The pond returned from the big smoke to find the One Nationisation of the lizard Oz in an advanced condition.
The reptiles were wildly excited by the vibe and the rebellion, with two yarns topping the "news" section early this morning ...
It's understandable.
The lizard Oz has always been a leader in devising and setting One Nation policies, and at last they can come out in a way that would make the average Pride party seem lightweight.
These days they're more than Pauline curious, they're happy piling on the Pauline bandwagon.
The pond doesn't usually bother with the lizard Oz "news", what with it being another word for propaganda in the alternative hive mind universe, but for those that care...
One Nation’s ‘Svengali’ taps Trump’s vibe to mastermind Hanson’s rise
James Ashby has built a Trump-style digital machine that has left Labor, Coalition and Greens strategists flat-footed.
By Geoff Chambers
Teaser trailer ...
Barnaby Joyce has emerged as One Nation’s Treasury spokesman as Pauline Hanson prepares to present an alternative vision for the country.
By Sarah Ison and Greg Brown
Teaser trailer ...
Hotly anticipated? Hacks gotta hack ...
Just to help pump up the volume, MAGA cap wearer Dame Slap was over on the extreme far right dong her thing...
Soaring levels of support for One Nation suggests millions of Australians have had enough with institutionalised complacency.
By Janet Albrechtsen
Columnist
Teaser trailer ...
Why only a teaser trailer for Dame Slap?
Well, she seizes the chance to indulge in another bout of transphobia, and there's only so much of the lizard Oz transphobia jihad the pond can take in a month. (If you want to see where a Bud Lite bout of transphobia can lead, have a sip of Parker Molloy).
The intermittent archive is currently working, so why not send her and her bigotry to that particular cornfield, where she can parade in her MAGA hat to her eternal pleasure ...
As for why the reptiles are obsessed with Pauline, Barners and the rabble on the extreme far right?
Simple. Allow the pond to explain:
And besides, all those teaser trailers clear space for "Ned" to natter, and as the pond is designed as a soporific, what better way to accomplish the mission?
The header: Iran deal proves one thing, Donald Trump is no wartime leader; There’s no question the Iran war has done the US President lasting damage.
Sadly there was no caption for the collage, and so the pond can't definitively say that it's a textbook example of how AI has completely degraded the lizard Oz, but the pond has its suspicions. Just look at how wretched it is ...
As for "Ned", he spent a remarkably short five minute read contemplating the current state of King Donald and his kingdom's war on Iran.
Who knows why the bromancer avoids the subject, leaving it all to "Ned", but it's a verifiable phenomenon.
The bromancer was seen yesterday offering this ...
As the British Prime Minister stumbles and AUKUS doubts grow, the parallels with Canberra raise uncomfortable questions for Australia.
And before that it was this ...
Albanese and Marles dissemble and deceive over Australia’s military weakness. Labor’s security performance is pure spin mixed with moonshine.
It was a bigly ten days ago that the bromancer scribbled No winners as Iran war set to get even worse.
And that's how the hive mind and the pond got stuck with "Ned", desperately nattering away in a bid to mop up the damage...
Trump is a weakened president, at home and in the world. The irony of the major triumph in his 60-day ceasefire agreement with Iran is the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz – but that is merely a restoration of the status quo before the attack on Iran by Trump and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu.
The interim agreement, not yet released but to be signed on Friday, is a fragile compromise, with political forces in both Washington and Tehran unhappy with the outcome. Trump’s political salesmanship – casting a messy retreat as a magnificent victory – will be tested to the limit as both sides claim to be winners.
Not yet released? The pond has no idea if this leak is true, READ: Leaked Alleged Text of Trump-Iran Deal, but if it's true, it's a doozy and makes everything "Ned" have to say seem entirely beside the point.
But that generally applies to what "Ned" has to say, so whatever ...
Trump is exposed as an inept war leader, flawed in preparation, outsmarted in tactics, misjudging the extent of US power, too close to Netanyahu and too arrogant in dealings with traditional allies. Equally damaging is the domestic impact in America. Trump failed to persuade the American public – even his own MAGA loyalists – of his Iran campaign. Trump couldn’t muster domestic support for a foreign war unpopular from the start and couldn’t put troops on the ground.
The reptiles decided to fling in a snap of the man who could yet bring the entire edifice crashing to the ground... Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at a press conference in Jerusalem. Picture: Ronen Zvulun / AFP
Speaking of Benji, the pond usually doesn't link to the cesspit known as X (Media Watch took to the platform in style) but Benji's pivot to AI is something to see ...
There were only two mentions of Lebanon, including this:
...I wish to clarify: we will remain in the security zones for as long as it is required to defend our country. Because after October 7th, I established a simple principle: Israel will not allow terror organizations to encamp on our borders; to tunnel into our territory; to prepare for a massacre close to our citizens. Today, the heroic IDF fighters stand as barrier between the terrorists and our citizens.
Good luck with negotiating an all-embracing peace treaty in sixty days, as "Ned" blamed the citizenry for being gutless...
Consider the agreement. It is a 60-day ceasefire extension, opening the strait for vessels, lifting the US naval blockade against Iran, decisions on the nuclear program are kicked down the road, reports from US officials suggest the future lifting of sanctions on Iran are tied to the progress on nuclear negotiations, and hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah are supposed to end, a provision that leaves Israel deeply upset. Neither Israel nor Hezbollah are parties to the agreement but further military exchanges between them could threaten the deal.
Given the lack of trust between America and Iran, many things can go wrong. While Trump said the reopened strait would be “toll-free”, Iranian officials said while there would not be “transit tolls” there could be fees in exchange for services. If the waterway is not completely free, Trump will be in trouble and the Iranians will face a global backlash.
Trump couldn’t let Iran impose an ongoing price on the world by closure of the strait. His military campaign had badly damaged Iran’s military forces and its state capability, but in the end Iran strangled the life out of Trump’s war: he had no option but to settle for a compromise peace over military escalation. It was a sound decision.
At this point the reptiles decided to slip in some PREMIUM content ...
Iran deal proves one thing, Trump is no wartime leader
Become a member to access our premium video content
Pay for reptile AV content? In what known or alternative universe is that a good idea?
The long absent lord knows what that's all about, and the pond will leave it to the long absent lord to care, as the "Ned" blame game continued...
The regional power equation seems unresolved – Iran’s quest for regional dominance and Trump’s quest, along with Israel, to thwart its aspirations and its ideological consequences. Walter Russell Mead, in assessing the agreement for The Wall Street Journal, highlighted the paradox of Trump – a master of political theatre who inevitably dominates the stage yet who “often fails to achieve the kind of concrete results that mark the difference between a PT Barnum and an Otto von Bismarck”.
Vice President JD Vance, expected to sign the agreement on Friday, talked up the nuclear angle, saying Iran “will never have a nuclear weapon”, a line reinforced by Mike Waltz, the US ambassador to the UN. Yet as far as is known, the agreement doesn’t involve any pledge to turn over stockpiles of enriched uranium with the nuclear negotiations deferred and the political nightmare for Trump being the need to secure a superior nuclear deal to Barack Obama’s in 2015, a deal Trump has denounced.
For Iran, the strategy logic seems unavoidable: this war will reinforce the regime’s determination to acquire a nuclear capability as the only guaranteed method to prevent a further resort to destructive US military action in coming years.
At the same time there appears to be no provision in the agreement for Iran to halt its support for regional terrorist groups, another issue kicked down the road. The Wall Street Journal, a supporter of Trump’s Iranian policy, significantly called the agreement “a strategic retreat short of achieving his war aims” but pointed out that Iran’s key nuclear facilities were in rubble and enrichment of uranium has been halted for the first time in 20 years.
The wider historical context is replete with Trump’s serial blunders. From the start he made clear his goal was regime change from air assault, encouraging the Iranian people to remove their government, always a forlorn prospect. This meant regime survival became an Iranian win and Trump’s own goal.
The reptiles offered a picture of the most forlorn and desperate member of the junta, with memories of his couch-molesting days hovering in the background (now that would make an interesting confession to his priest) ... JD Vance welcomed at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. Picture: Matt Rourke / AFP
Isn't JD busy doing a book tour and getting tangled with the likes of Megyn Kelly?
Contemptible as well as needy and pathetic, as "Ned" rolled out his final gobbet...
Incredibly, Trump had ignored earlier warnings from the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Caine, that Iran might close the strait to exert its leverage. Trump was dismissive, a disastrous mistake at the heart of how the war turned against him. The US national security system seemed partly dysfunctional, undermined by a president who overruled advice and believed his own propaganda. The Iranian war is like his tariffs – he acts without assessing the consequences.
Trump’s repeated declarations of victory, his calls for “unconditional surrender” and his conviction that killing senior regime figures would trigger an internal collapse exposed Trump as a war leader lacking judgment. He loves being the strongman, railing against Greenland, threatening Cuba and kidnapping the former Venezuelan dictator. But the longer Trump governs the more he resembles a phony tough.
Can Trump recover? Probably, but the war has still done him lasting damage. It has divided the Republicans, encouraged dissent among his advocates and suggests his unpredictable opportunism is a diminished currency.
For some reason that pond failed to understand - apart from the need to keep punters inside the hive mind - that last link led to Major Mitchell's Monday piece...
The pond has already covered it, but for those who can't be bothered reverting to yesterday's pond post or heading off to the archive, here's a reminder:
Utterly bemusing. What was that link all about?
The pond suspects it was a way to hide "Ned's" conclusion.
Can Trump recover? Probably ...
Probably?!?
Again we're in that alternative reptile universe known only to them.
That's worthy of state news media, otherwise known as Faux Noise, but in this stage of King Donald's reign, it suggests "Ned" is as completely delusional as the King and his sycophants ...
Take it away infallible Pope, spread that carcass like a patient etherised upon a table:
And so, as promised, to Dame Groan, who had in any case hung around like a bad smell and was still visible early in the morning, what with the lands not having swung around above the magic reptile faraway tree ...
The header: ‘Substandard’: Chalmers’ RBA revamp an abject failure; The Reserve Bank’s new-look board cut rates twice, then hiked three times – and now mortgage holders must wait until 2028 for inflation to be tamed.
Again there was no credit for the headlining collage, and again the pond suspects that's because AI is yet again ruining everything.
As for Dame Groan, she too was in her usual "we'll all be rooned" and "abject failure" mode, but the pond confesses that it was bitterly disappointed by her outing.
All she could manage for her diatribe was a measly two minutes!
As that disgraced comedian once said, sort of...
"Boy, the scribbles at this place are really terrible." The other one says, "Yeah, I know; and such small portions."
And with that, on with the abject failure and the complete roonation ...
This doesn’t mean that the next move in the cash rate is down. More time is needed to see how the economic landscape develops, including the consequences of the end of the conflict in the Middle East.
Indeed, the board’s statement makes it clear that fighting inflation remains its main role at this stage and “it will do what it considers necessary to achieve that outcome, including increasing the cash rate target further if required”.
The MPB has now been in operation for over a year. Achieving the restructure of the Reserve Bank is seen by Jim Chalmers as one of his finest achievements. He was able to install his preferred candidates. But the performance of the board has been underwhelming to be kind, substandard to be accurate.
Let’s not forget here that the MPB doesn’t expect the target rate of inflation to be achieved until the middle of 2028 – fully two years away. No, that’s not a typo – that the board’s expectation.
The reptiles probably decided this feeble offering - such a small portion - needed a bolstering with an AV distraction...The Reserve Bank of Australia have voted to keep the cash rate on hold at 4.35 per cent in a unanimous decision from the Monetary Policy Board.
The pond understands the problem, the dilemma Dame Groan faced. How to lather up yet another storm in her teacup?
What with the Reserve doing nothing, it takes some kind of heroic strength to get wildly agitated and run screaming around the hive mind that we'll all be rooned, but Dame Groan does her best ...
Blind Freddy could see that the inflation giant hadn’t been slayed last year, particularly as both the federal and some state governments were contributing to rising prices through their excessive spending. Not that the governor and chair of the MPB, Michele Bullock, could bring herself to issue an important warning to the respective treasurers. That would be too hard, if on point.
A part of the new arrangements is the media conference held by the governor after each MPB meeting. So much talking, so many questions, some of them silly. At first, it was a novelty and the performance of Bullock did improve. These media conferences now add very little apart from the governor making repetitive remarks and offering some general observations.
The regular statement put out by the board is equally vacuous, it having been carefully curated by the communications department of the bank. Why does the bank need a communications department? These statements are like reading the blurb on a box of cereal.
It’s hard not to side with the view of newly appointed chair of the US Federal Reserve, Kevin Warsh, that less talk is better. This includes avoiding potentially misleading forecasts of future rate movements. Our governor should say something when something needs to be said, not at the end of every board meeting.
In the meantime, mortgage holders will need to hold onto their hats. If the cash rate is to be cut, it will probably not be until next year. A further hike cannot be ruled out for this year. For those being pushed into negative equity as property prices fall, it’s likely to be a worrying time.
While many countries were able to bring inflation down quickly by hiking interest rates, our bank decided to take the scenic route by keeping the cash rate too low and then cutting it when the justification was not clear-cut. We are now paying a high price for this faulty decision-making. As Bullock says, “inflation hurts everyone”.
Perhaps Dame Groan will do better next time.
After all, people will feel short-changed, if it takes just two minutes for us to all be rooned.
Being rooned should take a little longer, and would benefit from added spice.
Meanwhile the immortal Rowe brought it all together ...
The pond has to wonder if that portrait of Barners, Tamworth's eternal shame, which defames Henry Higgins (just you wait, Mr Rowe) ...
... owes anything to that ancient Tamworth power station, where the pond once played in the slag heap, good preparation for dealing with that old slag...