As the destruction in the middle east goes on, the pond would now settle for a little planetary destruction with some old-fashioned climate science denialism from the reptiles.
But it's not to be. The pond had wondered when the reptiles would shift gear and crank in to full blown warrior mode, and today was the day ...
Buckle up, it's going to be a big one, with so much material the pond was forced to abstain from comments, go into strip down mode just to fit it all in.
The pond has only one brief note at the get go, one short thought on the matter.
Should the federal government listen to the baying reptile mob, the bloodthirsty hive mind, and decide to get involved, it will be the last time the pond ever votes for Labor at any level of government.
The pond understands no one will notice or care, but thank the long absent lord there will always be alternatives to the beefy boofhead bashing immigrants, or an ALP inclined to kow tow.
Now on with it, with the bromancer inevitably leading the charge ...
The header: Albanese and Labor want to have it both ways on Iran; Labor wants to tell the Americans it’s fully supportive and participating, while telling its own party, Greens voters, progressive commentators et al that it’s doing nothing at all.
The caption: Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong. Picture: Martin Ollman/NewsWire
There's never been a fight that the bromancer hasn't wanted to send others to, and he was at it again, hauling out the white feather and using the "coward" cry ...
The government took a minuscule rhetorical step towards Donald Trump over the weekend, with Foreign Minister Penny Wong acknowledging the obvious – that the so-called international rules-based order, especially the UN, has monumentally failed, over several decades, to deal with Iran – its terrorism, including against Australia, its murders, its military campaigns, its proxy wars, its nuclear derelictions.
So, Wong said, Australia is supporting the US actions, though once more she couldn’t say whether the government thinks these actions are legal or not. Here, characteristically, the Albanese government is caught between its conflicting imperatives of cowardice – it’s too scared of the left to say the US and Israeli actions are legal, or if illegal, that doesn’t matter a damn. And it’s too scared of the Americans to say intelligibly that their actions are illegal.
Wong also announced the government was considering sending military aid to the Gulf Arab states to help protect them from Iranian missiles and drones. This will be another triumph of tokenistic symbolism shielding emptiness in substance.
All the Gulf states are better equipped than Australia in both missile and drone defence. The Australian Defence Force has almost no capacity in either field.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong says the Australian military may help defend Gulf nations as the conflict in the Middle East escalates.
Our navy frigates are too feebly under-gunned, and without effective missile defence of their own, to make any contribution. We could send one of our three Air Warfare Destroyers. Apparently only one is in the water. It would take a long time to get there and has very limited capacity anyway.
Or we could conceivably send a few fighter aircraft to help shoot down incoming missiles, though they have such small quantities of ordnance they would need to be resupplied by someone else.
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has earned savage rebuke from Donald Trump for initially refusing to allow the US to use UK bases in the operation, then repeatedly changing his mind and finally offering to send an aircraft carrier. Trump replied that he doesn’t need help when the war’s already won but he won’t forget. Starmer is imperilling AUKUS but what a triumph this is for Albanese. Starmer offers aircraft carriers and gets a bollocking, Albanese may commit a plane, a couple of blokes and a press release and hope to get a medal.
The most bizarre intervention, however, was Albanese confirming that three Australian sailors were part of the crew of the US submarine that sank an Iranian naval vessel but that they took no part in that operation.
Even more bizarre, Albanese claimed no Australian has participated in any offensive effort against Iran at all.
US President Donald Trump salutes as special envoy Steve Witkoff, First Lady Melania Trump and Attorney-General Pam Bondi put hands on their heart while members of a US Army team carry a flagged-draped transfer case containing the remains of one of six US soldiers during a dignified transfer event at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. Picture: AFP
Ah yes, that event ...
Moving along ...
By revealing the information about the Australian sailors, the government opens itself to legitimate follow-up questions. Did the three Australians stand down from whatever duties they were performing while the operation was on? Did they retreat as a group to the submarine’s mess room, hold a group hug and chant anti-war slogans?
Or are we getting some tortured, convoluted, bureau-quackery speak to disguise a reality the government is too cowardly to admit. If an Australian sailor was helping maintain the nuclear reactor but didn’t actually press the button that fired the torpedo, does that mean he didn’t participate in the offensive action?
Albanese’s assurance that no Australian has participated in any offensive action against Iran recalls surely the single dumbest, oddest, weirdest statement ever made in military history, when the Albanese government was earlier caught in a contradiction of its own multi-directional cowardice concerning Israel.
Defence Minister Richard Marles asserted that Australia sells no weaponry to Israel, even when Canberra was briefly supporting Israel’s self-defence against Hamas. Yet Australia participates in building F-35 fighter aircraft. Like many US allies, Israel uses the F-35 as its peak fighter aircraft. This led Marles to declare, with supreme fatuousness, that Australia builds “only nonlethal parts of the F-35”.
Which part of a fifth-generation fighter aircraft is not lethal? What duties of a submariner at sea in a nuclear attack submarine in combat are “non-offensive”?
Anthony Albanese. Picture: Martin Ollman/NewsWire
On top of all that, Australians are working to maintain and repair US nuclear submarines. Do we only do that before missions where the US promises to seek our approval in advance for whatever they might need to do? Will we stop such maintenance work so that we are not participating in offensive actions?
Then again Australia has long had personnel integrated into the US Middle East command, CENTCOM, and the Indo-Pacific command, PACOM. Most of these Australians are fully integrated into US operations, like our sailors on US submarines. They do line jobs. They work. They are part of the command’s functioning. Their task is to deliver capability. Have they all been stood down during the US operation in Iran?
Probably not, you couldn’t run the kind of alliance we have like that.
An explosion erupts following strikes near Azadi Tower close to Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran. Picture: AFP
So far, the Albanese government’s defence policy has embodied a kind of dark genius. It does almost nothing at all yet promises fabulous things in a distant future, about the time when an AI version of Leonard Nimoy comes back as Mr Spock in Star Trek 112 sometime in the latter half of this century. It then markets this bargain basement virtual reality as national security credentials.
Eventually, the government will be found out by its contradictions. In the meantime, Australia’s strategic position steadily worsens.
So General "Taco" Bonespurs is our saviour? Pull the other one.
Haven't we already seen where being on a leash might lead?
Having learned nothing from Iraq and Afghanistan, Lord Downer was also at it ...
The header: Carney and Starmer baulk and pose while Trump fights on;Western leaders are no longer unequivocal champions of liberal democracy and show no determination to stand up to authoritarians and autocrats. They just play domestic politics with international relations.
The caption: (L-R) Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, US President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer pose for a photo during the Group of Seven (G7) Summit at the Kananaskis Country Golf Course in Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada on June 16, 2025. Picture: Geoff Robins/AFP
Elbows up Canucks, this isn't going to be pretty ... stand back, and let Lord Downer show you the way ...
Western leaders are no longer unequivocal champions of liberal democracy and show no determination to stand up to authoritarians and autocrats. They just play domestic politics with international relations.
Not surprisingly, adversaries of the liberal democratic system take advantage of this fecklessness. Let’s take two recent examples.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney made a nice little speech to a joint sitting of the House of Representatives and the Senate last week. Canada is a delightful country, which I have often described as Australia on ice. After all, it’s worth mentioning that the acknowledgment of country was copied from Canadian practice.
In his speech Carney yet again repeated his Davos message that middle powers should look at developing new international rules of engagement. When you stop and think about it, it’s hard to know what this could even mean.
The truth is the Western democratic system of government, the market economy and the so-called rules-based international system have been increasingly undermined by a coalition of China, Iran, and Russia.
Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during his visit to Canberra last week. Picture: AFP
Canada spends a paltry 1.3 per cent of GDP on defence and is entirely dependent on the US for its security. What would Carney’s new rules do to end the war in Ukraine, stop Iran trying to dominate the Levant and eliminate Israel from the face of the Earth, and stop China stealing contested reefs from neighbours such as The Philippines and Vietnam? Of course the answer is absolutely nothing. It’s just posturing.
In Carney’s case, his posturing is tied up with the run-in the Canadians have had with Donald Trump ever since the US President’s re-election.
To be fair, the Canadian position is entirely understandable. It’s not that anyone would take seriously Trump’s suggestion that Canada could become the 51st US state. It’s more the tariffs the US has imposed on Canada that have incensed the Canadians. Fair enough, but that’s the genesis of the Carney speech.
And in any case he’s pretty robust in his support for American and Israeli action in Iran.
The second example is British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. He initially refused to allow the Americans to use British bases in the Indian Ocean and the Middle East in the war against Iran. The fact Iran is the most hideous, autocratic, homophobic and misogynistic regime in the world doesn’t worry Starmer. He is more fussed about losing Muslim votes in the Midlands and the north of England. At this hugely important moment Starmer and his government have done more harm to the traditional special relationship between Britain and the US than any government since the Suez Crisis in 1956.
What is more, Britain’s fecklessness has been condemned by the country’s traditional allies in the Gulf and by Cyprus.
Keir Starmer chairs a roundtable meeting in Downing Street in central London on February 23. Picture: Toby Shepheard/AFP
Well, this war against Iran is a tipping point. It will determine whether autocratic adversaries will continue to play with the West or whether their adventurism is brought to an end. Any Westerner with any understanding of geopolitics will be hoping and praying the US operation against Iran’s leadership is successful. So far it has been a huge military success, meticulously planned and with brilliant intelligence. The Iranians are now using just 10 per cent of the number of drones they used in the first day of the war and they have reduced the number of missiles they fire by 85 per cent.
The pond has avoided its usual interstitial comments on the illustrations, so tedious are they, but feels compelled to introduce the splendid graphic the reptiles produced for His Lordship ...
What a stunning summary, as in depth as His Lordship himself, still blathering on ...
The capacity of the Israelis and Americans to assassinate Iranian leaders is breathtaking. Of course the Iranian leadership will always be able to appoint someone else as a leader, but understandably such a person’s life will be on a thread.
That will make it difficult for any leadership in Iran to build public confidence and support, let alone fight a war successfully.
Donald Trump disembarks from Air Force One at Miami International Airport on March 7. Picture: Saul Loeb/AFP
Not only will this make Israel safer than it has been since its modern foundation but it will also relieve pressure on the struggling Lebanese government, allow Syria and Iraq to strengthen their democratic institutions, and leave the Gulf states prospering without fear. Of course the ideal would be if the Islamic theocracy sustained by the IRGC collapsed under the weight of public opinion. I hope this happens, but it may take time.
In the meantime the leadership of Iran will be coerced into more responsible behaviour, just as the leadership of Venezuela has been since the seizure of president Nicolas Maduro.
So looked at from afar, the current Iran war is the beginning of the fight back by the Americans on behalf of the West against the coalition of autocracies that has been undermining the Western-led international system. It is a relief that our own Prime Minister has supported this action, even if the Foreign Minister calls for a return to diplomacy. That is, of course, what has been happening since the late 1970s and that weak approach has led to war after war.
Oh indeed, indeed ...
Regrettably because of an overload of regulars, the pond had to consign Zoe to the intermittent archive, always a risky business.
Never mind, the sentiment was all in the header...
Australia is built on the premise that women, gays, atheists, Jews, Christians and Muslims are all equal, a premise Khamenei spent his life trying to destroy.
By Zoe Booth
Zoe managed to be incomparably insufferable ...
The tolerance we’re asked to extend to those mourning Khamenei is itself a product of a civilisation he despised: liberal pluralism. It is a specifically Western concept, with Judaeo-Christian roots. It grew, haltingly and imperfectly, from the Hebrew prophets who insisted the king was answerable to God; from Christ’s injunction to render unto Caesar only what was Caesar’s; from the long and painful Christian argument about the limits of temporal power.
Perhaps the pond can't mourn the passing of sundry mad mullahs, but perhaps the pond could mourn the c. 150 schoolgirls murdered in a US strike, which King Donald shamelessly tried to blame on Iran, despite all evidence to the contrary ...
What a pity they won't be around to enjoy the flowering of feminism promised by the complete destruction - annihilation and devastation if you like - of the country.
They'll be unable to share in the trad 50s lifestyle for women on offer in fundamentalist Xian circles, not to mention the love foisted on gays and atheists in the disunited States.
Is Zoe completely catatonic, completely unaware of the bigotry that continues in the far right? Or is she just another wannabe shifter of the fundie Xian dung?
Quickly moving along, inevitably the Major was also in full Zionist warrior mode, ready to get down and jihad ...
The header: Why Iran’s radical regime is now facing the seeds of its own destruction; Australian students and journalists think they are speaking truth by unthinkingly using the term ‘resistance’ but only because they have no idea what it means to an Islamist.
The caption: Supporters of an Iranian regime change rally in support of the US and Israeli strikes. Picture: Getty Images
This was a bigly five minutes of the Major's Zionism, and is presented unadorned by comments, what with nausea having long ago overtaken the pond:
Commentators in Australia discuss Iran as a rational state rather than a time capsule of religious ideas. Yet those religious ideas underpin the strategies of the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his predecessor, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini: hatred of Jews, the embrace of martyrdom, and rejection of modernity.
Its spiritual leanings persuaded the regime it had succeeded against US and Israeli attacks last June and was right to kill 40,000 of its own people in January.
Yet these same ideas also sowed the seeds of its destruction, from the moment the regime did a 2017 deal with Hamas in Syria to save ally Bashar al-Assad.
Tehran saw Yahya Sinwar’s “Al Aqsa Flood” on October 7, 2023, as a great triumph but it was the beginning of the end for Iran’s regime.
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, who was killed in October 2024. Picture: AFP
It dismantled Tehran’s Hezbollah after blowing holes in thousands of fighters’ trousers with booby trapped pagers on September 17, 2024. Then Israel went into Lebanon and killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah before destroying much of the group’s weaponry.
The Mullahs of Iran could not see their failures. In Australia, the ABC could not report what was really happening, focused instead on whether various attacks on Iran and its proxies complied with international law.
Why? The national broadcaster appears to abhor Trump and Netanyahu more than it does a state that has financed terror around the world, including antisemitic attacks in Australia last year.
Observers have expressed surprise that the local pro-Palestine protest movement, marching most weekends for the past 26 months, has not stood in solidarity with young Iranians from the Women, Life, Freedom movement.
This column reckons protest leaders – such as Josh Lees, an old-fashioned socialist – don’t want protesters to understand they are at odds with the Iranian aspirations. The dreams of Iran’s real martyrs do not fit the Marxist-Islamist-anti-Western thinking that drives the pro-Palestinian narrative.
Serial protester Josh Lees at a rally in France. Picture: Instagram
The Free Press on March 1 published an essay by Times of Israel’s political correspondent Haviv Rettig Gur, titled “This is how the Islamic Republic falls”.
The Arabic word “muqawama” means resistance. It is both “’the Islamic Republic’s greatest source of resilience – and the engine of its unravelling,” Rettig Gur argues.
“When used by the leaders of Iran or Hezbollah or Hamas or the Houthis … (it) refers to a sustained, never-ending campaign of violence accompanied by a willingness to absorb catastrophic levels of damage. As the damage sustained to one’s own polity grows, so the sanctity and religious meaning grows with it.”
Sacrifice is the ultimate weapon the weak can use against the powerful. Rettig Gur outlines the role of a Syrian preacher, Izzedine al-Qassam, who died in 1935 as a martyr outside Jenin in the north of the West Bank shouting: “This is Jihad, victory or martyrdom.”
His death sparked the 1935-38 Arab revolt against British rule and is emblematic for Hamas which named its key combat force the Al-Qassam Brigades and its most common rocket the Qassam.
Into this legend 1960s Palestinian intellectuals added Mao’s theory of guerilla warfare: “A militarily inferior force embedded in a sympathetic population could exhaust a technologically superior enemy simply by refusing to be eliminated.” Sound like Hamas in tunnels?
Palestinian intellectuals also adopted anti-colonial theories that gave the Algerian National Liberation Front eventual victory when France abandoned the territory in 1962.
The psychiatrist Frantz Fanon had joined the Algerian revolution. He argued violence was a cleansing force for colonised peoples that restored their self-respect.
Rettig Gur argues Hamas and Iran’s Ayatollahs believe: “You do not need to win … You need to make the cost of occupying you unbearable in moral, political and economic terms.”
Just as liberation theology in South America re-cast Jesus as a Marxist, revolutionary sociologists recast Shi’ism as a revolutionary brand of Islam.
Khomeini, leader of Iran’s 1979 revolution, argued “the weak are spiritually purer than the arrogant but powerful West – arrogant for its reliance on worldly economic and military power, arrogant for its claim that individualistic democracy was morally superior to religious dictatorship.
“The weak and humble, saved from this arrogance, can remain spiritually clean … and therefore enjoy the divine protection that makes eventual victory inevitable.”
Like Russian communism, the system contains the seeds of its own destruction.
The educated young of Iran see their rulers enriching themselves while Iran pays for weapons for Iran’s terror proxies.
Iran, with 93 million people, an educated population and enormous natural resources, has a smaller GDP than tiny Israel which has a population of only nine million and few natural resources. This is why Hamas’s October 7 pogrom was timed to disrupt the Abraham Accords negotiation process.
Normalisation of relations between Israel and the Gulf States would be a disaster for the Mullahs: Iran’s domestic protest movement is more interested in a better life than a better martyrdom.
Students chanting “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon – my life for Iran”, and “They take our bread to buy rockets for Lebanon”, know a lot more about real resistance than the keffiyeh-wearing pro-Palestine mobs here each weekend.
Somalian born former Dutch politician and prolific writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali on March 2 published a piece on Substack under the headline “Iran is collapsing, but Islamism is spreading”.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
“Iran loses ground. The Middle East turns, the United States acts. That is good news but pressure is not defeat. Radicals relocate. They find the path of least resistance … that runs through Europe. The continent’s legal protections for asylum seekers’ human rights … make prosecuting (them) nearly impossible.
“There are large, politically mobilised Muslim communities in France, Germany, Belgium, Sweden and Britain, and a political class that prefers the comfortable lie to the uncomfortable conversation.’’
The ABC should interview Hirsi Ali and bench international law experts like Ben Saul and Chris Sidoti who never seem to criticise Islamist terror.
Back to the opening sentence. It will not be easy for the US and Israel to defeat Iran in the conventional Western sense. While its Ayatollahs remain in charge they will simply claim even basic survival is a glorious victory while they keep the internet and media shut down.
Perhaps the Major should take a look at Israel, at the moment the prime perpetrator of terror in the Middle East.
Never mind, last and least, the cratering Caterist also returned in supine creepy crawly mode ...
The header: This is Albanese’s best chance to mend relations with Israel; For those of an optimistic disposition, there are hints that the Albanese government’s hostility to Israel may be softening in the wake of Bondi.
The caption for yet another dull photo, the lizard Oz's graphics department seeming to have gone MIA for the day: Anthony Albanese’s decision to put Palestinian sovereignty ahead of loyalty to Israel was a strategic blunder. Picture: Martin Ollman
The pond will leave the Caterist to his own devices in a moment.
The pond just wanted to take the chance to note the absurdity of the loons in the deep north (apologies to the sane ones who must dwell amongst the loons).
First a dash of Anne Twomey in the Graudian ...
Instead, it opted for an outright statutory ban, stating that a “prohibited expression” means “from the river to the sea” or “globalise the intifada”. Thrown out are the requirements that the minister be satisfied that the expression represents an ideology of extreme prejudice against a group, such as a racial or religious group, and that the slogan is “regularly used to incite discrimination, hostility or violence towards a relevant group”. This is problematic, because they helped tie the prohibition to the particular harm it is intended to prevent.
Stunning indeed ...what with the need to ban Likud and many Israeli politicians ... per the wiki on the phrase ...
...An early Zionist slogan envisaged statehood extending over the two banks of the Jordan river, and when that vision proved impractical, it was substituted by the idea of a Greater Israel, an entity conceived as extending from the Jordan to the sea. The phrase has also been used by Israeli politicians. The 1977 election manifesto of the right-wing Israeli Likud party said: "Between the sea and the Jordan there will only be Israeli sovereignty."Similar wording, such as referring to the area "west of the Jordan river", has also been used in the 2020s by other Israeli politicians, including Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 18 January 2024.
See the wiki for the links, see the deep north for the inordinate stupidity, because it seems that if the pond quoted an Israeli politician, it would be off to the clink.
See Haaretz ...
And Haaretz again ...
And speaking of stupidity, on with the Caterist ...
As two democracies with small populations surviving on their wits in often hostile neighbourhoods, Australia and Israel had long seen each other as natural strategic partners. But the meetings did not go well. After a day of unproductive discussions with Australian officials, including Defence Minister Richard Marles, the visitors gathered for dinner at the Kurrajong Hotel. Those present recall a mood of frustration bordering on anger.
Three and a half years later, it is clear that Anthony Albanese’s decision to put Palestinian sovereignty ahead of loyalty to Israel wasn’t just ethically incoherent. It was a strategic blunder, a rebuff to an ally we sorely need right now.
For the past 41 months, Israel has been testing and refining its military capability, culminating last week with a near-perfect operation in partnership with the Americans in Iran.
Richard Marles attends a Defence Science and Technology showcase at RAAF Defence Establishment Fairbairn in Canberra on March 5. Picture: AFP
As Australia confronts its biggest strategic challenge since World War II, the US remains as important an ally as it was in 1942.
Yet we can be certain that the next military assault on Australia won’t begin with the shrill scream of an Aichi dive bomber over Darwin. Neither will start with the supersonic crack of a Dongfeng missile seconds away from Garden Island. Israel’s war with Iran and its proxies and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have radically altered the strategic landscape.
Oh FFS, Darwin?
Ukrainian-made Wasp quadcopters, each with a 3.2kg payload of explosives, were packed in container-sized wooden crates and driven to position by unsuspecting drivers on flatbed trucks. Once in position, the wooden roofs were lifted remotely, and the drones took off and were guided to their targets using the open-source software ArduPilot. They communicated via SIM cards connected to the local mobile phone network, making them impervious to jamming.
Australia’s ports are equipped to handle more than nine million containers a year. Four out of six containers come from China. Which means that Chinese containers are being unloaded at a rate of six or seven a minute.
Two years ago, a prospect that one of them might be fitted with a remote-controlled roof that released a swarm of explosive-laden drones might have seemed like science fiction. After Operation Spiderweb, not so much. Yet our ability to counter such an attack is all but non-existent.
Rockets fired from southern Lebanon are intercepted by Israel's Iron Dome air defence system over the Upper Galilee region in northern Israel, on August 4, 2024. Picture: AFP
Melbourne-based SYPAQ Systems developed the flat-packed, wax cardboard drones that have played a vital role in the defence of Ukraine. So, it is more than a little alarming to learn that Australian universities have been collaborating with our adversaries on drone technology research projects.
Meanwhile, the National Union of Students and National Tertiary Education Union campaign furiously for an academic boycott of Israel, urging universities to cut all ties with Israeli institutions, but turning a blind eye to the increasing amount of co-operation with Qatar, which is accused of funding anti-Israeli activism on campus.
The government’s moral equivocation has contributed to an environment in which universities may find it acceptable to co-operate with Iran on highly sensitive military technology, while a research partnership with an Israeli university is beyond the pale.
For those of an optimistic disposition, there are hints that the Albanese government’s hostility to Israel may be softening in the wake of Bondi. The visit by Israeli President Isaac Herzog in defiance of opposition from the unhinged left, Islamic radicals and the conspiratorial right was evidence that the Prime Minister might be crab-walking his way to the right side of history.
Breaking diplomatic relations with Iran after the revelation that it had been sponsoring antisemitic terrorism on our shores was the kind of decisive act we feared was beyond Albanese’s capability.
His support for Israeli and US action is in contrast to his hesitant response to Operation Midnight Hammer last June.
Israel’s Ambassador to Australia, Dr Hillel Newman, has invited Australia to deepen its defence co-operation. Picture: Martin Ollman
Indeed, in a timely and welcome intervention last week, newly appointed Israeli ambassador to Australia Hillel Newman invited Australia to deepen its defence co-operation, including adopting Israel’s Iron Dome missile interception system and the new laser-driven Iron Beam air defence system. Newman canvassed sharing cyber and drone technology, too.
He said the presence of rogue states like North Korea and others meant that “you never know what will happen tomorrow morning. You have to be ready.”
It would be foolish to underestimate the gravitational pull of the progressive left when, after October 7, 2023, Palestine overtook climate change as its threshold cause. Neither should we forget the influence of the Muslim vote, which is shaping Labor’s immigration policy under a deeply conflicted minister. Nevertheless, the opportunity for closer military ties with Israel is surely too good for Albanese to resist.
Of course it's all in the detail, but the pond would like to honour the inspiration ...notwith the familiar one of pudding world being carved up, but with other eccentricities... as evidence that madness never ends, no matter how many follies it produces. Still, it gives the cartoonists fresh meat on a daily basis.