Wednesday, September 02, 2020

In which the pond is entranced by nattering "Ned's" meanderings and the onion muncher in killer mood ...


The pond just had to start the day with an apology to its son. For years, the spawn had been warning the pond of the dangers of zombies.

Growing up as he did in post-George Romero times, he was acutely aware that zombies were everywhere, ready to strike at any time, and eternal vigilance was necessary.

The pond had scoffed - what zombies where, outside the movies? it asked - but thanks to Herman Cain, the pond now realises it was all true ...

Zombies stalk the earth ... and then came a dread realisation, an unnerving fear? What if Surry Hills had been taken over, and the reptiles had become zombies?

For a moment, the hairs on the back of the pond's neck stood up, and the nerves tingled ...

But the pond is made of stern stuff, and shrugged it off, as it looked like there was going to be another battle which would make World War Z look like small beer ...

 Oh the rich irony of News Corp talking of bullies.

The pond particularly enjoyed one comment at the bottom of a Crikey story about the impending saga ...



Who knows what will happen? Perhaps the pond will be collateral damage, but the pond will be grateful if it's put out of its misery, because these days, studying the reptiles tends to come by rote.

Just look at this line up in today's digital edition ...



Hmm, the war on China is going swimmingly well, but of course the pond focused on the white trash sending us their words, and who better to start the word-sending than nattering "Ned"?





Hang on, hang on, before we get past that header, credit where credit is due. 

It's the dirty digger from down under, who'd sell his soul and his citizenship for money, wot done it. Has there been a better effort to divide the United States than the money-making machine known as Fox News, with its fanatical tribalism and its barking mad after dark hosts? The Ingrahams, the Hannities, the Tucker Snarlsons?

Each day there's a new set of wonders ...


Please "Ned", no false modesty, embrace the darkness of the empire to which you belong ...


The pond apologises for leaving that sub-header "Compromise is forlorn" just hanging there, but the insidious reptiles followed it with a series of click-bait links of no interest to the pond. The poor darlings, they do so want to keep their readers locked into the bubble ...

What did interest the pond was that the reptiles now feel the need to punctuate "Ned", to break his ramblings up with sub-headers, as a way of helping unfortunates caught in his word web through the tangled weave ...

So okay, compromise is forlorn, because Fox News is all about compromise ...


The pond reluctantly had to admit that the reptiles were on to something. Reducing "Ned" to a series of chunky beef soup gobbets made sense ... created a tabloid sensationalism at odds with his usual dullard prattling, as in the next gobbet, featuring King Kong unleashed ...
 

What is it with Andrew Sullivan? Nobody at News Corp paid attention to the loon until he parted ways with New York Magazine, and the notion that he resigned is a little more nuanced than Ned's wording would have you believe.

Have no doubt he would have stayed on, blathering his irrelevancies to the moon, if he could have, but in his farewell column, he himself began this way ...

The good news is that my last column in this space is not about “cancel culture.” Well, almost. I agree with some of the critics that it’s a little nuts to say I’ve just been “canceled,” sent into oblivion and exile for some alleged sin. I haven’t. I’m just no longer going to be writing for a magazine that has every right to hire and fire anyone it wants when it comes to the content of what it wants to publish.
The quality of my work does not appear to be the problem. I have a long essay in the coming print magazine on how plagues change societies, after all. I have written some of the most widely read essays in the history of the magazine, and my column has been popular with readers. And I have no complaints about my interaction with the wonderful editors and fact-checkers here — and, in fact, am deeply grateful for their extraordinary talent, skill, and compassion. I’ve been in the office maybe a handful of times over four years, and so there’s no question of anyone mistreating me or vice versa. In fact, I’ve been proud and happy to be a part of this venture.
What has happened, I think, is relatively simple: A critical mass of the staff and management at New York Magazine and Vox Media no longer want to associate with me, and, in a time of ever tightening budgets, I’m a luxury item they don’t want to afford. And that’s entirely their prerogative... (here,
and BTW, a reader's link Andrew Sullivan: The 'polite' fascist is a fascist nonetheless).

That sounds much more like a none too gentle shove out the door rather than a principled resignation ...

Still it was good fun to see the man who called the United States the most tolerant country on the planet discover the limits of his co-workers' tolerance ...

There's only so much stupid shit anyone should be forced to deal with (except pond readers of course, highly skilled and trained and adept, and ready to take a job in any sewage works).

The pond only read Sullivan if it wanted to get angry, at the pompous prat's enormous self-regard (on view in the few pars above), and these days getting angry seems like a real luxury item.

But speaking of pompous prats, the pond must return to "Ned" and his next sub-heading:


Oh come now "Ned", surely any red-blooded American and News Corp scribbler would support the right of any 17 year old carrying an AR-15 style weapon to roam the streets, and if a few people happen to get killed, it's not vigilantism, it's just collateral damage. Where would good old Charlie Bronson and the Death Wish series, started by that terrible hack Michael Winner, be, without guns in the streets?

And as for that talk of the Donald's lack of discipline and chaotic administration, how unfair is that?




And so the last sub-header and the last chunky gobbet of "Ned" goodness ...



Well we could hope that fatuous fops of the "Ned" kind could stop quoting pompous prats of the Andrew Sullivan kind, but the pond doubts this will ever happen. Like starlings, they get together and crap on everything, and call it insight ...

Oh, and "Ned" might at some point stare at his own navel, hitched as it is to News Corp and so to Fox News, and realise that instead of Andrew Sullivan, he should be quoting Laura or Hannity or Tucker, his kissing cousins across the Pacific ...

The United States is fully fucked, and full credit to the dirty digger that helped make it so ...

And speaking of other monstrosities forced on to the world by News Corp, of course the pond was going to pay attention to the onion muncher in the lizard Oz this day ...


Such a pompous illustration for a clown, and the pond immediately felt the need to repeat that classic Pope ...


Ah, that felt better but then a very strange thing happened at the end of Magnay's far too short report ... as if the onion muncher was now an outdated irrelevancy that needed some pruning to stay in readable shape ...


 Say what?

"Mr Abbott, who is poised to be appointed to the UK Board of Trade ..."

"And then?", as the dude with a lost car would ask. Isn't there a sentence to be finished? Apparently not. No "and then" ...

Is it any wonder that for once in its life, the pond looked elsewhere, and lo and behold, the Graudian had a much better angle ...


Eek, he's been transmogrified into Killer Creighton ...
Now the pond doesn't wish to steal the Graudian's thunder.  Patrick Wintour's report can be found here, and it contains a graph which the pond excised,  and a video clip which here is only a screen cap, but please, compare this to Magnay's wretched outing, showing she might have a career in forensic cleansing ...



Of course if you die of Covid, it's hardly a natural death, more an agonising one, but the more the pond contemplated the onion muncher's infinite wisdom, the more that the pond wanted to echo Sideshow Bob: The Onion Muncher The, which anyone can translate into German, though only if you know the meaning of "Die wanker" ...



Yes, it's no wonder the reptiles kept their report short, and Magnay attempted to excise the deepest depths of onion muncher thinking. The man who brought you knighthoods was now posing as Dr Death ...


At the end of it all, the pond breathed a heartfelt sigh of relief. Imagine if this loon had still been running the country when the virus hit. Why we'd probably have matched the Donald in the US ... but at least we'd still be handing out Pom gongs for brave survivors ...

But here's the thing, and the sour note to end on. 

Some of the onion muncher's spawn are still active and in power, and this day their mischievous work has been celebrated by the infallible Pope ...




Why it's just like the United States, in its own way ...




18 comments:

  1. Just a happy little start to the day to help us get ready for the reptiles:

    "Would it be too much to pray for a day when the Bible gets a “Book of Trump,” much like it has a “Book of Esther” celebrating the deliverance of the Jews from ancient Persia?"
    MIRIAM ADELSON: A time of miracles
    https://www.reviewjournal.com/opinion/miriam-adelson-a-time-of-miracles-1705255/?_ga=2.135086835.318207483.1598999695-830963912.1596855814

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    1. Yes it is definitely a "time of miracles" with the liar in chief being the principal miracle worker in the form of a reverse Midas - everything he touches turns to shit.

      Delete
  2. So good to see Tony maintaining his unswerving commitment to the church's doctrine on the sanctity of human life.

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    1. No no, go with the flow here, Anony; it's really all about QALYs:

      "The monetary value of a quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) is frequently used to assess the benefits of health interventions and inform funding decisions".
      http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/89398/1/Frijters_Life-satisfaction-Published.pdf

      Besides, I thought it wasn't so much about that transitory, fleeting thing called "life", it was really all about the sanctity of souls, and doG made them immortal so that he could send sinners to eternal torment and damnation. But at least they didn't have to mill around in perpetual ecstasy singing his praises to their invisible friend.

      Delete
  3. The Cater has gone to the DWAGs. Deep in ‘Catallaxy Files’, one of the prolific contributors (sometimes under his own name) - Steve Kates - has taken up the Cater’s ‘at the moment is less than 0.002 per cent’ - quite uncritically.

    We understand Kates is an honorary adjunct associate professor at RMIT and sometime Commissioner of the Productivity Commission, so, of course, unlikely to do that back of envelope check of any stray number that crosses his vision, but otherwise suits his brain snap for the day.

    The brain snap is that - Australians, and particularly Victorians, are ‘submitting to authority’ because the country was ‘founded’ as a penal colony.

    But Kates, with the benefit of having been born in another country and migrating here, hopes that ‘there is still somewhere within our national DNA a love of freedom and a hatred of dictatorial restraint.’

    A smidgen of old-style eugenics, to go with Kates’ oft proclaimed old style take on economics? (He does publish with Connor Court). So we are still tainted by convict bloodlines, but there is some ‘national’ DNA that might express a love of freedom - of the kind Kates regularly praises in the USA, exemplified just now in their President. Now, if only ScoMo can chance on the key that activates those strands of (the national) DNA -

    That is quite a leap from the Cater’s duty column and its mangled mathematics, but what it really displays is that regular churn of the same themes, in and out of Fox/Sky, Limited News, steadily shrinking ‘think tanks’ and journals of tiny circulation, trying to maintain the Rupert vision of how things should be.

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    1. Of course it has never occurred to the Kateses of the world that WA, SA and Victoria were never penal "colonies" and that even NSW, Qld and Tas were only so for a short while and the 'penal population' were rapidly swamped by colonial settlers. But then, I don't suppose you could expect a CanUKian to know anything about Australian history, could you.

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    2. Hmmm. Didn't quite register the first time through, Chad: "trying to maintain the Rupert vision of how things should be." Of course, and with the empire under extreme threat, it has to be done with fewer and cheaper minions all the way down the line. So Caters and Kateses are in and Dame Groan is paid by the word.

      I wonder how long before that works its way all down the line ? Is Lachlan a serious enough penny-pincher ?

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    3. Jeez Chad, you seem to have detected a pattern here. Foreign born academic travels over water in great silver bird to bring enlightenment to the benighted natives - or alternatively to find a cosy gig in academia and engage in the culture wars on the side.

      I've noticed the likes of Babones popping up here and there on minor blogs and gabfests on YouTube. I get the sense that they are suffering a bit of relevance deprivation and think that, as you say above, constant repetition may produce that "love of freedom and a hatred of dictatorial restraint".

      My own view is that rather than rugged individualists we are rugged conformists and this shit will never fly.

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    4. Now that's interesting, Bef, because personally I've never thought the reptiles had any relevance to be deprived of. But I suppose they all sit around the zoom coffee lounge daily singing the company song and convincing themselves of their overwhelming importance in the great scheme of things: maintaining Roopie's vision of how things should be.

      But I dunno how hard detecting that "pattern" might have been, after all The Cater has already been doing it for years. And sundry others (eg Lomborg) have tried to join in. But are we really "conformists", Bef ? Once upon a time we weren't - back when Australia was known around the world as "the worker's paradise" - and then, especially post WWII - we were. And maybe that's the issue: when you are, after a very troubled time, suddenly prosperous and can afford the good things of life you really don't want to rock the boat, do you.

      https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/45152619 (The Barrier Miner, 30 Jan 1911)

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    5. Yes, Befuddled - Babones is given to 'popping up', isn't he? He is the kid in class flicking his hand in the air and gasping 'Me Miss, ask me, please Miss, I know Miss.'

      Yet, when you look at his university site, you find he has edited books on issues like the links between inequality and health. Like Dame Groan, he just seems not to have absorbed any of the content or conclusions, or to have no personal difficulty in putting that to one side as he tries to get a steady gig with Limited News, prepared to write whatever the editors think that Rupert wants to see in his Flagship.

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  4. Just a couple of gems today. Firstly, the really acute understanding of an old dodderer:

    "Trump is a poor governor but a dangerous campaigner. Now he is unleashed. Nobody watching Trump's acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention could doubt how formidable he looks and the power of the emotional pitch he makes. Trump will energise his base -- the only question is whether it still possesses sufficient bandwidth. Lies and narcissism are part of the American greatness mythology Trump has constructed that half of the country extols or sympathises with to some degree."

    Really truly says it all, doesn't it: the blind, insane worshipful belief in Trump and all his inanities that is de rigueur for reptiles. And Nullius Ned is onto it in full. Why, I'll bet he thinks that Trump's Derangement Syndrome interview with Ingraham* is just an absolute election winner. And I reckon the Bromancer would enthusiastically agree with him. And Miriam Adelson will be right in there, funding every little promise he makes.

    * For those who missed it:
    Five bizarre moments from Trump's interview with Laura Ingraham
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/01/donald-trump-laura-ingraham-fox-news-interview

    Now on to the Onion Muncher's happy phantasy.

    "After six months it is surely time to relax the rules so that individuals can take more personal responsibility and make more of their own decisions about the risks they are prepared to run."

    Now that just shows off the OM perfectly: it is always and only about him and "the risk's he'sprepared to run." But him being the brainless, narcissistic egoist he is, I'm not prepared to accept all the risks his thoughtless behaviour will impose on me. Sure, Muncher, if you were isolated on a desert island, I'd be happy for you to take risks because they'd only affect you. But in a modern, interconnected society, every risk you take imposes a risk on the rest of us.

    And if you don't believe that, can I commend the USA, the UK, Brazil, India, and especially Sweden etc. etc to your attention. And then compare them to Taiwan, China, Vietnam probably, NZ, and yes, even with Melbourne's second wave, Australia.

    So please, Onionman, please take your sorry little gluteal sulcus-free arse off to your place of birth just as quickly as you can arrange it.

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  5. Hi Dorothy,

    So the Onion Muncher is back in Dear Old Blighty after he had been granted special permission to travel (presumably from Mutton Dutton) and his trip had been privately funded. Privately funded by whom may we ask?

    It’s interesting to see who set up the Policy Exchange think tank that gave Tones a speaking gig, whilst he awaits his appointment to the UK Board of Trade.

    Michael Gove, Minister for Murdoch, oops sorry Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, set up the supposedly “independent, non-partisan educational charity” with a couple of other Tory politicians.

    As to who pays for "the largest, but also the most influential think tank on the right”? It appears we are not to know as it refuses to even identify its donors.

    At least the Onion Muncher should feel right at home as guess who is Chairman of Trustees? None other than part-time crossdresser and war criminal Sandy Downer.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Policy_Exchange

    The Mad Monk’s message of course was one of self reliance and for everyone to suck it up as we can’t afford to keep the crinklies alive indefinitely. If they cark it from the virus well…“Shit Happens”.

    $200,000 for an extra year of life is definitely exorbitant (in comparison Abbott only received a mere $296,000 from his parliamentary pension in 2019)

    https://www.sbs.com.au/news/the-feed/tony-abbott-s-pension-will-be-bigger-than-his-mp-paycheck-here-s-why

    “People once sturdily self-reliant looking to the government more than ever for support and sustenance, a something-for-nothing mindset, reinforced amongst young people spared the need of searching for jobs.”

    “A something-for-nothing mindset”? Well the Onion Muncher should know all about that as he has lived on the government teat virtually his whole adult life. He got a Rhodes Scholarship not because of any academic genius but that the sex pest on the selection committee was yet another rightwing Liberal.

    https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/dyson-heydon-was-on-panel-that-awarded-tony-abbott-his-prized-rhodes-scholarship-20150817-gj0o8o.html

    His daughter got a $60,000 scholarship from Whitehouse Institute of Design because one of Tones donors was chairman on the board of governors. He’s now waiting on another government job to which he has no qualification because he’s of the same rabid right wing mindset as BoJo and his set of clowns.

    Self-reliance is that what they call it in the Old-Boys network.

    DiddyWrote

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    1. And some just call it wingnut welfare, DW:
      https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Wingnut_welfare

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    2. Tone-deaf is the perfect combination of confidence and ignorance. Apart from the grift you have detailed above, his only talent is destroying everything he touches.

      I cannot wait to see the chaos that ensues if he gets the gig.

      PS He should have left the country by catapult.

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    3. The pond almost daily regrets taking the onion muncher off the pond banner. It was wrong at the time, it's still wrong now. And if he does become chief grand poo bah to the Boris, and do excellent deals with the Duchy of Grand Fenwick, and earn himself a knighthood, arise, sir onion muncher, then dammit, the pond will restore him to his rightful place ...

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    4. Don't let it upset you, DP, the Onion Muncher will always be in our hearts (though never in our minds). Just drop him back in for a day or two now and then as a special pond treat.

      Delete
  6. Hi GB,

    I think it’s quite a lot worse than Wingnut Welfare, at least then these loons were paid for directly by the Koch’s, Rinehart’s and Murdoch’s or whatever right wing billionaire found democracy an inhibitor.

    Now they have got their very own governments that they wish to “drag into the bathroom and drown in the bathtub” to actually pay the wingnut’s salary, pension and expenses.

    The hypocrisy is immense.

    DW

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    1. A relevant point, DW, but those kinds of billionaires are a relatively recent phenomenon whereas the world of sinecures has been around for, well, centuries. Though handing out sinecures isn't exclusively 'wingnut' of course, but they've always done better in the hypocrisy stakes - mainly because it's just been taken for granted. And a long compliant press seldom asked any embarrassing questions.

      In the case of Abbott though, I agree with Bef that the chaos ensuing on his appointment will be wondrous to behold.

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