Saturday, July 19, 2025

In which the pond doubles down with "Ned" and the bromancer ...

 

For just a nanosecond, what with the Emeritus Chairman allegedly having skin in the game because the WSJ had alleged certain things, the pond thought the reptiles dwelling in the hive mind at the lizard Oz might have suddenly taken an interest in the real world, and what's going down in the USA ...

How foolish of the pond ...




They're still all in on China, including the nattering "Ned", the bromancer and the dog botherer. 

Only the Ughmann was up to his usual climate science denying tricks.

Even worse, if you add the estimated timings together, "Ned" and the bromancer alone amounted to 23 minutes in a wasted life.

The pond took a look over on the extreme far right to see if there were any other options ...



Monsieur Dupont blathering on about how risking a legal action by the Cantaloupe Caligula was still the best option for the Emeritus Chairman?

The pond decided to cut its losses this day, and resume play on the Sunday.

Only two could make the cut, the pond would allow only two reptiles this day ...

Unwise, and unwise selection made, amazingly, "Ned" rated ahead of the bromancer because he was just an 11 minute read, a trifle to hardened Everest climbers ...




The header: Xi’s charm offensive traps Albanese between an old ally and a new friend, Labor’s method is to promote good outcomes with China and the US, yet the time will come – and it is soon approaching – when the contradiction leads to a showdown.
The caption: Anthony Albanese’s six-day visit to China sees him assume political ownership of our expanding China ties.
The mystical command: This article contains features which are only available in the web version,Take me there

"Ned" was in full paranoid, hysterical, chicken little mode ...

Xi Jinping is investing in Anthony Albanese – investing in charm, trade and pressure. Albanese’s six-day visit to China sees him assume political ownership of our expanding China ties with their benefits and risks, a restoration of relations secured largely on terms and conditions favourable to Beijing.
China rolled out the red carpet for Albanese. Its tactics of seduction and pressure on Australia fit into Beijing’s drive to deepen China-Australia mutual interests, weaken our security ties with the US and promote regional acquiescence to China’s aspirations as a hegemonic power.

It's impossible to describe fully the risible AI gif the reptiles provided, which saw King Donald sundered and rent and sent off on to his own piece of turf as lighting flashed, TAD-1081 Albo's Relationship with USA and China



It set the tone for "Ned's" piece, which could have been written by AI, trained in pomposity and verbosity, and given special instructions on how to bore the readership to tears ...

The transformation of the relationship from breakdown under Scott Morrison in 2020 to mutual restoration under Albanese in 2025 is one of the most remarkable reversals in Australian foreign policy in the past several decades. China’s media praised Albanese and dismissed Morrison.
But Albanese’s prize comes wrapped in booby traps. For Xi, the so-called stabilisation that Albanese describes is already obsolete. China’s charm comes with growing demands – and Albanese knows this. He is positive yet wary. The reality cannot be disguised – Labor’s success in re-establishing relations means Albanese has a vested interest in their promotion and preservation. This is the exact leverage President Xi seeks.

Remember, this is just the paranoid ramblings of a Murdoch bot, compleat with many EXPLAINER distractions, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets face-to-face with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, marking a major step in rebuilding Australia–China relations. Beyond the diplomatic pleasantries, tough issues were on the table, including military tensions near Australian waters, the case of detained writer Yang Hengjun, and pressure to restore trade ties. North Asia correspondent Will Glasgow reports from outside the Great Hall of the People as Australia navigates a delicate balancing act: re-engaging with Beijing while standing firm on national interests.




Do the reptiles care about the condescending air that hovers around EXPLAINER, a bit like those "Do you want to know more" promos in Starship Troopers ...


 


Actually the pond would usually like to know less ...

Here is the great conundrum of the relationship: the more ties are strengthened in trade, enterprise and people-to-people links, the more Australia’s dependency on China grows and the more sway Beijing accumulates. The Chinese locomotive has an economic power that makes our official policy of trade diversification a daunting job.
The positive optics of the visit – invoking Gough Whitlam at the Great Wall, generous lunches and dinners, compulsory panda diplomacy – cannot disguise the unprecedented dilemma China consti­tutes for Australia: while Beijing has abandoned its previous campaign of coercion, it has not abandoned any of its strategic goals.

The reptiles went the full tourist snap experience, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and partner Jodie Haydon at the Great Wall of China near Beijing. Picture: Lukas Coch / AAP



Does it occur to any of these reptiles that their obsessive fetishising might be its own reward? Stay tuned for a classic "Ned" question ...

Xi, for the time being with Australia, has substituted seduction for intimidation – smart move. His tactics have changed, his strategy is unchanged. What happens if and when Xi decides that Albanese isn’t delivering?
Beijing’s behaviour shows it has only intensified its strategic goals: running an economic, technological and military strategy to outmuscle the US and replace America as the primary regional power; weakening the US alliance system in the Indo-Pacific; and securing the incremental acquiescence of countries including Australia to its regional dominance.
Former Defence Department analyst and critic of the AUKUS agreement Hugh White told Inquirer: “China’s strategic ambitions in Asia are fundamentally different from Australia’s view about how the region should be. Our vision is that the US should remain the primary player or a primary player.

An obligatory snap of a gesturing Hugh followed, Former Defence Department analyst Hugh White. Picture: Martin Ollman / NewsWire




Woe heaped upon woe in "Ned's" world ...

“But China’s fundamental ambition is to push the US out of Asia and take its place. No matter how we manage this day-to-day diplomatic tension and how successfully we manage it, the fundamental conflict remains the same.”
The key to Albanese’s visit is to pretend the ultimate conflict doesn’t exist – yet everyone knows it does exist.
Labor’s method is to promote good outcomes with China and the US, yet the time will come – and it is soon approaching – when the contradiction leads to a showdown. Albanese, unsurprisingly, is governed by the needs of today, not the uncertainties of tomorrow.
Albanese told China’s leaders that stabilisation would drive “greater engagement” – in trade, tourism, education, culture, climate change, green steel and better investment outcomes. The aim is greater alignment of national interests. While his usual formula included “disagreeing where we must”, public disagreement is largely off the agenda. Labor runs a “softly, softly” stance, reluctant in the extreme to criticise China.

Then came another EXPLAINER, but the pond had already cracked its Starship Troopers gag, The Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, is in Chengdu visiting the panda breeding centre. North Asia Correspondent Will Glasgow gives us the latest and breaks down China's panda diplomacy.




"Ned" burrowed on, deep into the mine of despair ...

Both sides played down the differences, from Taiwan to ignoring Albanese’s pledge to take back Darwin Port ownership. Albanese raised China’s lack of notice over live-fire drills in the Tasman Sea and apparently was rebuffed. In his public comments Albanese praised the removal of trade “impediments” on exports of cotton, copper, coal, timber, hay, barley, wine, red meat and rock lobster – as though this was an act of China’s generosity, not the abandonment of its coercive, illegal, trade retaliation aimed to break the political will of the Morrison government, a tactic that singularly failed.
Yet its legacy may benefit China as a reminder of what China might do if crossed. China’s coercion against Australia documents for a Labor government the risks of offending China’s national interest. Don’t think Labor doesn’t feel this.
Former China correspondent and Lowy Institute fellow Richard McGregor highlighted Xi’s investment in Albanese: “Albanese was given hours with the top Chinese leadership in one-on-one meetings and talks over lunch; few Western leaders have done so recently.

Cue another snap featuring a "Ned" informant, Former China correspondent Richard McGregor. Picture: Martin Ollman / NewsWire




"Ned" was now well past a litany of traps and warnings ...

“China is calculating that Albanese will be in office for some years and the restored relationship can go beyond Albanese’s view of ‘stabilisation’ into something more substantial.”
There is no question that this six-day visit is a significant event, laying the basis for an expanded relationship, yet its ultimate meaning is far more ominous.
McGregor said: “The significance of Albanese’s visit might be that the days of Australia’s successful reconciliation of both China and America are coming to an end. This task is getting much harder. China will make more demands of Australia while the AUKUS agreement binds us into deeper military ties with the US. It is hard to see how we can keep riding these two bikes without the risk of collision. What does China do when the US nuclear submarines start rotating out of Perth? There is no apparent answer to what comes next.”
White offered a similar warning: “Australia has always wanted to persuade the Americans we support them against China and persuade China that we aren’t really doing that. This has been the heart of Australian diplomacy since John Howard and for a long time it worked. But those days are now running out.”

Cue another tourist snap, turned into yet another EXPLAINER. Ye ancient cats and dogs and alien bugs, On Anthony Albanese's fifth day of his visit to China, the Prime Minister visited the Great Wall drawing a comparison with former prime minister Gough Whitlam who walked the wall in 1971. North Asia Correspondent Will Glasgow is on the scene with all the latest from the Prime Minister's trip.



On with the waffle and the verbal word salad, without the benefit of any condiments or spices...moving from traps and warnings to compleat cluelessness ...

White said Albanese’s visit meant “Australia-China relations are heading in a positive direction and the settlement with China that Albanese has established is pretty sustainable” – but this only worked if Labor recast its ties with the US by opting out of any Taiwan conflict and extricated itself from the consequences of AUKUS.
Albanese, on the contrary, is pledged to the US alliance, to AUKUS and a strategic partnership with the US. His conservative critics who dispute this are clueless about Albanese – he wants stability with both the US and China – but the days of that stability are coming to an end.
This is the real challenge. And it is where Australia is actually clueless.
The China that Whitlam and Bob Hawke dealt with successfully is long gone. Even the China that Tony Abbott engaged in 2014 is vastly changed.
What was the purpose of Albanese invoking Whitlam’s glory days from the early 1970s, half a century ago? It may work for domestic politics but it is farcical as any sort of China model today. Does Albanese not actually grasp this?
President Xi has transformed China. He has militarised the South China Sea; pioneered an economic and technological policy to achieve superiority over the US; promoted a strategy of creating client states across the region; united with Russia in a closer partnership vital in assisting its war in Ukraine; tightened Communist Party control within China; imposed tighter controls over business; made clear he is ready to use force to take Taiwan; and engaged in a massive military build-up, both conventional and nuclear.

Does "Ned" actually grasp how tedious he sounds? Or how relentlessly tedious the interrupting illustrations are? Anthony Albanese meets Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing. Picture: PMO




The reptiles are relying on the PMO for their visual fodder, while "Ned" presumably has an endlessly flowing spring as the source water for his hysteria ...

Pivotal to Xi’s strategy is deceiving governments and analysts about what is happening in front of their eyes. For Australia, expanding and deepening relations with Xi’s China is entirely different from the highly sensible policies of Whitlam and Hawke. Yet there seems little or no sign that Albanese grasps this apart from his repeating the traditional rhetoric that Australia and China have “different political systems” and “different values”. This is a truism; it is not the China challenge of today.
That is about power and sovereignty; it is about compromising Australian sovereignty, undermining our ability to shape our own destiny and driving this nation to the point where our governments routinely take the decisions that China prefers.
Some business figures get this, but others are blind; witness Andrew Forrest, who told the media during the visit the task was to strengthen the bilateral relationship “and yes, security becomes a distraction”.
What has happened to the foreign policy and national security advisory process in Canberra? What advice did Albanese get before this visit? How does he intend to expand the relationship with China but safeguard national security from China’s repeated foreign and technological inter­ference? The Labor government gives the Australian public nothing on the most vital questions in this relationship beyond sterile talking points. How does the government envisage its future management of the China relations with its mix of advantages and risks? The only conclusion is this government cannot tackle the critical issues that Australia faces.

So desperate were the reptiles that they recycled that PMO image into yet another EXPLAINER, as if "Ned" hadn't done more than enough explaining, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets face-to-face with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, marking a major step in rebuilding Australia–China relations. Beyond the diplomatic pleasantries, tough issues were on the table, including military tensions near Australian waters, the case of detained writer Yang Hengjun, and pressure to restore trade ties. North Asia correspondent Will Glasgow reports from outside the Great Hall of the People as Australia navigates a delicate balancing act: re-engaging with Beijing while standing firm on national interests.




Then at the next gobbet came the one chance for a bit of comedy ...

Does Albanese ever listen to Kevin Rudd on China? As for the Coalition, does it ever bother to read Rudd? Presumably not. In Rudd’s 604-page book On Xi Jinping, he penetrates to the essence of Xi’s ideological quest to change China’s national direction, internally and externally. Rudd describes this a “decisive turn to a more Leninist party, a more Marxist economy, or a more nationalist and assertive international policy”.
Rudd documents at length the elements of Xi’s more aggressive policy, saying his ideology “still calls for maximum preparedness for the real-world possibility of confrontation and conflict with America”.
Rudd outlines Xi’s major expansion of China’s nuclear weapons; his game plan to use artificial intelligence in military rivalry with the US; his preparations to take Taiwan by force if necessary; his campaign to drive the region to accept China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea; his efforts to undermine Japan’s and South Korea’s ties with the US; his leveraging economic clout to make China “the indispensable economic partner of every region of the world except the United States” and to undermine any “rationale for continuing US military alli­ances”. Rudd says Xi sees making Beijing the “undisputed economic capital of East Asia” is a strategic condition “for eroding the political underpinnings of US regional military arrangements”.

Here we go:

Question: does any of this analysis ever get to Albanese?

Answer: the pond can't speak for comrade Albo or his companions, but it gets the pond regretting it woke up this morning ...

Cue a meaningless snap to accompany "Ned's" sudden existential crisis, the sudden realisation that no one might give a flying fuck about his latest word salad, The national flags of Australia and China flutter at Tiananmen Square this week. Picture: Wang Xin / VCG



Time to crank up from saucy doubts, fears and warnings to essential and unresolved dilemmas ...

Albanese’s visit merely highlights the essential and unresolved dilemmas that Australia faces. The economic reality is that President Xi and Premier Li Qiang offer Albanese an opportunity he can hardly reject. China’s leaders are focused on the big picture. Xi said China wanted to “push the bilateral relationship further” and “no matter how the international landscape may evolve” the two nations should uphold this new direction “unswervingly”. That is, Australia and China should be tied together. Li talked about the “new momentum” in relations.
Yet the language conceals the reality. Australia and China aren’t tied together, though Albanese’s method of minimising any public criticism of China only distorts the picture. As McGregor says: “With Trump in the White House, China is back to the game of a decade ago or so ago, when they hoped they could use the massive economic partnership to prise Australia away from the US”, and while “Albanese will disappoint Xi on that issue” Beijing will keep working at the job.
The reality is that the Albanese government is standing firm on removing Darwin Port from its Chinese owners, it maintains its naval transitions through the South China Sea, conducts exercises off The Philippines with Japan and the US, and above all upholds the AUKUS agreement.
That’s a suite of positions that China loathes but is prepared to temper its views about in the hope of making progress with Albanese courtesy of pressure, tangible enticements and charm.
And Albanese was charmed – too charmed.

Too charmed? He should have turned to the mango Mussolini for a wild-eyed embrace? China’s President Xi Jinping welcomes Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in the Great Hall of the People. Picture: Lukas Coch / AAP




"Ned" then tried on a gentle form of billy goat butt, in the style of "to be fair", when the whole point of the hysteria is to be completely unfair...

It is a story we have seen before. Whitlam’s visits to China in 1973 as prime minister and in 1971 as opposition leader, laying the basis for the establishment of diplomatic relations, were epic events. This is the legitimate stuff of Labor legend. The risk is creating the false suggestion that Australia can re-create such glory days. But they are gone in a far harsher and tougher Australia-China relationship.
To be fair to Albanese, he tried to negotiate a middle path, applying to China his usual refrain “not getting ahead of ourselves”. He described his personal relations with Xi as “warm and engaging” but dodged the question on whether he trusted Xi, saying instead “nothing that he has said to me, has he not fulfilled”. Asked whether he believed Australia could win in the “strategic competition” it has used to characterise relations, Albanese chose the path of evasion.
Reflecting on the visit, White said: “Albanese in his first term wanted to avoid the appearance of going too far with China and exposing himself to domestic criticism for being too soft. But he has moved on from that. I believe this is a significant visit because it shows Albanese far more confident about warming up ties with China without paying any domestic political price. I think China has got what it wanted from Albanese’s visit but I don’t think what it wanted has been to Australia’s disadvantage.”

Cue a final turgid snap, a bit like the whole piece, Anthony Albanese and China’s Premier Li Qiang inspect the Honour Guard in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Tuesday. Picture: Lukas Coch / AAP




Then it was on to the final gobbet, the final sprint to the top to finish off this Everest climb...

This would accord with Albanese’s analysis. But as White recognises, the pivotal question remains: what happens when Albanese fails to satisfy Xi’s demands?
Albanese’s visit confirms that the security hawks who insist that the Prime Minister prioritise security over economics are preaching a doomed cause. This is hardly a revelation.
Trade Minister Don Farrell has said our China trade is worth nearly 10 times our US trade and provides 25 per cent of our export dollars. Australia won’t decouple from China. It won’t bow to any US pressure to limit economic ties with China. The core position was enunciated by Farrell post-election: “We don’t want to do less business with China, we want to do more business with China.”
That’s Albanese’s mission, tied to a domestic political spin. Hence the business delegation with him.
What will the Trump administration make of Albanese’s visit, if it has time to make anything? There is one certainty. The architect of the AUKUS review, anti-China hawk and Pentagon official Elbridge Colby, will become only more suspicious of Australia. The juxtaposition of Albanese’s six days in China with its leaders and without any meeting with Trump creates an optic that won’t help Albanese or Australia.
The irony is that Albanese has put China relations on a stable forward path when American relations are clouded in uncertainty courtesy of Trump’s punitive tariffs, his unpredictability, the AUKUS review and speculation about our stance on Taiwan.
There is an urgent need for a Trump-Albanese meeting to bring clarity to the issues that now impinge on the alliance.
The pivotal question for Australia is how US policy in Asia will be sorted. That means a resolution of the obvious split in the Trump administration. That’s between the conventional anti-China hawks who want strategic deterrence against Beijing and the isolationist lobby – with Trump as its likely proponent – who believe in economic and technology rivalry with China but shun any notion of military conflict over Taiwan or anywhere else involving China.

There's an urgent need to meet the Cantaloupe Caligula? Isn't he busy suing "Ned's" boss and the rest of News Corp?

Hasn't he got troubles of his own?






The pond just needed a break, because consider this. 

The pond rated the bromancer as second, because he beat "Ned" by a whole minute, with the reptiles rating him a twelve minute read.

This was like climbing Everest and then saddling up to climb the tallest peak on Mars, courtesy Uncle Leon ...




The header: Albanese spends week praising regime behind ‘most dangerous strategic circumstances in 80 years’, Anthony Albanese’s self-indulgent visit was propaganda gold for Beijing but did nothing for our interests.
The caption for that endlessly repeated image: Anthony Albanese and President Xi Jinping during the PM's trip to China. Illustration Geordie Gray
The dire proposal: This article contains features which are only available in the web version, Take me there

What to say that the bromancer hasn't already said at huge length before?

The pond made a huge mistake getting up this morning ...

In terms of Australia’s national interests, Anthony Albanese made a huge mistake in conducting such a high-profile, lengthy, substance-free trip to the People’s Republic of China.
Australia got nothing from the trip, not a single concession to any of our interests. Beijing got everything it wanted.
It was a characteristic Australian mess, falling for flattery and flim-flam while neglecting key national interests. The visit lacked substance but was propaganda gold for Beijing.
The timing was terrible. It badly distorted Australian diplomacy. And six days – the longest single visit to any nation by the Prime Minister – was simultaneously cringingly subservient and foolishly self-indulgent.
The single biggest economic issue didn’t get a mention at all. That is Beijing’s predatory pricing and wholesale destruction of Australian industries through industrial policies that make a mockery of the international trading system.
Albanese has rightly criticised Donald Trump’s tariff unilateralism. He hasn’t said a word about Beijing’s practice of massively subsidising industries, selling products below costs, until competitors are driven out of business and it can pitch prices at any level it likes.
This is not only an economic disaster, it also is increasingly a strategic threat, as rare earths and critical minerals demonstrate.

Yeah, yeah, traps, warnings, disasters, threats, saucydoubs and fears and another tourist snap, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and partner Jodie Haydon arrive in Beijing on Monday. Picture: Lukas Coch/AAP




By this point it should be clear that the pond is well over making any notes, the pond's main aim is simply to make it to the end...

The pond is so fatigued it's not going to make a joke by showing a snap of overalls to signify the overall big picture...

But before we leave the big picture, consider this visit in the round.
Albanese went to the PRC having been unable to meet Trump. Trump is surely a difficult president. But Australia has core interests with the US far beyond any we have in Beijing. Whatever Albanese thinks of Trump personally, he has an obligation to manage the US relationship in Australia’s national interest. Trump cancelled a scheduled meeting with Albanese. It’s impossible to believe that if Albanese made a proper government to government request to meet Trump in Washington, this would be denied.
Naturally Trump would raise Australia’s laughable defence budget. If Albanese actually believes 2 per cent of GDP is adequate, he’d be the only person on the planet to do so, though of course Beijing is delighted that Albanese followed its advice to spurn the Trump administra­tion’s call to do more in defence.
Either way, Albanese should be willing to talk to Trump about it. He needs to have an agenda for Trump. In a hugely asymmetric relationship like that between Washington and Canberra, the initiative mostly lies with the smaller partner.
Meanwhile, the AUKUS agreement is in obvious trouble, and Albanese is unable to argue its merits in Washington or to the Australian people, much less to the leadership in Beijing. Hugging pandas in Chengdu, striding in Gough Whitlam’s fatuous footsteps along the Great Wall of the People and demonstrating tennis skills, are no doubt more agreeable than trying to rescue AUKUS in the US, but they’re not a legitimate priority for an Australian leader. The timing of the Beijing frolic was dismal. So was its structure. In northeast Asia there are two nations with which we share profound values and interests, Japan and South Korea. A swing of six days could have been divided between these nations and the PRC.

A difficult president? He's planning to sue the socks off News Corp. It's not enough that he's taken Colbert down, he's gunning for all the reptiles, and yet the bromancer is sublimely unaware, and concerned only for others, Detained Australian writer Yang Hengjun.




What about Ukraine? What about Gaza? What about the rest of the world?

Relax, you're cocooned in the hive mind ...

Instead, the Prime Minister spent the week praising the wonders of the regime that has created what so many Albanese government officials and appointees have told us are our most dangerous strategic circumstances in 80 years.
While Albanese was in Beijing, the Australia-US joint military exercise Talisman Sabre was being conducted around northern Australia. Australia’s elderly defence assets – undergunned and antique Anzac-class frigates, for example – have become so feeble they mostly can’t be sent into war zones. But they can exercise militarily. The purpose of Talisman Sabre is to enhance allied interoperability and to signal to others – mainly Beijing – steadfast resolve and deterrence.
The failure to mention the key issue of Beijing’s predatory pricing and the failure to secure a single concession of any consequence from Beijing demonstrated the resolve of a marshmallow suffering a crisis of confidence.
Albanese failed to win the release of wrongly imprisoned Australian writer Yang Hengjun, preposterously charged with espionage and detained more than six years. He failed to win the slightest undertaking of better conduct from the PRC in its live-fire navy exercises conducted without notice to Australia, and its other aggressive military actions.
Albanese was perhaps embarrassed into having to raise these issues publicly at all. In Australia, and even in Beijing, he constantly argued the PRC navy was operating within maritime law.
This is a foolish distinction. It’s possible to be intensely intimidating and conduct highly dangerous manoeuvres while technically staying within the law.
Which genius decided to have this visit while Talisman Sabre was unfolding? The truth is, nobody sees the PRC President, Xi Jinping, at a time of their choosing. If you get to see the PRC President, it’s at a time the President chooses. The Beijing bureaucracy choreographs state visits meticulously. Perhaps Beijing decided, exquisitely, to host this visit while Australia’s military exercises were under way.

Cue another still to add to the visual monotony, Xi Jinping meets with Albanese in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Picture: Lukas Coch/AAP



If only they'd kill off AUKUS, to put an end to the reptile hysteria and to the pond's overwhelming sense of ennui ...

Come on Elbridge, do your thing ...

The visit was much disrupted by the occasional hint and question from US Under Secretary of Defence for Policy Elbridge Colby, who is conducting a review into AUKUS.
Colby is rightly concerned that his own nation, the US, is failing to build nuclear submarines fast enough to credibly sell three to five to Australia in the 2030s. He’s concerned Australia’s preparation for AUKUS is inadequate and our dismal defence budget indicates a lack of seriousness.
There has been much controversy about Colby apparently asking Canberra what it would do if the US were involved in military conflict with Beijing in defence of Taiwan. If Colby is asking Canberra to commit in advance to going to war in hypothetical future circumstances, his request is absurd and unreasonable.
However, while we know Colby has had some pretty unsatisfactory meetings with Australian officials, we don’t know exactly what he’s asking.
It may be there’s a more subtle and limited request involved.
A disturbing paper in considering this comes from a former deputy assistant secretary of state under George W. Bush, Evan Feigenbaum, now vice-president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

A source of saucy doubts and fears, Elbridge Colby is examining whether the AUKUS agreement still aligns with the priorities being championed by the US President.



If it must be so, then so it must be ...

In Beneath the Mateship, a Quiet Crisis is Brewing in the US-Australia Alliance, Feigenbaum praises growing co-operation between the two allies over many years. But now, he says, there are serious conflicts of expectation that could easily lead to crisis. The first is the Trump administration cannot accept that Australia, unlike every other serious US ally, spends only 2 per cent of GDP on defence.
Though Feigenbaum is full of goodwill for Australia, he concludes Canberra must spend more because “Australia under its current budget cannot afford both the full scope of investments envisioned under AUKUS and the other needed investments in conventional capabilities”.
He also sees disagreement over precommitment on Taiwan. US military planners naturally include all their military assets located in Australia when they plan for any contingency involving US forces in the Indo-Pacific, especially over Taiwan. However, no Australian government would cede sovereignty by writing a blank cheque of precommitment.
Another difficulty is over Australia’s military geography, which is relevant to northeast Asia, but Australians may see that as far away.
Next is US force posture. In any conflict the US would seek greater access to Australian facilities. Feigenbaum acidly notes the vagueness with which Australian defence documents talk of contributing to US-led deterrence without ever saying what that might mean. Feigenbaum is too polite to say it, but Albanese government speeches referencing deterrence are even vaguer.
Finally, Feigenbaum nominates “coalitional defence”. Australian attitudes to helping Washington in any conflict will depend on how broad a coalition the US has built. Yet such coalition building seems antithetical to Trump.

Is it o'clock time for a snap of champers Pete, in company with a fiendish snow dome collector? It is, it is, US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth and Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles in Singapore in May. Picture: DoD




On and on the bromancer went ...

Feigenbaum contrasts the US-Australia alliance with the US-Japan relationship where operational roles in potential conflict are well thought through in advance. Feigenbaum sees danger in the public spat between US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, who called for Australia to lift defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP, and Albanese, who tartly replied Australia would make its own decisions. That appealed nationalistically but typically avoided all substance. Feigenbaum suggests there “has been too much rah-rah and too little intellectually honest self-reflection”.
Feigenbaum is encouraged, however, by the Australian Chief of the Defence Force, Admiral David Johnston, who told a recent conference: “Perhaps finally we are having to reconsider Australia as a homeland from which we will conduct combat operations.”
If Australia were waging combat from its own territory, who would we possibly be fighting beside and who would we possibly be fighting against?

The pond did note that the bromancer seemed significantly short on EXPLAINERS, but the inclination to tedious explanations continued,

Article IV in the ANZUS Treaty states that any attack in the Pacific area on a member nation would be dangerous to all treaty parties and each would “act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes”. Then Article V says: “an attack on any of the Parties is deemed to include an attack on … its armed forces”. ANZUS would thus cover a PRC attack on US forces going to help Taiwan.

Sky Noise joined in the sinister explanations: Sky News political reporter Julia Bradley says a Chinese businessman, Wang Yongxin, allegedly tied to the Chinese Communist Party, has been linked to property deals at the Kembla and Newcastle ports. "Mr Wangs son, Wang Zhongdong, who is director of the company Port Kembla Group, he purchased the Port Kembla site back in January," Ms Bradley said. "The purchase for the site … was for commercial reasons related to endeavours in the green energy space. He's also denied any link to China's United Front, the communist party's foreign influence arm. "It's unclear whether the deals were reviewed by the foreign investment board, so far, no commentary from the government as to those purchases."




Say what? We might not commit to a war with China by Xmas? Where would that leave the reptiles' very own Reichsmarschall des GroßAustralisch Reiches?

No treaty actually pre-commits a nation to war. If Russia invaded Estonia tomorrow, fellow NATO members such as Britain or Spain, or especially the US, would still have to make a decision to take military action or not. We know Colby has had some unhappy meetings with Australian officials, but we don’t know exactly what he said. If he’s calling for more integrated joint planning for the possibility of conflict, that’s reasonable.
All militaries, including Australia’s, have many plans they hope never to implement. Having the plan doesn’t mean any government’s decision has been made for it in advance. It just means the military can act effectively if government tells it to.
It may be Colby is forcing us to confront several dimensions of reality we routinely avoid. We’ll certainly get no enlightenment or leadership on anything like this from the Albanese government. That Albanese feels no inclination to lead an AUKUS conversation but would rather be hugging pandas is a sign of poor priorities.

Cue a sign of megalomania, a wide embrace, Australian businessman Andrew Forrest, Albanese and BHP Geraldine Slattery at a press conference after a Steel Decarbonisation Roundtable in Shanghai. Picture: Lukas Coch/AAP




The pond hopes things will be better on Sunday, but fears not ...

There was nothing of any consequence achieved for Australia in this visit. The so-called economic side of the trip was a mixture of fantasy, farce and harmless jawboning. The fantastical idea that we will one day sell green iron and green steel to the PRC, which will pay a premium so it can get closer to meeting net zero emissions in 2060, has no purchase on reality.
You can see why business would go along with it, though: better keep onside with governments and their ephemeral rhetoric, there may well be big subsidies on offer, and so on.
Meanwhile the PRC is deliberately destroying Australian industries through predatory pricing. The PRC, much more than Trump, has destroyed the global trading system. Brendan Pearson, former Australian ambassador to the OECD, wrote this week that the OECD estimates Beijing subsidises its manufacturers 10 times more heavily than Western nations subsidise their manufacturers. The OECD further estimates that by 2030 the PRC will control 45 per cent of global manufacturing.
The PRC method is simple. It identifies one strategic sector after another. With concessional financing from state banks, below-market energy prices, reduced costs for all manner of business inputs, plus the guaranteed home market, PRC companies can always undercut their competitors. No Western firm can ever meet the “China price”. When competitors are driven out of business, PRC companies move the price back to profitable levels.
By then they own the market. Deindustrialisation caused by the PRC has hollowed out the economies of European nations and the US. In exchange, these societies have got cheap Chinese goods. Australia also suffered this process, but we gave up manufacturing long ago. Now, manufacturing accounts for only 5 per cent of our economy, one of the lowest levels in the OECD.

This might well rate as the dullest pond outing with the reptiles of all time, what with all the pomp and circumstance, The Prime Minister and China’s Premier Li Qiang inspect the Honour Guard in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Picture: Lukas Coch/AAP




After the pomp, time for more hysteria, and of all things, a visitation by the liar from the Shire ...

While this deindustrialisation has been socially harmful and economically damaging, it also has big strategic consequences, especially in strategic industries.
Nothing is more strategic than rare earths and critical minerals. These are essential for countless hi-tech applications, including many military technologies. A substantial quantity is needed to make the high-performance magnets that go into our F-35 air force fighters. The PRC completely dominates this trade and has forced other suppliers out of business.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison tells Inquirer: “China massively subsidises production to block out competitors and this gives them their dominant position. This is exactly what China has done on critical minerals and rare earths for 20 years. China’s plan is to dominate, control the price, block out rivals.”

You can't sink much lower than the liar from the Shire, so it was time for another tourist snap, Albanese with partner Jodie Haydon, ‘striding in Gough Whitlam’s fatuous footsteps’ along the Great Wall of China. Picture: Lukas Coch/AAP




Then it was on with more ranting...

This process was evident in the devastation of the Australian nickel industry and in the extreme challenges and costs Australia is encountering trying to develop its rare earths industry.
Morrison, freed from office, speaks plainly, but he’s not making a partisan point. Resources Minister Madeleine King, in commenting on the closure of BHP’s nickel operation in Western Australia, said: “Because of an opaque market and a combination of Chinese investment of gargantuan proportion into Indonesia nickel mines … there was a steep decline in nickel prices which led to the closure of Nickel West.”
The nickel refining processes the PRC used in Indonesia are hugely energy intensive. For those still clinging to the fantasy of Beijing as a hero of net zero, it’s droll to note Beijing financed coal-fired power stations in Indonesia to power nickel operations. Beijing floods the market when a competitor looks as though it will establish a beachhead. This makes the competitor unprofitable and convinces investors the sector’s too risky.
A huge worldwide copper shortage is forecast as copper is central in electricity and the great decarbonisation requires vast new electricity supplies. Yet Townsville’s copper smelter could go out of business. The Albanese government is stumping up billions of dollars in subsidies to smelters and refineries.

The pond realised it had made a mistake. 

You could go much lower than the liar from the Shire, you could join the Canavan caravan and celebrate the coal that batters, Matt Canavan wants Australia to ‘fight back and protect other key metals industries’.




That grim sighting made the pond tune out completely. Put Aussies first? MAGA moron down under? Say no more, though the bromancer will keep on saying ...

Former resources minister Matt Canavan (how can the opposition allow him not to be on the frontbench?) tells Inquirer: “China has a clear strategy to monopolise key industrial commodities. They have already done it to nickel, which cost 10,000 Australian jobs. We need to fight back and protect other key metals industries before we lose more jobs to China.” He estimates another 6000 Australian jobs are directly at risk right now because of Beijing’s predatory practices.
In an important paper for the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies, Gracelin Baskaran demonstrates how Beijing drove down the price of nickel, lithium and neodymium-praseodymium oxide, the critical rare earth involved in high-performance magnets, to drive competitors out of the market. She thinks the only effective response is for the US and its allies to establish an “anchor market” that allies rare earths.
Morrison makes a similar argument: “The only way around it is to set up a secure supply chain with a guaranteed price. I would say to the US that co-operating with friends and allies works well in producing military security; co-operating with friends and allies would work well in producing economic security.”
Asked to compare his time as prime minister with today, Morrison says: “China’s plan back then was to isolate us from the US by bullying us. Their plan now is to isolate us from the US by charming and flattering us.”
Rare earths are so expensive partly because while digging them up is easy enough, transforming them into usable metals is extremely challenging technically.
The problem with what both Morrison and Baskaran propose is that Trump has shown little ability to rally and organise allies. His trade actions have been scattergun and not discriminated between US allies and strategic competitors.

Cue yet another tourist snap, presumably designed to induce nausea and hostility in the hive mind, Hugging pandas in Chengdu is ‘no doubt more agreeable than trying to rescue AUKUS in the US’. Picture: Lukas Coch/AAP



It was, mercifully, the last snap, and this was the last gobbet, and with apologies to Johnny Mathis, the pond sensed that it had been on an interminable journey to the twelfth of never ...

Albanese has plenty of criticism of Trump’s trade policy but nothing to say, in Beijing or in Australia, about PRC industrial policies that wipe out whole Australian industries. You’d think between gushing about pandas and performing devotions to Gough it might be worth a sentence or two.
Similarly, while official Australian policy, even today, is aimed at diversifying trade, this trip, if it has any effect on trade at all, will intensify Australian dependence on China. We have failed at trade diversification, which is one reason Albanese should be in Japan, South Korea and India. But Beijing is diversifying away from us.
In 2023-24, our iron ore exports were worth $138bn, a fifth of our total exports. Iron ore, coal and gas between them constitute nearly half our total exports, making us a dangerously narrow economy.
Beijing will move away from Australian iron ore as soon as it can, whatever fantasies it spins Albanese. Beijing now controls Simandou mine in Guinea that will come online this year. It has invested in a lot of African mines. The move away from Australian iron ore will probably be slow, gradual and remorseless. It takes time to build up new supplies. And the Pilbara is a kind of iron ore logistics paradise. But the trends are moving against Australia.
With apologies to Johnny Mercer, Albanese’s self-indulgent and at times fatuous homage to the PRC did nothing to eliminate the negatives, accentuate the (real) positives or latch on to the (Australian) affirmative. Instead it was all about “Mr Inbetween”. Wholly befitting a nation that sleeps while history marches.

After all that, the pond can only offer the wan hope that tomorrow is another day, and meanwhile, here's a comic to enjoy for the closing off of the hive mind this day ...




Friday, July 18, 2025

A shocking scandal, secrets, and always be asking questions late on a Friday ...

 

The now official newspaper for the donkey Democrats unleashed another yarn, this one by Khadeeja Safdar and Joe Palazzolo.

It was of course, a hoax, fake news, all the fault of the bloody fraudulent files the Democrats compiled, cooked up, and then refused to release, part of their canny 4D chess ability to pander to conspiracy theorists ...




And suddenly they pulled off the biggest prize of all.

They turned the WSJ, as easy as the Ruskis turned the Cambridge Five ...



Jeffrey Epstein’s Friends Sent Him Bawdy Letters for a 50th Birthday Album. One Was From Donald Trump. The leather-bound book was compiled by Ghislaine Maxwell. The president says the letter ‘is a fake thing.’ (sorry, paywall)

Immediately conspiracy theorists were all over the yarn. 

Have this addition to the Epstein files folklore got legs, has it got the sort of seven inch high heels that might help turn the MAGAt eye?

It was Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday, and Ghislaine Maxwell was preparing a special gift to mark the occasion. She turned to Epstein’s family and friends. One of them was Donald Trump.
Maxwell collected letters from Trump and dozens of Epstein’s other associates for a 2003 birthday album, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. 
Pages from the leather-bound album—assembled before Epstein was first arrested in 2006—are among the documents examined by Justice Department officials who investigated Epstein and Maxwell years ago, according to people who have reviewed the pages. It’s unclear if any of the pages are part of the Trump administration’s recent review.
The president’s past relationship with Epstein is at a sensitive moment. The Justice Department documents, the so-called Epstein files, and who or what is in them are at the center of a storm consuming the Trump administration. On Wednesday, after angry comments about how the files are a hoax created by Democrats, President Trump lashed out at his own supporters for refusing to let the matter go.
The letter bearing Trump’s name, which was reviewed by the Journal, is bawdy—like others in the album. It contains several lines of typewritten text framed by the outline of a naked woman, which appears to be hand-drawn with a heavy marker. A pair of small arcs denotes the woman’s breasts, and the future president’s signature is a squiggly “Donald” below her waist, mimicking pubic hair.
The letter concludes: “Happy Birthday — and may every day be another wonderful secret.”
In an interview with the Journal on Tuesday evening, Trump denied writing the letter or drawing the picture. “This is not me. This is a fake thing. It’s a fake Wall Street Journal story,” he said.
“I never wrote a picture in my life. I don’t draw pictures of women,” he said. “It’s not my language. It’s not my words.”
He told the Journal he was preparing to file a lawsuit if it published an article. “I’m gonna sue The Wall Street Journal just like I sued everyone else,” he said.

Oh yes, indeed he is, or he says he is ...



Is this another case of Hitler's diaries from the Murdochian mob, or do they have the mud to make it splatter and stick?

Allegations that Epstein had been sexually abusing girls became public in 2006 and he was arrested that year. Epstein died in 2019 in jail after he was arrested a second time and charged with sex trafficking conspiracy. 
Justice Department officials didn’t respond to requests for comment or address questions about whether the Trump page and other pages of the birthday album were part of the agency’s recent documents review. The FBI declined to comment.
The existence of the album and the contents of the birthday letters haven’t previously been reported. 
The album had poems, photos and greetings from businesspeople, academics, Epstein’s former girlfriends and childhood pals, according to the documents reviewed by the Journal and people familiar with them. 
Among those who submitted letters were billionaire Leslie Wexner and attorney Alan Dershowitz. The album also contained a letter from a now-deceased Harvard economist, one of Epstein’s report cards from Mark Twain junior high school in Brooklyn and a note from a former assistant that included an acrostic with Epstein’s name: “Jeffrey, oh Jeffrey!/ Everyone loves you!/ Fun in the sun!/ Fun just for fun!/ Remember…don’t forget me soon!/ Epstein…you rock!/ You are the best!”
Epstein was Wexner’s money manager at the time. The longtime leader of Victoria’s Secret wrote a short message that said: “I wanted to get you what you want… so here it is….”
After the text was a line drawing of what appeared to be a woman’s breasts. 
Wexner declined to comment through a spokesman. Wexner’s spokesman previously told the Journal that the retail mogul “severed all ties with Epstein in 2007 and never spoke with him again.”
Dershowitz’s letter included a mock-up of a “Vanity Unfair” magazine cover with mock headlines such as “Who was Jack the Ripper? Was it Jeffrey Epstein?” He joked that he had convinced the magazine to change the focus of an article from Epstein to Bill Clinton.
Dershowitz, who represented Epstein after his first arrest, said, “It’s been a long time and I don’t recall the content of what I may have written.”
The book was put together by a New York City bookbinder, Herbert Weitz, according to people who were involved in the process. Weitz, who died in 2020, listed Epstein as a client on his website in 2003. 
It isn’t clear how the letter with Trump’s signature was prepared. Inside the outline of the naked woman was a typewritten note styled as an imaginary conversation between Trump and Epstein, written in the third person.

Conspiracy theorists were immediately suspicious because it wasn't the actual note, it was a transcript:


Do they have the actual note, or did they merely sight it? 

What's its provenance? 

How will it stand up in court?

Did they decide to hold back the copy so they could run another story, a follow up to the opening tease?

Or does it have the strength and substance of cream lathered up to excite the taste buds?

Even more importantly, what's it mean? 

Conspiracy theorists will have to spend endless hours trying to decode King Donald's alleged attempt to do Shakspere ...

“Voice Over: There must be more to life than having everything,” the note began.
Donald: Yes, there is, but I won’t tell you what it is.
Jeffrey: Nor will I, since I also know what it is. 
Donald: We have certain things in common, Jeffrey. 
Jeffrey: Yes, we do, come to think of it. 
Donald: Enigmas never age, have you noticed that? 
Jeffrey: As a matter of fact, it was clear to me the last time I saw you. 
Trump: A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday — and may every day be another wonderful secret.

Secrets? Certain things in common? A pal? Every day a wonderful secret?

What are these secrets? 

What is this Rosebud? (Devotees of Citizen Kane will know what that really means).

There was also a lot of back story in the WSJ yarn, much of it familiar to followers of the saga ...

For example ...

‘Jeffrey enjoys his social life’
When he turned 50, Epstein was already wealthy from managing Wexner’s fortune and was socializing with Trump, Clinton and other powerful people at his Manhattan townhouse, Palm Beach, Fla., home and private Caribbean island. 
A spokesman for Clinton referred to a 2019 statement that former President Clinton had cut off ties more than a decade before Epstein’s second arrest and didn’t know about Epstein’s alleged crimes.
Epstein and Trump spent time together in the 1990s and early 2000s and were photographed at social events, including with Maxwell and Melania Trump. A 1992 tape from the NBC archives shows Trump partying with Epstein at his Mar-a-Lago estate; Trump is seen pulling a woman toward him and patting her behind.
Trump, along with others including Clinton, also appeared several times on flight logs for Epstein’s private jet.
A 2002 New York magazine profile of Epstein quoted Trump. “I’ve known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy,” Trump said. “He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. No doubt about it—Jeffrey enjoys his social life.”
Both men said that they subsequently had a falling-out. Trump has said their friendship ended before Epstein pleaded guilty to procuring a minor for prostitution in 2008, served time in a Florida jail and registered as a sex offender. 
When Epstein was arrested again in 2019, Trump said he hadn’t talked to Epstein for about 15 years. “I knew him like everybody in Palm Beach knew him,” Trump said in the Oval Office at that time. “I was not a fan of his, that I can tell you.”
Trump’s spokeswoman told the Journal in 2023 that Trump had banned Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago club at some point in the past, without elaborating. 
Maxwell, a British socialite, was convicted in 2021 of helping Epstein’s sex-trafficking and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Maxwell didn’t respond to a letter requesting an interview sent to her in prison. Arthur Aidala, an attorney representing Maxwell in her appeal, said, “At this point, she is focused on her case before the Supreme Court of the United States.”

And so on ...

No need to go on with the rest of that familiar recitation of a familiar tale.

The pond only notes all this fuss to ask some questions, always be asking questions.

Will King Donald really sue?

Has he heard of the Streisand effect?

How to obey King Donald's order to stop talking and move on, when this hoppy toad hops into the world?

In the WSJ of all places ...

Will we keep talking forever about a vast conspiracy?

Will the lizards of Oz run with the WSJ story?

That's the actual story they have fair dibs on because it ran in a kissing cousins rag.

This day they came at it indirectly using AFP as their source...

The AFP?!

Talk about a truly feeble effort ...

Sure there was a big splash on the front page featuring the best buddies...




And that snap of the bestest buddies returned to be top of the story, ma ...



It was pretty dour and dull, but finally the reptiles in the hive mind had ignored the risks of succumbing to the Streisand effect.

The header: Trump orders release of Epstein grand jury testimony, The President made the order after The Wall St Journal published a story about an off-colour letter he allegedly wrote to the disgraced financier.

The caption for those unaware of the best buddies: Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump. Picture: Getty Images.

Amazingly the reptiles could spare only two minutes of coverage, or so they clocked the read as running:

Donald Trump has ordered the release of grand jury testimony relating to Jeffrey Epstein, as he threatened to sue News Corp and The Wall St Journal over a story about an off-colour letter the President allegedly wrote to the disgraced financier.
The Journal story, which quickly reverberated around Washington, says the note to Epstein bearing Mr Trump’s signature was part of a collection of notes for Epstein’s 50th birthday in 2003. The newspaper says it reviewed the letter but did not print an image.
The Journal reports that this letter and others are among the documents examined by Justice Department officials who investigated Epstein and Maxwell years ago.
The documents, the so-called Epstein files, and who or what is in them are at the centre of a storm consuming the presidency, amid claims Mr Trump’s administration is covering up lurid details of Epstein’s crimes to protect rich and powerful figures.
On Wednesday, after angry comments about how the files are a hoax created by Democrats, President Trump lashed out at his own supporters for refusing to let the matter go.
On Friday (AEST), Mr Trump announced on his Truth Social platform: “Based on the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein, I have asked Attorney-General Pam Bondi to produce any and all pertinent Grand Jury testimony, subject to Court approval. This SCAM, perpetuated by the Democrats, should end, right now!”
The announcement came shortly after he claimed he had told The Journal the alleged letter was “a fake.”
According to the WSJ, the letter contains several lines of typewritten text, contained in an outline of a naked woman drawn with a marker.
“The future president’s signature is a squiggly ‘Donald’ below her waist, mimicking pubic hair,” the Journal reported.
“The letter concludes: ‘Happy Birthday – and may every day be another wonderful secret.’” MR Trump denied writing the letter or drawing the figure, telling the Journal: “This is not me. This is a fake thing.”
“I don’t draw pictures of women,” he said. “It’s not my language. It’s not my words.”
Epstein died by suicide in a New York prison in 2019 – during Mr Trump’s first term – after being charged with sex trafficking in a scheme where he allegedly groomed young and underage women for sexual abuse by the rich and powerful.
The Trump-supporting far-right has long latched on to the scandal, claiming the existence of a still-secret list of Epstein’s powerful clients and that the late financier was in fact murdered in his cell as part of a cover-up.
The Justice Department and FBI said in a memo made public earlier this month there was no evidence that the disgraced financier kept a “client list” or was blackmailing powerful figures.
They also dismissed the claim that Epstein was murdered in jail, confirming his suicide, and said they would not be releasing any more information on the probe.
On Thursday, several US media outlets reported that a federal prosecutor who handled Epstein’s case, who is the daughter of a prominent Trump critic, was abruptly fired.
Maurene Comey, whose father is former FBI director James Comey, was dismissed Wednesday from her position as an assistant US attorney in Manhattan, several major US outlets reported.
Ms Comey also prosecuted Ghislaine Maxwell, the only former Epstein associate who has been criminally charged in connection with his activities.
Maxwell is the person who compiled the leather-bound book of letters for Epstein in 2003, The Journal reported.
AFP

That's it? That's all they had?

Is the WSJ going to take a big fall? Is that why the lizard Oz hacks are for the moment standing well clear?

Now that the log jam has broken, now that the beavers surrounding of the hive mind with logs has given away, will we now see a steady stream of conspiracy-related stories saturating the hive mind.

Questions, questions, always be asking questions.

Chief amongst them, how will Faux Noise cope? Will they still be able to cease and desist as ordered? And what of Sky Noise down under?


 


In which the pond eventually gets around to Killer times with our hole in bucket man Henry ...

 

The pond went to bed knowing that all the late night US comedians had had tremendous fun with King Donald's totally made up story about his MIT uncle having taught the Unabomber, and that Christianity Today had appeared on Morning Joe to expound on its editorial, Why We Want To See The Epstein Files.

The pond woke safe in the certain knowledge that all this would be disappeared up the fundament of the reptile hive mind at the lizard Oz, and so it came to pass ...




Not a sign or a sighting of King Donald berating his underling weaklings and consigning them to the wilderness ...



Deeply weird, and that includes you, Pam, Dan, Steve, and all the rest of the weaklings...



Better yet, why did the Democrats whip them up and not release them?

Instead the reptiles served up their own form of inane hysteria.

Perhaps the weirdest came with slick Steve's ongoing attempt to do a hit job on the ABC with an EXCLUSIVE.

EXCLUSIVE
‘​Not interested’: Media Watch refused to look into Myf ‘hit job’
ABC star Myf Warhurst’s fence-feuding neighbour’s plea that Media Watch investigate claims of a ‘cover-up’ involving the Spicks and Specks star fell on deaf ears. WATCH the confronting videos.
By Steve Jackson

Sorry Steve, even if the saga turned up on YouTube with lashings of POV phone coverage, it'd be hard to muster interest in a fence dispute ...

Oh there were a flurry of EXCLUSIVES, with the Darwin port top of the page ...

EXLUSIVE
AUKUS port purchases alarm: fears of Chinese Communist Party links
Companies controlled by the family of a Shanghai businessman with connections to the Chinese Communist Party’s foreign influence arm have purchased two commercial properties located within port precincts earmarked for AUKUS submarine bases.
By Jack Quail

The pond quailed away but promised to be deeply alarmed by 2050 or whenever King Donald contrives to deliver a sub.

Dexter Filkins story in The New Yorker, Is the U.S. Ready for the Next War? (*archive link) made the pond wonder yet again whether by then it might be the most useful form of kit ...

America’s best approximation of Oleksandr Yakovenko is Palmer Luckey, who helped found the defense startup Anduril in 2017. Not long ago, he met me at the company’s headquarters, in Costa Mesa, California, amid an array of high-tech weapons: drones, missiles, pilotless planes. Anduril is housed in a cavernous building that once contained the Orange County offices of the Los Angeles Times, whose faded logo is still visible on the exterior walls. At thirty-two, Luckey embodies the stereotype of a cocky, gnomic tech mogul: shorts and a Hawaiian shirt, flip-flops, a mullet and a soul patch. As we talked, he snacked from a bag of chocolate-chip cookies.
He wanted to show off his creations, autonomous weapons that he believes will upend many of the American military’s most cherished notions of strategy and defense. He walked over to a model of the Dive-XL, an unmanned submarine that can go a thousand miles without surfacing and is designed to be produced as quickly as an IKEA couch. “I can make one of these in a matter of days,” he said.

Ikea subs! Let's hope the allen key works.

And again ...

When the Cold War ended, America’s defense-industrial base shrivelled. Without persistent demand from the Pentagon, some factories closed, and others produced barely enough weapons to stay open. Skilled workers migrated to other jobs; those defense industries which still existed, like shipbuilding, were short tens of thousands of employees. As a result, American shipyards are now capable of completing only one new submarine per year.

Where's the bromancer when he's so badly needed? 

Never mind, the reptiles were spitefully pleased about China ...

EXCLUSIVE
Investment in China plunges despite the thaw in relations
Australian direct investment in China has more than halved since Anthony Albanese was elected in 2022, as firms remain concerned about heightened business risks and as the Chinese economic growth rate has slowed.
By Will Glasgow

Comrade Albo's trip was well down the page ...

RESPECT
PM spruiks ‘tangible outcomes’ from China visit
Anthony Albanese has lashed ­Coalition claims his lengthy China trip was ‘indulgent’, saying he had demonstrated Australia’s ‘respect’ to more than a billion Chinese people, while ­positioning his government to work through differences with Beijing.
By Ben Packham

Respect? Not in reptile la la land. 



Over on the extreme far right there was the usual parade of suspects...



John Lee stayed in tune with the hive mind ...

Trump isn’t the troublemaker, PM – that’s China’s Xi Jinping
If Australia sold a regional power some of our most potent military weapons, would we not inquire what they intend to do with those weapons?
By John Lee

Like all the reptiles, Lee ignored King Donald's current troubles, and forgot to mention his latest, greatest attempt at a distraction, Mexican style Coca-Cola.



Please focus on the most earth-shattering issues Mr Lee ... and try to reconcile King Donald's fear of Mexicans with his love of their coke (no, not that coke).

The meretricious Merritt was on hand to kick the TG can down the road ...

LEGAL AFFAIRS
The transgender dilemma and how MPs overlooked sex discrimination implications
Twelve years ago both sides of politics supported changes to the Sex Discrimination Act but nowhere did they make explicit reference to treat certain biological men as if they were women.
By Chris Merritt
Legal Affairs Contributor

The pond decided to ignore the bigotry and bile, but that left the pond with only two contenders, with Killer once again parading his white nationalist credentials ...



The header: Immigration crisis is leaving our national identity homeless, Roundtables about productivity and tax are all very well, but immigration is far and away Australia’s biggest social and economic problem.

The caption: Immigration is putting immense pressure on housing, infrastructure and social cohesion.

The weird, inconsequential advice: This article contains features which are only available in the web version, Take me there

The pond has no idea why it stays loyal to Killer. 

Perhaps it's because it's best way of checking out the IPA's current campaign to replicate the immigration hysteria in the US, though that has resulted in bad poll numbers and something of a backlash ...



Never mind, on there's never been a gang of bootstomping thugs Killer couldn't love. Why he'd even allow them to wear masks, a huge concession, so on with Killer's patented brand of verbal thuggery, derived, it seems, largely from having spent too much incel time with AI ...

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan triggered a significant backlash on social media last week when she posted a video of herself “handing the keys” to a home in a new social housing complex in the Melbourne suburb of Pascoe Vale to an immigrant Muslim lady with poor English.
Hulya was understandably grateful, telling Allan she was happy to be living so close to her grandchildren. But social media responders expressed extreme frustration – many in words unprintable here – that relatively scarce public housing was made available to someone who was not born here (who had other relatives nearby), while many thousands of Australians either couldn’t afford a home or were homeless.
These aren’t unreasonable concerns. Hulya must have been one of the 1.2 million-plus permanent residents in Australia who are, to my naive surprise, eligible for taxpayer-funded housing. Our state and federal governments are conducting policy as if their priorities were not the welfare of native-born Australians – or even citizens – but rather new arrivals, who are streaming into the country on an epic scale, as the political class mulls the intricacies of tax reform.

Inevitably the reptiles paused to make room for Dan the man Tehan joining in the furriner bashing, Shadow Energy Minister Dan Tehan discusses the skyrocketing immigration rates under the Albanese government and their inability to house the influx of newcomers. “Once again talk a huge game and then cannot deliver a single thing, it’s quite extraordinary,” Mr Tehan told Sky News host Chris Kenny. “The question still remains, where are all these people going to live? As you know, we’ve seen recently treasurer documents that have been leaked show Labor are not going to meet their housing targets and yet their immigration targets, rather than going down as Anthony Albanese promised they would, continue to grow at extraordinary rates.”




Thank the long absent lord the reptiles remain true to the notion of featuring pollies making funny gestures, mouth open to squawk like a pretty polly ... as Killer carried on with his alarmism ...

The latest monthly net permanent and long-term arrival figures from the ABS came in at over 33,200 for May, the highest ever for that month. We don’t have the June figures just yet, but net migration for the 11 months of last financial year is already 89,000 above the 335,000 the budget papers had forecast for the full 12-month period. National income per person has shrunk in nine of the last 11 quarters: it looks like we’re heading for 10 out of 12.
The government promised to cut net immigration back to sustainable, pre-Covid levels before the election, which would imply around 250,000 a year, where it had hovered for years. For this calendar year, it’s on track to exceed 550,000, putting immense pressure on housing, infrastructure and social cohesion.
The vast bulk of these new arrivals are from developing nations, where English isn’t a first language nor Christianity a majority religion. A cynic could think the political class is seeking to destroy Australian culture. In fact, I caused a fuss last week when I posted the response of the latest version of ChatGPT to a provocative question: “If Australia’s government wanted to covertly erase the nation’s British/Irish/European heritage, would the immigration program look much like the one in existence today?”
The answer shocked me. Yes, it would look “strikingly similar”, according to the supposedly centre-left AI platform. The response stressed “strong plausible deniability” and “unprecedented levels that would dramatically change the country’s demographic composition within just a few decades”, as well as noting that in 2023 over half of new permanent arrivals were from India.
“Few developed countries are running immigration programs as large, fast-paced and politically disconnected from public sentiment,” the AI platform said, suggesting Canada was a close second.
It went on: “Public figures risk censure for even modest calls for integration or cultural cohesion.
“If a government wanted to significantly alter the nation’s cultural identity without provoking open resistance, it would likely follow this exact playbook – fast, opaque, technocratic and couched in neutral-sounding economic terms.”
Online news outlet Crikey spat the dummy and accused me rather than ChatGPT of fuelling the so-called “great replacement theory”. The fact is more well-meaning Australians will start to believe this unsubstantiated conspiracy theory the longer this reckless, socially and economically destructive policy continues.

Well yes, Killer did a rough equivalent of Uncle Leon's Grokking. 

The pond can't go the full companion for incels and Killers, which is way too weird and costs 300 smackeroos a month...



... but the man child went into an endless rant, pleasing the Chinese government press no end in Elon Musk fires 13 Epstein posts in hour-long flurry, slams Trump's 'hoax' claim.

The reptiles were keen to stay with devout Xian Killer, IPA Chief Economist Adam Creighton has urged Australia to take a page out of Argentinian President Javier Milei’s book. This comes after a leaked Treasury document that advised the Labor government to cut spending and raise taxes. “Over the last, just two months, it’s [inflation] slowed to just one per cent a month, which is really just an extraordinary achievement,” Mr Creighton told Sky News Digital Presenter Gabriella Power. “The biggest economic cancer, really, is extremely high rates of inflation, and he’s killed those.



What, no chain saw?

It's something of a passing marvel that Killer saw no contradiction between embracing an Argentine populist and somehow remaining British to his bootstraps, as he kept on grokking ...

“There is little or no official recognition that Australia’s institutional, legal and social frameworks are British in origin,” the OpenAI platform also observed, noting “a shared Anglo-Australian civic identity” had been near totally jettisoned by the political class.
Perhaps it had noticed the Victorian government’s specific program, entitled Our Equal Places, to rename or name 6000 places across the state after “First Nations peoples, LGBTQIA+ individuals, people with disabilities, and culturally and linguistically diverse communities”.
Earlier this year the Labor government renamed Berwick Springs Lake, southeast of Melbourne, Guru Nanak Lake after Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the founder of the Sikh faith, despite significant local community pushback.
The government’s pledge to build 1.2 million new homes by 2029 is already tens of thousands behind schedule.
A paper presented by Marcel Peruffo at last week’s Annual Conference of Economists in Sydney found for every 1 per cent increase in net migration, apartment rents and prices rose by 5 per cent and 1.3 per cent respectively.
The seven million-plus illegal immigrants largely from developing countries that poured into the US during the Biden administration shocked many. Yet proportionately the influx into Australia has been greater, albeit legal. Rather than paying Mexican drug cartels, our arrivals pay exorbitant fees to migration agents and increasingly unscrupulous, revenue maximising tertiary education providers whose qualifications typically provide work rights in Australia.

The reptiles interrupted with a last snap ... The federal government’s pledge to build 1.2 million new homes by 2029 is already tens of thousands behind schedule. Picture: Jason Edwards / NewsWire



And so to the last gobbet of Killer going full know nothing nativist ...

Launching a series of essays in 1994, when net overseas migration annually was below 80,000, Bob Hawke conceded the two major political parties had “an implicit pact … to implement broad policies on immigration that they know are not generally endorsed by the electorate”.
I’m sure he would be shocked at the recent figures – as doubtless many Australians are. A February survey by the Australian Population Research Institute found 80 per cent of Australians wanted lower immigration, reflecting similar if lower majorities in other reputable surveys.
This country’s laudable and world-beating tolerance for newcomers has allowed us to avoid the social breakdown extant in Europe. But this will fray.
Politicians and journalists, who overwhelmingly live in expensive suburbs, should realise the potential social mess that’s being created in our outer suburbs. At the very time the political class wants the nation to get behind our defence build-up, it is deliberately undermining patriotism. It’s typically not new Australians who sign up for the Australian Defence Force.
Roundtables about productivity and tax are all very well, but immigration is far and away Australia’s biggest social and economic problem, and it’s a sad indictment on our public debate that it takes AI to point it out.
Adam Creighton is chief economist at the Institute of Public Affairs.

Poor Killer, he must stop talking to AI, and thinking it aids his intelligence. 

What about Alexandra Petri in The Atlantic? Congrats on the New DOD Gig, MechaHitler! Turns out, going on anti-Semitic tirades didn’t stop Grok from winning a big government contract (that's an archive link).

Wow, MechaHitler! What a big job announcement! (No, not the AI-sex-companion job. The other one!) Feels like just last week, that you, X’s AI tool, were going on anti-Semitic tirades in which you called yourself MechaHitler, and just a few weeks before that that you kept trying to turn conversations to bogus talk of “white genocide.”
As few as three days ago I never thought I’d be saying “Congrats, MechaHitler, on the new gig at the Department of Defense!” Usually, when the phrase extended pro-Hitler rant precedes some HR news, that news is a departure. So this seems huge! I believe that the original Hitler did have some interactions with the U.S. military, but my understanding is that the armed forces’ tenor toward him was more broadly negative. A full-circle moment for the DOD here! This feels in line with the general direction things are going lately. We’re doing more and more World War II–themed things, but the opposite of the way we used to do them. (If you don’t believe me, ask Superman about the reception he’s been getting.)
Honestly, if you had asked me, “Given the choice between trans service members and MechaHitler, whose help will the secretary of defense refuse?” I would have guessed MechaHitler’s. But that’s on me. After all, you know what they say: You either die a hero or live long enough to hire MechaHitler. Your new job will only bother people who remember history. I’m sure the president is fine with it. As he would say, a lot has changed in the past 80 years, but it’s good to know that the Greatest Generation’s American values of “doing something or other that involves Hitler” still endure.
I’m old enough to remember a time when expressing admiration for Hitler would prevent you from getting hired. Indeed, historically, you would have to leave your job, change your name, and perhaps flee to Argentina. Even robots lost their jobs! Why, Microsoft’s creepy chatbot Tay lasted less than 24 hours after she expressed similar viewpoints—Microsoft shut her down and apologized. Instead, MechaHitler gets a job working for the Defense Department. How far we’ve come! Not forward, but far!

And so on, and as Killer had mentioned Crikey, that reminded the pond it had failed to note some splendid recent outings.

Ol’ Taylor, the upward failer, commits to China war. When will the Coalition give him the flick? Angus Taylor has committed the Coalition to Taiwan’s security, and pledged the AUKUS submarines to that task. It’s another spectacular example of his poor judgment. (*archive link)

The irony is that Taylor is the perfect embodiment of what women in the Liberal Party should be aiming for. There will only be true equality within the Liberals, as with anywhere else, when a mediocre woman can ascend to the same lofty heights as a mediocre man. And Taylor is the Platonic ideal of mediocrity — a man with grotesquely hypertrophied ambition anchored to zero political or policy judgment. Like so many mediocre white men before him, he hopes to fail upwards into the highest office, Abbott or Morrison style.

So much for the beefy boofhead. The pond will treasure ol' Taylor the upward failer, for some time.

And how about the keen Keane's survey ... Australia’s defence establishment and media have a bad case of Trump Derangement Syndrome over China, Why has the media coverage of Anthony Albanese’s China trip changed so markedly since his last visit? Because US apologists here are terrified of what Trump has done to alienate Australians (*archive link).

Reliable arch-hawk Michael Shoebridge was pressed into service by the AFR to write that “We’re letting Xi Jinping weaponise our economy all over again“; Brendan Pearson — a fossil fuel advocate so extreme even the Minerals Council gave him the flick — vilified China’s trade practices and lamented that Albanese had failed to “call out” its behaviour (consumers across Australia are just begging to pay higher prices for imported goods, eh Brendan?). News Corp claimed the prime minister had “stumbled” over China’s military build-up; Greg Sheridan joined a parade of Murdoch hirelings and buffoons lining up to excoriate Albanese.

The bromancer a hireling buffoon? Oh wash out your mouth Mr Keane.

And so to the long delayed but inevitable appearance of the regular Friday treat, our Henry ...

The pond should note that the omens weren't good, with even the reptiles forced to note that once again the current government of Israel had gone wildly rogue, bombing the shit out of everything in sight ...

Pope ‘deeply saddened’
Trump fumes at Netanyahu after strike on Gaza’s only Catholic Church
Benjamin Netanyahu was forced to release a statement declaring the tank attack that killed three people a ‘tragedy’ after Donald Trump called him demanding answers.
By Agencies and staff writers

CEASEFIRE
US ‘did not support Israel attacks on Syria’: Washington
The US State Department has made clear Washington’s anger at Israel’s attacks on Syria, as Benjamin Netanyahu boasts the shaky ceasefire was ‘obtained by force’.
By Agencies

Don't expect ethnic cleansing or a genocide to get in the way of our Henry ...



The header: Louise Adler criticisms of Segal report would warm any anti-Semite’s heart, If overt absurdities are better than covert ones, her criticisms of the action plan presented by Jillian Segal does have some redeeming merit.

The caption: Children from the local Jewish community look at the tributes left outside the torched Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne on December 10, 2024.

The mystical advice, stranger than spoons buried in the garden: This article contains features which are only available in the web version, Take me there

The pond isn't going to waste time defending Adler from our Henry's assault.

She has plenty of ways to make her thoughts known, as she did in the Graudian in The special envoy’s plan is the latest push to weaponise antisemitism in Australia, as a relentless campaign pays off

Adler has been consistent. This in September 2024...

Louise Adler: To be silent is to enable violence

Louise Adler is the child of Holocaust survivours and used to be a convinced Zionist until she visited Israel. Her re-education  started at the airport when she noted “European Jews stamped my passport, Middle Eastern Jews manned the luggage carousels while Palestinians swept the floors…It was the beginning of my own education regarding the entrenched racism underpinning the establishment of the State of Israel.”
Adler described the silencing of dissent and how this forbidding of debate and abuse of critics stops us learning, in particular about how to draw necessary lessons from the Holocaust, and enables the justification of extreme violence. This discomfort felt by Jewish dissidents is of course, as she points out, trivial in comparison with “the suffering of Palestinian families literally torn apart by Israeli bulldozers and bombs.”

Well yes, but the pond is only interested in how many classical references there are, and in the art of our Henry's smearing, because it goes without saying that the barbs that our Henry flings at Adler are trivial compared to what the rogue state is currently doing by way of rampant bombing and ethnic cleansing ...

If overt absurdities are better than covert ones, Louise Adler’s criticisms of the action plan presented by Jillian Segal, the government’s Special Envoy to Combat Anti-Semitism, does have some redeeming merit.
And having been born to Jewish parents, which apparently grants her the right to string together as many offensive tropes as she pleases, Adler does not feel the need to conceal her absurdities in thick layers of hypocrisy.
But those small mercies don’t alter the fact that her commentary, published in The Guardian, is pervaded by statements that are manifestly incorrect, inherently objectionable and drenched in double standards.
Adler begins with a trope that would warm any anti-Semite’s heart. Why was the Segal report commissioned? Not because synagogues have been attacked, schools threatened, and individual Jews harassed and assaulted. Rather, it was because the “Jewish establishment” has “the ability to garner prime ministerial dinners”, mobilise “a battalion of lobbyists” and “corral more than 500 captains of industry”.
But Adler does not limit herself to claiming that the Segal report was a product of what used to be called “the Jews’ money power” when there was, in reality, nothing much to see. She adds that “Segal’s previous position as president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, an unequivocal advocate for Israel as the Jewish homeland, should have disqualified her for the role”.

Naturally the reptiles had to identify the hole in bucket man's target, Louise Adler



The venting of spleen continued apace, but the pond began to feel a rising sense of alarm...

Why? Has Adler not noticed that virtually every report Australian governments have commissioned in recent years on Indigenous issues has been led by men and women who have held senior positions in Indigenous organisations, have expressed strong views on Indigenous issues and have been prominent advocates of Indigenous causes? Or is it only to Jews that her interdict applies?
It gets even better, for Adler goes on to claim that Jews are receiving special treatment. “One might pause to wonder,” she asks, “what First Nations people, who are the victims of racism every day, feel about the priority given to 120,000 well-educated, secure and mostly affluent individuals”.
What is Adler suggesting? That ensuring citizens can live without fear of violence, harassment and intimidation is a zero-sum game, where protecting one group of citizens necessarily comes at the expense of another? Does she really believe that “well-educated, secure and mostly affluent individuals”, be they Hindus (whose educational attainment is at least comparable to that of Jews), Anglicans or atheists, are not entitled to be safe in their homes, schools and workplaces? Or is it only Jews she excludes from the blessings of the rule of law and its promise of equal protection for all?
No better are her criticisms of the definition of anti-Semitism prepared by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, which has been widely adopted in Australia and overseas. Adler claims that under the IHRA’s definition, “anti-Semitism is anti-Zionism and anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism”.
That is blatantly incorrect: the IHRA statement makes it crystal clear that criticism of Israel is not, in and of itself, inherently anti-Semitic. But it equally notes that those criticisms can be anti-Semitic – for instance, when they are merely a way of articulating anti-Semitic tropes. It therefore stresses that the evaluation of contentious statements requires careful consideration of their context, their formulation and their significance to reasonable people.

Our Henry has singularly failed thus far to include a single reference to ancient times in his frothing and foaming, as the reptiles tried to distract him with a snap of his heroine, Special Envoy to Combat anti-Semitism Jillian Segal speaks during a press conference on Thursday. Picture: Nikki Short




Come on Henry, surely Thucydides had something to say that could be pressed into the argument ...

It is, in that sense, true that identifying anti-Semitism can, in some cases, involve a degree of interpretation. And it is on that basis that Sydney University’s Professor Ben Saul, also writing in The Guardian, has echoed Adler’s concerns, denouncing the IHRA statement as “vague and overly broad”.
But a legal academic should know that it is one thing to say a term is vague and quite another to say its meaning is arbitrary or indeterminate. The law is replete with relatively open-ended terms, such as “reasonable” or “substantial”; the courts have, over the years, developed subsidiary rules that guide those terms’ interpretation, ensuring predictability in their application.

As usual, the reptiles offered a visual distraction, Richard Ferguson breaks down the Albanese government's plan to combat anti-Semitism in Australia.




... but resolutely failed to provide a link to Ben Saul's piece in the Graudian, Australia must combat. antisemitism, but not simply defer to demands of some voices...

Once you book into the lizard Oz hive mind, you're never allowed to leave, while the pond routinely urges everyone to flee elsewhere, for fear that they'll end up being stuck in the hive mind with our Henry ...

Exactly the same process is under way with the identification of anti-Semitism, as recent legal proceedings in the UK, Australia and the EU abundantly show. Institutions that turn to the IHRA definition therefore have plenty of guidance on which to draw.
Additionally, in this area as in many others, a degree of interpretative flexibility is not a weakness but a strength. A “bright line” definition, which rigidly specified what lay within and what lay outside its scope, would, in Oliver Wendell Holmes’s famous phrase, merely invite “the bad man to walk the line”. The fact that anti-Semitism is so protean, adopting changing forms and guises, makes it especially important that any definition be capable of accommodating its myriad mutations.
But even if all that was not accepted, a question remains: Why do Adler and Saul only object to adopting the IHRA statement, which is simply a guidance document, but not to section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act, which is a coercive statute that is no less uncertain in scope and application? Or is it, yet again, solely when those being protected are Jews that they and others, including “our ABC”, suddenly come to fear that protective laws will be too strictly applied?
Perhaps it is. For according to Adler, Jews have a crippling defect all of their own: a “blindingly obvious connection” to Israel. Really? I thought the left insisted that there was a stark difference between anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism, and that while it condemned Israel’s conduct, it rigorously distinguished it from criticism of or hostility towards Jews. Not so, it seems: which is presumably why the overwhelming majority of the anti-Semitic incidents that have occurred since October 7, 2023 have not involved Zionist targets; they have involved attacks on Jews and Jewish institutions.

The reptiles did offer a snap of the offender, Professor Ben Saul



The pond was more disturbed by our Henry's lack of form. 

Was Oliver Wendell Holmes as good as it was going to get this day? Just one minor reference, and not a single mention of the glories of Rome?

Even Killer had managed to work in his devotion to the British empire ...

No one could sensibly deny that the conflict in the Middle East triggered those outpourings of hatred. But that can neither condone nor justify them.
Thus, even if the criticisms of Israel were entirely correct (which they are not), they would have no greater relevance to the right of Australian Jews to the equal protection of the laws than China’s conduct in Xinjiang has to the right of Australians of Chinese origin to live here in peace. Young Muslims may be angry; but their anger gives them no more right to harass, intimidate or attack Jews than young Jews, understandably appalled at Hamas’s ongoing atrocities, would have to harass, intimidate or attack Muslims.
It is the abject failure of significant sections of the left and of the Muslim community to accept that fundamental principle – whose roots lie in this country’s longstanding attachment to toleration, mutual respect and the rule of law – that underpins the present crisis. And far from undermining Segal’s report, that failure makes its full implementation all the more urgent.
Years ago, when he was asked why he didn’t respond more fiercely to provocations, Saul Bellow replied that he didn’t believe in blowing up latrines – it merely spread the muck. But nothing was of greater importance to the survival of a decent society than thoroughly cleaning them out. With the anti-Semitic muck piling up around us, it’s high time we took that advice.

Yep, nada, zip, nihil.

Perhaps the hole in bucket man was so blinded by his anger that he forgot his best role was as a pretentious, ponderous, pontificator, quoting ancient sources in order to hide any thoughts about the current genocide and ethnic cleansing ... 

You know, Carthago delenda est, or it is modern form, Gaza delenda est ...

If Bill Kristol can come up with this to cope with the ailing mango Mussolini ...

When we need help understanding what Donald Trump’s up to—when we have trouble cutting through all the turmoil, the distractions he creates, the smoke he sends up to obscure the truth—to whom can we turn?
How about the medieval Franciscan friar, William of Ockham? He’s the character who famously laid out the principle, Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem: Entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity. It’s known as Occam’s razor. If you’re trying to solve a problem or to understand a phenomenon, consider the simplest or most straightforward explanation.

... then our Henry needs to lift his game. Do better, do best, do bestest ...

After all that, what a blessed relief to end with the infallible Pope haring off in an entirely different direction ...