Thursday, August 31, 2023

In which the pond hits the road, takes a drive on the wild side, and ends up doing serious study with a prof from the west, and then endures Roger of The Times droning about drones ...

 


Now that the date has been set, the pond is determined to boldly ignore all the screeching and squawking and alarmist fear mongering that will be emitted from the Murdochian camp like farts let off in the wind to protest the sun's rise.

If that's all there is, the pond will abandon duties for the day, because nothing is better than promulgating and spreading the usual rabid reptile bigotry. It might also mean keeping some unusual and odd company.

That said, the pond has some fair hope that enough of the hive mind will be distracted from the main reptile mission to provide some entertainment.

Perhaps some might think the pond is exaggerating. But what were the first few words out of simplistic Simon - here no conflict of interest - within minutes of the date being announced?




 Yep, "Fear and doubt".  The very first words out of a reptile keyboard ...

Sure simpleton Simon then threw into a mention of empty symbolism and tortured guilt, but you could hardly count those as positives up against the fear and the doubt...

So the pond is now on a quest to find alternatives. A bit of old-fashioned climate science denialism - is there a Lloydie down from the Amazon? - or perhaps the bromancer returning to the war on China, or Dame Groan railing at pesky, difficult, uppity furriners ... anything but the screeching and the squawking and the carry-on ...

To get the jokes rolling, here's a good one from Charlie Lewis in Crikey (paywall) about a US activist investor Arjuna Capital in the Faux Noise henhouse...

...Citing the US$787 million settlement of the lawsuit brought against it by electronic voting company Dominion ...Voting systems, and the ongoing defamation lawsuit from Smartmatic (which is seeking $2.7 billion in damages), the proposal, filed in May, argued: “Fox must address how it is assessing and mitigating risks such as misinformation and disinformation.”
The proposal has now been withdrawn after Fox committed to hiring a law firm to assess its oversight of these risks. Last month, Fox asked the US Securities and Exchange Commission to be allowed to omit the proposal, arguing it was already implementing the requested measure via language which has the same relationship with caveats that Bonnie and Clyde’s V8 Ford had with bullets:
After discussing the proposal, the board concluded that conducting an evaluation of the merits of establishing a risk oversight committee is an advisable exercise and is taking steps to implement the proposal.
Unequivocal stuff. It’s hired law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen and Hamilton to undertake the review. We’ll see what happens — qualifiers aside, Fox trying to mitigate the risks of disinformation is rather like advising lions on the risks of attacking zebras.

A risk oversight committee? Could the lizard Oz and Sky News after dark be in urgent need of a risk oversight committee?

Time to let the metaphors run wild and free. Perhaps like mad dogs advising humans on the risk of rabies? Advising reptile zombies on the risks of going vegan,  or perhaps advising Killer to don a mask? And there must be some way to evoke Lloydie of the Amazon ... perhaps baby Emperor Penguins advising reptiles of the dangers of falling off the sea ice?

Charlie also had other jokes about sporty Bid McKenzie and Richard Marles taking to the air, but they must be reserved for those who pony up for Crikey.

The pond's main game is the reptile stew, and so to today's digital offerings ... and naturally the lead announced there could be no path to victory ...




Nope, nothing there for the pond. Simplistic Simon was still hanging about, there was much about the voice, Petey boy was on about Qantas and there was a distraction offered up by cane toad land, but as for pond fodder, zip, zilch, nada...

Down below was equally sparse ... with the pond showing its workings, before finally landing on a reptile offering on the basis of any port in a sterile storm...





"Voice debate must unfold in respectful spirit of unity"? Well there's a laugh, and as for Penbo, just allow the pond to spend a quality moment with a bucket. What's the point, apart from an upchuck, for a man who starts with "irrefutable"?

There's also a note about Qantas, but in all that surely explains why the pond welcomed a new voice, one Alex """" Coram of the west ...




Dear sweet long absent lord, the pond hadn't expected a ponderous serve of desiccated coconut, but that's the price you pay for leaving the rest to the cartoonists ...






The pond realised its stay outside the hive mind might well be a tedious affair ...






Ah, a navigation app. What an astonishing metaphor, full of clarity and insight, and there was the pond thinking that avoiding the tolls was the way to go, what with an EV battery offering cheap mileage and time a never no mind ...

The reptiles were so startled that they slipped in a snap of a solar farm to remind the pond of the demonic forces at work ...




Then it was back to Alex of the west, and in the next gobbet the scales fell from the pond's eyes ...




To be blunt, it seems he's a cackling Claire man!

And if cackling Claire is his idea of a robust expert, then the long absent lord help those in the west...

To be blunt on the general tone of the piece thus far, it seems that Alex of the west doesn't have much to offer by way of anything other than nattering negativity of the sort the pond routinely expects from nattering nabobs of negativism ... and the pond can get that from your friendly local cartoonist, unless they're determined to look on the bright side of life ...









Well there's a lot of cheery bright side-ism at work ...

Meanwhile, here was one last gobbet from nattering nabob Alex of the west, and the pond wondered if he might at least propose something, anything, perhaps even nuking the country ... some sort of solution to the conundrum ...



That's it, that's all the emeritus prof of the west could come up with? He's worried? Surely these matters should have been called "troubling" or perhaps "deeply troubling" or even "deeply worrisome"?

So what's the solution to all this troubling worrying?

 "A serious economic study", and what's more it's "required as a matter of urgency"? And there will be "wide-ranging theoretical and analytical capabilities"?

So the country, the climate and the energy crisis will be saved by a word salad and a study?  Perhaps with the results to be delivered by around 2050, together with the subs?

What a waste of space and time and life and pretty much everything, but the pond guesses that's what happens when you refuse to take a drive on the wild side with the infallible Pope ...




Set the motor running, looking for adventure, but sadly as a bonus, all the pond could do was forage through yesterday's stale reptile bread, only to come up with Roger of The Times droning on about drones ...





Eek, never mind Roger of The Times droning on about drones, the reptiles slipped in a 'read next' featuring little Johnny maintaining the rage.

So that's how "Voice debate must unfold in respectful spirit of unity"

By maintaining the rage? WTF? 

The pond might occasionally rage at the lot assigned to the indigenous population, but maintain the rage?

Luckily at that moment the reptiles helped out the droning Roger by slipping in a snap of a drone ...




... and a lot of video clips the pond could delete, and so the pond could get back to the droning and could learn a new word ...




Polycrisis! Luckily there was reading to hand, and the pond could catch up on this Davos buzzword here in company with Adam Tooze, or here for even more on the Davos buzzword ...

Sheesh, and once upon a time the reptiles had trained the pond to think of Davos as being down there with George Soros, but if Roger of the Times uses it in his droning, it must be fine ...

As for the rest of the droning, the pond will confess it hasn't been paying much attention, and found it hard to focus ... but it seems there's a new way for the bromancer to approach his war with China by Xmas ...




Indeed, indeed, much better for the Ukrainians just to sit back and suck it up ...

And so there was a gobbet of droning to go ... and waddya know, dinkum Aussie droning was all the go ...





A cardboard polycrisis!

So Roger of The Times took wing for a final droning on about drones gobbet ...




Meanwhile, for all the evocation of hellfire, there doesn't seem to be an actual way to resolve matters on the battlefield, with civilians forced to wear the brunt of terror campaigns, especially the ones mounted by the sociopathic Vlad the Impaler ...

The pond confesses it entirely missed the point of the droning ... though it seemed it was all part of a polycrisis that seemed to have a singularity, a droning monocrisis involving droning about drones ...

There might be a big price to pay for the pond sitting outside the reptile tent for the duration, with the pond already forced to offer humble apologies for this day's humble offerings of humbug, while cartoonists like the immortal Rowe make out like bandits ...






It's always in the details, the detailing of the baleful wraiths, hanging like gargoyles off the walls at Sydney uni  ...







Wednesday, August 30, 2023

In which the pond finds a couple of treats thanks to the 50 shades of Grey man, and Riddster from the IPA cheering on his friendly Jordie ...

 

The pond is coming to a transformative time of the year. Soon enough the pond will shift over from parritch to muesli ... as it does each year, what with the seasonal shift and the heating of the planet ... which is to say the ordinary heating of the southern hemisphere, and not the exceptional heating of the planet, which continues apace ...

The pond has a simple recipe for parritch ... a (small) cup, with a cup of milk and a cup of water, bring to a brisk simmer, and stir to a mucilaginous gluey glugginess and glutinous mushiness that suits ... then add a little brown sugar or Golden Syrup, Tamworth style, to taste ...

The result's a bit like the slushy, sludgy swill and undiluted pureed hokum you can get from the lizard Oz.

Some might think think that the pond should stick with cooked oats rather than shift over to munching on raw oats, but as with the lizard Oz, there's not much difference between the raw and the cooked ... (please, no Claude Lévi-Strauss jokes, leave that to an expert like a sociological Caterist).

Speaking of the cooked, there was Stan Grant at the top of the lizard Oz yet again, at the top on the far right ...




What could possibly explain the lizard Oz's ongoing fascination with Grant? Well, it's not just a climate denialist rag, it's routinely a racist and sexist rag, and bashing uppity, difficult, tricky blacks is par for the reptile bigotry course ...

Now the pond isn't a fan of Grant - anyone who wastes time at Q+A is a time waster - but does he need to endure the relentless persecution of the reptiles, carrying on like New Idea in the presence of a Hollywood star the rag can carry some false smut and innuendo about?

Grant didn't seem to think so, Stan Grant accuses the Australian newspaper of acting like a ‘racist hit squad’.

Here the pond must intrude. In its quaint way, The Graudian is talking about The Australian, with a capital T, as in The Lizard Oz, The Haven of Reptiles, The Gaggle of Racist Goons ... and its an EXCLUSIVE: prominent Indigenous journalist, who recently left the ABC, says he is being targeted by News Corp paper which ran story about a ‘bullying’ incident

Well of course. It's what the reptiles do ... and the pond did skim lightly over the previous reptile outing, but this one is worth a mention, if only because ...

...Stan Grant has accused the Australian newspaper of acting like “a racist hit squad” with a history of targeting Indigenous public figures, after the Murdoch masthead claimed the former ABC host was the subject of a bullying complaint.
“They’ve targeted Marcia Langton, they’ve targeted Noel Pearson – he’s been depicted as some sort of raving bully in the past,” Grant said. “They’ve done it to Larissa Behrendt, they’ve done it to Bruce Pascoe, it’s hunting season for Aboriginal people, that’s what it is.”
Grant said the article published on the front page on Tuesday was an “outrageous slur” and came on top of the referendum year in which he has been “constantly abused” by the media and on social media, including headlines about the colour of his skin.

Well yes, and for what? Nothing much, and something the reptiles would dismiss as cancel culture woke nonsense in another context, because apparently Grant said a naughty word or perhaps three and bunged on a bit of a blue, as they used to do out the back at Maguire's pub ...

...The Guardian has confirmed the senior colleague did not lodge a formal complaint about the conversation, which took place on 29 January, the day of the first episode of Q+A for 2023.
The Australian’s article reported that Grant swore at his colleague. Grant admitted “he lost it” when he was approached by the woman because he was talking to a friend about his distress about his niece dying and his father being ill.
“I was trying to get my head together to host a show before I jump in a car and drive out to bury my niece and give the eulogy,” he said.
ABC management did discuss the incident with both parties who have conflicting accounts of what took place but there was no formal complaint. No one who witnessed the incident has described it as “bullying” but rather as a single altercation.
The Australian has been asking the ABC questions about the incident for several months, sources said.
“This is an Australian newspaper; a racist hit squad that has been targeting me forever,” Grant said. “And I am sick to death of me and my family being smeared constantly.
“Do they care that my kids are gonna get abused today? Do they care that I’m gonna get abused today? Do they care that I am going to get death threats? Do they care?”

Well no, they don't care, they only care about angertainment, and serving up the shekels to Chairman Rupert, and cowering in the bunker the rest of the time ...

And now, rather than dwell anymore on that, on with a little of the pond's own angertainment, and there were a couple of splendid items in the comments section this day ...




Not the hit squad of Mundine and Shanners ... the pond only mentions them so that it can show off that infallible Pope from yesterday in proper format ...




... which it has to be said is less stomach-churning than this day's infallible Pope ... but as sexism has been mentioned alongside bog standard reptile racism ...




And with that the pond can turn to 50 shades of nuking the planet Grey ...




Why that artist's impression? Well they ain't got a real one that looks that good. And why does the pond bother, having gone down the path of nuking the country and the planet many, many times before with the reptiles?

Well the other day, the keen Keane went right off in Crikey in The right’s nuclear stupidity is enough to make us cough up Phlegm Orville. (paywall)

This was the lede ...The right's love of small modular reactors is scam used by fossil fuel interests to try to delay meaningful climate action.

The pond can take very little of the grundling that has returned to Crikey after a long absence, but the keen Keane was intent on nuking the AFR, and he will also serve here as a nice point and counterpoint montage ...

As Crikey has explained more times than we can remember, the “debate” about nuclear power in Australia follows a boringly predictable pattern. The right calls for a “sensible debate” about nuclear power (“sensible” means “don’t use it as a scare campaign against us because we know it will work”). Then someone who can count points out that nuclear power is famously subject to extraordinary delays and multi-hundred-percent cost blowouts, at which point the right will invoke “small modular reactors”, which have been promised for decades.
It’s so ritualised you could do a kabuki play about it. Not even the language changes. It was John Howard who as prime minister wanted a “sensible debate”, not once but twice. Julie Bishop wanted a “sensible debate” in 2014. Karen Andrews went “sensible” in 2015. Warren Mundine in 2019. Judith Sloan, too. Chris Kenny in 2021. Ryan Stokes earlier this year.
The latest iteration has played out true to form, with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton calling for “a sensible and sober conversation on nuclear power in Australia” because of “safe, small modular and microreactors”. But at least we’ve got something a little new this time. In July, when Dutton spoke to far-right lobby group the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) about the sensible debate, he tried to argue nuclear power is not just an obsession of the right.
President Macron has reversed France’s original plan to reduce its nuclear energy from 70% to 50%, indeed as part of a nuclear renaissance, France will build six new large reactors and shortly commence testing on a nuclear power plant in Phlegm Orville, which is set to open early next year.
Er, what? Phlegm Orville in France? Sounds like a haute cuisine serving of mucus. Presumably the IPA scribe misheard when Dutton referred to Flamanville Nuclear Power Plant (thank God he didn’t refer to Finland’s Olkiluoto). Or perhaps they couldn’t believe Dutton was seriously invoking Flamanville as an advertisement for the wisdom of nuclear power.

Now the keen Keane is full of keen links, and the pond hasn't bothered with most of them - there's a reason to head to the original piece in Crikey - but that joke about the IPA is worth the link ... if only to confirm it was really there ...

President Macron has reversed France’s original plan to reduce its nuclear energy from 70 to 50%, indeed as part of a nuclear renaissance, France will build six new large reactors and shortly commence testing on a nuclear power plant in Phlegm Orville, which is set to open early next year. France’s state owned electricity company EDF has created a subsidiary to develop its new SMR and is even bringing Italian partners into the fold.

And then it was back to those 50 shades of Grey ...




At this point the reptiles slipped in a snap of a smirking energy minister and the pond had to interrupt the montage to downsize it ...





With that done, the pond could return to the keen Keane in full flight... and with links that unfortunately the pond has lost, but as noted, the pond has to leave a reason for heading off to Crikey ...

Crikey first mentioned the new reactor being built at Flamanville in 2009, when it was due to open in 2013 and was already one-third over budget. By 2016 it was 200% over budget and scheduled to start in 2018. By 2018, the builder EDF discovered serious construction problems that delayed the start until 2020, and blew the budget out again. In 2020, the French government labelled Flamanville a “mess”. Early in 2022, when it was going to open at the end of the year, there was another delay and the budget rose to €12.7 billion (A$21.3 billion). At the end of last year, there was another delay into 2024 and the budget went over €13 billion.
So, all up, a decade overdue, and a final cost triple the initial estimate — if it starts next year. And it’s what Dutton thinks is an advertisement for nuclear power. Perhaps he should have mentioned Olkiluoto instead. It finally commenced in April this year… 14 years overdue.
Such criticisms, however, are now airily dismissed by nuclear power advocates. The future is small modular reactors (SMRs), which take much less time to build and are far cheaper — even if there are none actually operating outside Russia or China yet. “A single SMR can power some 300,000 homes. A microreactor could power a regional hospital, a factory, a mining site or a military base,” Dutton told the IPA.
At the same time as Dutton is spruiking SMRs, the Financial Review is as well. It’s run a three-part series on plans in Canada, Japan and the United Kingdom for SMRs (as one AFR reader acerbically noted, the keyword is “plans”).

Uh huh, but the safe word on the pond is "50 shades of Grey" ...




Now the keen Keane was agitated about the AFR, but really why not just transpose him to another key, and apply the rant to the 50 shades of Grey man?

The AFR also editorialised about the glories of SMRs. Conveniently absent, however, was the fact that even the new wonder technology needs massive taxpayer subsidies. The SMR that gets advocates most excited is the small prototype that US firm NuScale received regulatory approval to build in Idaho earlier this year — celebrated as a major milestone for the technology. Except it won’t commence operation until 2030 at the earliest and has already received US$1.4 billion in subsidies. That hasn’t stopped the proposed facility’s cost per MW-hour already increasing by more than 50% — three times the current cost of large-scale nuclear power in the US.
Why has the cost gone up for this SMR? Because, erm… cough cough… there’s been a massive blowout in the construction cost: 75%, to more than US$9 billion. Sure, it’s not a Phlegm Orville 300% blowout, but it is only a small reactor. And who will insure SMRs? In the United States, the government provides that insurance, with nuclear power plant owners paying hundreds of millions of dollars a year in premiums, further adding to the cost.
Another issue not mentioned by either the AFR or Dutton — both of whom like to whine about too much government spending — is what to do with the waste produced by SMRs. See, while they may be small, SMRs produce much more waste per unit of energy produced — and waste with higher radioactivity levels — than normal reactors. Good luck finding somewhere to store that for 10,000 years. You can bet no company will be doing that — it will fall to taxpayers, yet again.
So, apart from taking a long time to build, blowing out costs, requiring a massive infrastructure solution in terms of waste disposal and requiring colossal taxpayer support, the SMRs championed by Dutton and the AFR are completely different to traditional nuclear power.
What’s driving all this? Why does the right think SMRs are the solution? The delays that are typical of nuclear power, and which would be typical of SMRs as well, aren’t the problem — they’re the point. Switching focus to nuclear power and away from renewables and storage would delay decarbonisation and give fossil fuel industries extra years — indeed, extra decades — to keep operating while a nuclear “solution” was prepared. Like carbon capture, like gas, it’s another scam used by fossil fuel interests to try to delay meaningful climate action.
It’s enough to make you cough your lungs out.

And with that, the pond was nicely primed to get a final lashing from the 50 shades of Grey man ...




For those who think they've heard all this before, they have ... many, many times, because it's not just Stan Grant that routinely cops a lashing, so does the pond's eyeballs ...





That's what you get when a rag is a climate science denialist hit squad ...

And so to the bonus and another delightful item, this time featuring the Riddster of the IPA ... because when all other options expire, there's always Gina's money ... and a spot in the lizard Oz ...




A friend of the pond sent along a link to a CBC story, knowing that at some point the reptiles would do a friendly Jordie story ... Ontario court rules against Jordan Peterson, upholds social media training order.

It is of course seemly and proper, as you'd expect of CBC ...



Allow the pond to provide that link to the story about those social media posts ...

Allow the pond to cherry pick some of them ...

...The complaints centred on tweets Peterson had made about public health restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic and his appearance on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast. The panel followed up on the concerns, examined other tweets Peterson had made and noted particular concern with a series of statements that included:

  • Referring to Catherine McKenney, an Ottawa city councillor, who prefers to use they/them pronouns, as an "appalling self-righteous moralizing thing."
  • A tweet in which he used the dead name of actor Elliot Page, stating: "Remember when pride was a sin. And Ellen Page just had her breasts removed by a criminal physician."
  • A tweet in which he referred to Gerald Butts, the former principal secretary of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, as a "prik" (sic).
  • His tweet in response to a Sports Illustrated swimsuit cover of a plus-sized model, in which he said: "Sorry. Not Beautiful. And no amount of authoritarian tolerance is going to change that."
Peterson was temporarily suspended from Twitter for his tweet about Page. His account was reinstated by Elon Musk shortly after he purchased the social media platform in 2022.
After its review, the panel concluded that Peterson's conduct "poses moderate risks to the public," which includes the potential of "undermining public trust in the profession of psychology, and trust in the college's ability to regulate the profession in the public interest."

Actually judging by that content, Jordie poses more of a risk to himself than anyone else, and at this point the pond was reminded of the Groucho line, Please accept my resignation. I don't want to belong to any club that will accept me as a member ...

Why does addictive Jordie bother, why does he want to hang in there?




Well yes, you just have to ask Charlie Teo what happens when questions start being asked ... and and that point the pond was reminded of another matter entirely, featured in the Nine rag's Time for Teo’s media supporters to back away from their controversial mate

...With Teo’s reputation in tatters following a recent finding of unsatisfactory professional conduct: a Herald investigation has raised questions about his involvement in the Blacktown Brain and Spinal Institute, the sale of council land to developer Walker Corporation at a hefty discount, and the conduct of the neurosurgeon’s business partners.
The Herald’s chief investigative reporter Kate McClymont on Tuesday revealed that at a 2021 presentation on the “Transformation of Blacktown,” the council’s chief executive officer flagged a $100 million sale to the BBSI group for its billion-dollar medical development. However, last March the land was sold to developer Lang Walker’s company for $42 million, without going to public tender. The same day Walker Corporation bought the land, ASIC documents show builder Leny Manassa resigned as the sole director of the BBSI Group. Manassa, local businessman Carlo LoGiudice and Teo all quit as shareholders of BBSI, too.
Teo’s reputation was vital in gaining council support for the project. But the consortium was shaken after McClymont’s front page article on September 5, 2019, which raised serious questions about Teo’s judgment, behaviour, exorbitant fees and sexual harassment of female colleagues. The following December, she also reported Teo’s and LoGiudice’s association with Melbourne underworld figure Mick Gatto. The article also raised the multiple attempts to bankrupt LoGiudice, who had featured a number of times in diaries of the now-jailed former Labor minister Eddie Obeid.
Reputations and risk: Charlie Teo’s ‘wolf pack’ unleashes torrent of abuse
The medical profession took off after Teo. A professional standards committee last month found him guilty of unsatisfactory conduct, saying he lacked insight, empathy and judgment and that he had failed to properly explain the risks of the operations to patients and relatives. The committee also ruled he could not carry out brain surgery unless he obtained written approval from an independent neurosurgeon of 15 years’ standing who had to be approved by the Medical Council of NSW. It is now near-impossible for Teo to operate in Australia because no neurosurgeon will vouch for him.
Following the publication of the 2019 investigation, it has emerged LoGuidice boasted to a WhatsApp group that included Teo of a threat by a young Italian man and his father to “rifle” McClymont and set fire to The Sydney Morning Herald, and warned they were the “wrong wolfpack” to mess with.
He initially said the conversations may have been “doctored” but subsequently claimed it was “banter.” “Neither you nor the SMH nor any other person has anything to fear from me,” LoGiudice later told the Herald in an email. But, as we reported yesterday, NSW Police have discussed the threats with Nine’s security and management, who interpreted the comments as threats to staff. It should go without saying but is worth making clear: the Herald stands by McClymont and condemns these appalling threats of violence.
These latest revelations further damage Teo’s tarnished reputation. In response to LoGiudice’s message, Teo thanked him. Based on the contents of the Whatsapp messages seen by the Herald, he failed to rebuke his business partner for his choice of language. Teo did not respond to a request for comment about the exchange.

Sorry, the pond got distracted, but the principle's the same, there's nothing like a good goss, and if you head to Russia zonked out of your mind, someone's going to notice ... 

What Happened to Jordan Peterson? A philosopher, a medical crisis, and a mystery...

....it was something of a surprise to learn, in early February, that Peterson had spent eight days in a medically induced coma at an unnamed clinic in Russia. Peterson’s daughter Mikhaila, a 28-year-old food blogger, posted a brief but dramatic video claiming that she and her father had traveled to Russia in early January seeking an unorthodox treatment for his physical dependence on the drug clonazepam. Dependency goes against the core tenets of Peterson’s philosophical brand: stoicism, self-reliance, the power of the will over circumstance and environment. “No one gets away with anything, ever, so take responsibility for your own life,” he admonished in his bestselling self-help book 12 Rules for Life. 
According to Mikhaila, he nearly died several times during his medical ordeal. After weeks in intensive care, he was unable to speak or write and was taking anti-seizure medicine.
The news was met with bafflement by doctors and laypeople alike. What was Peterson doing in a drug-induced coma in Russia? Based on interviews with medical professionals and a close reading of various statements that Mikhaila and Peterson himself have made on podcasts and social media, it is clear that Peterson ended up in Russia after an extended battle to wean himself off clonazepam. And it seems likely that Peterson, a self-proclaimed man of science, succumbed to the lure of a quack treatment—with devastating consequences.    
Peterson’s saga has mostly been covered in conservative news outlets, which have relied almost exclusively on a disjointed narrative put forth by Mikhaila, a nutrition “influencer” with no medical credentials who claims to have cured her idiopathic juvenile arthritis, clinical depression, and a C. difficile infection by eating nothing but meat, salt, and water. Peterson promoted his daughter’s snake oil diet and even embraced the program himself. In July 2018, he told celebrity podcaster Joe Rogan that he’d been eating nothing but beef, salt, and water for two months at his daughter’s suggestion, following a year of eating almost nothing but steak and salad. It’s unclear whether Peterson continued to follow this extreme diet. 
Peterson’s health problems first surfaced in September 2019, when his family announced that he had undergone a stint in rehab in upstate New York. According to Mikhaila’s update from Russia, he was prescribed the sedative clonazepam, a benzodiazepine, by his family doctor in 2017 for anxiety stemming from a “severe autoimmune reaction to food.” Peterson’s doctor allegedly increased his dose after Peterson’s wife was diagnosed with kidney cancer in April 2019. Peterson supposedly didn’t realize he’d become dependent on clonazepam until he suffered agonizing withdrawal symptoms when he tried to quit the medication cold turkey during the summer of 2019. 

Why on earth would any professional body want this man as a member? Why would this man think he was the right sort of man to be offering psychological advice under the auspices of a professional body?

Well eventually the pond had to get back to the Riddster, without expecting any sensible answer now that he's gone full Gina ...




Sorry, Riddster, that was indeed beyond the valley of the risk of being self-serving ... but why whinge and moan, you have Gina's money for comfort ...

Meanwhile, with that friendly Jordie, the question was simply who was going to be boss ...




And so on, and on, wanting to be a member of a club he shouldn't want to be a member of, and now back to the Riddster, who obviously sees himself as the same sort of martyr ... a persecuted Christ figure, iconic and symbolic ...




Here's the thing. The Riddster himself hasn't lost the right to freely express himself. The reptiles welcome him with open arms, as they welcome all sorts of IPA loons. 

Friendly Jordie hasn't lost the right to express himself. He can't just do it under the cloak of a licence from a professional body, much as Charlie Teo has run into troubled waters in his professional career ...

At this point, the reptiles decided to run one of their patented rights free dirt cheap snaps of an historical figure, naturally cut down to size by the pond ...




That was followed by a short final par from the Riddster now deep in his martyrdom ...




Dedicated professionals?

That's one deeply delusional way of putting it.

The pond is reminded of Icarus, who flew too high and got too close to the sun, and imagined that the world would worship him for it, and instead ended up in a deeply weird place ...

...Mikhaila blames Western medicine for her father’s predicament, and not just because Western doctors prescribed the pills. Allegedly, Peterson’s pneumonia was the fault of a North American hospital, too, though she doesn’t say how she knows that. Mikhaila is essentially weaving her own “hero’s journey” into her father’s ordeal, one in which she brought him to a far-flung clinic that had “the guts” to do what Western doctors wouldn’t. It’s a tale that burnishes her brand as a wellness influencer and shoves aside awkward questions about whether the treatment harmed Peterson.
When it comes to recovery, there are no quick fixes. But that doesn’t mean the most arduous option is necessarily the most effective. If Peterson’s sad story has a moral, it’s that a drug problem is neither a dragon to be slain nor a sin to be ashamed of. It’s a mundane health problem that should be treated scientifically, without heroics.

Sorry, the pond left the world of science long ago, first with that 50 shades of Grey man, and then with the Riddster, and all that's left for breakfast is a patented bowl of sludge ...

What a relief then to turn to the immortal Rowe for a closing cartoon featuring none of the above ...





Tuesday, August 29, 2023

In which Lloydie of the Amazon fights back, the lizard Oz editorialist stands by their team with a burst of right think, and Dame Groan offers up her usual groaning ... (no sighing in the stalls, please) ...

 

The pond was mortified. Despite its best intentions, it snuck in a viewing of Media Watch, though its findings are routinely disputed, and was astonished and mortified to see that Lloydie of the Amazon, just like Colonel Fawcett, had fought back, and the pond had missed it ...

The pond had unwittingly denied Lloydie of the Amazon the right of reply, though his reply might be disputed ...

A quick glance at the top of the lizard Oz digital edition confirmed that there was nothing of such importance happening this day ...



Sure, there was the reptiles' new hero, Stan Grant, in martyr pose, and way down below the mango Mussolini up for trial, and over on the far right there's a little Natasha hysteria about nuking education, but there was nothing to compare to Lloydie of the Amazon fighting back ... c'mon, show a snap of a bushfire, tremendous proof there's no climate emergency ...




There's no need to follow that link - to its enduring shame, the pond on Sunday reprinted Lloydie of the Amazon's magnificent September opus in A brief note in honour of Lloydie of the Amazon - and how right of Lloydie to call his own work accurate, since few others will.

Here the pond should note that Lloydie's work is sometimes disputed, per Media Watch ...

Publisher Springer Nature reviewed the article after complaints from leading climate scientists, and on Wednesday published a retraction announcing:

… the Editors-in-Chief no longer have confidence in the results and conclusions reported in this article. 
The Editors-in-Chief have retracted this article. - Springer Nature, Retraction Note, 23 August, 2023

And it gets worse.
As part of the review, the authors were invited to write an addendum to address claims of cherry picking facts but it seems not even that was worth printing, with the publisher saying:

… the addendum was not suitable for publication and that the conclusions of the article were not supported by available evidence or data provided by the authors. - Springer Nature, Retraction Note, 23 August, 2023

So, will The Australian be doing the same given its article is still online?
We asked the Editor, Michelle Gunn, and then her deputy, but we did not get a reply.  
Instead, the paper has published a new story by Graham Lloyd, arguing that the discredited study has fallen victim to a ‘heated campaign’ and should not have been retracted.
And is that any surprise? 
In the last few weeks we’ve seen wildfires raging in Canada and Greece, and heat records being smashed around the world, with July reportedly the hottest month ever. 
Yet 10 days ago Chris Kenny was running this opinion piece in The Australian, calling for fathers to better protect their children from climate hysteria and claiming:

This catastrophism is calculated, community child abuse. - The Weekend Australian, 19-20 August, 2023

‘Child abuse’?  It really does beggar belief.

Beggars belief? What beggars belief is that anyone would think the lizard Oz is in the business of apologising for its climate science denialism, and dammit, Lloydie of the Amazon stands proud ...




Of course, of course. What a splendid snap and who else would Lloydie of the Amazon turn to than Judith Curry, one of the preeminent climate science denialists in business today ...

Curry is featured at DeSmog and at Skeptical Science, though that really doesn't compete up against Lloydie of the Amazon's splendid plan for a 'healing retreat' in the Peruvian jungle, what with plans for hallucinogens and a shaman to make good the dirty business of selling your soul to make shekels for Chairman Rupert ... and now back to the defiant Lloydie ...



And today the lizard Oz editorialist stood by sundry reptiles in the thick of the fog of reptile wars ...




"Right think"? Well it's a new wrinkle, a sort of projection or transference, so that any talk of barking mad right wing loons at the lizard Oz gets transformed into "right think". Who needs "Orwellian" or "virtue signalling" or "woke mob" or "cancel culture", or even Killer's invention of "wrongthink", when you can talk of "right think"?

Regardless of the facts and whether the statement is one page or a zillion, it's only the lizard Oz that stands against the virtue signallers, the cancellers, or if you will, the legions of morally superior enforcers...

Talk about a modern malady, talk about Faux Noise? Not likely, talk about sweet simpleton Sharri, out at the front of the lizard Oz pack, a lone voice howling into the wilderness at the wildebeests ... (though in the pond's observation of the Namib camera, it's the oryx that tend to hog the camera) ...




Of course, of course, Killer Creighton too, featured on these very pages, though the pond expects the lizard Oz editorial team will rush to insert "right think" wherever Killer wrongly mentioned the old think of "wrongthink" ...

And so to Lloydie of the Amazon's redemption, with bonus Riddster giving them Curry ...




What a tremendous last line. Blather about the dogmatic climate elite and hysteria about the overweening nature of right think, and silly old Media Watch thought the reptiles might contemplate an apology. Didn't silly old Media Watch realise that its findings would be disputed?

In your dreams, you right thinkers, which is not to say barking mad far right thinkers howling at the moon with the lizard Oz reptiles ...

And so to a bonus, and a dire choice ...





Usually the pond would stay loyal to the bromancer. After all a fundamentalist Catholic raving on about a common and universal vision of humanity - including the right to force kiss and ban abortions - is always a sight to see, and the pond has too often featured Dame Groan railing about pesky dirty furriners rooning everything ...

The problem for the pond, the reason the pond gave the bromancer a very rare red card (for him at least, for Dame Slap almost daily)?

The pond had already completed the referendum and dutifully ticked off the boxes provided not just by the immortal Rowe, but also by the whimsical Wilcox ...




Dammit, did the pond just produce a rigged faux pas? It's not as irritating as the infallible Pope heading back behind the paywall so the first iterations of his cartoons are now cropped, though it's possible to catch the gist of it, and a most excellent idea for a hair piece it is too ...





As for ancient Troy fearing the mango Mussolini, is he completely unaware that he works for an organisation that has routinely enabled the orange overlord, and that he's actually a kissing cousin with the folk at Faux Noise?

Here, have a Luckovich to celebrate ...




And after that, it's on with the groaning, if only to please dedicated cultists always up for the groaner plying her trade ...




At this point the pond should note its appreciation of all the links in the comments section, too many to mention, though this one and the link drew the pond's attention to a cartoon which seemed to have Dame Groan written all over it ...






... though perhaps mixing economics and sociology is just as much a Caterist thing ... (incidentally NPR has a profile of cartoonist Tom Toro at How'd A Cartoonist Sell His First Drawing? It Only Took 610 Tries).

Now back to the groaning, and please excuse the pond for not actually addressing the content of the groaning because the pond has heard Dame Groan railing at furriners and the roonation they cause a zillion times or more ...




It does allow the pond to take a break from the way that the pesky, difficult, uppity blacks are trying to roon the country with their outrageous unXian proposals ...

And so to the last gobbet of groan, and apparently she can never get a tradie when she wants one, though the pond has always found pounding a keyboard to produce angertainment a tremendously effective way of sorting out the plumbing and the wiring ...




The good news is that at the very end of it all, there was a relevant immortal Rowe to run, though he seemed to see some sort of issue with the stage 3 tax cuts ... when all you need is a decently sharp saw and a handy tradie ...