Saturday, July 05, 2025

In which the pond is deeply bored by the weekend's offerings, and after a serve of Ughmann denialism, heads back to celebrate independence day with Baker of The Times and the bromancer ...

 

The secret to mindless propaganda is mindless repetition, a never ending murmuration by the hive mind, squawking in unison.

See how it works this mindless weekend.

Look first at the "news" ...



Just the usual aggregation of mindless moaning and whining, though a little below that the reptiles attempted a pathetic attempt at relevance, a desperate attempt to appeal to vulgar youff ...




Dear sweet long absent lord, he hasn't even been to Glastonbury?

... then turn to the "'leet" commentary.



The reptiles have already done Glastonbury to death, yet felt the need to import a Pom to do it all again ...

The Glastonbury epiphany: Death-chanting foot soldiers of new genocidaires
Let’s be clear – this is not a movement for peace, it’s a movement for war on Jews.
By Brendan O'Neill
Columnist

Actually, as a correspondent noted, you didn't have to look as far as that for antisemitic tropes of an ancient kind ...

Donald Trump has defended using an antisemitic slur during a speech, claiming he had “never heard” it used as an attack on Jewish people before.
Trump was asked about his use of the term “Shylocks”–a reference to the Jewish moneylender in William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice, who famously demands a “pound of flesh” from another character who cannot repay a loan—after he spoke Thursday at a rally celebrating the 250th anniversary of America’s independence in Des Moines, Iowa.
“No death tax, no estate tax, no going to the banks and borrowing from, in some cases, a fine banker and in some cases, Shylocks and bad people,” Trump told the crowd while praising his “Big Beautiful” spending bill, which the House passed Thursday.
Speaking to reporters after disembarking from Air Force One in Maryland, Trump claimed his use of the word differs from the meaning the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) describes as a “centuries-old antisemitic trope” that plays on negative stereotypes about Jewish people and money. The antisemitism watchdog called the trope “extremely offensive and dangerous.”
“The meaning of Shylock is somebody that’s a money lender at high rates,” Trump said, according to The Washington Post. “You view it differently. I’ve never heard that.” (*archive link to source)

What else? The worst of reptile minds - including our Henry - have already savaged the Yoorrook report, yet Dame Slap felt the need to do it all again ...

Truth is, in a single country Yoorrook a wasted opportunity
It’s a simple truth: the Yoorrook report fails to address basic needs of Indigenous children, but makes outlandish demands in serving the interests of the adults who drove it.
By Janet Albrechtsen
Columnist

Truth is, this sort of mindless repetition just helps lead AI down the pathway to reptile darkness.

In the same way, the reptiles have been blathering on about super for weeks, yet there was still room for another dropping of Pearls of Wisdom ... and ye sainted aunts and uncles, the man felt compelled to drag in a French clock lover for emotional support ...

Why Labor’s super overreach is a bridge too far for Keating
Paul Keating has long accused Coalition governments of trashing the superannuation system. His intervention over Jim Chalmers’ super tax proposal highlights the threat now comes from within.
By David Pearl

Snappy Tom showed a similar desperation by dragging in Bob Hawke, trading off on a familiar, suggesting intimacy and affection ...

Tell it straight like Hawkie and people will understand
The reform narrative out of the economic roundtable must be about the future of our kids.
By Tom Dusevic
Policy Editor

Tell it straight in crooked reptile la la land? Dream on snappy Tom ...

Simpleton "here no conflict of interest" Simon decided to invent an internecine war to liven up the hive mind's day ...

Albanese is rejuvenated, but his biggest threat might be his Treasurer
The success of the government’s aspirational reform agenda hinges on the relationship between the PM and his Treasurer.
By Simon Benson
Political Editor 

"Might be"? Come on simplistic Simon, announce a certain civil war. Conjure up a Cromwell ...

Was there any upside at all in this parade of reptile hacks, wannabes, never weres, losers and dropkicks?

Well "Ned" Kelly continues to be MIA, it being June 6th when he last disturbed the hive mind with Netanyahu is strong in war, but when does the peace come?

As for that climate science denialist, renewables basher and unreformed seminarian, guess what?




Here we go again, for the umpteenth time: Blind Milton could see net-zero is a lost cause, To measure the true weight of Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ words, we first need to decode them – because they are written to conceal.
The caption for a stock image that delights the reptiles: in 2024 the world burned more coal, oil and gas than in any previous year, surpassing the record set in 2023. Picture: istock
The ritual incantation: This article contains features which are only available in the web version, Take me there

The pond only regurgitates this crap because it's there ...

Words are the tools of public life, and how a politician chooses and uses them says a lot. Some words are designed to illuminate, some to disguise and some to deceive.
Communicating clearly should be the aim of anyone who works in public service. Sift the wheat from the chaff of a politician’s words, and you can weigh their worth. If they speak plainly, then you can benchmark their pledges against their deeds. In a subjective world, pointing to the gap between the two is often the only thing that still chastens them.
If a politician’s words are obscure or confusing, then the intent is to build a thicket of them and hide in plain sight.
That’s not to say that communicating complex ideas is easy. Sending a clear message from one mind to many is a constant struggle with language. How do you pick exactly the right word and put it in the perfect place to transmit meaning?
Nowhere is the search to find the right words more powerfully evoked than in the opening stanzas of John Milton’s Paradise Lost.

Say what? We're going to get a talk on climate science and renewables and the whole damn thing, and  the key talking point is going to be Milton? Yep ... Poet John Milton (1608-1674).



Why does the unreformed seminarian do it? 

Well he's completely clueless about the science, so best blather on in his own inimitable way ...

The poet begins with an exhortation to the Holy Spirit to “sing Heavenly Muse” as Milton seeks “thy aid to my adventurous song” because his ambition for this work is: “That with no middle flight intends to soar … while it pursues things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme”.
He prays “what in me is dark illumine, what is low raise and support” because he has a mighty purpose to “justify the ways of God to men”.
Milton’s words and his example are inspirational. How did a blind poet, who lent his voice to the republican revolution led by Oliver Cromwell and narrowly escaped execution after the return of a king, conceive and dictate the greatest epic poem in the English language as he set his sightless eyes on the heavens?
In dramatising Lucifer’s rebellion against God, his battalions of angels being hurled into hell, Satan’s defiant rise, the temptation of Adam and Eve, and humanity’s exile from Eden, Milton weaves a vast tapestry from the threads of Genesis, classical mythology, and Christian theology.
But at its heart lies a single, urgent question: how can evil exist in a world created by a just God?
Milton’s radical answer is that God gave angels and humans the gift of true freedom. That includes the freedom to defy God. It is why Satan’s defiance has a tragic grandeur and why the fall of humanity, though catastrophic, opens the path to redemption.
Paradise Lost is not merely a tale of rebellion and ruin; it is a profound meditation on the dignity and danger of freedom. As one of history’s great defenders of liberty, especially freedom of the press, Milton understood the peril that came with free speech.
You do not need to be a believer to admire the genius of Milton or to appreciate that attempting to justify the ways of God to men in blank verse is beyond the reach of just about everyone but him.
The only lesson here is that all of us should aim high in trying to express ourselves, and all should endeavour to use words to illuminate, not conceal. As Milton could attest, the truth will set you free.
Given the cause of most politicians is much lower than trying to explain the ways of God, the battle to find the right words to communicate thorny problems is not that high. A middle flight would be perfectly adequate.
So why do so many fail even the most modest of tasks?
Here, let’s descend from the heights of Milton’s poetry to ponder a single prose sentence buried deep in the text of a speech to the National Press Club by Jim Chalmers: “The global net-zero transition will also reshape our revenue from resources.”

It's beyond the furthest valley of caricature, so the pond won't attempt a comment on this meandering Xian effort.

At this point came the sudden realisation that the reptiles were trying to stay relevant by offering a repeat of Jimbo's National Press Club... on YouTube, a tentative step outside the hive mind...



The clueless unreformed seminarian eventually got on topic ...

This line didn’t attract much media interest at the time, probably because it sounds so bland. But is it? What could it mean? To measure the true weight of these words, we first need to decode them because they are written to conceal.
The “global net-zero transition” means, among many things, eliminating the trade in fossil fuels. Let’s assume that’s what the Treasurer meant when he used the word resources. For Australia, the fossil fuels that count are coal and liquefied natural gas.
Now let’s turn to the word revenue. In 2024, coal and LNG were Australia’s second and third biggest sources of export income, raking in a combined $160bn. That money creates jobs and wealth. It also helps fill government coffers.

Amazingly Sky Noise after dark has this Miltonesque clown on to discuss energy ... Sky News contributor Chris Uhlmann discusses the cost renewables are placing on energy grids around the world. “We have seen it around the world, everywhere you put in large-scale deployment of wind and solar – two things happen,” Mr Uhlmann told Sky News host Peta Credlin. “The grid becomes more fragile, and electricity prices soar.”




And so to a final, seemingly endless rant which the pond didn't have the heart to interrupt ...

In 2023-24, Australian state and federal governments collected about $28bn from coal and LNG through royalties, company taxes and resource rent levies. The flow of this cash is now directly threatened by the political decision to eliminate fossil fuels. That’s a big hole to fill.
That’s why the use of the word reshape is intriguing. Obliterate would seem more appropriate.
So, seeking the Muse’s aid to illum­ine what is dark in the Treasurer’s words, let’s recast this sentence as: “By agreeing to eliminate fossil fuels, the government has signed up to exterminating Australia’s coal and gas exports, which will shake the economy’s foundations and blow a multibillion-dollar hole in the federal budget.”
If the Treasurer had said this, it’s a fair bet his speech would have generated more headlines. The more literary among you might be able to render this statement in blank verse. Feel free to have a crack in the comments section.
His next sentence was: “This evolution in our revenue base is one of the reasons tax reform is so crucial to budget sustainability, on top of restraining spending, finding savings and working on longer term spending pressures.”
In a nutshell, this means the government is going to have to raise taxes and cut services to fill the yawning gap left by torching our resource revenue as we hurtle into the abyss of a permanent structural deficit.
Note the use of the word evolution, which makes it sound like we have no choice in abandoning our resources because there is a global Darwinian reordering of energy.
Is that true? Well, no.
The Energy Institute has just released its annual Statistical Review of World Energy, a publication that for more than 70 years – first under BP and now independently – has served as the gold standard in documenting global energy production and consumption across every nation and fuel type.

Hang on, that "first under BP" is too rich not to note. Please, carry on ...

And what did it show? That in 2024 the world burned more coal, oil and gas than in any previous year, surpassing the record set in 2023. That about 82 per cent of the world’s total primary energy demand was met by fossil fuels. That the rapid growth in wind and solar generation is not replacing hydrocarbons but merely adding to the world’s ever-increasing demand for power.
It also recorded that global carbon dioxide emissions rose again in 2024, reaching yet another all-time high. Whether you choose to deplore or ignore this finding does not change the cold, hard fact.
The numbers have their own eloquence and they don’t lie. They show there is no “global net-zero transition”. There is no evolution away from fossil fuel. There is an energy addition, as the globe consumes more of everything.
The world’s politicians have been committed to cutting carbon emissions for more than a quarter of a century. Trillions of dollars have been torched in the quest for this solitary goal. Trillions more are dedicated to the task and, measured against achievement, it is an abject failure.
At some point everyone will stop even pretending that this goal is achievable.
So Australia is making a deliberate decision to destroy its own revenue base and trash its electricity system in the process. This is a deliberate act of self-harm, with zero benefit to the planet. This is no small matter because energy is the master resource. Everything else in the economy depends on it.
The Treasurer needs to start making the link between productivity and cheap, abundant power. One will not flow without the other.
Everywhere, the lights on the government’s “transition” are flashing red. It comes in now near-daily reports of rising electricity prices, business collapse and the evaporation of green hydrogen dreams.
Australia is deliberately squandering its wealth in pursuit of a false god. A blind poet could tell you that we are on a highway to hell.

Truly, utterly pathetic, and if that's how the Ughmann wants to do his science, why didn't he revert to AC/DC for his highway?




Truth to tell, if you wanted to read about what's going down in the world, you'd be better off visiting an aged rock 'n roll magazine ...

The Worst Parts of Trump and the GOP’s Disastrous Tax Bill, The keystone of the president’s legislative agenda is a disaster for the environment, health care, and the nation’s dignity (*archive link)



And so on and on, but instead the pond wound the clock back a little and turned to Baker of The Times, celebrating King Donald by turning him into emperor Donald ...



The header: Imperial Trump shows how to get things done, You may loathe the man and think he is a menace to all that is good and decent on planet Earth, but from the simple analytical perspective of making government work he has no equal in the modern world.

The caption: As the US enters the 250th year since its rejection of kingship, what better way to celebrate than by crowning an emperor?

Making it work? The pond supposes that depends on a bizarro world definition of what "making" and "works" means ...



Okay, okay, the pond only went there because there were 'toons handy to offer some relief ...and there was a chance to rectify an omission and celebrate independence day with Baker of The Times offering a coronation ...

If politics is the art of the possible, Donald Trump is a political Renoir. Or, if you prefer, considering the artwork, maybe a Jackson Pollock. You may loathe the man, think he is a menace to freedom, democracy and all that is good and decent on planet Earth, but from the simple analytical perspective of making government work he has no equal in the modern world.
While Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour government toils ineffectually with a majority of 170 seats in the House of Commons in a parliamentary democracy once described as an elective dictatorship, Trump rules like a monarch in a federative political system specifically designed to limit the power of any one branch of government, where his party has majorities of just a handful in both houses of the legislature.

Never mind the pompous references to the y'artz, if the pond wanted to read about Keir it would turn to Marina delivering her usual Hydeing in Starmer's reno of the UK is going brilliantly. If you don't count the walls falling down ...

Speaking of brill, Baker of The Times finds it all positively brillig ... all mimsy was this borogrove ...

Consider what, in less than six months, Trump has achieved so far in his second term.
Small boats may continue to wash up on Britain’s shores in great numbers but in just five months Trump has in effect stopped illegal immigration into the US. The latest data from Customs and Border Protection show that there were 6,000 illegal border crossings into the US in May, down from 80,000 in May of last year and a monthly peak of 250,000 in December 2023. Deportations of those here illegally are accelerating. Daily arrests of suspected illegal immigrants are running at around 750, up from 350 on average in the previous decade.
The fanfare over his “Liberation Day” tariffs in April gave way to a quiet climbdown as he paused or cut most of the duties, and just as quietly, elevated levels of tariffs have remained in place on most imports into the US, radically changing the economic system. The Budget Lab, a nonpartisan economic research unit at Yale University, estimates that the average tariff paid by American importers today stands at around 15 per cent, up from 3 per cent before Trump took office and the highest level since 1938.
Despite this, and the panicked warnings of economic Armageddon that would follow such an embrace of protectionism, the US economy continues to grow at a fair clip. Yesterday (Thursday) the Labor Department reported another month of job gains in June - 147,000 - and the unemployment rate remained near its recent low of 4.1 per cent.
While the president has suffered a slew of defeats in court over the scope of his volley of executive orders on immigration, government spending, universities and other matters, he has won the biggest cases, affirming his unprecedented bid for expanded executive authority. Last week the Supreme Court ruled that a lower court judge cannot issue a nationwide injunction against a presidential mandate but can only limit his powers within a relatively narrow geography confined to the actual litigants. His opponents had been using such injunctions in effect to stymie much of Trump’s programme. Now that’s off the table.
That slender Republican majority in Congress has passed one of the most consequential pieces of domestic legislation in the past 50 years. No chaotic and destructive backbench rebellions here: just a few squawks of protest from some isolated Republican critics. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) enshrines in permanent law deep corporate and personal tax cuts (take that, Kemi Badenoch), makes significant reductions in welfare programmes (eat your heart out, Rachel Reeves), while spending heavily on defence and border security (how do you like that, Nigel Farage?). Though the bill adds trillions of dollars to an already heaving pile of federal government debt, the yield on ten-year US government bonds is down from the day Trump took office (can anyone say “Liz Truss"?).

At this point the reptiles interrupted with a snap ... New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani with supporters. Picture: Getty Images



The pond could match that with another celebration ...



Back to more celebration ...

His domestic political enemies are divided, confused and finding themselves increasingly tempted by a destructive extremism likely only to rally support behind Trump. To the alarm of more moderate Democrats, the most prominent figures in the party have been helping illegal immigrants violently defy immigration enforcement; denouncing presidential actions against the nation’s enemies, and defending the “free speech” of jihadi-supporting students and demonstrators. The party’s current leading figures in the media are a pair of thirtysomething self-described “democratic socialists": Zohran Mamdani, the party’s candidate for mayor of New York City; and his fellow New Yorker, congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
On the world stage, Trump has shown he is an eager exponent of the imperial presidency. His territorial threats against Greenland and Canada have, mercifully and predictably, come to nought. But his activism in defence and foreign policy has yielded significant results. Last week Nato members agreed to do what every American president for the past 40 years has tried to get them to do: significantly raise their contribution to the alliance’s total defence spending.

Cue another snap ... US Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Picture: AFP



The pond can match that with another female contributor to the state of the nation ...




And so to a final short celebratory gobbet ...

By ordering an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities last month, he demonstrated his willingness to take the sort of military action against the country from which his predecessors have all shied away. There is no sign of the end to the Russia-Ukraine war he promised, but Israel and Hamas seem to be on the brink of a ceasefire he has spent a good deal of time trying to organise.
There are plenty of caveats. While it’s hard to dispute that Trump has got so much done, we don’t yet know what exactly he has done. The effect of tariffs on the economy has still not been fully realised and may yet produce headwinds. The Big Beautiful Bill Act’s fiscal costs could come to worry bond markets and its political effects could haunt Republicans. The strike on Iran may have only increased Tehran’s determination to get the bomb. Ukraine could yet stain his presidential record. The authoritarian way he has wielded executive power may be badly damaging the foundations of America’s constitutional republic.
But for now, on this July 4, as the US enters the 250th year since its rejection of kingship, what better way to celebrate than by crowning an emperor?

And with the drollery done, please feel free to join Baker of The Times in the pot...



Is Milton in there too? And the Ughmann?

And so to the bonus, and unnervingly the reptiles clocked it at a 12 minute read, even worse than "Ned" and full of visual distractions ...

It was timed to go out on 4th July to celebrate the day ...



The header: With friends like us, who needs AUKUS?, Anthony Albanese is about to embark on an extended trip to China, where he will have his fourth meeting with President Xi Jinping. By contrast, he has never met Donald Trump. With friends like us, who needs AUKUS?

There was no caption for the truly pathetic collage, no doubt driven by AI slush, which meant there was only the usual incantation: This article contains features which are only available in the web version, Take me there

Why does the pond do it? Why does the pond always make room for the bromancer?

For starters, it's always a pleasure to see how deeply he wants to tug the forelock, bend the knee, fall prostrate on the ground, and kiss the ring, or whatever other part the newly crowned Emperor Donald offers ...

There's something nauseating about the spectacle, and yet entrancing, like watching a train go off the rails in slo mo ...

Anthony Albanese has achieved something astonishing for an Australian Prime Minister, only ever accomplished once before. He now knows, relates to and benefits from the leadership of the People’s Republic of China much better than he knows the leadership of the United States of America.
The Prime Minister is about to embark on an extended trip to China, where he will have his fourth meeting with President Xi Jinping. By contrast, he has never met Donald Trump, who served as president for four years from 2016 and who was elected president again more than eight months ago.
Albanese finds political comfort in Beijing and apparently political terror in Washington. Stop and stare at the strangeness of this reversal of all common sense and history. The last time this seemingly impossible inversion occurred was when Gough Whitlam, who very nearly destroyed the US alliance, was prime minister in the early 1970s. Whitlam was big in Beijing, detested in Washington.

It's all to do with the bromancer's desire to bung on a war with China by Xmas, which explains the reptiles dragging in Gough and Mao...Chairman Mae Tsetung meets with Prime Minister Gough Whitlam at Chungnanhai in Peking in 1973.



Might not it have resonated more if the bromancer had assembled four pests?




Sorry, it's a long trek this one, best keep trudging ...

The US is our closest strategic ally, in war and peace, in love and thunder, in values and interests, in life and death. It saved our independence and sovereignty in World War II. All our military capability depends on it.
The PRC, on the other hand, is ruled by the Leninist Chinese Communist Party. In the PRC there are no human rights, elections, religious or civic freedom. There is illegal occupation of islands in the South China Sea, Australians periodically taken hostage, frequent hostile and dangerous interactions with Australian military ships and planes.
Yet Beijing provides political comfort to Albanese, Washington perplexity at best. Politics here reverses reality.
These days, Albanese won’t utter any criticism of Beijing, even when its actions are illegal or hurt Australia. Yet he’s happy to tell the Trump administration to mind its own business on Australia’s woeful defence budget, though this directly impacts alliance capabilities.
Albanese ran in part against Trump, tying Peter Dutton to Trump. His senior ministers routinely criticise Trump policies.

At this point the reptiles offered even more bromancer, blathering away ...The Australian’s Foreign Editor Greg Sheridan says Australia has gone into a "monastic silence" on anything bad relating to China. “We are absolutely lacking credibility on defence and now Albanese won't say boo about China ever, never disagree with China publicly,” Mr Sheridan told Sky News host Steve Price. “He’s gone into a sort of monastic silence on anything bad that China does.”



Of course it's going amazingly well in the States ...



Enough already, time to dine on bromancer tears ...

Perhaps without even realising fully what it’s doing, when you take all its actions together, the Albanese government may be fatally undermining the long-term viability of our US alliance. If that’s so, it will be the single bleak achievement for which history remembers the Albanese government.
Canberra is telling everyone it’s trying to organise a meeting between Albanese and Trump. Albanese talks of getting together with Trump in the margins of a big international meeting, a Quad, G20 or APEC summit, maybe the UN General Assembly meeting in New York in September.
When it looked as though Albanese would meet Trump on the sidelines of the G7 meeting in Canada, senior government figures were glad it would be that kind of meeting, short, informal, unlikely to involve a joint media appearance, rather than a dedicated one-on-one in the Oval Office.
So here’s an acutely important question. Is Albanese now seeking or dodging a meeting in the White House? Either answer is disturbing, for no meeting is forthcoming.
If Albanese is actively seeking a Washington appointment and is being put off by Trump, that’s a startling and unique moment in Australian history. Richard Nixon and Whitlam loathed each other but Nixon saw Whitlam.
If Albanese wants to go to the White House and Trump won’t receive him, that’s a revolutionary loss of influence and access for Australia. Trump is undoubtedly challenging to work with, but this nonetheless indicates hopeless management by the Albanese government.
But perhaps Albanese doesn’t want to see Trump in the White House and is asking for a meeting only on the sidelines of some summit.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong recently raised the vexed meeting question with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Quad foreign ministers’ gathering. She reports Rubio expressing regret Trump had to cancel the appointment with Albanese at the G7 in Canada. Trump had to go back to Washington to handle Iran. Notably, Trump rang the Indian Prime Minister and the Mexican President to apologise for cancelling their meetings. He didn’t ring Albanese.

The reptiles again interrupted the bromancer... to provide more bromancer ...The Australian’s Foreign Editor Greg Sheridan says Australia has moved to a "third-tier" alliance partner with the US. “It’s a very shabby state of the relationship, the alliance is in the US interest as well as ours,” Mr Sheridan told Sky News host Steve Price. “We’ve moved from a first-tier alliance partner to a third-tier alliance partner. “Albanese was stupid not to go there before the inauguration.”




For reasons known only to the bromancer, he seemed to think Sir Keir showed the way. 

Perhaps he needed a good Hydeing before coming out with this sort of supine support...

If Albanese is scared to go to the White House, the contrast with his view of Beijing is striking. Albanese is about to embark on an extended trip to the PRC.
What would Albanese have to fear in an Oval Office meeting with Trump? Of course, Trump is mercurial and unpredictable. After the way Trump humiliated Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky, some leaders are scared of getting monstered by Trump.
Yet look at the White House success Britain’s Keir Starmer had. Starmer not only managed the personal dynamics with Trump well, he raised British defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP this year, committed to 3 per cent in the short term and 3.5 per cent within a decade. Australia’s stagnant defence spend of just a tiny tick over 2 per cent of GDP is manifestly inadequate.

So you fuck the country, but you get to shake hands with the emperor, and that's a job well done? US President Donald Trump shakes hands with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a meeting in the Oval Office in February. Picture: AFP



At this point the reptiles only allowed the bromancer a few words ...

In so far as Trump ever thinks of Australia, it’s positive. He has Australian friends such as Greg Norman and projects on to Australia a personality of rugged good cheer, sports prowess and can-do, pragmatic, sun-worshipping, hedonistic, patriotic, MAGA-Down-Under types. Australia is popular in the US, especially in congress. It’s unlikely Trump would set out intending to monster Albanese.
But Albanese may well fear Trump pushing him into some kind of commitment, something on the defence budget, maybe some remark about China.

... so they could provide a visual example of comrade Albo's perfidy ... Anthony Albanese and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in the Great Hall of the People in 2023. Picture: AAP



That set the bromancer off and naturally he turned to little Johnny to say what veteran liars do ...

The first question Trump would be asked in a press appearance is about Australia’s defence spending.
If Albanese is delighted to go to Beijing, the Great Hall of the People, the Zhongnanhai leadership compound and the Forbidden City but is effectively trying to dodge going to the Oval Office, there’s something very strange going on.
Former prime minister John Howard thinks Albanese has comprehensively mishandled the US relationship since Trump became president.
Howard tells Inquirer: “I think he (Albanese) has managed the optics of the association with Trump very badly, and you can’t separate this from the optics of the relationship with America generally. He’s allowed this to get out of hand. There’s really no substitute for the Prime Minister going to see the President in Washington.”
Perhaps Albanese should have gone to see Trump shortly after the President’s election, even before his inauguration. He should certainly have made clear his desire to make a bilateral visit to Washington. By trying to precisely engineer the circumstances of his first meeting with Trump, Albanese has been “too clever by half”, in Howard’s view.

The lying rodent's reward? A snap ... Former Prime Minister John Howard says Anthony Albanese has been “too clever by half”. Picture: Getty




Age really does take its toll, and the pond can feel itself ageing because next off the bromancer's block of shameless references is the disgraced, disgraceful Mike, still doing a rehabilitation tour in the lizard Oz ...

Howard says: “He allowed sensitivity over whether he could get a deal on tariffs to take over from the need to meet Trump.”
Howard’s point is that however annoying tariffs might be, the US-Australia alliance needs long-term affirmation and management at the top. Howard believes Labor’s unexpectedly large election win is leading Albanese into a false sense of superiority, causing him to seriously miscalculate on issues relating to both the US and China: “They (the government) run the risk of damaging the national interest. On China, they’re just paralysed into silence.”
Many observers are struck by Albanese’s silence over Beijing’s strategic behaviour.
Defence Minister Richard Marles, especially when speaking overseas in the presence of senior Americans, will very occasionally, gently call Beijing out. But Albanese, Wong and most senior ministers won’t say boo.
The PRC’s navy conducted live-fire exercises in the Tasman Sea without giving Canberra notice and disrupted Australia-New Zealand flights. It then circumnavigated Australia.
Albanese’s reaction was to stress that Beijing was behaving legally and Australia did the same thing to China when our navy sailed through the South China Sea. This was wrong on the facts as Australia doesn’t recognise PRC sovereignty over the islands Beijing has occupied or built in the South China Sea. But the cringing tone was the most telling aspect.
Chinese ambassador to Australia, Xiao Qian, wrote an op-ed for the Australian in which he instructed the Albanese government not to increase its defence spending as the US has requested. This was a blatant interference in Australian politics. Yet the only displeasure Albanese expressed was directed at the journalist who had the bad manners to ask him about the ambassador’s behaviour. Will the Australian ambassador in Beijing now write an article calling on the PRC to reduce its massive defence spending?
Mike Pezzullo, former head of the Home Affairs Department and before that a deputy secretary in Defence, believes the government’s strange silences on Beijing damage Australia.
He tells Inquirer: “The Australian government’s clear preference is to principally speak about China in bilateral terms (the stabilisation policy narrative).

Mike also gets a reward, by way of a snap, Mike Pezzullo says the government’s strange silences on Beijing damage Australia. Picture: Martin Ollman



You'd think Mike was an authority figure rather than a disgraced, disgraceful former cardigan wearer ...

On the bromancer went, and the pond trudged in his wake ...

“China also prefers this approach. This means there is no official discussion of regional security in concrete terms, in relation to questions such as: what is the risk of conflict, say over Taiwan; does Australia agree with the US strategy of deterring China from using military force; does Australia wish to see the US remain as the regionally dominant military power; would conflict with China inevitably draw Australia in, given the presence here of US facilities, joint and otherwise?”
Pezzullo continues: “The silence over these questions undermines our democracy, as the public is more reliant on government pronouncements in the field of defence and strategy than it is in any other area of public policy.”
The Trump administration has made clear Australia’s pitiful defence spend of 2 per cent of GDP, the same percentage as when Albanese first came to government, is inadequate and constitutes “free-riding” by a US ally. The US provides 99 per cent of Australian security. Australia provides perhaps 1 per cent of US security. The US spends about 3.5 per cent of its GDP on defence. Without the US, we are effectively defenceless. Without us, the US is still overwhelmingly strong.
US Under Secretary of Defence for Policy Elbridge Colby is reviewing AUKUS to see whether it fits with Trump’s policies overall. Colby has been an AUKUS sceptic, thinking the idea of the US selling Australia three Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines in the 2030s, when the US will desperately need those subs to balance Beijing’s burgeoning forces, is unrealistic.

Yes, it was time for the bromancer to go into full panic, abject hysteria mode, with an ominous snap, US Under Secretary of Defence for Policy Elbridge Colby is reviewing AUKUS. Picture: Getty




Immediately the bromancer buckled and wilted like a precious petal in the noon day sun. 

Was there a ring some where he might kiss, any ring would do ...

Recently Colby had a meeting with a senior Australian Defence official that went very poorly.
Analysts have speculated Colby’s inquiry may be a way of Washington applying pressure on Australia to increase defence spending. There’s another way of looking at it. Why would Washington give up three of its nuclear submarines to an ally that manifestly doesn’t take its own military capability seriously?
Albanese declares he won’t increase defence spending to please the US. It’s extraordinarily damaging to Australia’s national interests for Albanese to frame the issue that way, when everyone whom the Albanese government has commissioned to guide it on defence policy has publicly said Australia needs to spend at least 3 per cent of GDP.
Albanese, Marles and Wong all say Australia won’t commit to a particular percentage of GDP but will assess what capabilities it needs and acquire these.
Leave aside the dishonesty inherent in the fact the Albanese government has routinely itself spoken in GDP percentage terms.
The Albanese government did commission a report, the Defence Strategic Review, to identify necessary capabilities. Yet at no stage has the Albanese government pursued the capabilities the DSR said were essential.
The DSR called for ground-based missile interceptors to provide missile defence for key Australian bases and other potential targets. It called for asymmetric drone capabilities. More prosaically, it called for navy supply ships so our navy could operate further from shore, and for demining ships. The Albanese government has shelved all these capabilities.
Further, as the Australian National Audit Office made clear in a scathing report this week, it has become so penny-pinching it can’t even provide sustained performance and reliable availability for simple vessels such as the navy’s landing helicopter docks, our biggest ships. It’s tempting to attribute all this to simple incompetence and a level of political cowardice involved in being unwilling to divert any social spending to defence.
But there’s another interpretation consistent with the facts. Albanese may not have his heart in acquiring nuclear-powered submarines at all. By providing such an absurdly inadequate defence budget, Albanese makes it harder for Australia’s friends in Washington to justify AUKUS.
If the Trump administration ultimately says to Canberra, you need to significantly lift your defence effort or we can’t justify selling you nuclear subs, the Albanese government may well decide it can live without the subs after all and present the decision as sticking up for Australian sovereignty.
Politically, Albanese and co don’t want to be the government that lost the US alliance. They apparently believe the US so values access to northern Australia that there are no circumstances in which it would abandon the alliance. However, that’s an incredibly dangerous and, in its way, basely transactional, view of the alliance. You Americans need access to our northern air fields and Indian Ocean naval bases, so in giving you that, we’ve reached the limit of our contribution to the alliance.

That was a long one, but the bromancer did provide a little comedy at the end, discussing Emperor Donald and deploring "basely transactional".

As if the cantaloupe clown wasn't "basely transactional" and a master grifter and snake oil salesman to boot.

You really can't go past the bromancer for that sort of joke, as the reptiles interrupted a last time with their favourite snap of a downcast pair, Politically, Albanese and co don’t want to be the government that lost the US alliance. Picture: NewsWire/Martin Ollman




Even glummer looking than the Glums sounding glum on old time radio.

Time to don the spurs and ride the bromancer home in a last, seemingly endless rant ...

Wong is the strongest intellect in the government. In her speeches on the region she has a formulation that Australia seeks a region in which no one dominates and no one feels dominated. This is taken as opposing Chinese domination. It’s also a formulation that opposes US dominance.
But for the past 80 years Australia has desperately wanted US strategic leadership, indeed dominance, in Asia. Wong talks frequently of “ASEAN centrality”. Almost no one who says that, including most Southeast Asians, actually means it. But perhaps Wong does.
Australian officials have been known to say Australian policy should look more like ASEAN policy. This line of thinking actually goes back to Donald Horne and his 1964 book, The Lucky Country, and finds many echoes down the years in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
The idea is that Australia might keep the US alliance as an antique ornament on the mantelpiece but really become effectively quasi-neutral, accepting that China will dominate the region eventually. If there’s a conflict between the US and China, in this view, Australia just rides it out. This approach is not only dangerous and amoral but wildly unrealistic.
In one very strange speech in London in 2023, Wong explained foreign policy in Asia as a species of identity politics. The Albanese government is the first Labor government, since Whitlam’s, dominated by the left. Whitlam’s disastrous government was so poorly regarded that not only the US but also for a time Britain and Canada cut off intelligence co-operation with Canberra while Whitlam was prime minister.
Albanese and Wong both grew up entirely in the left, initially the student activist far left. It was a modern counterpart of the far left ideologues who dominated and destroyed the Whitlam government. Of course, both Albanese and Wong have matured and cast off their old views. But if you grow up in the left, you’re never attuned to thinking seriously about national security. It’s not part of the left’s intellectual DNA.
Labor leaders who grew up in the party’s Right, like Kim Beazley and Bill Shorten, pondered national security all their lives. Bob Hawke, Labor’s greatest post-war prime minister, had been on the Left but made a complete conversion to the Right. His defence minister, Beazley, and foreign minister, Gareth Evans, were in the Right.
The contemporary left view of international affairs is to see it as a battleground of identity politics. The US is toxic masculinity representing white racial hegemony and neo-colonialism. Israel even more so. Only a rejection of all this, and a Third World, gender-focused, anti-colonial mindset is good.

That last bit is deeply weird, but so deeply bro ...

iI's worth interrupting with the immortal Rowe ...




Eeek, it's a giant white whale,  or a giant squid, or perhaps a pile of useless blubber of the kind that can be found in an ocean garbage patch.

How the bromancer loves the beast, and wants to take it home, and slobber all over it ...

It would be wrong to think the Albanese government subscribes fully to this type of formulation, but it’s consistent with its weird strategic silence on China, fear of Washington, refusal to take defence seriously, cliches about ASEAN and instinctive multilateral woolliness.
Especially on China, this marks a disastrous evolution away from its declaratory positions in its first year in office.
Justin Bassi, head of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, thinks the US alliance will survive but the new situation is full of political danger. He believes our geography makes us important to the US, even if our defence effort is feeble, but it’s dangerous to let this breed complacency. 
He says: “It’s not going unnoticed that Australia is willing to be more critical of our strategic ally than our strategic rival. The principle of ‘co-operate where you can and disagree where you must’ (is) in China’s interests, not ours, because the ‘must’ shrinks to almost nothing. Australia should not be limited to criticising our friends because they won’t punish us. If we continue to avoid criticising countries that might coerce us, that’s coercion in itself.”
Historian of China John Fitzgerald argues similarly that “we’ve gone silent on China while we feel at liberty to criticise Washington”.
Labor may have imposed another wicked constraint on itself and on Australia. Labor has ruthlessly convinced ethnic Chinese Australians that any criticism of the Beijing government by the Liberals or Nationals is a criticism of them. During the last campaign Liberal frontbencher Jane Hume made a shockingly stupid comment about “Chinese spies” being part of Labor’s campaign. This was unspeakably dumb and deserved to be punished. Wong, however, immediately made a WeChat video accusing the Coalition of targeting ethnic Chinese. This video received 500,000 views.
Fitzgerald comments on the video: “Senator Wong’s response was cynical, playing on sensitive community issues for political gain and damaging public trust.”
The gobsmacking lack of urgency with which the whole Albanese government now approaches defence and national security could be attributed to incompetence, poor management, laziness, hubris, provincial myopia, domestic obsessions.
Frankly, those are the benign interpretations. For if it’s instead the result of considered strategy, our nation is in much more trouble than it realises.

Oh come on bromancer, we know the planet is fucked, and fascism is on the march, and you think the reptiles are the way forward/

Keep on with your delusional dreaming ...




Friday, July 04, 2025

In which our Henry returns to splendid ancient times form, with a kontribution from Killer kommentary as the bonus ...

 

The reptiles were exceedingly busy this morning with an astonishing three - that's a mighty triptych - sets of EXCLUSIVES at the top of the digital edition. 

Count 'em and weep...



The pond would like to say it has some EXCLUSIVES of its own, but all it can report is the delight at seeing the look on Maria's face as she hastily breezed past the latest job figures, live on air, because MediaIte was there first...Fox’s Maria Bartiromo Hypes Good Job Numbers About to Come In And Skips Right By Them As News Turns Negative ...

And the pond would like to report on The Art of the Shakedown, How Trump turned garbage lawsuits into a billion-dollar protection racket — and why corporate America keeps paying up, but Parker Molloy got there first.

Of course it would be wrong and inappropriate for the pond to suggest that the best way to respond would be to pirate anything by Paramount, CBS or any of the other output by the rest of the corporate shills keen to sell out news and truth... that would to behave like the gangster king himself.

As for the BBB, Krugman also gazumped the pond with Trump’s Big Beautiful Debt Bomb, The budget bill is both devastatingly cruel and deeply irresponsible.

The pond shockingly waltzed past all that to see what nuggets were on the extreme far right, and the pond can EXCLUSIVELY reveal to anyone not on the way to Mars with Leon that it was the same old, same old...



The pond danced right past the latest outing for the Australian Zionist News Daily ...

It can’t be ‘too late’ to stop normalising of Jewish hatred
When is too late to call out conduct that threatens minority groups? It was clearly too late when Jews were marshalled into ghettos and when they were herded on to cattle-cars that transported them to the death camps.
By Vic Alhadeff

It can't be too late to stop the slaughter of Palestinians. It surely can't be too late for the reptiles to stop ignoring what's happening in Gaza, but the pond sometimes wonders if there will ever be any mention of Palestinians herded into line to avoid mass starvation, and then picked off?

Never mind, the pond, prescient as always - the pond has picked up the habit of lazy self-promotion from reading the reptiles - yesterday suggested that the outing by by the lesser Henry, his acolyte Alex McDermott ,was just a warm-up for some bashing of uppity, pesky, difficult blacks by his master, our Henry, and so it came to pass ...

And so, after the warm-up act, to the main show, with the pond hoping against hope that this will stimulate flagging clicks and inspire much devoted commentary from adoring correspondents ...



The header: Yoorrook inquiry’s ‘truth-telling’ if not plainly dishonest is less than candid, Why then would anyone take this report seriously? There is surely a patronising element of condescension at work, as if we should not hold Indigenous Australians to the standards we would demand of anyone else.
The caption: The Yoorrook commission’s work is now over. As the Victorian government prepares to introduce a voice to parliament and negotiate a treaty, it will undoubtedly be followed by others. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling
The mystical advice, as transporting as a smoking ceremony: This article contains features which are only available in the web version, Take me there

Henry was right into it, and right into top form, as he often is,  ever since Hecataeus of Miletus set the pace for him ...

The most serious, and by far the most depressing, aspect of the final report of Victoria’s Yoorrook “truth-telling” royal commission is that anyone would take it seriously.
To say that is not to dismiss the sincerity of the many Indigenous witnesses the commission interviewed. Nor is it to deny that the encounter between European settlers and the continent’s Indigenous people was tragic, in the deepest sense of the word, as even the many administrators and settlers who were full of good will lacked the means and the understanding to mitigate its consequences.
But a commitment to “truth-telling” imposes weighty responsibilities, made all the weightier by the commission’s official status. For if there is a fact of life it is that the truth is hard to find, and once found, may be easily lost. Moreover, no truth is more elusive than that about the distant past, where the “what” and the “how” are frequently uncertain while the “why” is shrouded in the complex interaction of intentions, constraints and contingencies.
It is for that reason that ever since Hecataeus of Miletus – who, in the sixth century BC, prefaced his work by saying that the pre-existing “accounts of the Greeks”, which he aimed to supersede by a more accurate analysis, “were many and ridiculous” – the hallmark of Western historiography has been its incessant focus on historical method.
Fundamental to that method, as it developed over the centuries, is an abiding scepticism about relying on individual memory, which is an account of the past constructed in the present. It is, by its very nature, subjective; it may also be irrational, inconsistent, deceptive and self-serving.
It must therefore be tested, as must all the material on which the historian relies. And the historian’s duty is not just to rigorously test the evidence. It is also to scrupulously present any authoritative material that tells against the conclusion that is eventually reached.

At this point the reptiles featured a woman who has all the hallmarks of a Comrade Dan, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan gave evidence before the Yoorrook Justice Commission last year. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Crosling



Henry made a tremendously important reference, which might rankle some ...

It is those principles that differentiate “history” from a “story”. Both set out coherent accounts; however, only “history” can, in Leopold von Ranke’s famous phrase, credibly claim to present the past “wie es eigentlich gewesen”, as it had really been.

Indeed, indeed, and the pond waits impatiently for our Henry's denunciations of all those stories that litter the Bible and somehow are heiled by the reptiles as signifying Western Civilisation.

As for poor old Herodotus, who loved a good yarn, say no more, and the pond must also give up reading Suetonius, and his stories of emperors behaving in ways befitting behaviour in Victoria's early learning centres...



Back to our Henry, outraged, outraged he tells ya, at these bloody uppity blacks ...

But centuries of Western historiography are treated by the commission as if they had never existed. Cavalierly dismissing conventional evidentiary standards, it replaces them by what it calls “a profound assertion of First Peoples’ ongoing sovereignty over their stories, knowledge and futures”.
In its proceedings, it frankly states, “truth-telling was not about debate” – and indeed there was none. Nor was there any testing of evidence, presentation of contrary views or attempt to engage with critics. Comfortably ensconced in the realm of naked assertion, the commission found the truth because it knew it.
Nowhere is that more apparent than in its “finding” of “genocide”. Not once, in its 230-page report, does it define the term or specify exactly what was allegedly involved. Rather, its discussion bears out with unusual force Alexis de Tocqueville’s dictum that “an abstract word is like a box with a false bottom; you may put in what ideas you please, and take them out again without being observed”.
Thus, it refers at one point to a “cultural genocide”; at another, to “linguicide”. In both cases it blithely assumes, without a shred of evidence, that had the European settlers somehow acted “better”, Indigenous languages and cultures would have resisted the pressures of acculturation. In reality, everything suggests they would have disappeared far more quickly and comprehensively had there been less discrimination and segregation than there was.

Indeed, indeed. Why according to some foolish fops, there were only 123 Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander languages still in use, and of these only 12 relatively strong ... and yet some suggest that back in the day over 250 languages and 800 dialects were spoken...

As for cultural genocide, please give our Henry some time, he's still working on it, as the reptiles interrupted again with important IPA news straight from the IPA mouth, helped by devastating Danica, IPA Deputy Executive Director Daniel Wild slams Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan for showing “complete and total contempt” for mainstream Victorians for not ruling out the Yoorrook Justice Commission’s final report recommendations. “What this shows is that the elites in this society don’t care what you think, they don’t care how you vote, they’ve got their own ideology, and they are going to implement it anyway,” Sky News host Danica De Giorgio. “The fundamental problem of this report is that it comes from a place of hate … this is punishment being meted out by the activist class because Australians voted no to their divisive policy at the referendum.”



Please note that barking mad fundamentalist activist lobby groups of the IPA should in no way be considered part of the activist class. They're far too advanced in their activism to be included in a class.

And now for all those who love to hear our Henry spouting Roman axioms, just to teach those oralists a bloody good lesson, it's Roman reference time ...

To make things worse, the commission’s report is, if not plainly dishonest, less than candid. To take but one example, the commission cites historians who have examined the contention that there was a genocide. What it never discloses is that they largely dispute, often with considerable asperity, the conclusion it so starkly states. And it therefore never explains why greater credence should be placed on its conclusion than on those of others.
That is not history; it is tarted up propaganda. Having rejected the ancient Roman axiom of justice, “Audi alteram partem” (hear the other side), the commission assumes its claims are true, or at least useful to its cause, and on that basis attempts to clothe them in as rhetorically effective a form as possible.
Why then would anyone take its report seriously? There is surely a patronising element of condescension at work, as if we should not hold Indigenous Australians to the standards we would demand of anyone else. That is not just unfortunate; it is completely counter-productive.
To begin with, it incites the unvarnished arrogance that pervades this report. Why did the proposed voice to parliament fail? Because “beneath the rhetoric of reconciliation” most Australians “did not want to hear the truth”. The possibility that the proposal was ill-conceived is never contemplated, much less examined.
Even more important, the condescension encourages demands that are increasingly extreme and increasingly poorly founded. Why have the enormous, ongoing transfers – of land, of royalties, of public subsidies – failed to alleviate entrenched disadvantage? According to the report, because they just weren’t enormous enough.
The possibility that like all forms of crony capitalism – which flourishes where political insiders control resources and allocate them to their relatives, friends, and supporters – the transfers enrich a privileged elite while condemning entire communities to hope-destroying social pathologies is, again, conveniently ignored.

Did our Henry mention crony capitalism?

Why the pond has a cartoon for that ...



So much for difficult, uppity blacks to learn about the glories of Western Civilisation.

The reptiles offered their own visual distraction, another assault on those bloody uppity blacks, Sky News host James Macpherson slams the recent findings in the Yoorrook for Justice report. The landmark Yoorrook for Justice report into Victoria’s Child Protection and Criminal Justice Systems, released on Tuesday, made 46 recommendations based on findings gathered across 67 days of public hearings, the testimony of more than 200 witnesses and the contributions of 1,500 First Nations people. In their final report, the Commission found that serious crimes were committed against Indigenous Australians from 1834. Mr Macpherson said the report wants Indigenous Victorians to be treated as “completely separate” from their neighbours. “As members of different nations, with different rights and with an entirely different relationship to the government.”



Damn you dancing feet, trying to crush our Henry's love of ancient times and writers of the Montesquieu kind ...

Nor does the commission consider the risk that being gifted valuable mines, forests and fisheries will discourage, rather than promote, the ingenuity and effort that underpins enduring wealth creation and human flourishing. Transferring wealth is simple; what is difficult – and this is what the commission studiously avoids addressing – is making it possible for people to do anything without trapping them in a life of doing nothing.
It would, however, be wrong to blame the commission alone. It is the faithful mirror of a fatuous political culture that has for decades amply rewarded those absurdities: not because it cares too much but because it cares too little. After all, as Montesquieu caustically observed about “the class of superior people”, it is “a thousand times easier, and more pleasing, to seem good than to do good”. Yes, keeping up appearances is costly; but what is public spending for, if not to paper over society’s cracks?
The Yoorrook commission’s work is now over. As the Victorian government prepares to introduce a voice to parliament and negotiate a treaty, it will undoubtedly be followed by others.
But for so long as hard realities are not faced, rather than erased, Indigenous policy will continue its rush on the road to nowhere. The savage pity of it is that so much needless misery will be inflicted on the truly disadvantaged along the way.

If only Western Australia made available the sort of position they once offered to A.O. Neville, the Chief Protector of Aborigines, way back when.

Neville wrote a splendid book, with this excellent review on 28th February 1948 in the SMH, at Trove here, and it reminds the pond what a trailblazer he was for our Henry...



Please allow the pond to celebrate the advance of Western Civilisation, as we've moved from monarchs with unfettered power to monarchs with unfettered power, with this day the perfect day to celebrate the move for the reptiles' Faux Noise arse-kissing, forelock-tugging cousins ...




And so to the Killer kommentary for the bonus ...



The header: Let’s have some conservative home truths on free speech, In their understandable and noble desire to defend Israel, conservatives should be careful what they wish for.
The caption: Islamic preacher Wissam Haddad and his solicitor outside court. Picture: Jane Dempster
The mystical command, up there with the ones the long absent lord gave to Moses: This article contains features which are only available in the web version, Take me there

For all the elaborate preparations at the start, the pond must report the shocking news that the reptiles so little valued Killer's killing kontribution that after that one opening snap, not a single other visual distraction followed.

Why was Killer visually deprived? Did AI go on strike?

No matter, the pond plunged ...

Almost 15 years ago, conservative political forces erupted in fury when columnist Andrew Bolt was convicted of contravening section 18c of the Racial Discrimination Act over a series of newspaper ­columns that allegedly offended Aboriginal groups.
The hitherto obscure 1995 provision made it unlawful to “offend, insult, humiliate, or intimidate another person or group of people ­because of their race, colour, or national or ethnic origin”. That same law was used to drag the late great Bill Leak’s name through the mud over a series of supposedly offensive cartoons in this newspaper.
Calls to abolish 18c rang out across the land. From Voltaire to John Stuart Mill, there were a flurry of quotes pointing out that free speech, however odious, was a fundamental human right that should underpin Australian society. If you’re offended, toughen up. The law can’t be based on feelings, the arguments went.
The campaign revved up again amid ludicrous accusations of racism at Queensland University of Technology following the barring of three university students from an “Indigenous space” on campus. Thankfully, that 18c case failed.
All the arguments in favour of free speech and against 18c were as laudable and correct then as they are now. So-called hate speech laws are infantilising and deny human agency. Inciting violence is a separate matter, dealt with under separate laws with much stricter legal tests.
Yet I won’t be holding my breath for conservative political forces to mount a principled defence of the contemptible preacher Wissam Haddad, who this week was convicted under 18c for making “disparaging imputations about Jewish people” in a series of lectures in Bankstown in 2023.
“What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist,” wrote Salman Rushdie. The last few years reveal just how few genuinely believe in that principle. Free speech must include the right to speech most of us find repugnant. It can’t only be free speech for political allies. With the exception of NSW Libertarian John Ruddick, where is the soaring defence of former SBS journalist Mary Kostakidis, who is facing possible trial under 18c for posting on social media a speech made by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, along with some severe criticism of Israel’s prosecution of the war in Gaza?
The tragedy of October 7 and the ensuing conflict in the Middle East has highlighted a censorious streak among conservatives who are understandably sympathetic to Israel, the only democracy in the region. Yet cancel culture seems to thrive among certain conservative sections.
ABC journalist Antoinette Lattouf was cancelled following a fusillade of complaints against her from Jewish groups after she posted on Instagram a Human Rights Watch tweet that alleged Israel was using starvation as a “weapon of war” in Gaza. Hundreds of thousands of people around the world would have already seen the incendiary tweet.

Ah, there you go, the pond begins to understand. Apparently Killer didn't realise he was writing for the Australian Daily Zionist News, and so the reptiles decided to deprive him of illustrations.

Killer was on hand for everybody ...

US podcaster Candace Owens was barred from entering Australia last year over allegations of anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial, and this week rapper Kanye West met the same fate for producing a deliberately provocative song which anyone in Australia could listen to online.

Indeed, indeed, let's here it for Kanye...

The pond was reminded of the tragedy that sees us not exposed to the brightest minds of this American generation.

Why haven't we invited Lauren Boebert, who asks serious questions about the moon landing? 




Excellent conspiracy theories and we need more of them, not less. 

Facts change, and there are alternative facts, and as our Henry seemed not to understand, the bible is full of facts...

That’s why I love Jesus, I love the Bible, because that is truth and that is everlasting, and that’s something that will never change. God is not a liar, but you know, there is a father of lies, and the Bible talks all about him. And unfortunately, we’ve seen time and time again where politicians are in office and deceive the American public.
And so I don’t know, have we been beyond the Van Allen radiation belt? Maybe?
If so, I would like to know why it’s taken so long to get back through it again. But, you know, here we are, and we’ll see what Artemis and the Orion spacecraft have to do when they try to take a crewed spaceship back out there in just a year or two.

Back to Killer and he's still krushing it in his kommentary ...

“We have enough problems in this country already without deliberately importing bigotry,” said Immigration Minister Tony Burke. Indeed, Australia has for decades been importing hundreds of thousands of people from Middle Eastern countries who vehemently hate Israel.
The c-grade rap duo Bob Vylan, who most people had never heard of until this week, has had concerts cancelled by organisers in France, Britain and Germany, while the US refused to issue him a visa over his chanting “death to the IDF” at the Glastonbury music festival.
It was a stupid comment, but why should we take him seriously? How does it differ from anti-­Vietnam War protesters and celebrities in the 1960s, who routinely vilified the US military as murderers, rapists and baby killers at public events?

Indeed, indeed. It's an interesting point Killer makes. How does the My Lai massacre differ from Gaza today, except perhaps by way of scale?

Or were they an even match? Was My Lai just one of many massacres in Vietnam War?

In 1968 US soldiers murdered several hundred Vietnamese civilians in the single most infamous incident of the Vietnam War. The My Lai massacre is often held to have been an aberration but investigative journalist Nick Turse has uncovered evidence that war crimes were committed by the US military on a far bigger scale.
In a war in which lip service was often paid to winning "hearts and minds", the US military had an almost singular focus on one defining measure of success in Vietnam: the body count - the number of enemy killed in action.
Vietnamese forces, outgunned by their adversaries, relied heavily on mines and other booby traps as well as sniper fire and ambushes. Their methods were to strike and immediately withdraw.
Unable to deal with an enemy that dictated the time and place of combat, US forces took to destroying whatever they could manage. If the Americans could kill more enemies - known as Viet Cong or VC - than the Vietnamese could replace, the thinking went, they would naturally give up the fight.
To motivate troops to aim for a high body count, competitions were held between units to see who could kill the most. Rewards for the highest tally, displayed on "kill boards" included days off or an extra case of beer. Their commanders meanwhile stood to win rapid promotion.
Very quickly the phrase - "If it's dead and Vietnamese, it's VC" - became a defining dictum of the war and civilian corpses were regularly tallied as slain enemies or Viet Cong.
Civilians, including women and children, were killed for running from soldiers or helicopter gunships that had fired warning shots, or being in a village suspected of sheltering Viet Cong.
At the time, much of this activity went unreported - but not unnoticed.

Surely unnoticed by Killer? Oh it was a goodly war and the current slaughter of Palestinians, whether by way of mass starvation or the killing fields is a goodly thing if we're going to have our new Riviera by the sea...

Do carry on Killer, with your killing komparisons, and please allow the pond to celebrate because there's not one word about Covid or masks or such like ...

“Speech has consequences,” Vylan’s conservative critics would say, deploying precisely the same arguments the left makes when it seeks to destroy individuals’ lives over allegations of homophobia and racism.
Of course some supporters of 18c – even those who see it as a crutch with which to attack their political opponents – mean well, but it’s far from clear that the law improves social cohesion.
Perhaps tens of thousands more Australians have read Haddad’s disgusting views than otherwise would have; had no court case emerged, the fringe cleric’s racist tirades would’ve remained at Al Madina Dawah Centre in Bankstown, where he delivered them, perhaps shared online by a few hundred of his bigoted followers.
Equally, does anyone seriously think Haddad’s conviction has prompted a change of heart by him or his followers? In fact, it’s probably hardened their hateful views, which they’ll now promote more vigorously in private. In the case of Bob Vylan, they’re more famous than they could have dreamt.
In their understandable and noble desire to defend Israel, conservatives should be careful what they wish for. Following a burst of anti-Semitic acts earlier this year, the federal, Victorian and NSW parliaments ushered in a string of new “hate speech” laws to protect politically favoured groups with barely a murmur of conservative dissent. When tensions in the Middle East subside, these laws will become an even more powerful tool to attack conservatives in the courts, which has long been their real purpose. The new laws don’t only seek to protect Jewish Australians and other religious and ethnic groups from taking offence, but also the LGBTIQ+ and disabled communities.
In a multicultural society, individuals will disagree and even hate each other for despicable reasons. Litigating over hurt feelings is a shocking waste of resources. The bottom line is, as a society, we need to toughen up.
Adam Creighton is senior fellow and chief economist at the Institute of Public Affairs.

Yes harden the fuck up, it's all good in a post-truth, post-fact age...

All the same the pond was devastated because the pond has been hungering, neigh salivating for the chance to reference a certain Robert Malone, one of Robert Kennedy's minions.


A sample to whet the appetite, tingle the taste buds ...

Robert Malone has a history of arguing against the data. He has called for an end to the use of mRNA vaccines for COVID despite the well-established fact that they reduce mortality and severe illness. He has promoted discredited COVID treatments such as ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, dismissing studies that show they are ineffective against the coronavirus. Recently, he called reports about two girls in West Texas dying from the measles “misinformation,” even though the doctors who treated the girls were unequivocal in their conclusion.
Now Malone will have a leading role in shaping America’s vaccine policy. He is one of eight new members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, replacing the 17 former members whom Robert F. Kennedy Jr. relieved of their duties on Monday. The re-formed committee will be responsible for guiding the CDC’s vaccine policy, recommending when and by whom vaccines should be used. The doctors and researchers who make up the new ACIP are all, to some degree, ideological allies of Kennedy, who has spent decades undermining public confidence in vaccines. And Malone arguably has the most extreme views of the group.
Malone, a physician and an infectious-disease researcher, readily acknowledges that he defies mainstream scientific consensus. Just this week, he wrote in his popular Substack newsletter that readers should embrace the anti-vax label, as he has done, and oppose “the madness of the vaccine mania that has swept public health and government.” (This was only a day before Kennedy pledged that the new ACIP members would not be “ideological anti-vaxxers.”)
He is also openly conspiratorial. In his best-selling book, Lies My Gov’t Told Me: And the Better Future Coming, Malone alleges that the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative’s grants to news publications (including The Atlantic) were payments “to smear” vaccine critics, and accuses Anthony Fauci of fearmongering to amass power. Last fall, Malone and his wife, Jill, released a follow-up, PsyWar, making the case that the U.S. government is engaged in a vague but diabolical program of psychological warfare against its own citizens. According to the Malones, the CIA, FBI, and Defense Department, along with a “censorship-industrial complex,” have granted the U.S. government “reality-bending information control capabilities.” (They also claim that “sexual favors are routinely exchanged to seal short-term alliances, both within agencies and between contractors and ‘Govies.’”) They envision this corruption spawning a postapocalyptic future in which guns, ammo, horses, and “a well-developed network of like-minded friends” might be necessary for survival. Malone, who lives on a horse farm in Virginia, appears to be already well prepared...

And so on, and by golly he's better than a Boebert and soon enough you'll be able to read the Australian Daily Zionist News daily without throwing up your breakfast or having the sort of gigantic bowel movement that regularly fixates the immortal Rowe ...




Don't even begin to contemplate what comes out of that fundament, just take the stairs...