Friday, November 21, 2025

In which there's a goodly dose of Argentinian IPA Killernomics, while Our Henry keeps on fussing and feuding and quoting the ancient Greeks and others...

 

Apropos of the reptiles no longer being interesting, their range narrowing, their contributors ranging from the dull to the perverse, but without the excitement afforded by a decent kink ...

...Alas you seem to have learned nothing.
Yes, I appreciate that things are not easy for you. Having the likes of Sky News and The Australian newspaper constantly criticise you and feed you and your team a steady diet of misguided advice cannot be easy. But you mustn’t let this get you down because barely anyone listens to them any more. (Graudian)

Well yes, though perforce the pond hears the distant hum of the hive mind on a daily basis... 

These days, sadly or happily, as the case may be, it's just a steady, repetitive drone... but now it's on to the misguided advice of the day, though perhaps "misguided" is too kind a word for relentless obfuscation, distortion and disinformation.

And the pond immediately had to ask, is cricket the last refuge of the irrelevant scoundrel?



As if the pond would bother to provide even archive links to those idle distractions. Take your talk of sandpapergate and shove it where the Sauron sun don't shine...

Meanwhile, in another place, the reptiles decided to take an entirely different tack ...



No way that the hive mind could cope any of that ...

The entire point of the hive mind is to stay abuzz in the hive.

Meanwhile, down below tales of the once upon a time flanneled fools, climate was all the go ...and having ignored COP30, suddenly the reptiles were deeply anxious about COP31:



Have at it in an archive way if anyone wants to add to Friday boredom and ennui ...

2026 summit
Keystone COP Chris Bowen sets off on a global power trip
Chris Bowen to serve as COP31 president after Australia cedes hosting rights to Turkey
Chris Bowen will lead UN climate talks while managing Australia’s energy crisis, as the government abandons its bid to host COP31 in Adelaide.
By Ben Packham and Geoff Chambers

COMMENTARY by Geoff Chambers
Forget soaring bills, meet our Minister for UN Summits
Chris Bowen’s unprecedented dual role as UN climate summit president threatens to derail Labor’s promise to lower power bills and hit emissions targets.

Breaking
Fire forces evacuation at COP30 climate talks
Fire forces panicked evacuation at United Nations climate talks in Brazil
Panicked delegates fled a UN climate conference in Brazil after fire broke out in a pavilion, disrupting crucial negotiations with just one day remaining.
by AFP and AP

Put it another way ...



Amazingly, after this flurry of floozies, the reptiles still kept at their latest jihad as a way of reminding the world why the rag had become unreadable and irrelevant.



This day Dame Slap took another break and left her loyal minions in charge of proceedings...

EXCLUSIVE
Judge blasts Albanese over Higgins ‘deflection’
Judge pans Anthony Albanese over Higgins’ case ‘deflection’
Former Supreme Court judge says Anthony Albanese appears unable to distinguish between Brittany Higgins’ rape and discredited claims of a political cover-up.
by Paul Garvey and Sarah Ison

Remarkably the reptiles offered a new category of PREMIUM ... as if this aged jihad was worth some kind of PREMIUM ...

PREMIUM
Reynolds breaks her silence: ‘The truth is now binding’ after five-year battle
Linda Reynolds reflects on her five-year fight to clear her name – and urges Labor to admit mistakes and make things right. 

It turned out that what this meant was that the reptiles had reverted to a non-archival harder form of paywall, but just the tag confirmed to the pond that it was part of a deep desire to make the rag unreadable and irrelevant ...

Linda Reynolds reflects on her five-year fight to clear her name, saying recent court rulings have finally confirmed the truth. She urges the Albanese government, and especially the Attorney-General, to admit mistakes and make things right.

Nah, boring as batsh*t (*blogger bot approved), but at least it was a classic distraction, what with another tree having fallen in the NSW Liberal woods ...



Over on the extreme far right, a long forgotten ghost crying to women to have a a baby for him, turned up in the form of the ghastly Petey boy  ...

Productivity mire to continue if we ignore the causes
Unless we push for growth, average real wages will decline
In 2025, real wage levels are at the level they were back in 2012. No wonder people feel they can’t get ahead – no real wage increase in a decade and more of what they get is taken away in tax.
By Peter Costello

Never had the ticker, but it's good to have him come out of his retirement home and feed some of his ancient, aged pap to the hive mind.

To be fair, as the pond always is, it's a tribute to the desire to make the rag unreadable and irrelevant.

Meanwhile, the anonymous Mocker confirmed once again that the most likely culprit for this phoney form of anon facadism was the dog botherer ...

Accuracy, impartiality and fairness lost amid BBC hypocrisy
Benny Hill said it best about the BBC in a clever depiction of the progressive mindset at its most insufferable – smug, insulated, driven by animus, and refusing to entertain different views.
By The Mocker

Just the opening anecdote will suffice ...

Benny Hill said it best about the BBC.
In a memorable skit, the late British comedian plays a sanctimonious television journalist on assignment outside the locked gates of a country estate.
“I hate rich people,” an immaculately coiffed Hill tells his fawning producer as he gestures towards the property.
“I believe in a fairer distribution of wealth. That’s why I’m a socialist, you see.”
As Hill outlines his vision of realising economic justice for the impoverished, an old tramp asks him for a cup of tea.
“P*ss off,” says Hill. (*blogger bot approved)
It was a clever depiction of the progressive mindset at its most insufferable – smug, insulated, driven by animus, and refusing to entertain.

P*ss off (*blogger bot approved) is clever, neigh witty? Suddenly Tamworth seemed the urbane centre of a sophisticated universe

And what did the BBC have to say about this?

...many forget that Benny Hill first forged his TV career with a long stint at the BBC, where The Benny Hill Show ran on and off for an amazing 13 years from 1955-1968.

So it's just p*ssing from inside the tent ... (*blogger bot approved).

Enough of the unreadable and irrelevant, time for a deep dive with Killer of the IPA ...



The header: We absurdly turn blind eye to the nuclear energy future that is so obvious, Lucas Heights stands alone, despite the enormous economic and environmental benefits a small civilian nuclear sector would bring.

The caption for all creatures great and small, and please no screen caps of that three eyed fish in The Simpsons: People fish near the towering Dukovany nuclear power plant in Dukovany, Czech Republic. (Photo: Petr David Josek/AP.)

Killer remained deeply infatuated by Milei and never mind that $20 billion bail out ...

For news of that you have to turn to the WSJ ...(*archive link)

A taster ...




And with that unpleasant tale of a grifter, chainsaw in hand, but always with an insatiable desire for cash in the paw noted, it's on with Killer of the IPA ...

Argentina’s incipient economic renaissance under libertarian President Javier Milei has reminded the world just how disastrous state-led economic management has been for once one of the world’s richest nations.
Much of that malaise stemmed from the influential rule of Juan Perón, whose unique Latin fusion of socialism and fascism – Peronism – scarred Argentina’s development for generations.
But, in fairness, Perón did leave one enduring achievement: he launched a nuclear industry in 1950 that still provides safe, cheap, reliable electricity, and even supports highly sophisticated technology exports Australia can only dream of matching.
Indeed, it was an Argentinian company that built Australia’s only nuclear reactor – the Lucas Heights research reactor – in the mid-2000s, at a cost of about $400m. Unfortunately, that remains our only one, despite the enormous economic and environmental benefits a small civilian nuclear sector would bring. Instead, Australia has settled for one of the most embarrassing and fact-free nuclear debates in the developed world.

Now the pond doesn't have to spend any time noting the way that Killer - and indeed the IPA - have turned from straightforward denialism to a cannier form of nuking the country to save the planet, not that it needed saving because climate change is a religious cult indulged in by fanatical zealots.

It's enough to note the distractions featuring that chainsaw grifter ... Newsweek Senior Editor-at-Large Josh Hammer reacts to Javier Milei’s win in Argentina’s midterm elections. “South America is a mess with the seeming exception of Argentina, which is really good news,” Mr Hammer told Sky News Digital Presenter Gabriella Power. “Milei has been able to achieve a lot in a very short period of time.”




Speaking of the IPA, Wilcox managed to bring together those two IPA strands - its support of coffin nails, and its current desire to nuke the country, and if not, to continue with preferred emissions (do inhale):



It turned out that Killer had been on a junket - thank the long absent lord, the IPA still seems to have a travel budget:

When I interviewed Professor Germán Guido Lavalle in Buenos Aires last week – the director-general overseeing some 3500 nuclear scientists at Argentina’s National Atomic Energy Commission – he was far too polite to criticise Australia’s bizarre prohibition on nuclear power. “Kazakhstan was in a similar situation, but they are changing their mind,” he told me gently, before offering a more candid observation off the record about Australia’s globally unique ban.
In June, that former Soviet republic – the world’s largest uranium exporter – selected Russia’s Rosatom to build its first domestic nuclear plant, with a second to be built by China.
Lavalle also rejects the conventional Australian wisdom that nuclear is too expensive. He argues a new medium-sized reactor of around 300MW could be built for between $1USbn to $US1.5bn ($1.541bn to $2.331bn) – an order of magnitude lower than the absurd $600bn figure the Albanese government circulated when rubbishing the Coalition’s proposal for seven reactors at the last election.
“No, it’s not extremely expensive,” he insists. “The reactors’ capital cost might be high, but operational costs are very low if you take into account that it will be running for 40 or more years.”

The reptiles slipped in a snap of a sight that always pleases them, It was an Argentinian company that built Australia’s only nuclear reactor – the Lucas Heights research reactor – in the mid-2000s, at a cost of about $400m. Picture Thomas Lisson.



Would you want to buy a plant from this mob, deeply in hock to the IMF?



Killer would, what with the IPA brand of Killernomics being keen to nuke the country ...

This stands in stark contrast to the CSIRO’s GenCost assumption that reactors last only 30 years – a figure wildly at odds with global experience. Argentina’s two large reactors, built in the 1970s and 1980s and providing around 7 per cent of the nation’s electricity, are about to receive life-extension upgrades that will take them to a staggering 50 years of full-power operation.
“Refurbishment is a very good deal,” Lavalle says. “It’s about a third of the cost of a new reactor.”
New large reactors, he adds, can be built for about $US4000 per kW. “At that level they are in the same range as wind and solar – but nuclear produces energy even without wind and through the night.”
This is precisely what Australia’s beloved Levelised Cost of Energy comparisons omit: wind and solar only work about a third of the time, and require massively expensive transmission expansions and batteries that remain laughably inefficient and costly.
Argentina is a reminder of how ideological – and frankly unserious – Australia’s energy policy has become, even putting Labor’s three-eyed fish antinuclear campaign aside. As a global nuclear revival accelerates, driven by surging demand for airconditioning in developing nations, rising electric vehicle loads in rich ones, and the explosion of AI data centres, Australia is positioning itself as an irrelevant outlier.

Then came another snap designed to warm the cockles of the hive mind heart: Cooling towers of the Dukovany nuclear power plant are seen in Dukovany, Czech Republic. Picture: AP /Petr David Josek




Oh it was a feast of towers ...

China has about two dozen reactors under construction, France has plans for a least half a dozen new ones. Last month, the US, finally recognising the geostrategic folly of allowing its nuclear expertise to atrophy, announced it would spend $US80bn on at least 10 Westinghouse reactors. Australia, meanwhile, continues to pretend the 21st-century nuclear renaissance isn’t happening. Australia sends hundreds of officials to COP talkfests riven with antinuclear ideology. Argentina sent no high-level representative to COP30 in Brazil this year – nor to Azerbaijan last year. Don’t expect a delegation for COP31 either.
The Coalition has torn itself apart over net-zero emissions targets when more populous nations, including the US and Argentina, clearly do not care. One of Argentina’s assistant economic ministers, Luis Lucero, told me he didn’t know his country’s emissions target – and, mercifully, didn’t appear remotely concerned. (For the record, it’s a 21 per cent cut from 2007 levels by 2030, far easier than Australia’s 43 per cent cut from 2005 levels.)

Then came another towering distraction, featuring the ever denialist dog botherer,  Global Nuclear Security Partners Australia Managing Director Jasmin Diab discusses Australia's stance on nuclear energy, despite being one of the world's largest uranium exporters. “We are a nuclear nation,” Ms Diab told Sky News host Chris Kenny. “We also produce a lot of the southern hemisphere's nuclear medicine isotopes. “Yet we are not heavily involved in the biggest nuclear industry exhibition globally.”




Now it's not for the pond to rabbit on about Killernomics and the IPA desire to nuke the country, what with them not being content with best efforts to smoke the country to death.

That's best left to others; all the pond wants to do is observe Killer, for once free of masks and Covid, but still deep in his devotion to chainsaws ...

Milei has repeatedly called climate change a “socialist lie”. Australia pretends to be ashamed of its uranium, while Argentina is issuing new exploration licences – including one to Australia’s own Piche Resources – to develop reserves Lavalle hopes will one day power its own nuclear fleet.
Despite superb solar potential in the Andes and world-class wind in Patagonia, Argentina has sensibly ignored the fading ideological obsession with intermittent energy. The idea of subsidising unreliable power is laughable for a government determined to run fiscal surpluses. Compare that to Australia’s vast, opaque off-budget Capacity Investment Scheme, funnelling billions into technologies that require the wind to blow and the sun to shine.
In the early 1970s prime minister Billy McMahon choked off what might have become a domestic nuclear power industry by cancelling the Jervis Bay plant proposed by his predecessor, John Gorton. It’s not too late to try again. With a better-quality public debate inspired by the verifiable facts in Argentina and elsewhere, it might even be popular. More than 70 per cent of Kazakhstanis backed nuclear power in a referendum last year.
Adam Creighton is chief economist at the Institute of Public Affairs.

We must reverse Billy McMahon! It's never too late to do an IPA!

Killernomics at its finest, and deserving of an infallible Pope...



And so to one of the pond's few remaining treats, the almost unreabable, reliably pompous and portentous musings of Our Henry.

The pond uses the affectionate term while aware that it was as ancient as the nineteenth century, what with it having appeared in The Diary of a Nobody way back when, in the context of Mr Pooter's party ...

...Mr. Nackles, Mr. Sprice-Hogg and his four daughters came; so did Franching, and one or two of Lupin’s new friends, members of the “Holloway Comedians.” Some of these seemed rather theatrical in their manner, especially one, who was posing all the evening, and leant on our little round table and cracked it. Lupin called him “our Henry,” and said he was “our lead at the H.C.’s,” and was quite as good in that department as Harry Mutlar was as the low-comedy merchant. All this is Greek to me.

Some might say that Our Henry is all Herodotus or all Aristotle to them ... but what's the bet the ancient Greeks will get at least a mention?



The header: Phillip Adams attacks me, but is trying to take spotlight off the issue; Phillip Adams should now do what intellectual honesty requires: address the arguments or apologise for his appalling tweets.

The caption for the image, which looks appallingly like it has been colourised, an artificial way of making if seem more "now", but which in its own way is a deep distortion and betrayal of any historical authenticity: A group of Jewish civilians being held at gunpoint by German SS troops after being forced out of a bunker in the Warsaw ghetto in 1943. Picture: Ullstein Bild via Getty Images

It turns out this week that Our Henry was still intent on his jihad with the token hive mind leftie, aka sell out advertising man. so the pond should provide an archive link to Our Henry so that anyone wanting to follow the links can do so ...

You see, as part of the insufferable sight of old fogeys still going hard at each other, a little pre-history is required.

Our Henry's opening flourish ...

Posting last week on X, Phillip Adams claimed he had responded on these pages to “Henry Ergas’s allegations that I’m anti-Semitic”. And it is true that his article dealt convincingly and at length with his repulsion at the Holocaust and his personal connections to Judaism.

... referenced some earlier history ...

Not anti-Semitic to deplore Benjamin Netanyahu ‘overkill’ in Gaza




The pond can't quote them at length but must acknowledge the depth and nature of this jihad ...

Exploiting the Holocaust is an idiot’s game,  Phillip Adams joins a long line that stretches from neo-Nazis to Islamists in using the Holocaust to make cheap anti-Israel points.



Phew, talk about a lot of fluff gathering and navel gazing, as Our Henry returned to the well for yet another round ... with the key point here the clever way his relentless bluster entirely manages to avoid the ethnic cleansing currently going down in Gaza and the West Bank ...

But I no more alleged he hated Jews than that he harbours an irrational animus toward Eskimos. My contention was, and remains, that his tweet stating “7000 Jews died in the Warsaw Ghetto. 68,000 Palestinians have died in Gaza” was a shocking distortion of historical truth and of moral argument.
The fact is that of the roughly 450,000 Jews herded into the Warsaw Ghetto, barely 30,000 survived. At least 80,000 – not 7000 – died in the Ghetto itself, and another 340,000 were murdered during the successive deportations or in the death camps.
As for Adams’s claim that Israel’s conduct in Gaza was even more appalling than that of the Nazis, it abandons all reason by equating the Germans’ coldly planned extermination of utterly defenceless men, women and children with the civilian casualties of a brutal urban war waged against an enemy that systematically uses its own population as human shields.
Yet Adams, in what he presents as his response, did not address a single one of those contentions. Instead, he cast himself as the target of an ad hominem attack – an assault on his character rather than a challenge to his statements.

You see? No need to contemplate what has actually been going down in Gaza and the West Bank. Just offer furious, righteous indignation, preferably dressed up with ancient fatuities ...

The reptiles decided to run a snap of the wretched one, and the pond has to confess to its shame that it once had relatives who lived in Gundy, Broadcaster and journalist Phillip Adams at his country estate in Gundy, in the NSW Hunter Valley. Picture: Max Mason-Hubers / The Australian




Our Henry was relentless, but of course the main point is to wait for the old blowhard to throw in some classical references, as if that form of camouflage constituted an argument:

That manoeuvre would simply be hackneyed were it not as shop-soiled as the argumentative sleights on which his initial tweet relied. For well over 70 years – ever since the Stalinist witch-trials of the early post-war period, when Czech communist leader Rudolf Slánský, hanged in 1952, “confessed” that he and other Jews had “deliberately sought to intimidate” Zionism’s opponents by calling them anti-Semites – Israel’s critics have relied time and again on the same device: to recast any scrutiny as a spurious charge against them of anti-Semitism and thereby avoid engaging with the substance.
The trick has its own kind of low cunning. In pretending to repel an unjustified ad hominem smear, its practitioners launch one themselves, impugning both their critics’ logic and their integrity while posturing as the wronged party.
But the reason the ploy is now ubiquitous is not merely that it is a cheap “get-out-of-jail” card; it endures because it perfectly mirrors the ethos gutting serious debate on issues ranging from Gaza to Indigenous policy, multiculturalism and transgender rights.
That ethos spurns the politics of reason in favour of the politics of position. Every disagreement is reimagined as a confrontation between self-proclaimed victims – whose asserted victimhood confers moral superiority – and morally tainted perpetrators. Arguments no longer concern propositions but identities; disputes cease to be disagreements and become existential struggles.
We saw that logic on full display only days ago in the proceedings pitting Greens deputy leader Mehreen Faruqi against Pauline Hanson, where Senator Faruqi’s barrister, Jessie Taylor, characterised Senator Hanson’s remarks not just as profoundly offensive but as an assault on Faruqi’s “whole identity”, “in which her Muslimness is integral and indivisible”. And as for Hanson herself, her conduct was, Taylor insisted, far worse than a momentary lapse or everyday political mudslinging: it flowed from Hanson’s own hardwired identity, with its “ubiquitous” and “notorious” “racism”, and a “hatred and hostility towards outsiders not divided cleanly along the lines of race or religion”.
Entirely lost in these battles-to-the-death between identities is one of the Judeo-Christian tradition’s most momentous contributions: the distinction between deploring the sin and damning the sinner.

Now some will reckon that a reference to "Judeo-Xian" tradition is enough, but the pond reckons Our Henry has got way more game than that to bring to the table, but first a couple more distracting snaps, Pauline Hanson arrives at Federal Court. Photo: NewsWire/ Gaye Gerard; Mehreen Faruqi arrives at Federal Court. Photo: NewsWire/ Gaye Gerard



The opening flourish to the next gobbet reassured the pond that the hole in bucket man has still got game, what with talk of - shades of Mr Pooter - the ancient Greeks:

The ancient Greeks made no such separation, viewing character and conduct as fused and fated. Nor can it be said that medieval or early modern Europe scrupulously observed it, when alleged heretics were routinely put to the sword or stake, their supposed errors inseparable from their very being. But it was precisely by reaffirming and redefining that distinction that the Enlightenment’s most searching thinkers – beginning with Pierre Bayle and John Locke – laid the foundations of modern liberty.
Elegantly synthesised in the mid-19th century by Orestes Brownson’s apothegm that “Error has no rights but the man who errs retains every right”, including the right to err, their core contention was that while attacking individuals on account of their ideas offends human dignity and is more likely to suppress than advance the truth, critiquing ideas is not just a right, but a duty.
It is no accident that the emergence of this contention coincided – indeed, for the first time since Aristotle – with sustained efforts to distinguish valid from invalid forms of argumentation, so that the untrammelled right to debate dogmas, ideas and opinions would allow the truth to shine.
That was the context in which ad hominem arguments came to be viewed as fallacious, for they breached what John Stuart Mill called “the real morality of public discussion”.
That morality not only demands the avoidance of “vituperative language” but also rejects the intellectual cowardice and “want of candour” involved in using attacks on a speaker’s person to avoid answering the substance of what that speaker said.
But Adams’s tweet, which claimed that I had called him anti-Semitic, did more than that. It exemplified the prevailing tactic of fleeing the argument and instead rousing one’s rusted-on supporters. In ancient Rome, upper-class men could rally gangs of roughs to intimidate critics and opponents; today, the gangs are mustered in X’s rigidly segregated echo chambers.
That effectiveness, however, compounds the harm it causes. Bayle put the danger with characteristic clarity: “This is the surest means of having no longer any common principle of reasoning, and of reducing (argument) to the laws of the strongest, and to these ridiculous maxims: this is very good when I do it, but when another does the same, it is a detestable action.”
That so few of those who saw Adams’s post will have read my article – and so many instinctively despise anyone routinely branded a “Zio” – is exactly what gives the tactic its devastating effectiveness.

And just look at the follow up name-dropping: Pierre Bayle, John Locke, Orestes Brownson’s apothegm, Aristotle, John Stuart Mill, In ancient Rome

... all in aid of two old fogeys having a dust-up ...

The reptiles tried to defuse the fuss by featuring the discursive if minuscule Minns: New South Wales Premier Chris Minns has commented on the neo-Nazi protests on Saturday, claiming these protesters seem to have gone around the Nazi symbol law. “A lot of those activists have been incredibly strong about rejecting the government’s hate speech laws, and now they’re suggesting that we should be throwing the book using the exact same laws, so there’s got to be a double standard here,” Mr Minns said. “This proves, in my view, that letting antisemitism and racism out of the bag in any context metastasises in the community and results in more division and racism, not less. “The hate speech laws that we’ve pursued in the NSW parliament, we believe are important and send a clear message that we are not going to stand for this kind of hatred in our community.”




Amazing really, that a man of such singular incompetence could rule the NSW roost, but to be fair, the Liberal party are trying really hard to make life incredibly easy for him ...

Now back to the fussing and the feuding and the in-fighting, as Our Henry keeps bunging on a do ... and when Our Henry drags in Cicero, the pond considers it "case closed"...

In writing those words, Bayle well understood what had destroyed the Roman republic. The proliferation of invective – the “rabid, undisciplined tone” Cicero deplored – fostered a war of reputations that mirrored a deeper crisis of legitimacy. With formal procedures losing authority, political struggle shifted into character destruction, which made compromise impossible.

And yet is Our Henry currently not doing to Adams what Cicero deplored (not that the pond gives to hoots about the self-serving token leftie dressed in to pretend the hive mind isn't barking mad far right):

Believing that personal gain is made by crushing others...

Well perhaps not personal gain, perhaps just the control of Gaza and the West Bank, and don't you worry about those vexatious, difficult, pesky Palestinians who thought living in a place for centuries gave them some kind of right to exist ...

That not only intensified the conflict. As German historian Christian Meier showed, it also prevented the contenders from sensibly discussing, much less agreeing upon, any path forward. The collapse of public reason produced a “crisis without a solution”, condemning the republic to its eventual demise.
What the fate of our own polity – and, more broadly, of the West, which suffers the same ailments – will be remains to be seen. But one thing is clear: a civic culture that abandons the discipline of public reason abandons itself. That is why Adams, and those who deploy similar tactics, must be held to account.
And that is why Adams should now do what intellectual honesty requires: address the arguments or apologise for his appalling tweets.

Will the ancient advertising man dodder back into print to continue the feud? 

Will he attempt to match the Ciceo, Meier quoting hole in bucket man, in an attempt to match Our Henry at his game?

Will the pond have the slightest interest?

On the upside, there's always an end to this kind of feuding and in-fighting ... and in the interim, as the two old codgers go at it, there's something to be said for the sight of demented old men shouting at clouds and flailing away at each other...

That said, if the pond wanted dementia, it would rather the fun of watching King Donald rule those disunited states, sadly ignored by the reptiles, but celebrated yet again by the immortal Rowe ...




Waiter, a CU of the tats if you please, what with the immortal Rowe clearly relishing the chance to offer his latest take of the madness of King Donald I, kissing cousin to King George III...




Thursday, November 20, 2025

In which Thursday at the lizard Oz sinking to a new low, with no relief from Joe, lesser member of the Kelly gang, or the lizard Oz editorialist. Only the 'toons save the day ...

 

The pond isn't surprised that the reptiles gave up a golden opportunity to ravage the Labor government over its treatment of the CSIRO, and science more generally ...

When have the reptiles ever given two figs about science?

Not a single mention of either the body or the notion tarnished the front page of the digital edition early this morning.

Ed Husic having a go at his own kind could only be found in another place

“If you do value science, you need to stop looking at science and research as a cost, and see it as an investment in the future, wellbeing and capability of the country,” Husic told ABC’s Afternoon Briefing.
“I think that the task at hand is to roll up the sleeves, get out the jar of gumption and pry open the jaws of Treasury to make sure that our national science agency is funded in the way that will be good for the country into the long term. If you want to find the money, you can find it.
“I mean, we found $600m for a football team in Papua New Guinea. I’m sure we’ll be able to find the money for our national science agency, because that is an investment, as I said, in our future capability as a country, really important.”

Well yes, but why is it that the pond must turn this morning to a couple of cartoonists to mount a more sustained critique than the hive mind could manage?





Exactly, so and thus ... never did find out about the apple from the lizard Oz.

The reptiles must really hate and despise science to give up that sort of free kick ...

And the pond shouldn't have been surprised at the lead early this morning ...



The pond had thought Dame Slap had given up her latest jihad, but she was just resting for a couple of days, leaving carriage of the jihads to minors, before returning to the fray in full throated vigour this morning.

This is the hill the reptiles prefer to die on? 

This is what they think will bring the government down?

They prefer to highlight this sort of jihad drivel over science?

Deeply, profoundly boring, and so any one interested in this jihad can head off to the archives, with the pond offering its usual "all care, no responsibility, intermittent archive at best" as a disclaimer...

Higgins case fallout
‘No parliamentary privilege here, PM’: Reynolds’ warning on Anthony Amnesia
The Prime Minister faces an extraordinary challenge from ex-minister Linda Reynolds after dismissing judges’ findings that cleared Liberals of Higgins cover-up allegations.
By Paul Garvey

Commentary by Janet Albrechtsen
Ducking, weaving Albanese fails accountability test
The Prime Minister was confronted with a test of leadership, credibility, accountability and decency over his government’s role in weaponising Brittany Higgins’ allegations against Linda Reynolds. He failed on each front.

If this is the best the reptiles can do to mount an attack on the federal government, Albo's mob might well begin to operate under the delusion that they're in for a thousand year Reich ...

As for the rest of the reptile rabble, has the pond noted that this was a deeply boring day?

The pond did? Well in the spirit of adding to the sense of ennui and tedium, the pond will say it again.

The poor old Victorians were under the hammer by that lightweight piece of fluff, petulant Peta ...

Lazy Liberal team needs to pull its weight
Victorian Libs don’t need a messiah, they need clear policies
It has been obvious for a long time that Victoria is a failing state after almost three decades of rule by the Labor Party.
By Peta Credlin
Columnist

This "Victoria is a failed, or a failing, state" routine bemuses the pond each time it visits the sparrows of the south ...

Jason Thomas tried on the aged routine of Victoria as Clockwork Orange...

Timid reforms no match for violent thugs running wild
Victoria’s leadership is complicit in its deadly Third World crime wave
It is not the fault of the hardworking Victoria Police. As in many failing states, its members are implementing government policy.
by Jason Thomas

There it was again - "failing state".

The trouble of course is that the pond could match any Melbourne eruption with a similar set of crimes in Sydney, with the local ambulance chasers always willing to lather up any number of dragons in the deep west.

As for the 'hardworking' Victoria plods? 

Where has Jason been lately, has he failed to notice all the crims back on the streets thanks to the singular incompetence of the plods in their handling of wayward lawyer X evidence?

In the Victoria Police submission, we have again accepted that permitting Nicola Gobbo to give information to officers about her own clients in this manner was profoundly wrong. As Chief Commissioner, it is appropriate that I have apologised to the courts and to the community for the events that transpired and reiterate that the way in which Ms Gobbo was managed as a human source was a profound failing.

And just who or what is Frontier Assessments?

Dr Jason Thomas is director of Frontier Assessments.

Ah, it's word salad central ...



Okay, doc, you've had your two minutes of promotional fame.

Damon was also hard at ...

‘Robotic Jess’ Wilson must learn from ‘sweaty Steve’ Bracks and ‘foot-in-mouth’ Jeff Kennett to become Victorian premier
Drop the robot and get real; that’s the message former premiers have sent new Victorian Opposition Leader Jess Wilson.
By Damon Johnston

Sheesh, Damon, not one mention of "fail" or "failing"? The pond would even have settled for flailing.

And the only way forward is to turn into a beefy boofhead as a way to Jeff the state again?



Sheesh, do better reptiles.

More generally, Jack the Insider decided he'd help the lettuce ...

Loose lips sink struggling Libs electoral prospects
It would help the Coalition if they stop talking about themselves
Vast demographic shifts are at play and they do not favour the Coalition. In raw numbers, younger voters outnumber older ones.
By Jack the Insider

Jack was into his own form of word salad ...

...The Coalition must take what slim victories come its way as a disastrous 2025 ends and 2026 is set to begin. The short-term aims are to rebuild its primary vote and hammer the Albanese government on energy prices.
But if the Liberals are still talking about themselves at this time next year, you can bet everybody else has stopped listening.

The trouble, Jack, is that we've been there and done that with nuking the country to save the planet.

On this Thursday, form the pond has stopped listening to the lizard Oz ... and has decided that the only way forward is a cartoon diet ...



Meanwhile, Amy tried the old 'strangled and smothered by red tape' routine ...

Flatten barriers to competition and watch nation soar
Increasing competition will boost the economy and help us all
Australia is moving backward on every competitiveness indicator. Our industry concentration is increasing, our leading firms appear entrenched.
By Amy Auster

Amy had all the usual blather down pat ...

... falling competitiveness means it’s time to figure out what is getting in the way of start-ups, scale-ups and challengers. Encouraging competition is the business of government, through competition policy.
Australia’s first National Competition Policy was launched in 1995, took 10 years, spent more than $10bn and increased GDP by $50bn a year – in today’s dollars – or about $5000 a household. This government has renewed National Competition Policy but more is required. Our playbook rests on three principal actions to kickstart what we call NCP 2.0.
First, empower pro-competi­tion reform leaders at every level of government. Each state and territory government should appoint a minister for competition, with a focus on removing regulatory barriers to competition – painful processes around business licensing, permit and environmental approvals, occupational licensing, health and safety compliance, and compliance with payroll, stamp duty and land taxes. At the federal level, Treasury’s promising start with the competi­tion taskforce should be expanded. The ACCC should focus on its core remit of enforcing competition law.
Second, resource the effort with funding of $20bn across 10 years to pay states for reform, reduce the federal compliance burden and facilitate new competition through consumer choice, technology and entry of new firms, products and services to Australia. The economic dividend of pro-competition reform means this investment will quickly pay for itself many times over.
Finally, we recommend a systemic effort to address all gatekeepers to competition, including where private firms or industry entities have acquired the power to determine who competes with them.
The economic imperative is clear and the time for action is now.

The pond's favourite word in that salad?

Empower.

Though the rousing Goughism, "the time for action is now" came a close second.



It turned out that Amy was just another bit of outsourcing ...

Amy Auster is chief executive of Policy Institute Australia, an independent, nonpartisan think tank.

Thursday is always the worst reptile day of the week, or perhaps the pond is getting more and more jaded, but this was surely close to the worst Thursday of all ...

That's how the pond ended up with Joe, lesser member of the Kelly gang.

The pond hadn't wanted to go there, but what alternatives were there?



The header: Will the DoJ pass the Epstein transparency test or fail the MAGA movement? Donald Trump radically overhauled the Department of Justice to stop its “weaponisation” against him by Joe Biden, but will it deliver for the MAGA base by releasing the Epstein files?

The caption, as if no one knew a mango when they saw it: US President Donald Trump and Attorney-General Pam Bondi. Picture: AFP

Joe managed just a pitiful two minutes, but then, as Dr Johnson reportedly once said, the sight of a reptile covering US politics is remarkably like a dog on two legs delivering a sermon ...

The US congress has come together in a moment of fleeting consensus over the Epstein Files Transparency Act, but the political focus will shift to how the Department of Justice will respond.
Donald Trump has launched a full-scale takeover of the department in his second term, using it as an instrument to pursue his political opponents.
This has forced out a large number of senior employees and prosecutors, with the move being justified as a response to the weaponisation of the DoJ against Mr Trump by the previous Biden administration. However, the DoJ now finds itself in new territory.
On one hand, the President’s powerful MAGA political constituency will be looking to it for answers on the Epstein files.
It is seeking justice for survivors, greater transparency and greater accountability for powerful people who have done the wrong thing.

The reptiles did their best to boost the yarn by dragging in Marge, though there was no news of the Rothschilds' skill with space lasers ... US Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican of Georgia, speaks during a press conference on the Epstein Files Transparency Act at the US Capitol in Washington on Wednesday. Picture: AFP




Sheesh, once again the pond had to call in a cartoonist to establish the right level of levity, what with grabbing women by the p*ssy (*blogger bot approved) the new standard for the conduct of US politics ...




Joe did his best, which wasn't much ...

This issue is also seen as a litmus test for the restoration of trust and confidence in the DoJ itself.
Speaking outside the Capitol Building on Tuesday morning local time (Wednesday AEDT) along with the Epstein survivors, Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said the crucial challenge would come following the passage of the legislation.
“The real test will be – will the Department of Justice release the files,” she said. “Or will it all remain tied up in investigations?”
“That’s information that needs to come out. And will the list of names that these woman privately hold … come out?”
On the other hand, the DoJ knows that Trump committed only to signing the legislation into law as a political hostage at the 11th hour after unsuccessfully attempting to scuttle the House of Representatives vote for weeks.
The President continues to publicly rubbish the entire issue as a Democrat “hoax”.
And he reversed his position last weekend, encouraging Republicans to support the Epstein legislation, as a tactic to avoid the appearance of the house GOP openly defying him.
Pressed on the issue by a journalist during the White House visit of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Mr Trump expressed his frustration.
“I have nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein. I threw him out of my club many years ago because I thought he was a sick pervert,” Mr Trump said.
“I guess I turned out to be right.”

Right ...




How's that action against the WSJ going?

No word from the lesser member of the Kelly gang on that News Corp front, instead just another visual distraction ... US Attorney-General Pam Bondi during a news conference with President Donald Trump. Picture: AFP




Joe ended up sounding uncertain as to how to proceed ...

House Speaker Mike Johnson also said the passage of the legislation by 427 votes to one was nothing more than a “political show vote”.
These comments are unlikely to instil confidence in Republicans hoping for greater transparency from the DoJ.
Haley Robson – one of the Epstein survivors – declared on Tuesday: “I am traumatised. I am not stupid.”
Addressing Mr Trump, she said: “I can’t help (but) to be sceptical of what the agenda is.
“You have put us through so much stress … and then get upset when your own party goes against you because what is being done is wrong.”
The text of the Epstein Transparency Act lists the various documents being sought and clarifies that no record should be withheld on the “basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity”.
But it does list several grounds for permitted withholdings including allowing the US Attorney-General, Pam Bondi, to make redactions to protect victims’ privacy, uphold national security and ensure that federal investigations are not jeopardised.
How the DoJ and Ms Bondi navigate the conflicting political imperatives around the release of the Epstein files will be closely monitored.
Yet Mr Trump and Ms Bondi will be aware that, in the highly charged political environment in the US, there will be many people – including those within their own MAGA movement – looking for high-profile scalps.
They will be suspicious if none are seen to emerge.

Joe, Joe, the fix is already in, or being put in, the only question is whether they manage to burn whatever's the equivalent of the Nixon tapes ...

After that outing, the pond almost regretted not giving aid and comfort to the lettuce in the race to Xmas ...



The pond struggled to find a bonus, and turned to the lizard Oz editorialist for help ...

China says developed nations should COP net zero by 2040, China is pressing its advantage in the Amazon city of Belem, Brazil. It wants developed countries to bring forward their net-zero targets to ‘before 2040’.
Editorial
2 min read
November 20, 2025 - 12:00AM

Foolish pond. The lizard Oz editorial is always a wasteland, almost as dire as Dame Slap raging to the heavens in her brittle way about Brittany ...

With the US absent from the colourful but pretentious climate change gathering under way in the Amazon city of Belem, Brazil, China is pressing its advantage. It wants developed countries to bring forward their net-zero targets to “before 2040”. China, the world’s biggest greenhouse gas emissions nation, still considers itself to be a developing country. It has given itself until 2060 to hit net zero and does not have to peak emissions until the end of this decade.
The demands for accelerated action from Europe, the US and presumably Australia were made by China’s special envoy for climate change, Liu Zhenmin, and reported in the US news outlet Politico. 

Why are the reptiles referencing Politico without a link?

Is it so hard, either at the site or in the archive?




Talk about giving dictator Xi a free kick ...and yet somehow the reptiles try to make King Donald the hero in this folly ...

Mr Liu said peaking emissions early in the developed world was “climate justice” and was needed to give developing nations more time to industrialise. This goes to the heart of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change process, which is really a struggle between the riches of Western nations and the expectations of the developing world. In the bureaucratese of UN diplomacy, it is called “common but differentiated responsibilities” and is a bedrock of the Paris Agreement.
The different expectations dominate the Belem negotiations, which are following a predictable path with furrowed brows and late-night sittings aiming to claim sufficient last-minute victory to keep the process alive. Organisers have made a demand that critical issues be resolved midweek so there may be a chance the COP will end on time. Three familiar issues are forcing negotiators to burn the midnight oil. And there is a sting in the tail for Australia, particularly if the Albanese government perseveres with its foolhardy push to host next year’s COP31 in Adelaide. The main game in Belem is how to increase the $US300bn a year that developing countries are being offered for climate action from developed countries to the $US1.3 trillion ($2 trillion) a year they are being told is possible, notably by China.
Another major issue is how to get signatories to the Paris Agreement to pledge action to meet the goals of limiting future temperature rises. But the most significant issue for Australia is the attempt to put a plan to phase out fossil fuel production and use back on to the formal agenda. With a consensus decision required, it is unlikely that a timetable for any phase-out will be agreed. But if Brazil succeeds in getting mention of a phase-out into the final text, it will be considered enough for activists to claim the Belem COP has been a success and the issue will dominate discussions at COP31. This will be a difficult issue for Australia if COP31 is held in Adelaide. If Australia drops its bid, as now looks possible, it still will be the top order of business at a leaders meeting in the Pacific that has been suggested as a compromise.
The bigger game at play in Belem is the way in which China has managed to weaponise climate change diplomacy for its geopolitical ends. With the US out of the talks, China is being lauded by activists and is taking a more assertive stand. Chinese negotiators have criticised the EU for not acting fast enough with its plan to cut emissions by between 66.3 per cent and 72.5 per cent by 2035 and by 90 per cent by 2040 compared with 1990 levels.
Unlike Australia, which has sent hundreds of delegates to Belem, the US has made a decision to stay away. The US State Department said: “The Trump administration refused to use taxpayer dollars to send or facilitate any official travel for this conference, which is dedicated to hamstringing the American economy and bankrupting the American people.” Something to think about.

Something to think about?

All the pond can think about is the profound anti-science stupidity of the lizard Oz ...and the way that TACO Donald is happy to screw not just the planet, but those disunited states, not to mention poor old Taiwan ...

Is there a bone saw in the house?

And with that, time to wrap up the follies with the bone saw man and his new piggy chum ... (apparently "piggy" is a term of affection in the US, as in "Ms Piggy")....



Forget the bone saw and all those files, and even that burger, with the elephant imitating the turtle reputed to hold up the world ...though there is a certain turtle-ish quality to the box ...



A fair cop, but as always the tats have it ...




Wednesday, November 19, 2025

In which the bromancer offers mud and the Bjorn-again one offers the technology stars ...

 


The reptiles finally noticed ...

It was down the page and a rehash by Anons, but they finally noticed...

Epstein Files
‘I was called a traitor by a man I fought for’: Greene slams Trump ahead of Epstein vote
Marjorie Taylor Greene, the former Trump loyalist, lashes out at the US President as Congress prepares to vote on the release of government records relating to one of the world’s most notorious scandals.
by AFP and staff writers

What a win for Marge ...and how weird they need to take a vote when King Donald could just declassify the records by thinking about them ...

And yet there were many other things that have gone unnoticed ...



Meanwhile King Donald carried on in his usual sociopathic way ...



White House
Trump says Saudi crown prince knew nothing of journalist murder, rejecting CIA assessment
‘Things happen’: Trump defends Saudi crown prince over Khashoggi murder
Donald Trump said the murdered journalist and US citizen Jamal Khashoggi was ‘extremely controversial,’ as he announced $1 trillion worth of deals with Mohammed bin Salman.
By Alexander Ward and Michael Gordon

Reality is never an issue for those living in an alternative universe, but at least the reptiles have taken to featuring bizarro world ...

Strangely there was no top-of-the-page mention of the ABC/BBC jihad - surely the feud with Media Watch was worth another dog botherer rant? - but that other jihad kept on bubbling along...



Higgins claims
Libs won’t rest until ‘Mean Girls’ say sorry
The opposition has vowed to pursue Labor’s top brass over false cover-up claims in the Brittany Higgins case, despite the Prime Minister dismissing two damning court rulings.
By Elizabeth Pike and Sarah Ison

That offered the peculiar sight of mean girls scribbling about mean girls.

Do they really think that puerile tag will work King Donald style? 

And where's Dame Slap? This was her pet jihad ...

Meanwhile, the reptiles can't help themselves...

EXCLUSIVE
Sussan Ley will not set a migration target, as she moves to shore up leadership before Christmas
Coalition to avoid hard migration target as Ley shores up leadership
Amid backbench agitation for the Coalition to take the fight up to Labor on immigration, The Australian understands there are no plans to lock in a preferred net overseas migration target 29 months out from the 2028 election.
By Geoff Chambers

So she's in the race with the lettuce until at least Xmas ...

It's so hard to keep up ...





Talk about all the fun of the fair. Everybody was having fun with it ...




But what to do as a distraction?

Bring back an old hit, with a plan to solve anything and everything in an absolutely spiffing way...




Top of the digital edition early in the morning ...and an EXCLUSIVE to boot ...

EXCLUSIVE
Cape York’s radical plan to save all Australians from welfare trap and make education a legal right
Radical plan to save all Australians from welfare trap, regardless of race
Noel Pearson’s Cape York Partnership has embarked on a major reboot of Indigenous politics and unveiled a post-welfare vision for the ‘bottom million’ Australians, no matter their race.
By Paige Taylor

Prolific Paige performed double duties by doubling down ...

Cape York Partnership offers social policy blueprint as government schemes fail
As national Indigenous programs face setbacks, Cape York’s unique welfare model has quietly achieved extraordinary results that could reshape Australian social policy.
By Paige Taylor

Speaking of ancient voices from distant pasts...

Jess Wilson may be new to parliament but she knows politics
Libs pass political baton to a young, bright generation
Jess Wilson has arrived at the right time, a breath of fresh air within a political environment that is increasingly stale.
ByJeff Kennett
Contributor

Did the reptiles have to drag out a stale old fossil to perform the baton change?



None of that meant anything to the pond, because the bromancer had returned to his rightful place, at the top of the extreme far right ma ...

The bromancer was in his element, with a from-the-river-to-the-sea and a real estate masterstroke - even better than a ballroom and gold gilt - was now in the offing...



The header: UN Security Council endorses Trump’s controversial Gaza plan despite Hamas rejection, The UN Security Council has delivered Trump an extraordinary diplomatic victory on Gaza peace, yet the crucial requirement for Hamas to disarm appears increasingly unlikely.

The caption: US Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz, left, speaks with his Israeli counterpart Danny Danon before the start of a UN Security Council meeting to vote on a US resolution on the Gaza peace plan at the UN Headquarters in New York City, November 17, 2025. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)

The bromancer was on his usual hysterical high, invigorated by his break ...

Donald Trump has had a big victory at the United Nations Security Council on the Middle East, with the UN’s one serious decision-making body endorsing the President’s Gaza peace plan.
Who ever thought we’d be typing those words?
Trump deserves great credit for this step. It materially advances the chances for peace in Gaza and throughout the Middle East.
And even if it fails, the situation Trump has brought about in Gaza is far better than the relentless destruction of war that prevailed before he intervened.
Nonetheless, for all that, it’s still difficult to see how the Trump plan can actually be implemented in reality.
The UN Security Council endorsed all the key elements of Trump’s peace plan for Gaza. There is to be an International Stabilisation Force to provide order in Gaza; there is to be a Peace Board presumably chaired by Trump himself; vetted Palestinians are to be trained for a new Gaza police force; there’s to be an international reconstruction effort; and the UN resolution even contained a positive reference to an eventual pathway to Palestinian statehood. Oh, and Hamas is to disarm.
Well, all of that still looks pretty hard, if not impossible.
But first, it’s important to register the diplomatic win. Trump mobilised both Arab and Israeli support for his peace plan.
And it was partly because of Arab and general Islamic support for the plan that both China and Russia, while abstaining on the vote, declined to veto it.
In a sense, this all involved much more traditional US diplomacy than is generally acknowledged. When Trump’s plans work, they typically add bluster to traditional diplomacy, rather than, as is often mistakenly thought, substituting bluster for diplomacy.
Thus Saudi Arabia gets a nuclear co-operation deal with the US. Turkey gets a better defence relationship with Washington. The Arab Gulf states get deeper US involvement in their security. These are traditional vectors of influence, and the Trump administration has used them to mobilise support for its plan.
And, crucially for the whole Arab and Islamic world, the resolution mentions a possible pathway to eventual Palestinian statehood, though Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu explicitly opposes this aspect of the plan, and in reality any potential Palestinian state is surely decades away at best.

Amazingly the reptiles provided only one visual distraction ... US Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz addresses the UN Security Council as they meet to vote on a draft resolution to authorise an International Stabilisation Force in Gaza, on November 17, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Adam Gray / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)




As usual, the pond likes to run such matters past Haaretz, and came up with this ...

What the UN Resolution on Gaza Tells Us About Trump - and What It Means for Israel and the Palestinians
Beyond a passing reference to Palestinian statehood, the resolution's immediate impact lies in its creation of the International Stabilization Force. But questions linger over whose soldiers will make up the force and if disarming Hamas is even possible
...The question of which countries will have the most influence in the new divided Gaza is key. Netanyahu chose in the past to give Qatar the keys to Gaza, and the wealthy Gulf nation bankrolled Hamas with his direct knowledge and blessing. Qatar emerged stronger than ever from the Gaza war, getting credit from U.S. President Donald Trump and other world leaders for its role in securing the cease-fire and hostage release agreement that ended the fighting. But Israel also knows the strings that can come with greater Qatari involvement – not to mention Turkey, whose antisemitic president is an avid Hamas supporter. Will Netanyahu insist that these countries will not be part of the international force?
As for the passing reference to Palestinian statehood in the UN resolution, it's important to understand how these words made their way into the text, and what their addition tells us about the Trump administration's next steps in the Middle East. This doesn't mean in any way that Trump is now committed to the two-state solution or that his administration will put an end to the despicable violence carried out by extremist Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank. For Trump, these words are no more than a line he was forced to add to the U.S. resolution in order to ensure the support of his Arab allies. Nothing more, nothing less.
The reason it still matters is the shift in Trump's approach compared to his own previous plans for Gaza. This is, after all, the U.S. president who just nine months ago spoke about deporting the entire population of Gaza to other countries, taking over the land and turning it into an American-run casino strip. Trump also expressed being open, at the beginning of his second term, to supporting Israeli annexation of the West Bank.

That doesn't sound good, what with King Donald just as likely to have a bromancer-style mood shift and change is plans in a trice. Is the casino really off the table? Given the rabid way of unchecked settlers, might there still be a full annexation?

It seems the main point for the moment was to do an arms deal, as explained by Haaretz (sorry, paywall)...

Forget murdered journalists, think of the planes ...

WASHINGTON – Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said that the establishment of a Palestinian state as part of the two-state solution is key to normalization with Israel at his meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House on Tuesday.
"We want to be part of the Abraham Accords, but we want also to be sure that we secure a clear path [to a] two-state solution," the crown prince said.
The Saudis have expressed interest in normalization with Israel as part of a defense pact with the United States, which would expand military and intelligence cooperation between the two countries and deem any attack on Saudi Arabia a threat to U.S. security.
The F-35 deal pushes MBS toward Israel. He can't be seen as selling out the Palestinians Yoel Guzansky
Planes, no Palestinian state: How Netanyahu will trade Israel's security for Saudi ties Amir Tibon
MBS' meeting with Trump will open a Pandora's box for Israel and the Middle East Ben Samuels
"I don't want to use the word commitment, but we've had a very good talk," Trump told the press. "We talked one-state, two-state. We talked about a lot of things. But I think you have a very good feeling toward the Abraham Accords."
Asked how a U.S. sale of F-35 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia would affect the joint U.S.–Israel policy of preserving Israel's regional military dominance – also known as the Qualitative Military Edge – President Trump said Saudi Arabia is "a great ally, and Israel is a great ally."
"When you look at the F-35, and you're asking me, 'is it the same' – I think it's gonna be pretty similar, yeah," Trump said, adding that Israel is aware of the F-35 deal and is "going to be very happy."
Defense officials are concerned that the Israel Air Force will lose its air superiority in the Middle East if the United States sells the stealth jets to Saudi Arabia.
Senior Israeli defense officials told Haaretz that a deal for the aircraft could give regional armies insights into the unique capabilities developed by the Israel Defense Forces based on the planes.
Israel "would like you to get planes of a reduced caliber," Trump told bin Salman, answering a journalist's question, but said that "as far as I'm concerned, they're both at a level where they should get top-of-the-line."

Great, everybody armed to the teeth, what could go wrong, and then came a prime example of the King's ability to whip up a word salad ...

...Trump was then asked about the International Stabilization Force, saying, "I think we're gonna get along great with the Palestinians, we just had a war, very successful, we did that on behalf of everybody, the outcome was extraordinary. Israel bought the best equipment. They bought it from us."

After that elaborate detour, it was time to return to the bromancer, and while it took a while coming, apparently everything in this triumph is actually as clear as mud ...

Indeed, some Israelis are arguing that Trump might have given away too much in order to secure this Security Council vote.
But whether any part of the plan can be realistically implemented remains very unclear.
Hamas immediately rejected the plan and the Security Council vote, saying that any International Stabilisation Force would usurp the rights of Palestinians to self-determination.
Hamas also claimed that “resisting occupation by all means is a legitimate right”.
This does not sound like a group that is going to disarm. If Hamas doesn’t voluntarily disarm, it’s hard to see how any of the peace plan proceeds. The idea that an International Stabilisation Force would or could disarm Hamas is entirely fanciful.
The Israeli Defence Force, pound for pound the best in the Middle East if not the world, with two bitter years of deadly conflict, was unable to completely disarm Hamas.
A raggle-taggle composite force of outsiders unfamiliar with Hamas and with no stomach for conflict wouldn’t have a chance of achieving this. Nor would any sane government authorise its forces to try.
Trump has said if Hamas doesn’t disarm “we’ll disarm them” but no one has the faintest idea what that could mean. It’s ­either empty bluster or it means asking the Israelis to begin the conflict all over again, which is most unlikely to be Washington, or Jerusalem’s, preferred course of action.
It’s barely possible that if Hamas’s backers, especially Qatar, insist on Hamas disarming some kind of gesture along those lines could take place.
In the background, Iran is rebuilding its networks and influence as much as it can and the West Bank, while not remotely wishing to undergo the Gaza experience, has been restive.
This is still a very delicate situation. Meanwhile the task of rebuilding Gaza is absolutely monumental. But just as Arab and other nations probably won’t commit to a Stabilisation Force until Hamas is well into disarming and co-operating with the new deal, similarly it’s very unlikely that any nation will stump up the billions upon billions of dollars necessary for the rebuilding process unless there is a clear peace.
There is a huge job in providing temporary shelter and continuing food and medical aid for Gaza, another huge job in clearing away the debris of collapsed and damaged buildings, another huge job in clearing unexploded ordnance and other weapons, another huge job in rebuilding residential accommodation. And that’s just the beginning.
Once again, Hamas is inflicting great and unnecessary tragedy on the Palestinians of Gaza, purely to serve its murderous terrorist intent.
For whether you like Trump or not, there’s no doubt that his plan is the most constructive offering for Gaza in many years.
Trump is pledging his own prestige and deep American involvement in the reconstruction of Gaza, the provision of a decent life there and the creation of some kind of political horizon.
And in this effort he has the agreement of Israel and the active support of the Arab and Islamic worlds. This is the kind of opportunity which doesn’t come along very often.
The potential benefit is immense. The factor that is stopping it is Hamas’s insistence on its desire to murder Israelis and maintain control over the Palestinian population through terror and ­violence.
If this peace plan achieves nothing else, it certainly demonstrates what a profound enemy of the Palestinian people Hamas is, and how utterly indifferent Hamas is to Palestinian suffering.
If Hamas persists in its rejectionism, the US and Israel together may have to devise some kind of Plan B, though nothing very good looks to be on offer.
Still, with all these difficulties ahead, the UN Security Council resolution was a necessary and by no means guaranteed step in any process of recovery.
But the future remains as clear as mud.

Amazing really, if you can follow the bromancer's convoluted contortions, apparently the most constructive offering in many years is actually as clear as mud ... 

...but surely an even better distraction than other recent attempts...




And so to the bonus, and it's a return to the old days in force, with the Bjørn-again one back to solve everything ... 



The header: West's climate spending fails to curb emissions, Why are emissions still increasing when the EU and the US spent more than $US700bn in 2024 on green investments such as solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, hydrogen, electric cars and power grids?

The caption for that snap featuring the Sauron-loving solar-addicted Satanist: Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen speaks during a plenary session at the COP30 UN Climate Summit. Picture: AP Photo/Fernando Llano

One of the things the pond has always liked to do with Bjørn-again offerings is check where else they've appeared.

Even searching with engines such as that Duck amuck, the pond couldn't find another place where this outing landed.

It is, as they say, truly, completely, utterly unique to the reptiles ...

On the upside, this means the hive mind is the only place to discover the latest in Bjørn-again thinking.

On the downside, it seems that his base is shrinking even further, and only the reptiles are willing to disappear up his technology-loving fundament ...

Not to worry, it was just a 3 minute read, because that's how long it takes the Bjørn-again one to sort everything out ...

As the COP30 climate summit wraps up in Brazil’s Amazonian hub of Belem, activists are dispersing after two weeks of rainforest photo ops, protest disruptions and impassioned speeches on slashing carbon emissions. But participants sidestepped the stark reality: The actions of Western nations – including Australia – hold diminishing sway over the trajectory of global warming.
For decades now, Western governments, especially in Europe, prioritised carbon cuts over higher economic growth, spending trillions of dollars to convince consumers to adopt electric cars and accept more expensive, less reliable wind and solar power. All these expensive efforts are barely making a dent.
The global decarbonisation rate (measured as carbon dioxide emissions over GDP) has remained roughly constant since the 1960s, with no change after the 2015 Paris Agreement. Global emissions have skyrocketed, reaching a new record high in 2024. Despite this, climate campaigners unrealistically demand that the world quadruples its decarbonisation rate.

The reptiles seized the chance to slip in a croweater reference: South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas has spoken about Adelaide potentially hosting COP31. “In South Australia, we put our best foot forward to be able to host the COP,” Mr Malinauskas told Sky News Australia.




The pond was disappointed that the Bjørn-again one seems not to have kept up with the latest environmental news from down under, though the infallible Pope was on hand to celebrate ...



Instead the Bjørn-again one  loved himself some defeatism yet again ...

Why are emissions still increasing when the EU and the US spent more than $US700bn in 2024 on green investments such as solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, hydrogen, electric cars and power grids?
Because rich world emissions matter very little for climate change in the 21st century. While the West dominated emissions in previous centuries, the vast amount of future emissions will come from China, India, Africa, Brazil, Indonesia and many other countries clambering out of poverty.
One recent scenario shows, with current policies, just 13 per cent of carbon dioxide emissions across the rest of this century will come from the mostly rich Western countries of the OECD.

At this point the reptiles interrupted with a snap of a royal, for no better reason than the reptiles love a royal ... Queen Mary in Belém during the COP30 summit. Picture Instagram




The Bjørn-again one didn't actually mention the sunnies Queen in his text, but what a visual relief from his usual stodge ...

The liberal West’s pledge of achieving net zero by 2050 will cost hundreds of trillions of dollars and do little. Most likely, the policy simply will shift more energy-intensive production to the rest of the world with little overall impact on emissions – just as we have seen electric car battery manufacturing shift to China’s coal-powered economy.
If rich countries try to fix this problem with carbon border taxes, the costs will escalate further for both rich and poor countries while robbing the poor of the opportunity for export-driven growth.
If we super-optimistically assume the West ends up actually eliminating all its own emissions without further leakage by 2050, global carbon dioxide emissions across the century will be reduced by just 8 per cent. The resulting reduction in global temperature rise is minuscule when run through the UN’s own climate model. By 2050, the West will have reduced the global temperature rise by just 0.02C. Even by the end of the century, temperature rise will be reduced by less than 0.1C.
Despite the West’s irrelevance, climate summits and pious activists endlessly fixate on what the rich world should do. Protesters glue themselves to highways in Europe and the US while mostly ignoring China and completely disregarding India, Africa and the rest of the world.
No wonder, because their message of self-sacrifice will not go far in countries that desperately want energy-driven development.
Poorer nations don’t look to the West and want to emulate Germany’s huge climate-driven debt, Spain’s green blackouts or Britain’s record-setting electricity prices.
There is a cheaper and much more efficient approach: innovation. Throughout history, humanity has not tackled major challenges through restrictions but by innovating.
When air pollution enveloped Los Angeles in the 1950s, we didn’t ban cars but developed the catalytic converter that made them cleaner. When much of the world was starving in the 60s, we didn’t force everyone to eat less but innovated higher-yielding crops.

The reptiles also introduced the Pope, a reminder that the rag still aspires to be the Catholic News Daily, when not appearing as the Daily Zionist News ... Pope Leo criticised world governments in a video released on Monday (November 17) for failing so far to slow global warming and called for a stronger response to the threat, as countries at the U.N. climate summit in Brazil's Amazon city of Belem entered the second week of negotiations with a goal to resolve their thorniest issues ahead of schedule.




Readers familiar with Bjørn-again one's offerings will know where this is heading ...

Having berated expenditure, what we need is the power of smart R&D.

The Bjørn-again one has been singing this song about as long as prattling Polonius has been telling us there's not a single conservative in the ABC ...

Now we need similar breakthroughs for green energy, but the world is all but ignoring innovation. In 1980, after the oil price shocks, the rich world spent more than US8c of every $US100 of GDP on green R&D to find energy alternatives. As fossil fuels became cheap, investment dropped. When climate concerns grew, in our dash to subsidise inefficient solar and wind we ignored innovation. By 2023, the rich world was still spending less than US4c out of every $US100 of GDP. Total rich world spending adds up to just $US27bn – less than 2 per cent of overall green spending.
The West should increase this to about $US100bn ($154bn) a year. This would enable a focus on breakthroughs in many potential technologies. We could invest to innovate fourth-generation nuclear with small, modular, type-approved reactors, or boost green hydrogen production along with water purification, or research next-generation battery technology, carbon dioxide-free oil harvested from algae, as well as carbon dioxide extraction, fusion, second-generation biofuels and thousands of other possibilities.
None of these technologies is currently efficient but innovation needs only to make one or a few better than fossil fuels and all nations will switch. Moreover, innovation will cost a tiny fraction of current and future net-zero spending, so green R&D allows us to do much more while spending much less.
Unfortunately, the leaders who jetted into Brazil’s rainforest for the climate summit remain fixated on mandates and subsidies, missing the power of smart R&D. It’s time for the West to recognise its limited leverage and pivot from wasteful spending to game-changing tech investments that actually deliver results.
Bjorn Lomborg is president of the Copenhagen Consensus, visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution and author of False Alarm and Best Things First.

Meanwhile...

China's exports of batteries and battery energy storage systems (BESS) have hit a record in 2025, soaring by 24 per cent from the year before over the first nine months of the year.
Batteries have been China's most lucrative clean energy technology export since mid-2022, and so far this year have generated roughly $60 billion in export receipts for the country, data from energy think tank Ember shows.
That compares to battery earnings of just under $48 billion over the same period in 2024, and exceeds China's year-to-date export earnings from electric vehicles, grid components, renewable energy infrastructure and cooling equipment.
China is the global leader in battery technology manufacturing and exports, and is benefiting from a worldwide boom in demand for batteries used in EVs and power networks.

So it goes, and so it ends this day with the immortal Rowe ...




Always the details ...

I should have been a pair of ragged claws
Scuttling across the floors of silent seas.