Wednesday, February 04, 2026

No way anyone can make a ditty out of "Ned's" pompous natter, and Dame Groan's needy whining ...


After a brief fawning over SloMo, the reptiles decided to throw the clap happy liar from the Shire under the bus ...




The intermittent archive is more intermittent than usual this day, but what the hell ...

EXCLUSIVE
Morrison’s men threw me under Brittany bus: Brown
In explosive Federal Court documents, former Liberal staffer Fiona Brown has accused Scott Morrison and his senior advisers of silencing her and destroying her career during the Brittany Higgins scandal.

Stop right there ...



Even worse, the authors?

Fiona Brown’s explosive lawsuit exposes betrayal by Scott Morrison’s office
Janet Albrechtsen and Stephen Rice

Stop right there.

For months now, the pond has considered anything soiled by Dame Slap as unreadable, and only reproducible at the risk of promoting brain damage as a lifestyle choice... 

This outing took a bigly thirteen minutes to plough through, or so the reptiles said, and the pond couldn't take it.

The pond is so far beyond matters relating to the Lehrmann scandal, as channeled by Dame Slap, that it took a considerable effort just to note this latest reptile venture.

The pond's ill-feeling towards Dame Slap was enhanced by her column this day ...

Europe’s decade of migration disorder a reminder Howard was ahead of the times
As John Howard’s prime ministership turns 30, Europe’s migration reckoning shows why his tough but fair border controls worked — and why elites ignore public concern at their peril.
By Janet Albrechtsen
Columnist

Could the pond summon the strength to indulge Dame Slap in lying rodent worship, with the bonus of bashing furriners?

Nah, that's way too much Slappingaround the head.

There's only so much bigotry the pond can stand ...

The challenges of migration – along with its costs and benefits – need to be tackled openly and honestly. When there is a vacuum at the top on issues that directly affect our lives, voters will look elsewhere for someone who speaks in plain English.

Actually the pond has always found French and Italian to be mellifluous languages, though perhaps an honest "bullsh*t" sounds more exotic in other tongues (*google bot aware). 

C'est des conneries just doesn't have the right ring to it, even when the besotted Dame proposes to be open and honest, while la porcheria sounds like an insult to a loved animal. 

Perhaps Sono tutte stronzate!" or "È una cazzata!"?

Whatever, the pond feels pleased that there have been other contributors to Australia than some Danish or Germanic blonde princess.

Luckily, after an extended absence (or so it seems) nattering "Ned" has returned to grind pond correspondents into the ground ...

With "Ned" clocking in at a mighty ten minutes, massive tedium and ennui was guaranteed. Here no ditties, no ditties here, and no hope either ...



The header: One Nation surge won’t save the right; it only helps Labor; Pauline Hanson’s surge is fracturing the centre-right — but it isn’t hurting Labor. History and polling show One Nation weakens the Coalition and entrenches Albanese.

The caption for the snap helping "Ned" promote attention to fake red hair:  Pauline Hanson’s One Nation is surging in the polls, but its rise is weakening the centre-right rather than threatening Labor. Picture: Dean Martin

"Ned" erupting about Pauline? 

Begin the great nodding off now ..

The eruption of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation to seize the polling lead from the former Coalition partners testifies to the fracturing of centre-right politics – yet the electoral meaning and policy consequences seem mired in abject confusion or outright denial.
There is no secret about the consequences. They have been on repeated display going back 30 years to the 1998 election, when One Nation polled 8.4 per cent of the primary vote and briefly threatened John Howard’s re-election at the famous GST election.
After the election Liberal federal director Lynton Crosby calculated that 67 per cent of One Nation voters came from the Coalition but only 53 per cent preferenced the Coalition in return – so One Nation operated as a net voting transfer from Coalition to Labor. A relieved Crosby post-election said Labor tacticians had seen One Nation as the potential “vehicle to The Lodge” for Labor leader Kim Beazley. Nothing has changed fundamentally in nearly 30 years.
Yet the setting is different. Our politics is far more fractured today than in 1998, disillusionment with the established political system is greater, and hostility towards the so-called parties of government is far more potent. Most analysts would probably think One Nation will poll higher than 8.4 per cent at the next federal election compared with its 1998 vote.
During the 1998 campaign, the prime minister was campaigning outside Gladesville Public School in his electorate when a One Nation worker said to him: “I hope you win.” An exasperated Howard pointed to the preference recommendation against him in his own seat and asked: “Well, what are you doing this for?” The One Nation worker said he had to follow the preference allocation against sitting MPs. Howard shot back: “How can you do this and say you want me to get back?” He felt there was a collective madness at work.
The collective madness is still at work, only on a much greater scale.

Hang on, hang on, isn't it just the collective madness cultivated by the reptiles in the hive mind?



Carry on ...

It is on display every day scattered across the right-wing media and social media in this country. The right-wing shock jocks and their legions on social media loathe the Albanese government while praising and promoting Pauline Hanson; the assumption being that “shaking up our politics” as exemplified by Hanson’s surge is the best way to threaten or destroy the dominance of Anthony Albanese.
The argument is fallacious. Backing in the Hanson vote has two sure impacts – it weakens the centre-right of politics and it helps to consolidate Albanese. Have you watched Albanese’s response? He can hardly believe his good fortune. The right-wing support for Hanson isn’t hurting Albanese, it’s helping him. It’s a rare event when your enemies are helping you, but Labor today benefits from that rare event.
If you want to grasp the madness engulfing the centre-right in this country, here is a good place to start. One Nation is a catalyst for centre-right disruption, which cynics would brand as panic. It contributes to the devastating loss of confidence within the right, it exposes the weaknesses of Sussan Ley and, in particular, David Littleproud as leaders, it was the sinister chorus to the busting of the Coalition, and it accentuates the political civil war within the right wing over policy and belief.

What's profoundly disturbing isn't "Ned's"usual level of hysteria so much as the parsimonious way the reptiles only managed to interrupt with just three snaps, starting with this anodyne one, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, whose Labor government continues to benefit from preference flows as One Nation rises. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman



Perhaps the reptiles thought that the smirk would set "Ned" off, but does he really need that sort of prop? 



Surely his desire to parade his preening pompous portentousness is a enough of a motiviation ...

Its real impact is revealed in the recent Newspolls and the Financial Review Redbridge/Accent Research poll that show despite the doubling and then tripling of One Nation’s primary vote, Labor’s overall lead on the two-party-preferred vote – the vote that counts – has either increased or been maintained from its huge May 2025 election victory.
The message is clear: Hanson’s revolution is primarily a vote transfer within centre-right politics against the Liberal and National parties and not a vote transfer from Labor to the centre-right. It is a crisis for the right, not a crisis for Labor.
Consider Newspoll over September to November last year when Hanson’s vote rose to the 11-15 per cent zone. At the same time Labor’s two-party-preferred lead surged to a massive 57-58 per cent to 43-42 per cent for the Coalition.
In the January poll, influenced by the Bondi massacre that saw Labor’s primary vote fall to 32 per cent while One Nation rose to 22 per cent (just ahead of the Coalition), Labor’s two-party-preferred lead was still the same as the May 2025 election. As the Bondi factor fades and Labor’s primary support rises again, the Albanese government’s two-party-preferred vote will lift again – and remember, such increases come on top of Labor’s greatest-ever result in 2025.
Consider the Financial Review poll this week that had One Nation’s vote at a mammoth 26 per cent compared with a dismal Coalition outcome at 19 per cent – yet Labor’s two-party-preferred lead was an immense 56-44 per cent, a better result than Labor secured at its 2025 victory. This was despite Hanson having the best favourability rating of any political leader – her net favourability was minus three, with Albanese at minus 10 and Ley at minus 32. The lesson: the higher Hanson goes, the more the Coalition falls and the stronger Albanese gets via the preference system.
Optimists arguing that the combined Liberal, National and One Nation primary vote shows the centre-right is threatening Labor are running a phony proposition. As explained by analyst Antony Green on his blog, it’s all about preferences. Labor enjoys Green preferences running at around 85 per cent or higher, and that’s entrenched over time. One Nation preferences to the Coalition parties don’t remotely match this. Historically, they have been in the 50s but at the 2025 election they reached 74.5 per cent, not enough to prevent a Coalition election wipe-out.
Green highlights the related problem – One Nation preferences to the Coalition parties are higher in Liberal and National seats, not in Labor seats they need to win. Here’s the arithmetic fact: the only way the rise of One Nation can become a centre-right plus is to achieve a much higher preference flow between the Hanson party and the former Coalition parties – and there is no sign of this happening.
Unfortunately, there is precious little satire about our politics today. Pity. One Nation invites satire as being a retirement centre for political has-beens and failures. It is the home for Hanson’s last grasp, for Barnaby Joyce in his desperate self-interested quest to stay relevant, and for the long forgotten Cory Bernardi, surely giddy from his repeated changes of allegiance.

Hang on, hang on, didn't the oscillating fan once welcome Barners back in the lizard Oz in Barnaby Joyce's detractors are blinded by their disdain for the man?

Wasn't Tamworth's ineradicable shame once celebrated by the bromancer?





How the glory days have gone ...

Let’s confront the brutal truths. One Nation is not strong enough to have any role in executive government but it is strong enough to deny executive government to the former Coalition parties. It remains a grievance lobby and its recent success is driven by the rise of multiple grievances, notably anger about the divisions and ineptitude within the Liberal and National parties. It has no viable policies for office, but thrives on branding and slogans, thereby exploiting the demise of our national policy conversation while it seeks to leverage the alarming gulf between regional and urban Australia.
The prospect of a transformed centre-right with three parties – Liberal, One Nation and National – contains grave dangers for the country. It means One Nation looms larger on the centre-right in power, media and symbolic terms. It will compromise and contaminate the centre-right. While conservatives will declare centre-right voters are becoming more conservative, much of urban Australia will look at a Hanson-influenced centre-right and say “no thanks”.

Let's confront the brutal truth. 

The pond is only in this because it put a motza on the lettuce, and now we're into February and the lettuce is badly wilting, and Susssan is feeling the power of "s", Coalition leaders Sussan Ley, pictured, and David Littleproud face mounting pressure as One Nation siphons votes from the centre-right. Picture: Thomas Lisson



The poor lettuce, fancy knowing your hopes had faded to the point where the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way was your last hope...



Why it's a fate worse than that of a whale stranded on the Hume highway, and exposed to fiendish windmills.

Sadly, that was the last visual distraction, and yet somehow "Ned" seemed to think that the pond should join the hive mind and care about the fate of a party that in recent years had tossed up an NBN harming Malware, an onion muncher gone nuts for knights, and a clap happy liar from the shire as ways to ruin the country?

With a shrug, with a gesture of bewilderment and sense of loss, the pond realised it had nowhere to go but "Ned's" verbiage ...without even the distraction of a giant-sized popcorn bucket needed while watching a movie about Melania... the saltier, the butterier, the more heart-attack inducing, the better ...

The Liberals will not survive unless they regain seats in urban Australia, and the higher the One Nation profile, the more Hanson looks a rival conservative leader, the more the Liberals will be contaminated in a centre-right troika where they need to separate themselves from Hanson yet also win back the voters they have lost.
Reconstituting a viable Coalition, if possible, is one of many steps needed to salvage centre-right politics.
There is no secret about the consequences. They have been on repeated display going back 30 years to the 1998 election when One Nation polled 8.4 per cent of the primary vote and briefly threatened John Howard’s re-election at the famous GST election.
After the election Liberal Federal Director, Lynton Crosby, calculated that 67 per cent of One Nation voters came from the Coalition but only 53 per cent preferenced the Coalition in return – so One Nation operated as a net voting transfer from Coalition to Labor. A relieved Crosby post-election said Labor tacticians had seen One Nation as the potential “vehicle to the Lodge” for Labor leader, Kim Beazley. Nothing has changed fundamentally in nearly 30 years.
Yet the setting is different. Our politics is far more fractured today than in 1998, disillusionment with the established political system is greater and hostility towards the so-called parties of government is far more potent. Most analysts would probably think One Nation will poll higher than 8.4 per cent at the next federal election compared with its 1998 vote.
During the 1998 campaign the prime minister was campaigning outside Gladesville public school in his electorate when a One Nation worker said to him: “I hope you win.” An exasperated Howard pointed to the preference recommendation against him in his own seat and asked: “Well, what are you doing this for?” The One Nation worker said he had to follow the preference allocation against sitting MPs. Howard shot back: “How can you do this and say you want me to get back?” He felt there was a collective madness at work.
The collective madness is still at work, only on a much greater scale.
It is on display every day scattered across the right-wing media and social media in this country. The right-wing shock jocks and their legions on social media loath the Albanese government while praising and promoting Pauline Hanson, the assumption being that “shaking up our politics” as exemplified by Hanson’s surge is the best way to threaten or destroy the dominance of Anthony Albanese.
The argument is fallacious. Backing in the Hanson vote has two sure impacts – it weakens the centre-right of politics and it helps to consolidate Albanese. Have you watched Albanese’s response? He can hardly believe his good fortune. The right-wing support for Hanson isn’t hurting Albanese, it’s helping him. It’s a rare event when your enemies are helping you, but Labor today benefits from that rare event.
If you want to grasp the madness engulfing the centre-right in this country, here is a good place to start. One Nation is a catalyst for centre-right disruption, which cynics would brand as panic. It contributes to the devastating loss of confidence within the right, it exposes the weaknesses of Sussan Ley and, in particular, David Littleproud as leaders, it was the sinister chorus to the busting of the Coalition and it accentuates the political civil war within the right-wing over policy and belief.
Its real impact is revealed in the recent Newspolls and the Financial Review Redbridge/Accent Research poll that show despite the doubling and then tripling of One Nation’s primary vote, Labor’s overall lead on the two-party preferred vote – the vote that counts – has either increased or been maintained from its huge May 2025 election victory.
The message is clear: Hanson’s revolution is primarily a vote transfer within centre-right politics against the Liberal and National parties and not a vote transfer from Labor to the centre-right. It is a crisis for the right, not a crisis for Labor.
Consider Newspoll over September to November last year when Hanson’s vote rose to the 11-15 per cent zone. At the same time Labor’s two-party preferred lead surged to a massive 57-58 per cent to 43-42 per cent for the Coalition.
In the January poll, influenced by the Bondi massacre that saw Labor’s primary vote fall to 32 per cent while One Nation rose to 22 per cent (just ahead of the Coalition) Labor’s two-party preferred lead was still the same as the May 2025 election. As the Bondi factor fades and Labor’s primary rises again, the Albanese government’s two-party preferred vote will lift again – and remember such increases come on top of Labor’s greatest ever 2025 result.
Consider the Financial Review poll this week that had One Nation’s vote at a mammoth 26 per cent compared with a dismal Coalition outcome at 19 per cent – yet Labor’s two-party preferred lead was an immense 56-44 per cent, a better result than Labor secured at its 2025 victory. This was despite Hanson having the best favourability rating of any political leader – her net favourability was minus 3, with Albanese at minus 10 and Ley at minus 32. The lesson: the higher Hanson goes, the more the Coalition falls and the stronger Albanese gets via the preference system.
Optimists arguing that the combined Liberal, National and One Nation primary vote shows the centre-right is threatening Labor are running a phony proposition. As explained by analyst Antony Green on his blog, it’s all about preferences. Labor enjoys Green preferences running at around 85 per cent or higher and that’s entrenched over time. One Nation preferences to the Coalition parties don’t remotely match this. Historically they have been in the 50s but at the 2025 election they reached 74.5 per cent, not enough to prevent a Coalition election wipe-out.
Green highlights the related problem – One Nation preferences to the Coalition parties are higher in Liberal and National seats, not in Labor seats they need to win. Here’s the arithmetic fact: the only way the rise of One Nation can become a centre-right plus is to achieve a much higher preference flow between the Hanson party and the former Coalition parties – and there is no sign of this happening.
Unfortunately, there is precious little satire about our politics today. Pity. One Nation invites satire as being a retirement centre for political has-beens and failures. It is the home for Hanson’s last gasp, for Barnaby Joyce in his desperate self-interested quest to stay relevant and for the long forgotten, Cory Bernardi, surely giddy from his repeated changes of allegiance.
Let’s confront the brutal truths. One Nation is not strong enough to have any role in executive government but it is strong enough to deny executive government to the former Coalition parties. It remains a grievance lobby and its recent success is driven by the rise of multiple grievances, notably anger about the divisions and ineptitude within the Liberal and National parties. It has no viable policies for office, but thrives on branding and slogans thereby exploiting the demise of our national policy conversation while it seeks to leverage the alarming gulf between regional and urban Australia.
The prospect of a transformed centre-right with three parties – Liberal, One Nation and National – contains grave dangers for the country. It means One Nation looms larger on the centre-right in power, media and symbolic terms. It will compromise and contaminate the centre-right. While conservatives will declare centre-right voters are becoming more conservative much of urban Australia will look at a Hanson-influenced centre-right and say “no thanks”.
The Liberals will not survive unless they regain seats in urban Australia and the higher the One Nation profile, the more Hanson looks as a rival conservative leader, the more the Liberals will be contaminated in a centre-right troika where they need to separate themselves from Hanson yet also win back the voters they have lost. Reconstituting a viable Coalition, if possible, is one of many steps needed to salvage centre-right politics.

Sheesh, there goes the pond's ratings for the day.

Done and dusted ... but try to cobble a ditty out of that bulk-sized serve of malarkey...

What a dismal life it is for the pond these days.

The reptiles at last turned to the Epstein files, but only because they could have a go at Mandelson and former prince Andy, and then only via "agencies", when the Graudian is handing this sort of stuff out for free ...

And the late night comics have been making a meal of it all on YouTube ...




At last a chance for some revenge on the indignities suffered over the years at the hands of Microsoft, but what's taking the punishing of Apple so long?

The pond wouldn't like punters to reel away as empty handed as their heads must be feeling...

The pond was tempted by an amazing gif accompanying Mattie's yarn, featuring oodles of cash splashing and a rotating Jimbo ...




It turned out it was all AI slop front and no house, and just two minutes of blather ...

Jim’s two big goals and one big headache
The Reserve Bank has shattered Jim Chalmers’ economic credibility, forecasting the exact opposite of what the Treasurer promised to deliver this year.
By Matthew Cranston
Economics Correspondent

Uncredited AI slop surely has a place in the world, but in the end the pond decided to pass ... let the intermittent archive deal with that (but sorry, no epic gif in the archive).

Ditto the bouffant one attempting to do a "Ned" ...in just two feeble minutes ..

The Coalition had the rate rise, but Labor had the last laugh
A rate rise on the first scheduled sitting day for 2026 was a reprieve for the opposition. Yet the depth of frustration, anger and desperation in the Liberal ranks left Labor, incredibly, with a parliamentary win.
By Dennis Shanahan

The bouffant one was bitter ...

...the depth of frustration, anger and desperation in the Liberal ranks managed to overshadow what Ley and Littleproud tried, and left Labor, incredibly, with a parliamentary win on tone, tactics and strategy.
Voters will know what has happened and Labor is quietly fearful but the Liberal and Nationals’ MPs continue to be so distracted and divided that public disappointment with Albanese will not transfer to Ley/Littleproud and their cohorts.
Ley’s aggression earned her a sharp rebuke from Speaker Milton Dick for abusing her privileges and showing disrespect for him and the parliament.
The Liberals and Nationals asked the same questions and in what Chalmers described as an act of desperation, Ley tried to drag the Treasury secretary into the rate rise fight.
Ley started on the script by asking Albanese about the expected rate rise but the “new” reality became clear when the second non-Labor question came from independent Zali Steggall – who holds the seat of former Liberal PM Tony Abbott – and was not about interest rates but domestic violence.
The Liberal leader, exercising a claim on “indulgence” to respond in a bipartisan way on a sensitive topic – such as domestic violence, which Peter Dutton always did – earned the ire of the Speaker when she used it to take a political pot shot.
“It’s completely disrespectful to me, but it’s disrespectful to the house,” Dick said.
In a house where the Liberals are outnumbered by those on the crossbench and facing a government with a huge majority, it is necessary to at least keep the Speaker on side.
Under no pressure, Albanese and Chalmers batted away the questions using historical economic comparisons and would not be forced to talk about the future.
Embarrassingly, as Albanese extended question time to bleed out the opposition, Ley asked about the role of the Treasury secretary at the RBA board meeting on interest rates – a role the secretary fulfils as a Treasury representative and has done so for years – including under the Morrison government.
Chalmers described it as an act of “desperation” and “entirely inappropriate”.
On a day when treasurers are whipped and beaten, Chalmers was able to adopt the high moral ground.
Albanese, Chris Bowen and Mark Butler treated the opposition with humorous contempt. But voters just won’t get the joke.

The depth of frustration, anger and desperation the bouffant one was mildly entertaining, but sorry, the pond doesn't get out of bed unless it's a Très Difficile or grade VI "Ned" Everest climb...

On the other hand, the pond will always make room for Dame Groan and her groans and sighs...



The header: Rate decision raises questions over not just Jim Chalmers, but Michele Bullock too; As Jim Chalmers seeks to avoid taking any blame for rate rise, it’s now at the point of questioning whether Michele Bullock was really a good choice for the top job at the central bank.

The caption for yet another snap savaging: Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock on Tuesday. Picture: NewsWire

To be sure to be sure, Dame Groan was in fine form, even though it was just a three minute squawk which struggled to get up to the level of a decent groan:

It shows the desperation of Treasurer Jim Chalmers to avoid taking any blame for the rise in the cash rate that he would reference the statement by the Monetary Policy Board.
No specific mention there of the role played by excessive government spending, so he’s off the hook, or so he thinks.
He’s like the boy in the orchard stealing apples. By hiding them behind his back, he thinks he won’t be caught. Who, me? he declares. It’s just no one believes him.
I’m pretty sure that the 3.3 million mortgage holders don’t give a toss about the official statement.
For them, the higher cash rate will feed into higher mortgage rates. The period of respite – the three cuts last year – has now come to an end.
The length of this easing cycle may well be a record – the shortest ever. There are very real prospects of further rate hikes this year. This is reinforced by the bank’s forecasts of inflation for the rest of the year, which put it well above the target band.
In fact, it is not until mid-2028 that underlying CPI growth is expected to reach 2.5 per cent, the bank’s preferred target!
To be sure, the statement notes that “growth in private demand has strengthened substantially more than expected, driven by both household spending and investment”.
But even though the decision to hike was unanimous, bear in mind here that the board members no doubt carefully consider the wording of the statement and make some “helpful” drafting suggestions.
Also bear in mind that growth in private demand is adding to total aggregate demand, which includes government spending. In other words, it’s the relationship between the growth of aggregate demand, including government spending, and the growth of aggregate supply.
But talking about light-fingered children in the orchard, the governor of the Reserve Bank, Michele Bullock, looks to be lurking among the trees too.

Did anyone expect anything different? The pond has now heard so many Groans that they all blend in to one, leaving the pond with the sense that we'll all be rooned by next weekend, and it's all the fault of Jimbo, and no one having the foresight or wisdom to make Dame Groan head of the RBA, Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers during question time at Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday. Picture: AAP




The pond has no idea why the reptiles gave Mattie the whirling, rotating gif and left Dame Groan plain and dowdy in a tattered coat of many whining colours...

She has adopted the completely unconvincing “on the one hand and on the other” explanation for every decision the bank has made.
She seems to be hiding some apples as well and asking the same question: Who, me? Let’s be clear, in terms of the bank’s brief to keep inflation within the annual target band of 2-3 per cent, the bank’s record has been extremely disappointing.
Prior to Covid, it was quarter after quarter of undershooting the band; it’s now quarter after quarter of overshooting, with two exceptions.
It’s impossible to avoid the conclusion that the bank has been far too timid in recent times in knocking inflation on the head while prematurely initiating an easing cycle.
The contrast with other central banks around the world is telling.
In most developed countries, core inflation is now under control and interest rate easing is in progress. Aggressively targeting inflation with rapid and substantial rate hikes has paid off in many instances.
The idea that the gains in unemployment had to be preserved here at all costs sits very uneasily with the governor’s own exposition of the costs to everyone of persistent, elevated inflation.

Oh we're not back to this again, are we?



The pond is already there, but at least it's going to be over quickly this day ...

And let’s face it, many of the government jobs that underpin the low rate of unemployment should never have been created and are not sustainable given the fiscal pressures that will eventually confront the Treasurer.
It’s got to the point of questioning whether Bullock was really a good choice for the top job at the bank.
Sure, she has spent her whole career there, but mainly in the payments side.
Her reluctance to deal with the impact of government spending – she tells us fiscal policy is independent and she doesn’t get involved there – indicates a lack of strength when it comes to meeting the goals set under the legislation.
The real advice coming out of the bank’s decision, and the subsequent press conference/Q&A held by the governor, is to hang on to your hat.
While she is adamant that she doesn’t provide forward guidance, the forecasts on inflation point to at least two more cash rate increases this year.
The sclerotic supply side of our economy and the increasing size of government mean that weak economic growth is likely to hang around too. Welcome to 2026.

Once again the pond has missed out on everything amusing and droll in the disunited States, with peak Marge madness still going strong ...




Poor Marge ...poor Kennedy centre ... but grifters gunna grift, grifters gotta grift. 

As one wag put it somewhere on the full to overflowing intertubes, the Magis' gifts magically turned into the MAGA grift, with this latest, revised accounting recently featuring in The New Yorker ...

Trump’s Profiteering Hits $4 Billion
In August, I reported that the President and his family had made $3.4 billion by leveraging his position. After his first year back in office, the number has ballooned.
By David D. Kirkpatrick (*archive link)

Never mind, it helps put things in perspective ...




Perhaps an acquired taste, only for those with a refined taste for loonacy? (Pity about the interrupting ad)


Tuesday, February 03, 2026

In which the pond glances at Our Henry, groans along with Dame Groan, and takes to ancient Troy's bashing of the beefy boofhead ...

 

For some reason - second thoughts, the pond knows the reason, it's the Australian Daily Zionist News, so there must be a daily serve of Zionism - the reptiles decided to let Our Henry out of his box on a Tuesday with a big splash, and an amazing gif full of terrifying pop-ups ...



No need to go there, but the older archived version - which ran late last night, while the reptiles pretended it was brand, spanking new in the morning- featured Our Henry gazing into a camera in a haunting way. (Some people should never be allowed to stream).

It was a ten minute rant, and punters will be devastated to note an unseemly lack of classical references.

The best the pond could spot was "Manichean choice" and "Manicheanism" (a couple of times), but instead of Thucydides, Our Henry offered up Lenin, Stalin, the storming of the Winter Palace, Frantz Fanon, and a Voltaire cliché:

Voltaire put it best, in his entry on fanaticism in the Encyclopaedia: it is rogues, masquerading as thinkers, who guide fanatics and put murderous daggers in their hands.

Meanwhile, in Haaretz, The IDF Admits It Killed 70,000 Palestinians in Gaza. What Other Accusations Could Turn Out to Be True? The dispute over the number of fatalities may be approaching an end, but the debate on their identities is still expected to trudge on. The Israeli public must ask itself what this belated recognition indicates about the army and the government's credibility regarding Israel's conduct in Gaza

And with the Gaza killings and cleansing going on apace ...

IDF Blocks Palestinian Bedouins From Rebuilding Their West Bank Homes Burned by Israeli Settlers, Bedouin residents of Mukhmas arrived Sunday to rebuild homes torched by settlers but were stopped by Israeli soldiers, who said the area was a closed military zone. When asked about an Israeli man who photographed the houses, a soldier responded, 'He can do whatever he wants'

Back in your box, hole in bucket repair man, and the pond will see you on Friday.

On the upside, the outburst pushed the elephants in the room down the page ...

A rebirth! Thank the long absent lord, the navels are working again.

That cleared room for doing what the reptiles do best, raging at the government, with Dame Groan leading the way ...



After that bigly splash came chief villain himself, pointing in a nasty way ...



The header: Labor’s spending strategy is driving up inflation; Labor’s trillion-dollar debt disaster shows the government is robbing Peter to pay Peter while ordinary families suffer the consequences.

The caption for the snap of the gesticulating Jimbo, used so many times by the reptiles that if the pond scored a dollar each time, it would be a squillionaire: Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers says public service spending isn’t to blame for a rise in inflation. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman

Don't blame the pond, it was the reptiles that made Dame Groan first out of the gate, it was the reptiles intent on using demeaning snaps in hideous uncredited collages, and when they prated about "economists warn", of course they had to have an economist to hand, their very own in house biddy.

What followed was an incredibly dull raging at the Jimbo, seen a zillion times before, but the pond is mindful that Dame Groan has a cult following, and it's wise to feed the cultists what they have an insatiable appetite for ...

When Anthony Albanese was asked last week whether government spending was contributing to the uptick in inflation, he immediately rattled off a list of government handouts. He talked about cheaper medicine, Medicare bulkbilling, the guarantee of three days per week of subsidised childcare.
I wondered whether he had misheard the question, but the reality is that the Labor government thinks the solution to inflation is to go long on handouts. What he doesn’t seem to understand is that these handouts are part of the problem, not the solution.
They are contributing to the unsustainable growth in government spending which, in the context of inflexible supply in many parts of the economy, is simply adding to inflationary price ­pressures.
For a short time, Jim Chalmers thought he had discovered a new secret sauce. By introducing universal electricity rebates, he figured the headline rate of inflation would be lower – this is arithmetically correct – and the Reserve Bank would do the right thing by adjusting the cash rate based on this manipulated figure.

As usual there were a few AV distractions - got to plug Sky Noise - starting with this one, CommSec’s Ryan Felsman claims there are a lot of “rate hike jitters” around the Australian share market following the release of the latest inflation data. New data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) has revealed inflation surged to 3.8 per cent in the year to December while the trimmed mean inflation lifted to 3.3 per cent. This means the chances of the Reserve Bank of Australia lifting interest rates next week have increased. “There’s a lot of rate hike jitters around the market at the moment on the back of that stronger than expected core inflation data yesterday,” Mr Felsman told Sky News Australia. Presented by CommSec.



Alas and alack, that only wound up the groaning to eleven:

Alas, the good folk down at the bank see through this sort of thing and concentrate on the trimmed mean figure of the CPI. But think about if Chalmers had been correct, he should have doubled, tripled or even quadrupled the rebates. He would have slain the inflation dragon while allowing the bank to cut the cash rate. How good would that have been?
But here’s the thing: it has become increasingly clear that Chalmers simply doesn’t understand how the economy works. When confronted with the unwelcome CPI release last week, the Treasurer pulled out all the talking points given to him by Treasury and attempted to tell us that black is white.
Evidently, inflation is now all about the evil workings of the private sector. It has nothing to do with government spending. After all, the RBA managed to cut the cash rate three times last year. In any case, the governor of the bank doesn’t attribute blame to excess government spending, at least explicitly. (There are quotes around from the governor that put a different spin on this story.)
Chalmers also has some weird analysis about the components of the CPI increase – housing and childcare were big-ticket items. But we are expected to believe that these changes have nothing to do with what the government has been up to.
The Treasurer is living on another planet if he thinks that the ramp-up in government spending is not making inflation worse. Just look at the figures. According to MYEFO, real government spending will increase by 4.5 per cent this financial year; it grew by 5.5 per cent last financial year. Government payments as percentage of GDP are close to 27 per cent, another record outside Covid and several years in the early 1980s.
His relocation to another planet is confirmed by his declaration that the budget is now in “better nick”. Someone should tell the Treasurer that no one cares about what was laid down in the 2022 pre-election and fiscal outlook statement which was written at a time of great economic uncertainty. Comparisons with the Coalition government voted out in 2022 are also becoming extremely stale.

Satan himself made an appearance, though he tried to surround himself with camouflage ... Australians have been told to expect to see 'a huge shift' this year towards the universal childcare system Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has long vowed to deliver



Dame Groan was terrified, or at least frightened enough, and never mind what meltdown or run on gold King Donald was provoking each day ...

The reality is that the four-year cumulative underlying cash balance provided in the MYEFO at the end of last year was negative $143bn, while the more meaningful headline cash balance which takes into account off-budget spending was negative $237bn.
But if these figures are not frightening enough, it turns out Treasury has become increasingly inept at forecasting spending. For example, there has been a close to $60bn deterioration in the overall budget position since May 2025, overwhelmingly because of higher payments. There is now no expectation that the budget will return to surplus within a decade given the very significant underestimate in payments.
There is not a sensible economist anywhere who would describe these developments as being consistent with the description of the budget being in better nick. In fact, the fiscal picture is grim and worsening, with the government either unwilling or incapable of restricting the growth of payments. Recall here that government debt is now over one trillion dollars and growing rapidly.
Take the case of childcare. The cost of the childcare subsidies has now crept into the six fastest growing government payment items – interest is the fastest, followed by the NDIS. It is hardly surprising that the cost of childcare services has grown by over 20 per cent since 2022, and by over 10 per cent in the last year, according to the CPI print. This is what happens when demand is pumped through government subsidies and supply is slow to react.
It’s now clear that the government will struggle to rein in the annual growth of NDIS payments below 8 per cent, having failed to seal an immediate deal with the state governments to hive off a separate program for children with mild autism and developmental delays.

How the reptiles love Joel - he's the new Jennie of finance - how the reptiles love rats in the ranks, so Joel made an appearance on Sky Noise... Former Labor cabinet minister Joel Fitzgibbon has warned the Albanese government to wind back public spending to take pressure off the economy as inflation soars and rate hikes loom. “Some economists today will be asking about the amount we’re spending on the NDIS in particular where you see a crowding out of the labour market, which is again putting pressure on inflation,” Mr Fitzgibbon told Sky News Australia. “At some point the government is going to have to become very very serious about winding government spending further back to take pressure of the economy more generally.”

And then it was on to the wrap up, and a final Groaning ...

In any case, it’s hard to get too enthusiastic about this because establishing another program with another name doesn’t necessarily alter the amount of government resources being devoted to disability services, with all its waste and inefficiency.
The fact is that the Labor government has taken the wrong fork in the road by stepping away from means-testing of social spending. Only by means-testing is spending targeted at those who cannot afford the services. Recall that this was the principal means former Labor finance minister Peter Walsh used to get the budget into better nick. Mind you, he saw it as both an economic and moral imperative.
For reasons that are not entirely clear, although the changing demographics of Labor voters is part of the explanation, the Albanese government has been rapidly walking away from means-testing, with the slight exception of aged care.
Why do high income earners require bulk-billed GP services? Why do families with combined incomes of more than half a million dollars require subsidies for childcare? Why should those on high incomes not contribute to the disability services needed by them or their family?

Hang on, hang on, has Dame Groan gone all perfidious socialist, with an outrageous desire to tax the rich?




Steady, steady, it was only a momentary aberration ...

The irony now is that consideration is being given to taxing people on high incomes more, including through the removal of economically justified concessions. It’s the classic case of robbing Peter to pay Paul, except it is actually robbing Peter to pay Peter.
With the prospect of several interest rate hikes this year, the government is peddling hard to sell the likely economic developments in a positive light. Add in the prospect of falling real wages – the growth has been very weak in any case – and it’s an unattractive picture. Were it not for the complete ineffectiveness of an opposition in tatters, the government might be on the ropes.

And the pond trusts that the cultists are, albeit perhaps briefly, satiated...and please, no blaming the pond, it was the reptiles wot did it. The pond would much rather have had other topics to hand ...



As for over on the far right, the canny Cranston picked up where Dame Groan left off ...

Treasury, RBA too close or too far apart?
Australia’s government spending has hit levels not seen in decades, prompting economists to question whether the Reserve Bank should abandon Treasury’s consistently wrong forecasts.
By Matthew Cranston
Economics Correspondent

The only thing the pond will note is the uncanny way the reptiles continue to pick the most defamatory snap to hand ...see how they recycled that one of the Guv, featured in the collage above...



And pace Our Henry, the ADZN continued apace ...

PM’s chance to reset relations with Israel – will he take it?
Anthony Albanese should make it clear during Isaac Herzog’s visit that if someone denies Israel’s right to exist, there is no daylight between this position and antisemitism.
By Anthony Bergin

Ah, but what if you thought no theocratic state had the right to exist, Mr Bergin, what then? What if you thought religion had no business running a state, what then Mr Bergin, what then?

No way the pond was going there, but that meant the pond was left with an agonising choice.

Should the pond go with the bouffant one, doing his very best to see sunnyside up?

Best hour in weeks but it’s a long way back
Liberal leader Sussan Ley and Nationals leader David Littleproud have begun talks to heal their Coalition split, but the damage may already be done.
By Dennis Shanahan
National Editor

The archived version was an earlier edition, though it still featured snaps of Black Jack and the man who crashed a Spittie, but how could the pond resist ancient Troy trashing the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way?



The header: Liberal leadership infighting threatens to deepen party’s existential crisis; Liberal geniuses scheme to topple first female leader as the party desperately needs to win back women voters who have abandoned them in droves.

The caption for that oft repeated collage (another dollar in the pond's kit?): Andrew Hastie, Susan Ley, Angus Taylor. Picture: Newswire

Ancient Troy spend a goodly four minutes bagging the beefy boofhead and laying with Ley, what with him being something of a feminista, as much as a wet reptile can be ...

So a bunch of blokes in the right wing of the Liberal Party think the answer to the party’s problem of regaining the votes of women, who have deserted the party in droves at recent elections, is to terminate their first female leader, Sussan Ley, after serving less than a year in the top job.
They plotted Ley’s downfall in the hours before attending the funeral of former MP Katie Allen, a Liberal woman who was respected and admired across the political spectrum. Their backstabbing, plotting and sheer treachery took attention away from Allen’s funeral and dominated the media last week.
With firebrand Andrew Hastie bowing out of a leadership contest for now, preferring to bide his time, the path has seemingly been cleared for Angus Taylor to seize the Liberal leadership, despite failing to convince colleagues he should get the job last year after his woeful performance as shadow treasurer.
As the men scheme to topple Ley, have they considered how voters, especially women, will view this latest act of political sabotage? At the last election, just 28 per cent of women voted for the Liberal and National parties, barely a quarter, according to the Australian Election Study. Good luck lifting that vote share.

How the reptiles love that Mafia shot of the Dons out and about, and for once the pond can't blame them ... Angus Taylor, James Paterson, Matt O’Sullivan and Andrew Hastie leave the meeting in suburban Melbourne on Thursday. Picture: Liam Mendes



What a bunch of boofheads and thugs!

Of course ancient Troy could have selected the pastie Hastie for abuse, but whatever ...

Nor do they seem to have contemplated the transition costs of toppling a leader. Leadership contests create winners and losers. Rarely do the losers depart happy; they and their supporters are usually filled with resentment and bitterness, and many seek revenge. It was ever thus in politics but the lessons are frequently not learned.
While Ley clings to the Liberal leadership, stoic and defiant, the public watch on as a pantomime plays out in public and private, and knives are sharpened. Hastie went to social media affirming he would like to lead the party but did “not have the support needed to become leader” at this time, so would “not be contesting the leadership”.
Hello? Is there a ballot for leader scheduled? No. The naked ambition of the man is not disguised while the current leader gets on with the job. If this kabuki-style statement was not enough, then Taylor chimed in, offering a paean of praise for his “colleague and friend”, noting he shared “many of his views” and was “a great asset” to the party.
This is a not-so-subtle undermining of the leader of which we have seen far too much in the past 20 years. Recall Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard? Or Brendan Nelson and Malcolm Turnbull? Or Turnbull and Tony Abbott? Or the cunning Scott Morrison, who took the prime ministership when Turnbull fell. Hastie and Taylor are repeating the destabilisation formula.
It is surprising that some Liberals seem to be taking seriously the idea of Taylor as leader. His colleagues have told this column he has a reputation for not putting in the hard work and, as shadow treasurer, seemed not to be across details of his portfolio. Why did he not return from a European holiday when parliament considered new gun ownership and hate speech laws in response to the nation’s worst terrorist attack?

At this point, the reptiles retreated to safer visual turf, a reminder of other assassinations ... Former prime ministers Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard attend the ALP campaign launch, South Brisbane, 2019. Picture: Liam Kidston




And at this point the pond should note others were gunning for the beefy boofhead.

This morning The Echidna popped into the pond's tray (no link, newsletter) with John Hanscombe in a whimsical mood ...

...From where I sit, it's more comedy gold than soapie or reality TV. Especially if Taylor gets the leader's gig, a prospect more likely now Andrew Hastie has removed himself from contention.
When it comes to pass - few are saying "if" any longer - the government will be chuffed. Since coming to office in 2022, it has relished every moment Taylor has risen to his feet in question time.
"The gift that keeps giving," Treasurer Jim Chalmers quipped in 2023 when Taylor muddled a question about the budget. It's hard to keep a straight face, Chalmers told the chamber, wearing a smile so bright it was reflected in the glasses of those sitting opposite. He then demolished the premise of Taylor's question.
Throughout the last term of Parliament, Chalmers ran rings around the then shadow treasurer. Every question asked would be met with ridicule, Taylor returning to his seat, shaking his head in frustration and looking as if comprehension was just beyond his grasp.
Taylor also ran rings around himself, even prompting the Coalition-friendly Sky News to list a "litany" of Taylor's errors on the floor of the House: the price of Vegemite rising by 8 per cent in month, which it hadn't; confusing monthly inflation with the annual rate; asserting half of Australia's mortgage holders were about to go from fixed to variable interest rates when they weren't: and saying he'd always supported the government's energy bill relief when he'd previously stood up calling it the worst legislation ever.
Even in government Taylor made spectacular errors. There was the smear job on Sydney's Lord Mayor Clover Moore, using bogus statistics, which prompted a police investigation. Oh, and don't forget the time he posted "Well done, Angus" on his own Facebook page.
You couldn't ask for a better leader of the parliamentary Liberal Party. If you were the Labor government, that is. We've seen less of Taylor this term. As shadow defence minister, there have been fewer opportunities to put his foot in his mouth. But as Liberal leader, he'd have to be first on his feet, to the delight of Labor.
All well and good if you enjoy easy laughs with your question time. If you believe the business of parliament should be more than comedy and canned laughter from the government benches, perhaps Taylor isn't such a good idea.

Oh come on Mr Hanscombe, gotta be able to laugh ...



Meanwhile ancient Troy kept on sounding like he wanted to be in The Canberra Times or even worse, a Nine rag, or perhaps don an ABC cardigan ...

During last year’s federal election campaign, as I noted at the time, Taylor struggled to communicate the Liberal Party’s values and policies, did little to prepare a detailed economic agenda to take to the election, and was comprehensively outgunned by Treasurer Jim Chalmers. Taylor looked weak and evasive, and his attacks fell flat.
This has been confirmed by the AES, which showed the most important issue for voters was cost of living at a time of high inflation and rising costs for households, yet Labor was judged the better party over the Coalition on nine of 10 policy areas, including economic management and taxation. That is the verdict on Taylor – surrendering the party’s long-held advantage on economic policy.
Taylor blew up the party’s economic and budget credentials at the last election with policies that betrayed the Howard-Costello model. He routinely expresses fidelity to their legacy, yet as shadow treasurer did not support Labor’s modest income tax cuts and planned to have bigger budget deficits if the Coalition returned to government.
Peter Costello, who as treasurer delivered 10 budget surpluses, paid off government debt and reformed the tax system, told me just six weeks ago that the Liberal Party surrendered its reputation on economic management at the last election. Guess who was the shadow treasurer?
“The Liberal Party walked away from that central commitment to economic security and I think it did enormous brand damage,” Costello told me. “At the last election, they got themselves into a position where they were proposing to increase income taxes, run bigger deficits, no real plan to reduce debt.”

The reptiles were so startled they again reverted to ancient times, perhaps to forestall a hive mind panic, Tony Abbott (left) and Malcolm Turnbull at the conclusion of Question Time in the House of Representatives at Parliament House, in Canberra.




Soothed by the sight of the onion muncher and Malware and fond memories of destroying the NBN, the reptiles could allow a final bout of wet ancient Troy flinging mud and standing up for Susssan, to the wilting lettuce's despair ...

Ley is not perfect and has made mistakes, but deserves time. Her challenge is immense. The Liberal Party has lost many seats, its voter support is in decline and its members are walking away. The Coalition with the National Party has been severed. Ley needs to redefine the party, craft a viable electoral strategy, develop a policy agenda and repair the Coalition.
Australia needs an effective opposition to keep the government accountable. We get a better government when we have a better opposition. The opposition is now just the ever-shrinking Liberal Party, while the National Party sulks on the crossbench. The Liberal Party, self-indulgent, devoid of responsibility and utterly divided, is like a clown car at a circus that has seen better days.
Meanwhile, the government dominates the parliament with almost two-thirds of seats in the lower house. The Labor Party remains well ahead in the polls and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is dominant. The centre-right of politics is rupturing with the rise of the far-right One Nation, and neither the Liberal nor National parties have a clue what to do about it.
Albanese, whose prime ministership has been a study in determination, conviction, steadiness, resilience and luck, has his 2028 election slogan ready to go: “If you can’t govern yourselves, you can’t govern the country.”

At this point the pond would usually wrap things up.

Try to do a segue a cartoon for a closer, especially if it might inspire more ditties in the comments section, and that would be that ...



But damn it, having glanced at Our Henry, groaned through the groaning, and took to the Susssan battlements with ancient Troy, the pond needed a treat, and what better way than to see the Murdochians serving it up to Nosferatu himself...




That's not the pond's preferred snap, the pond always prefers the vanity snap ...



Sure the pond could have left it to an archive link,  but there's something fragrant about the panic in the WSJ air, as they took to Nosferatu, armed with garlic and righteous Murdochian holy water ...



Eek, it's all coming together in a nightmare of cross-pollination, at least if you trust the immortal Rowe ... (and the pond always does)




Monday, February 02, 2026

In which Monday turns into a dull outing with Pom migrant carousing Caterist and the denialist Major Mitchell ...

 

Boring. Deeply, deeply boring.

Is there anyone with enough ticker to give the lettuce hope, as it begins to wilt?

Even the reptiles couldn't get excited about the little to be proud of affair, with this second cab off the rank ...



EXCLUSIVE
Taylor opens arms to Hastie and his supporters in leadership bid
Ahead of a looming leadership spill, Angus Taylor has offered an olive branch to Andrew Hastie’s key backers amid a push for Mr Hastie to become Treasury spokesman in a Taylor-led Liberal Party.
By Greg Brown, Sarah Ison and Noah Yim

The only notable thing in the update on the archive version was the way the pasty Hastie dressed in double blue, like a refugee from the 1970s or a Marlboro ad ...



C'mon, we all remember the look ...




Nothing about Clive, Epstein and Steve

Nah, all Brownie could do was sob and sigh into the digital ether.

Commentary by Greg Brown
PM getting free ride amid the Coalition chaos
With the heat off Anthony Albanese’s agenda, Sussan Ley could face a challenge from Angus Taylor next week.

Could? Coulda. Woulda. Shouda.

Next week?

Always next week, King Donald style, while the lettuce fades and the pond sinks into an even deeper torpor.

How tedious and tiresome it all is, though the infallible Pope is always on hand to provide relief ...



There was nothing for it but to seek refuge on the extreme far right ... but alas ...

Coalition car crash an obvious win for PM – and a big snub to voters
Andrew Hastie’s retreat was less a reflection of his suitability for the top job than it was an indictment on the amateurish and frankly embarrassing nature of the internal manoeuvres that have been going on within the party.
By Simon Benson
Political analyst

The pond will leave simplistic Simon's "analysis" (the pond uses the word loosely when in reptile company), while it finds nothing to excite in the latest droppings of pearls of wisdom...

Bullock can restore lost credibility by calling out Chalmers
Credibility is the most important tool central bankers have at their disposal. It means that we believe their promises on inflation. Bullock has broken hers.
By David Pearl

The pond makes only one note - why no credit for the collage, which makes a Leak cartoon look subtle?




Go on, pick the lurking, glowering, truly terrifying baddies if you can  if it's too hard, try training on a 1950s western).

The pond also only notes this effort ...

Politics over facts is the chief problem in immigration debate
If policymakers and commentators want a more honest migration debate, they should stop pretending net migration can be ‘controlled’ like a thermostat.
By Alan Gamlen and Peter McDonald

... to get briefly to the conclusion ...

...The real policy question, then, is not whether NOM is “too high” or “too low” in any one year. It is whether the structure of Australia’s migration system is fit for purpose: whether the balance between temporary and permanent migration is right; whether pathways are clear and credible; whether the infrastructure for successful settlement is in place; whether institutions have the analytical capacity to understand system-wide dynamics, and; whether public debate focuses on substance rather than headline numbers.
On that score, there is room for improvement, but not for panic.
Australia’s post-pandemic migration experience is near identical to that of other high-income countries. The surge and fall were not uniquely Australian, nor uniquely political. They were the predictable aftershocks of a global shutdown.
The lesson is a simple one. Volatility after a shock is not evidence of failure. It is evidence of adjustment. If policymakers and commentators want a more honest migration debate, they should stop pretending net migration can be “controlled” like a thermostat and start paying attention to how the system actually works.

You want politics over facts?

Easy peasy ... because this day the Caterist went there and flung the pond into a panic about the way that the immigration system had let a dangerously radicalised, third rate sociology student into the country ...



The header: Migrants promised a dream, but sold into system of hostility; The immigration crisis, the one the political class is desperate not to discuss, is not going away. It is time we realised that promising the dream of Australia to millions denies the gift of becoming Australian to a qualified few.

The caption: International students at the University of Sydney.

A system of hostility? Isn't that the lizard Oz, and the spewings of the likes of Dame Groan?

The pond really didn't want to go there, an imported Pom whining yet again for four minutes, in a way designed to get Dame Groan agitated, but what other choice was there?

In July, an Indian woman posted a query on Facebook seeking advice on using a student visa as a pathway to permanent residency.
“My education agent is recommending that I study to become a painter,” she wrote. “Is physical labour really the only realistic option? I imagine it must be quite tough work.” A fellow participant replies: “You could look up chef pathway alternatively.”
Were this applicant to persist in moving to Australia, she would likely end up in the limbo of “permanent temporariness”, the ungainly official expression that describes the status of millions of migrants who live and work here with little hope of becoming an Australian. They are drawn here by loose visa rules, high wages, low unemployment and the expectation that getting a foot in the door is a step towards permanent residency and citizenship.
All the while, they are egged on by overseas migration agents and the Australian higher education sector with alluring promises that are unlikely to be met.
The number of temporary residents in Australia grew from 700,000 at the turn of the century to more than 2.2 million at the end of 2023. For most of its post-war history, settlement was permanent. They were encouraged to integrate and become Australian citizens, granting them an equal stake in the country’s future.
In recent decades, with almost no public discussion, our extraordinarily successful settlement program has been downgraded into a version of Germany’s Gastarbeiter system regulating the importation of labour units on time-limited permits.
Germany is hardly a good role model. What was conceived as a temporary labour solution for a booming post-war manufacturing sector quietly hardened into a structural fault line. A recent study found that around three-quarters of Germans worry that society is falling apart.
Whatever our concerns about the impact of temporary migrants on the housing market or the changing character of our cities, it is the fraying of the social fabric that should alarm us most after Bondi. Anthony Albanese’s quest to strengthen social cohesion is being undermined by weaknesses in an immigration system his government has only lightly addressed.

Naturally the reptiles dragged in the Bondi massacre, Thousands of flowers are laid at Bondi Pavilion to honour the 15 victims of last Sunday's attack. Picture: Tom Parrish



Last Sunday's attack?

Such lazy, shoddy journalism, what with the terror attack taking place back on the 14th December, more than a few Sundays ago.

Never mind,  back to the grind ...

The Migration Strategy, which two of his ministers signed off on in December 2023, implicitly states the problem: “Australians don’t want a nation of ‘permanently temporary’ residents. This is not a recipe for building stronger communities or maintaining social cohesion, and it is not a pathway to strengthening the confidence Australians have in our migration system.”
It is hardly gratuitous to draw a link to the Bondi atrocity. The elder of the two alleged gunmen arrived from India on a student visa a quarter of a century ago and never went home. He fathered a son who appears to have followed the familiar path for second-generation radicalisation, growing up among people he had learned to resent.
Like other bad policy decisions, no one designed this system of institutionalised impermanence. It just happened when educating overseas students expanded from a highly successful aid program devised by Robert Menzies into an export industry under Labor’s Bob Hawke. Successive governments have fallen for the argument that reform would jeopardise a $50bn export industry. But framing higher learning as an export commodity like iron ore or wool is highly misleading.
Unlike shipments of minerals or agricultural products, gross spending on education does not equal value added. Servicing overseas student demand consumes scarce resources that could be used for other purposes, such as housing, transport, infrastructure, and university desks. Heavy reliance on international fees alters universities’ incentives toward volume, downgrading the higher education experience for domestic students.
Policy failure is inevitable when there has been little attention to clearer distinctions between temporary labour, genuine study and permanent settlement. No government has been willing to resolve the central contradiction of linking a demand-driven market in higher education and a supply-constrained market for permanent residency.
The subclass 189 skilled independent visa is one part of the system that remains intact. It provides a pure, federal, points-tested pathway to permanent residency in which a fixed number of places are auctioned to the most highly skilled applicants.
So, while you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to apply for a 189, a degree in an astronautical engineering would boost your chances of getting one, while a grade 3 certificate in painting and decorating wouldn’t.
Hence the growth of permanently temporary migrants, drawn by false expectations, who live and work in Australia for years, often cycling through student, graduate, bridging and provisional visas, yet never securing permanent residency or citizenship. We allow them to live among us without inviting them to be one of us.

And then here we go again ... Anthony Albanese arriving to the national Day of Reflection on Sunday to honour the victims of the December 14th Bondi Beach terror attack and to stand in solidarity with the Jewish community. Picture NewsWire / Monique Harmer




The Day of Reflection vigil was back in December, the National Day of Mourning was on 22nd January ...

On the upside, the pond was completely distracted, and so missed the Caterist doing his best to politicise immigration matters...

The system limits their goals to surviving week to week and keeping one step ahead of an overcomplicated system. They are not inspired by freedom that offers the chance to build a better life.
They find themselves in a queue without an exit. They are encouraged to invest time, money and identity in Australia without any clear line of sight to permanence. They become economically embedded and socially present, yet civically excluded. Permanent temporary residents pay tax and follow the law, but lack political voice and long-term security. Uncertainty about belonging discourages commitment. People delay family formation, avoid deep civic engagement, and cluster socially with others in similar positions.
It is not necessarily hostility, but rational detachment. Why plant roots in soil you may be asked to leave? Why make the effort to assimilate to a society from which you have been excluded? A system that normalises exclusion creates blind spots as ambiguity hardens into resentment over time. It is the inversion of a settlement arrangement that has offered redemption to millions since 1788. A land of freedom and opportunity has become a Kafkaesque nightmare that forces migrants into a bureaucratic purgatory, wrestling with nonsensical rules.
The immigration crisis, the one the political class is desperate not to discuss, is not going away. Indeed, it has intensified after Bondi, prompting a fresh exodus from the legacy parties to One Nation, which is at least prepared to name the problem, even if it lacks a well-developed policy solution to fix a devilishly complicated system riddled with unintended consequences. Reform should begin from first principles: a student visa grants permission to study, not full entry to the workforce before or after completing a degree.
It is time we realised that promising the dream of Australia to millions denies the gift of becoming Australian to a qualified few.

The qualified few? How on earth did he qualify?

Phew, the pond is pleased that's over. Sometimes the careening Caterist pushes the pond to the outer limits of tolerance for migrants, which is deeply unfair to the many newcomers who make positive contributions to the country.

As for the rest of the reptile rabble, the pond discovered that the Major was back on his favourite climate science denialist hobby horse, this time with a new angle, blaming the bloody Canadians ...



The header: Insurance premiums rising again? Carney ignited climate risk industry; Australians unhappy with high home insurance premiums can blame a Canadian for his move in 2015 to make global businesses account for climate change risks.

The caption: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney started the push for greater corporate accountability when he was Bank of England governor. Picture: The Canadian Press via AP

Astonishing really that one Canuck has been responsible for trends in the global insurance industry, suggesting that perhaps the Major has been talking to a few too many treasonous Albertans.

Elbows up Canucks, it's going to be a rough ride ...

Australians unhappy with high home insurance premiums can blame a Canadian. Canada’s Prime Minister, Mark Carney, a hero to the local left for his speech in Davos a fortnight ago criticising US President Donald Trump, is a bogey man to Canada’s green left.
Carney has flipped his rhetoric on climate change since 2015 when, as governor of the Bank of England, he began a push to make global businesses account for climate change risks.
That speech kicked off a whole new consulting industry that has allowed bankers and large accountancy firms to make even more money from green politics: As if just investing in government-guaranteed renewables schemes underwritten by taxpayers with annual rates of return fixed by law was not enough already.
After the 2008-10 global financial crisis triggered by the collapse in September 2008 of US-based investment bank Lehman Brothers, G20 leaders turned their attention to other potential threats to the global financial system.
The international media was already focused on the potential for disasters triggered by global warming in the wake of former US vice-president Al Gore’s climate change hysteria film, An Inconvenient Truth.

The reptiles slipped in a couple of dull snaps for those who missed the current feud ... Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney; US President Donald Trump.



The sight of King Donald could have inspired a cartoon about his latest folly, but instead the pond turned to the Graudian ...

How climate risks are driving up insurance premiums around the US – visualized
‘Tight correlation’ between premium rises and counties deemed most at risk from climate crisis, experts say
Oliver Milman with graphics by Andrew Witherspoon
Concern over the climate crisis may evaporate in the White House from January, but its financial costs are now starkly apparent to Americans in the form of soaring home insurance premiums – with those in the riskiest areas for floods, storms and wildfires suffering the steepest rises of all.
A mounting toll of severe hurricanes, floods, fires and other extreme events has caused average premiums to leap since 2020, with parts of the US most prone to disasters bearing the brunt. A climate crisis is starting to stir an insurance crisis.
Across all US counties, those in the top fifth for climate-driven disaster risk saw home premiums leap by 22% in just three years to 2023, compared to an overall average of a 13% rise in real terms, research of mortgage payment data has found. The Guardian has analyzed the study’s data to illustrate the places in the US at highest risk from disasters and insurance hikes.

Sure 'nuff, there was a graph for those who like that sort of thing ...



There were more graphs, but the pond had to get back to the Major blaming the Canuck for the whole damn thing ...

Now, as Canadian PM, Carney has approved new oil and gas operations, encouraged nuclear power investment, supported channelling funds into small modular nuclear reactors that the ALP here says do not exist, and underwritten carbon sequestration schemes that provide a lifeline to fossil fuel industries.
He has paused electric vehicle mandates and reduced carbon taxes. Canada already has huge reserves of non-emitting hydro-electric power generation that provide half its electricity.
While our government commits all-out to renewables, Carney has signed off on a new private sector oil pipeline from Alberta to the British Columbia coast and a uranium deal with India. He wants Canada to be an energy superpower to defend itself against new US tariffs.
While Carney’s pragmatism should be a signal to governments here and in Europe, perhaps more interesting for Australian consumers is new analysis showing how the climate risk financial services sector has allowed global insurance businesses to keep ramping up premiums while receiving sympathetic coverage from activist environment journalists who have fed into a false narrative about natural disasters.
This column on December 11 recommended readers who want to understand how predictions of global warming had become overheated since the original Paris accord of 2015 check Roger Pielke Jr’s The Honest Broker site on Substack.
Pielke, often criticised by activists as a climate sceptic, is also a respected political scientist, a professor at the University of Colorado, a former staff scientist at the US National Centre for Atmospheric Research and a believer in climate science.
He published a three-part series in December looking at how the insurance industry has used false claims about individual climate events to ramp up premiums and profitability.
Part one, on December 9, is titled “The Climate Risk Industrial Complex and the Manufactured Insurance Crisis”.

Credit where credit is due, Roger A. Pielke Sr. also made an appearance in DeSmog, while Pielke Jr. has a long and sordid DeSmog CV ...

The reptiles wanted to put Jr in the frame,  Roger Pielke Jr. Picture: Getty Images




Now don't get the pond wrong.

Climate change, climate science and insurance are big issues, as explained by the infallible Pope ...



Just don't expect any enlightenment from the Major ...

Pielke says that since 2019, The New York Times, “the primary driver” of the insurance collapse idea, “has published more that 1250 articles on climate change and insurance”. This crisis narrative has allowed the industry to hide behind claims, not supported by UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change analysis, that say individual disasters cannot be attributed to man-made climate change.
In the wake of last year’s Los Angeles fires, he quotes the US National Association of Insurance Commissions: “Despite heavy catastrophe losses, including the costliest wildfires on record, the US Property and Casualty industry recorded its best mid-year underwriting gain in nearly 20 years.” Here the picture is much the same: industry analysts say Australian insurance profitability is at or near record levels.
Releasing figures that show total US P&C insurance profits rising from just under $US40bn ($57.5bn) in 2017 to $US170bn in 2024, the NAIC said: “Strong premium growth, driven largely by rate increases, coupled with abating economic inflation … (has seen) net income nearly doubled from last year.”
Pielke links this rise in profitability directly to Carney’s Bank of England speech.
He says climate risk assessment companies that have grown since then depend almost entirely on the vagaries of economic modelling that effectively compounds the vagaries of the climate science modelling.

Of course when peddling a vast international conspiracy, there are a few other suspects ... Simon Holmes a Court. Picture: Martin Ollman



Meanwhile, the Major is intent on proving that a little reading can be a dangerous thing ...

Pielke’s part two, published on December 16, “How the Financial System Invented ‘Climate Risk’ Untethered from Climate Science”, focuses on the technical responses of the Financial Security Board, created by the G20 after the GFC, and the Bank of International Settlements, to the finance industry’s climate task outlined by Carney.
This essay ends with a devastating quote from global climate risk assessment firm Verisk: “We estimate about 1 per cent year-on-year average annual losses are attributable to climate change. Such small shifts can easily get lost behind other sources of systemic loss … such as inflation … The random volatility from internal climate variability also dwarfs the small positive climate change signal.”
In part three, published December 22, “The Invention of Climate Risk – Politically Brilliant but Fatally Flawed”, Pielke shows how the climate risk business was targeted “at compelling the outcomes of the 2015 Paris Agreement”.
“Extreme weather became the focal point but the real world did not play along.
“Efforts to connect climate change and extreme weather really took off” after Al Gore’s movie, mentioned above. The problem with this as a strategy to bring the dangers of climate change home to ordinary people was that “Mother Nature was not co-operating with detectable trends” in extreme weather.

Time for another suspect,  Mike Cannon-Brookes. Picture: Martin Ollman



The pond supposes that a bout of climate science denialism, dressed up as a form of paranoid Canuck bashing, is a variation on the Major's usual Zionism, but the pond regrets it, because the pond had saved up a cartoon for the Major, a way of celebrating the ongoing carnage in Gaza...



Never mind, almost done ...

As regular readers of this column will know, it has been clear in many IPCC reviews that most climate scientists assign a very low probability to links between man-made climate change and individual climate events. Trends in tropical storms here, in the US and Asia have been down.

Clear? Only in the Major's truly bizarre world ...

Amazingly, King Donald's minions left this NASA page up ...

... including these immortal words ...

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)’s Sixth Assessment Report released in 2021, the human-caused rise in greenhouse gases has increased the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. NASA’s satellite missions, including the upcoming Earth System Observatory, provide vital data for monitoring and responding to extreme weather events

Vital data? Surely it won't be long before King Donald's minions scrub that page ... as the Major wrapped up ...

Pielke’s series concludes with an observation that could describe Malcolm Turnbull, Simon Holmes a Court or Mike Cannon-Brookes: One “aspect of the political brilliance of ‘climate risk’ is that the global financial community, because of its power and access to wealth and capital, brought along with it an ability to convince or compel businesses and governments to join the campaign … one reason why ESG governance centred on climate swept through the business world”.
Lest readers imagine Pielke is alone in this, Jessica Weinkle, on the EcoModernist site on Substack last February, traced the insurance industry’s reactions to major US disasters since Hurricane Andrew in Florida in August 1992, only months after the creation the previous June of the UN Convention on Climate Change.
Her central conclusion about disasters and insurance industry risk: it is the lifestyle decisions of millions of people moving to warmer sea-change areas or fire-prone tree-change areas that is driving the cost of individual natural disasters.
That and inflation in the building industry. Sound familiar?

Yes, the denialism is tedious and way beyond familiar,  and despite the endless provocations, the pond is pleased at the discipline shown in not going the 'toon ...



Well if the reptiles can slip in visual irrelevancies ...

And now, as the Major mentioned the NY Times, the pond seized on the chance to note that David Brooks has left its hallowed two siderest halls...

He left a trace of his taint in Time to Say Goodbye ... (archive link)

Sadly it wasn't goodbye and good riddance, and the pond only notes this to draw attention to a farewell offered by Chris Lehmann in The Nation ...

Just a whiff, a taster, a teasing trailer ... go on Chris, tell us what you really think ...

Through an unlikely set of circumstances, in the early aughts, I was at the media party where longtime New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd approached David Brooks about coming on board. I’ve long thought in retrospect that I should have put my body on the line to prevent the ensuing intellectual catastrophe from happening.
Brooks, who has occupied the prestigious (if mythical) “reasonable conservative” perch at the opinion section of the Paper of Record for nearly a quarter century, is now decamping for The Atlantic, another inert organ of elite consensus politics, to serve as a staff writer and host of a video podcast. For Brooks to be forsaking his role as the nation’s Times-branded civic scold while US democracy swoons further into the abyss amid Donald Trump’s second authoritarian term drives home how ineffectual-to-untenable he has been as a trollish Never Trumper. Still, his failure bears a closer look, if only to size up the vacuity of a particular strain of culture-calibrating punditry from the US right that has bent over backward to avoid acknowledging a clear and present mobilization of blood-and-soil reaction.
For in the moral universe that David Brooks presides over, there is never a sustained ideological threat to democracy and civic culture from an insurgent right; instead, the great hazard before us is the failure of liberal and left elites to strike just the right Goldilocks posture of sympathy with the conservative grievance-industrial complex. Across successive revanchist right takeovers of the GOP, Brooks’s columnizing output hewed to this message with the unshakable conviction of a Soviet apparatchik, and he also reliably plied it from his role as a reasonable right solon on the PBS News Hour—which, alas, shares the same editorial instincts as Maureen Dowd.
During a post-2016 election colloquy of pundits debating the laughably irrelevant proposition, “Do liberals hold the moral high ground?,” Brooks, who was of course arguing the negative claim, disclosed the formula behind all his sober diagnoses of what ails our body politic. “A lot of people voted for Donald Trump because they thought a lot of tenured radicals along the coasts thought they were morally superior to them,” he proclaimed. “So if you want the kind of politics we have today, think you’re morally superior to the other side.”
That smug, counter-empirical refrain has fueled countless Brooks columns, to say nothing of a torrent of ponderous and unenlightening books, harking back to his reputation-making work of “comic sociology” Bobos in Paradise. In Brooks’s foreshortened social vision—which, for the record, is neither comic nor sociological—myopically privileged if provisionally well-meaning liberal elites have broken faith with the American civic tradition by putting themselves indelicately forward as role models for everyone else. The ensuing backlash is thus entirely their doing, in just the way that abusive spouses declare that their inattentive mates have left them no choice but to assault them.
This just-so fable of terminal social haughtiness from the left was, despite its rough plausibility for certain neighborhoods in Berkeley or Cambridge, always a lie. Back when Brooks, then a staff writer at The Weekly Standard, was burnishing his mainstream comic-sociological bona fides in the pages of—you guessed it—The Atlantic, he published a suburban safari dispatch from Montgomery County, Maryland, outside DC and the Franklin County exurbs of Philadelphia professing to document the insular lifestyle politics in strongholds of “blue state” liberalism and “red state” cultural revolt on the right. The resulting Mad Libs–style account was classic Brooks; riding mowers and NASCAR viewing were duly name-checked as badges of conservative belonging, while NPR listening and (irony of ironies, given his subsequent career arc) a subscription to The New York Times were telltale signs of opportunistic liberal secession from the broader polis.
The only problem, as then–Philadelphia magazine writer Sasha Issenberg documented, is that the whole thing was a fairy tale. Three of the country’s top five NASCAR TV markets were in blue states, Issenberg found, and the QVC home-shopping network—another sign of red-state habitation in Brooks’s account—also drew most of its revenue from blue states. Brooks’s claim that he was unable to spend more than $20 on a meal in Franklin County was likewise easily exposed bullshit. When Issenberg interviewed Brooks about this barrage of falsehoods, he retreated to his “comic sociology” shtick, and argued that he was trafficking in broad generalizations that “ring true” to the worrisome cultural divides overtaking the country.
Tellingly, when Issenberg cited another unfounded claim in the Atlantic piece—the proto-Trumpian fable that “blue America” was awash with undocumented immigrants—the pundit’s genial comic mask slipped. “This is dishonest research,” the dishonest researcher announced. “You’re not approaching the piece in the spirit of an honest reporter. Is this how you’re going to start your career? I mean, really, doing this sort of piece? I used to do ’em, I know ’em, how one starts, but it’s just something you’ll mature beyond.”

There's more at the link, but already the pond was howling with delight ...and now the pond will do its best to ignore Brooks at The Atlantic in the way it ignores the NY Times - the pond is stuck on its hive mind lizard Oz track - despite the many pleasures and temptations that path would offer...

In much the same way the pond is likely to miss the movie of the year, despite the immortal Rowe's best ticket selling devices...