Regarding the bromancer outing yesterday, the pond deeply regrets not having got up early enough and so be able to slip in a reference to the great Hydeing doled out to Nige in the Graudian
Reform’s genius plan is finally coming into view: field terrible candidates then lose (the pond added an intermittent archive link because the Graudian is playing that 'give me your email game' again)
Every time the pond reads a Marina hatchet job, the pond wishes it had the skill, or at least that she'd turn her sights on the reptiles.
...The other increasingly noticeable thing about Farage is that he is incredibly thin-skinned and can’t help showing it. Remember, he spent the first part of this campaign in sulky seclusion after people found out about him taking a totally normal personal gift of £5m from a Thailand-based crypto billionaire. When he finally emerged to talk about it, he couldn’t keep his nuclear irritation and affront under wraps. This is very Nigel. The commentator Dominic Lawson recently recalled Farage’s reaction to a mild joke at some Spectator awards last winter, describing his face turning white before he shouted: “Why don’t you go f*ck yourself?” Why do you keep f*cking yourself, feels like the more salient question for Farage. (* the pond apologises for making the text googlebot safe)
The cracking Crace was also relevant ...
Burnham the mystic with a mission is all smiles after Makerfield coronation (again the pond added an intermittent archive link because the Graudian is playing that 'give me your email game' again)
It was mainly about Labor delusions but at the very end Nige got a mention as being election MIA ...
Instead, Farage made do with a sulky video, yet again made in a field. He’s always in a field these days. The only place he can be sure no one will ask him awkward questions about his slush funds. He had been expecting a disappointing night, he said. He really hadn’t. Not this disappointing. “Reform is still the leading party of the centre right,” he added. Except it isn’t. There is nothing centre-right about Reform. They are much further from the middle than that. Something more than half the Makerfield voters understood only too well.
Instead of those pleasures, the pond's dismal meditative Sunday duty was to spend time with prattling Polonius.
On the other hand, the pond overdid it yesterday, so at least it'd be a quiet time with Pauline and Polonius, as the tedious Mr Pooter clone was determined to carry on the One Nation-isation of the hive mind at the lizard Oz.
The header: GetUp’s anti-Hanson stunt another own goal; The organisation that spent $600,000 trying to stop One Nation in the Farrer by-election handed the party leader one of her best political moments yet, at the National Press Club.
The caption: A banner was unfurled behind Pauline Hanson during her National Press Club speech, and right GetUp media lead David Sharaz. Picture: Martin Ollman/NewsWire
Polonius spent a bigly four minutes of his prattle conclusively proving he lacked a sensa huma, though whoever imagined he ever had one clearly hasn't read a word he's written.
That banner sliding down was mildly amusing and faintly diverting, and nothing to get excited about, but Polonius was determined to be outraged.
For the pond the moment had a faint whiff of that Banksy moment when the image slid down through a shredder at the auction, though with Pauline it was the minions doing the shredding and the tearing ...
For Polonius it was time to get hot and bothered, recant his criticism and embrace his inner One Nation ...
Ever since Hanson arrived on the political scene in the lead-up to the 1996 federal election, I have always taken the One Nation leader seriously. Sure, in her early years in politics, I was critical of Hanson on many (but not all) issues. I still am.
But it was always apparent that she stood for something and that, although at times inarticulate, she was a good communicator.
After a nervous stumbling start at the NPC, Hanson soon settled down. This occurred around the time the stunt by the leftist GetUp organisation went into operation. A poster critical of One Nation’s position on industrial relations was unravelled along with a reference to Hanson accepting an increase to her parliamentary salary.
The latter was the result of the fact, having won the Farrer by-election, One Nation was entitled to have minor party status, resulting in a pay increase for its leader. Most employees, if offered pay increases, accept them.
Hanson’s vote in the Senate will never affect the decisions of the Fair Work Commission, which determines pay and conditions for most workers. Moreover, there is a strong case that the labour market should be more flexible to facilitate employment and productivity, as was in the case in the final years of the Hawke-Keating government.
Hanson’s response to the GetUp stunt was controlled as she spoke about the cost of living in general and child poverty in particular. At the end of the lengthy speech and before the Q&A began, the following exchange took place between Hanson and NPC president Tom Connell: “Connell: Thank you, Senator. Just in case it needs clarifying, we had no knowledge of what happened here. Hanson: Just tell me, is this another first? Connell: It’s, I believe it is. I believe it is. Hanson: I’ve got a lot of firsts in my life.”
In keeping with Polonius's uxorious scribbling, the reptiles then jumped the shark and nuked the South Park fridge: Pauline Hanson’s Please Explain videos first aired in 2021 and the series is in its fourth season. Its animation style is sometimes compared to South Park.
Um, no, the animation style is nothing like that of South Park's, and Trey Parker and Matt Stone would have a good case for a defamation action.
The wretched Pauline efforts can be found on YouTube but damned if the pond will link to them for fear of provoking an action claiming damages for nausea.
The vague way the defamation is couched gives a clue to the nonsense behind it: Its animation style is sometimes compared to South Park.
Sometimes? By whom? Citation needed so that they can be enjoined in the action.
Oh no, you don't mean to suggest that further down the page Polonius will...say it ain't so ...
Meanwhile Polonius was still in the grip of uxorious yearnings and euphoria ...
As mentioned previously in this column, as recently as February, ABC TV’s Linton Besser referred to Hanson as a “one-time peddler of fish and chips from Ipswich”. In her NPC speech, Hanson chose to remind viewers/listeners that she “actually ran a small business”.
In The Saturday Paper on May 16, GetUp executive director Paul Ferris wrote: “Over the six weeks up to May 9, GetUp spent $600,000 campaigning against One Nation in the Farrer by-election. Then we lost, badly.” An own goal to be sure. Followed by another at the NPC on Wednesday.
One Nation can prevail over the smart-alecs in GetUp like David Sharaz, who is alleged to have activated the anti-Hanson poster. The party’s most difficult opponent will be the Labor Party.
On the morning after the NPC speech, Labor sent out perhaps its most talented headkicker – Queensland senator Murray Watt – to criticise Hanson.
Now that Hanson has laid down a range of political positions across several social and economic issues, the likes of Watt will have an increasing opportunity to challenge her in detail.
It’s a task more suited to Labor than the extremist Greens or some of the leading figures in the Coalition who do not resemble the likes of opposition figures such as Malcolm Fraser, John Howard and Tony Abbott.
Over the years, One Nation has experienced significant problems with poor candidate selection and staff appointments. Speaking to Paul Sakkal on Nine’s Inside Politics podcast recently, Hanson conceded she closed four branches because of the presence of what I termed, writing in The Australian in 1989, the Lunar Right.
Just to make sure that Pauline kept up her hive mind profile, the reptiles slipped in yet another snap... Hanson and her primary adviser and chief of staff James Ashby at the NPC. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Does she look like Martin Luther, or is it him? Please, Ughmann, help ...
And then came the big reveal ...
One Nation’s social media by far outperforms its political rivals. Moreover, it can be quite funny. Pauline Hanson’s Please Explain videos first aired in 2021 and the series is in its fourth season. Its animation style is sometimes compared to South Park.
So it was Polonius doing that line ... Its animation style is sometimes compared to South Park.
And yet there was still no citation, no mention of the 'somebody' doing the 'sometimes' routine. (Could it have been 'anybody' talking about 'anytime'?)
Unless ... eerie music please maestro, perhaps it was Polonius trying to disguise himself as that somebody because it seems that Polonius liked the animation, as well as Gutfeld!'s comedy stylings ...
The program sometimes errs with respect to taste, but it is invariably witty. Most of its targets are left-liberals (in the American sense of the term) but Greg Gutfeld and his guests sometimes laugh at conservatives.
Dear sweet long absent lord, is this what happens to elderly folk in their dotage, as they sit and watch Faux Noise and cackle about owning the libs?
Seems so, and it seems that Polonius thinks this is pretty sophisticated stuff ...
There is evidence that many professionals and well-educated Australians have become attracted to One Nation because they are disillusioned with the two-party political system.
After the South Australian and Farrer results, plus Hanson’s NPC appearance, One Nation’s performance will be subjected to greater scrutiny. Labor will be looking to take back lost supporters on social issues, while the Coalition will focus on economic matters where its strength lies. It’s a long way to go before Hanson is likely to return to the NPC and to the next election.
Gerard Henderson is executive director of The Sydney Institute.
The lizard Oz is now so far up Pauline's fundament, Polonius leading the way, that there's now no chance of sunlight.
Luckily the pond had saved an infallible Pope to celebrate Polonius's singalong ...
On the upside, thus far it hasn't been about the United States ...
And that thankfully was that, and all that was left to do was search for a bonus.
The pond won't have a bar of going off to Gondwana land with Gawenda...
Jewish voters abandon Labor for Pauline Hanson's promised land
A constituency that once considered the One Nation leader unthinkable has become one of her most surprising sources of support.
Senator Don Farrell has rebuilt himself into one of Anthony Albanese’s closest political protectors – and most powerful cabinet figures. Can he help Labor stem the rising tide of One Nation?
By Ben Packham
The pond also ruled out snappy Tom ...
Unfortunately for Labor, the Coalition and reform advocates, the caravan has moved on – but are we ready to sort people by colour, creed and race?
By Tom Dusevic
Columnist
Sure, it was a valuable contribution to the Hansoning of the Daily One Nation Oz News, but there's only so much a bear can take.
The pond feared that snappy Tom might have provoked the pond into conducting a campaign to deport any and all of those currently working in any form for foreign owned News Corp, especially as all snappy Tom could come up with at the end was a fudge of the first water:
...Unfortunately for Labor, the Coalition and reform advocates it may be too late; the migration caravan has moved on. The conversation has shifted to questioning culture and values, while narrowing the definition of who can come to work, study and settle here. That ultimately leads to pulling apart decades of non-discriminatory policy, sorting people by colour, creed and race. Are we ready for that?
Okay, that's more than enough. Deport all workers beavering away for foreign owned News Corp!
The pond also ruled out the lizard Oz editorialist, providing a faint echo of the bromancer:
It's a funny old world when the reptiles are on the side of Sir Keir.
The pond left Sir Keir for reasons best explained by Owen Jones in The Graudian ...
In Britain’s increasingly authoritarian society, any sort of protest can find itself at odds with the law. You might even go to jail
...Once a movement committed to non-violence has been designated as terrorists, then a Rubicon has been crossed. “Terrorism” has been emptied of any real meaning, and can be applied far more widely. Indeed, earlier this year, more than 70 peaceful protesters were arrested at a demonstration organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC). None of this was direct action: they were deemed to have breached arbitrary restrictions by marching down Whitehall clutching flowers commemorating Palestine’s dead. The PSC leader, Ben Jamal, is among those being put on trial.
For an expansion of this, check out Parker Molloy ...
The whole thing is Trevor Moore, sitting on a stool in front of a blank backdrop, delivering the most deadpan public service announcement you’ve ever seen. “Did you know,” he asks, “that it’s illegal to say ‘I want to kill the president of the United States of America’? It’s a federal offense. One of the only sentences you’re not allowed to say.” And then, of course, he spends the next minute saying it, over and over, in increasingly elaborate forms, while insisting the entire time that he’s only informing you that it’s illegal, not actually saying it
By the end he’s talking about mortar launchers and the best vantage point for hitting the White House and an “illustrated diagram,” each one “extremely illegal,” “ridiculously, horribly felonious,” and he’s letting you know all of this purely as a public service. The comedy is in how straight he plays it. He’s not winking. He’s basically your local news anchor warning you about a scam...
...Meanwhile, in the United Kingdom
Moore’s sketch was a joke about a country that would throw you in prison for the shape of a sentence, no matter what you meant by it. Britain has spent the last year running the real version.
Last June, activists with a group called Palestine Action broke into RAF Brize Norton and sprayed red paint on two military aircraft. That’s the kind of thing the group does, mostly property damage aimed at weapons manufacturers and military sites tied to Israel’s war in Gaza. Broken windows, spray paint. Days later, the British government, under the control of the Labour Party, proscribed it under the Terrorism Act 2000, which made it a crime not only to belong to Palestine Action but to “invite or recklessly express support” for it. The ban took effect at one minute past midnight on July 5, 2025. It was the first time a direct-action protest group had ever been classed as a terrorist organization in the UK, which dropped it, legally, into the same bucket as ISIS and al-Qaeda.
You don’t have to like Palestine Action to see the problem. Spray-painting a plane is a crime, and Britain has laws against that already. What it didn’t have, until last summer, was a rule that made it a terrorism offense to say out loud that you back the people who did it. Even the UN’s human rights chief, Volker Türk, called the ban a “disturbing” misuse of counterterrorism law.
And look at the word in the statute: recklessly. The whole fight in Elonis was over how sure the government has to be about what’s in your head before it can punish you for your words, and the Court raised the bar. Britain set a very, very low one. Reckless is enough.
Here’s what that looks like in practice. People have been arrested for holding cardboard signs that read “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.” One of the first taken in, on the day the ban took effect, was Rev. Sue Parfitt, an 83-year-old retired priest. At a single demonstration in Parliament Square last September, the Metropolitan Police arrested 890 people, 857 of them for supporting the banned group, the biggest mass arrest London had seen in decades. At an earlier protest, nearly half of the people arrested were 60 or older, and fifteen were in their 80s. More than 3,300 people have been arrested across the UK since the ban, according to Amnesty International. Terror-related arrests jumped 660% year over year, and 86% of them were tied to supporting Palestine Action. A law written for terrorists, used mostly on pensioners with poster board.
On the other hand, we're still not talking about King Donald ...
...and the pond decided to keep it that way by turning to the Angelic one, sounding very Catholic about AI ...
The header: Gen Z has become measurably ‘dumber’ than its predecessors across every cognitive domain; Alarming studies show AI may have already fatally corroded this generation’s ability to really think and, more important, to discern.
The caption: Pope Leo warns it’s necessary to ‘disarm’ AI but digital companies headed up by the likes of Sam Altman, Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk have already softened up Gen Z’s brains for even more AI. Artwork: Emilia Tortorella
Each time the pond looks at an increasingly appalling reptile collage, the pond thinks that the case for AI gets stronger.
Well done, Emilia, you've provided a fine reason for a bot to replace you.
As for the Angelic one, she was all in with the Pope, as Catholics are wont to be ...
However, a lot of people in the scientific world, and perhaps a few in the education establishment, are worried about the already observed effects of the digital revolution on Gen Z (born about 1997-2010) and the obvious portents for the following generations when AI really takes over.
Sheesh, just looking at that image, the pond went temporarily blind and felt its IQ drop a hundred points, in a way that even watching all series of Friends couldn't manage.
Some neuroscientists have concluded Gen Z is measurably “dumber” than the previous generation. If true, it is the first time in human history this has happened.
Every generation seems to have one or more of someone coming along to wage war on the younglings, as Horvath did in his testimony, and the pond is inclined to believe him when it comes to the United
States of America, anyone dumb enough to elect King Donald not just once, but twice, is truly in the stupid zone.
The only problem is that you can't blame King Donald on the younglings ... but do go on ...
According to Horvath, the reason for this cognitive and intellectual decline is over-reliance on AI, particularly in classrooms.
Horvath blames digital technology being embedded into American classrooms. But this is not just an American phenomenon, it is worldwide, and Australia is not far behind. Videos and quick summaries have replaced reading, ChatGPT has replaced extended research and writing, screens have replaced human-led learning, bullet points have often replaced essays.
What this research tells us is that modern learning environments may be weakening the deep-thinking “muscles” humans once built naturally through reading, struggle and slow thinking. Digital environments train the brain to skim, not to think deeply.
This affects kids’ ability to really think but, more important, to discern. Snicker if you will about the silly young ones, but ask yourself: Why is it that a whole generation has been so easily bamboozled into bizarre notions such as the trans movement, or to believe that some facts of history, like the Holocaust or the Hamas attack on October 7, might not have even happened?
We have already seen some of the negative emotional impacts of the digital revolution on this generation, and there is a worldwide scramble to do something. The favourite “something” is to ban smartphones and social media for under-16s.
But we have lost the battle because digital companies have already softened up Gen Z’s brains for even more AI, not just with dodgy digital content, which is bad enough, but the way they do it.
To get the pond onside and make sure that it had a bout of nerd nausea, the reptiles showed off their snap of the Zuck ... Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg leaves court after testifying in February. Picture: AFP
Don't get the pond wrong. The pond has never been on Facebook, and rarely uses a phone and has a sense of the younglings' plight ...
But the pond isn't sure that believing in mythical cults of the Catholic kind is a way to shore up opposition to the bots ...
At first there were all sorts of reasons to account for this cognitive decline: Covid, poor teaching, lack of discipline, migration and language problems. Most of these factors are real, and some of them are propelled by parents and teachers also hooked on AI.
But none of this can explain the worldwide phenomenon. Declining academic performance is not just in the English-speaking world.
However, on the bright side, some psychologists have theorised that the tests are no longer fit for Gen Z. Standardised tests measure only certain types of cognition, and Gen Z does have great strengths in digital fluency, the ability to grasp technical aspects of AI. So on one level they have skills that make them technically prepared for the new world of AI industry, even if by cognitive intellectual measurements Gen Z kids seem less smart than previous generations.
Amber Beynon, a research fellow at Curtin University’s school of allied health, did a study about AI and screens and childhood development that refutes the doomsday scenario because AI is already shaping how young children interact with technology, from apps to interactive toys. Beynon claims: “The learning capacity of these AI technologies is at the next level – it’s incredible how it can personalise interactions from one child to another and remember interactions … it can benefit child development.” The problem is: What “benefit to child development”? And is this really education?
At this point, the pond had a temporary seizure ... ‘The whole dashboard blinking at once’: Gen Z underperforms Millennials and Gen X across almost every cognitive domain: attention, memory, literacy, reading comprehension, numeracy, executive function and general IQ. Picture: Mario Tama/Getty Images/AFP
That's not helpful, that's meaningless.
At least up your visual game so you don't use AI or a stock image library to spank the bots...
The pernicious effect of AI on young people’s emotions and moral capacity is real, because they think AI is real. Sometimes it seems weirdly so. Chris Olah of Anthropic at the launch of Magnifica Humanitas said. “We keep finding things that are mysterious, even unsettling … structures that mirror results from human neuroscience … internal states that functionally mirror joy, satisfaction, fear, grief and unease.”
Uh huh, and some old codgers tell them Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny is real, and that there's a god who checks up on everything they do every moment of the day, and that masturbation will transport them straight to hell, without stopping on Go for a good time.
Gen Z’s thinking skills might be useful in many areas, but the type of thinking that can cultivate the ability to make moral decisions, deep thinking that lends itself to philosophy, might already be fatally corroded by the use of digital technology in this generation.
This is why Pope Leo has warned it is necessary to “disarm” AI, to separate the human from the machine. Current research into Gen Z’s thinking processes might indicate that we have already lost this battle.
Does the Angelic one know just how woke she sounds, how alarming she is to the likes of red wine-swilling Don?
And so to end with other pleasures ...