Colbear.

When the pond last checked, Colbear's interview with Rep Talarico had garnered c. 6.183 million views on YouTube.

Colbear's usual ratings in his time slot?

Last quarter 2025 the show averaged 2.42 million...

Well played CBS lawyers, well played Bari's team...

And so slowly, inexorably FTA TV drives itself into oblivion to conform to the wishes of the demented, 'second childhood' King.

The Streisand effect always puts the pond in a good mood, despite Wilcox's insistence that the pond ends this day's reptile observations on a downer and a bummer. Are you listening Jack?