In which the pond heads back down the US rabbit hole with nattering "Ned", jolly Joe Hockey and Dame Slap ...
The pond woke with an impending sense of dread. The pond's spam filter - blame Blogger - is playing up and the pond's own logarithms have been flooded with MSNBC doing endless coverage, to the point of nausea and tedium.
John Hanscombe scribbled for The Canberra Times' newsletter The Echidna this plea (subscribe and you get the infallible Pope early)...
...not all media have gone down the rabbit hole - mercifully, most local papers are covering important local news. But the main media players have and, thanks to time zones, the live channels of their websites look a little silly. Not much happens in the middle of the night in America, which is when those channels are live on Australian websites. So what we get are live channels that appear dead - or at best on life support. The whole thing reached peak absurdity last week when the ABC broadcast Trump's acceptance speech in full. The producers were probably expecting an hour maximum but what they got was 92 minutes of mainly rambling nonsense with cutaway shots of supporters sporting panty liners on their right ears in sympathy. So here's a plea to our news organisations. Refocus on the domestic issues that have been consigned to the background. The worst road toll in a decade. The ongoing domestic violence epidemic. The nuclear energy debate. The housing crisis. The cost of living (not helped by the global olive oil shortage). The use of AI by the Queensland LNP to create a fake video of Labor Premier Steven Miles - a new low point in our political discourse. Refocus, too, on the other important stories from around the world overshadowed by this dark America comedy. Gaza. Ukraine. Sudan. Bangladesh. Oh, and the Olympics. We still have more than 100 days of this American farce to play out. It will be fascinating. There will be more moments of craziness. We will be exhausted by it. But we should not allow it to become a smokescreen for all the issues here that need and deserve attention.
Yes, yes, and yes, and luckily because the pond doesn't watch the ABC, it missed the orange swamp monster's speech.
But when the pond turned to the lizard Oz this day, there it was, more of the farce playing out and more of the commentary dedicated to the farce ...
Sure, down the bottom Alexi Demetriadi, former employee of the Fulham Football Club, did his best to evoke Islamic extremism, and that lesser member of the Kelly gang, the valiant Joe, had yet another go at the greenies ... but as for the rest?
Please don't blame the pond for this sample of leading lizard Oz "thought leaders"; please excuse the pond for beginning with nattering "Ned", always an Everest, this day more like a mountain on Mars ...
It would, of course, be droll ironically amusing if not mindlessly numbing and tedious. "Ned" perforce has to speak in code when blathering about the "pro-Trump populist right" and "its mindless cheering" because if forced to name names, he would have had to mention Sky News and its gang, and all the local lickspittle lackeys of the Chairman Emeritus at work in the lizard Oz and his local tabloids, not to mention the rabble at work abroad at Faux Noise ...
The snaps were no better, with Ronnie Raygun dragged back from his dementia and death to make an appearance ...
The only upside to this anxious hand wringing and Chicken Little carry on was that the prolix "Ned" was - for him - relatively brief ...
Apparently "Ned" has also forgotten he's scribbling in the Catholic Boys' daily, with the usual remit the bemoaning of the decline and fall of Western civilisation, so it's a bit rich to be bagging Vance for doing what the reptiles have done for years ... but here we are, and on we go ...
Huh, might as well hope to shun Faux Noise, but we've arrived at the last gobbet of hand wringing ...
Suddenly "Ned" is alarmed? Suddenly "Ned" is blathering about mindless cheering? Here have a cartoon for making it to the end ... it'll come in handy if you have the fortitude and nerve to make it to Dame Slap's offering ...
Next up is - the pond almost fainted as it typed the words - jolly Joe Hockey ...
It did remind the pond that it's been a long time since Joe made regular appearances, and in a way that showed he was the perfect coach for Kamala ...
There were the usual illustrations offered as distractions ... this time the reptiles dragged in Nancy, the Clintons, the Queen, a different jolly Joe and LBJ ...
Stripped of the interstitial snaps, jolly Joe offered a series of short gobbets best tossed off with a drizzle of olive oil (lordy, lordy, how dear it is these days) and croutons, a kind of panzanella ...
Yep, a classic jolly Joe word salad. In the spring the garden will grow and in November the path will be unpredictable... and if the roots are not severed, she can energise the base, and all will be well. Campaigns grow, but first they must wither, trees have to lose their leaves in order to put forth new leaves and to grow thicker and stronger and taller...
As a famous American seer once said, it's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.
Here, have a cigar, or better still, an immortal Rowe cartoon as a reward for making it to the end...
It's always in the detail with the immortal Rowe and that detail this day was something else ... some form of shortlegs in the ceiling ...as alarming as any daddy longlegs you might see ... (in cinemas near you).
And so to the bonus, though really calling Dame Slap a bonus is an insult to bonuses everywhere ...
The pond did hesitate to give Dame Slap a place, what with her being a dedicated racist and sexist, and willing to run out the trope that blacks only get jobs because a white person has blessed them.
But the pond did so want to run, for the nth time, where "n" represents an infinite number, a reminder of Dame Slap in her prime ...
Once you realise where she's coming from it's easy not to be distracted by the usual set of snaps, provided by the struggling remnants of the lizard Oz graphics department ... incapable of showing figures sniggering into MAGA caps in the manner of the departed cult master ...
With those out of the way, we can get on with Dame Slap fellow travelling with all that's vile and obnoxious in the American body politic ...
In the pond's fantasy world, Harris would be given five minutes in the ring with Dame Slap, though she might be genteel enough not to observe that Dame Slap is a privileged blonde female with Germanic leanings ... and anyway that point's already been made in relation to the Dame's spiritual buddy...
Hmm, perhaps bleach is unfair, perhaps the Dame is naturally blonde in the stereotypical Germanic way... sorry, Dame Slap always brings the pond down to the LCD of childish abuse.
That little bout of bigotry, emanating from Tennessee, naturally found a home at bigots down under HQ ... but it is what it is, and the pond must now stick the bigot's course ...
The safest way for bigots to proceed in this tricky terrain is to just be asking questions, and naturally Dame Slap was JAQ of the finest rhetorical kind ...
That celebration of the deeply corrupt - and deeply activist SCOTUS - Dame Slap is usually out and about deploring judicial activists - was the cherry on top of this serve of classic vanilla thought leadership ...
Meanwhile, what a relief that blondes can find a steady form of work at Faux Noise.
Washing off the stench, the pond should note that at least the infallible Pope turned to other news, and what a relief it was, if only because it was a different kind of baseball bat to head and planet ...
And so to a bonus to the bonus, a tribute to Dame Slap and MAGA and bandage wearers everywhere.
It must be accompanied by a warning, because it features George Carlin and is scabrous and completely unfair, in the Carlin way.
If you don't like his comedy stylings, here mangled for another purpose, stand well clear. If you've never heard of Carlin, the pond pities you and urges you not to take the click ...
The pond's only excuse is that its bloody logarithm has a mind of its own, and keeps throwing up these sorts of distractions, and if the pond must suffer, it must share the suffering...
"SMRs are not ready for deployment yet. The earliest they could be built in Australia would be in the 2040s. That’s too late to help with the push to net zero by 2050." https://theconversation.com/small-modular-reactors-have-promise-but-we-found-theyre-unlikely-to-help-australia-hit-net-zero-by-2050-235198
“'What’s been reported in the media is simply not true, Musk told conservative commentator Jordan Peterson in an interview aired on Monday. I am not donating $45 million a month to Trump'.” https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/elon-musk-insists-he-is-not-spending-45m-a-month-to-get-donald-trump-elected/ar-BB1qvFkv
Tesla earnings nearly halved as price cuts put pressure on profits https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/jul/23/tesla-quarterly-earnings-elon-musk
"We can no longer assume that a story is true because it appears in the paper" This article is more than 9 years old John Quiggin "We are now in an age of transition. 20th century assumptions about mass media, and particularly the press are breaking down, but nothing has emerged to replace them Fri 22 Aug 2014
"We can no longer assume that a news story is true (let alone “fair and balanced”) simply because it appears on broadsheet paper. We have to make our own judgements about the credibility, or otherwise, of any given publication. ... There is no way, apart from experience and observation, to tell which sources are reliable and which are not."
I would have thought that this 'essential truth' was actually centuries old. I can't recall a time when any trust we might have in 'broadsheets' wasn't very conditional indeed.
Some of the self-titled 'journalists' that used to write for the Melbourne Age would do The Australian proud.
Compulsory voting in Australia is 100 years old. We should celebrate how special it makes our democracy https://theconversation.com/compulsory-voting-in-australia-is-100-years-old-we-should-celebrate-how-special-it-makes-our-democracy-234801
"This record is typically traced back to the pioneering in the 1850s of the secret ballot (sometimes called the 'Australian ballot') in a number of the Australian colonies and the embrace of other advanced democratic measures in the second half of the 19th century.
Beginning in the 1850s, Australia was a pioneer of the secret ballot. Dave Hunt/AAP These included manhood suffrage, payment of MPs and the extension of the franchise to women, beginning in South Australia in 1894. The innovations continued in the 20th century with such things as preferential voting and non-partisan bureaucratic electoral administration.
Second, Australia is alone in embracing compulsory voting among the Anglophone democracies to which it typically compares itself. The electoral systems of Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the United States are all based on voluntary voting.
Do you think Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the United States will ever catch up to us ?
PS: the really important thing about extending the vote to women in SA was that although it was second to do this (after NZ) it was the very first place in the "modern" world to extend the right to be elected to parliament to women.
While libertarians are inclined to rabbit on about freedumb, one of the virtues of compulsory voting is that it helps avoid the tendency to extremism, while preferential voting avoids the sort of wild swings that bedevil the UK's first past the post system. It also helps to have a relatively competent pack of cardigan wearers in charge of staging the elections, thereby avoiding the shameless gerrymandering, rigging, cheating and Tammany Hall behaviour of the two main parties in the USA, with the GOP having lately shown the most skill with those dark arts ...
Well, GB, they were wrong in so many other ways. Look at our Constitution, written by the smartest men in the room, yet none of them said, maybe we should have more flexibility in this Constitution. Maybe the world will be a lot different in say, 1940. Look back 40 years, we didn't have steamships, the telegraph, electric light, and then some say these new motor cars will change things (even replace the horse), and Mr Hargrave is talking about flying machines... maybe we should put in a system to review the Constitution every 30 years? Nah, they said, this document is perfect, and nothing will replace the horse!
Strewth, Joe, you expect our ancestors to have been universal geniuses, even (almost) capable of making predictions especially about the future. Naah, not a hope. But still a good effort with our electoral practices and improving them over time.
Maybe it came from those Chartists that were exported to the 'Australian dominions' back in those early days..
The era of privatisation is nearly over. But cleaning up the mess left behind will take years https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/jul/24/privatisation-public-sector-australia-uk-nsw-roads-thames-water
Yes, GB, but wasn't it grand to learn that our very own bank had helped with the enshittification of England's waters ... ah Macquarie, you've done it again ...
The New Hitler Rap (Apologies to the late, great Mel Brooks)
Well hi there sheeple, you know me I'm back to save the country from democracy And here's my little running mate, JD Vance I'm Der Feuhrer - he's der flunkey It's a true bromance!
I saw the neo-Nazis down in Charlottesville And I watched the MAGA minions swarmin' Capitol Hill Then I had a great idea (cos I'm such a smarty) That I need to get more bigots in my nasty party Then we'll win the election (well, kinda sorta) And before you know it - Hello New Order!
So I called up my good buddies to discuss my plan (Xinping, Putin, and my man Orban) They said "Whatcha got Donny? What's it gonna be?" I said "How about this one? World War Three!"
Oh the contrast, between the drivel in The Oz, and this article Running Kamala Harris may actually be a political masterstroke for the Democrats (in The Guardian) which uses facts! eg "Since 2020, 16 million young people have become eligible to vote, and 12 million people, most of them older, have died. Biden beat Trump by 30 points among young people, according to the exit polls, and he lost among the oldest voters (52% for Trump, 47% for Biden). So the fundamental composition of our nation’s electorate is more progressive, more diverse and more favorable to Democrats right now than it was in 2020."
+ Kamala got Biden's ? $140m, and has already trumped...! "Historic flood of cash pours into Harris campaign and allied groups www.washingtonpost.com › 2024/07/23 53 minutes ago · Democrats reported raising more than $250 million since Biden announced he was leaving the presidential race and endorsed Harris". We need to talk about Australia's abysmal political donation 'laws'.
"Big Deal begins with Christiaan mocking the fact that the US democracy has been taken over by big money, but he soon realises that the situation in his home country is not all that different. https://makeitabigdeal.org
Clive and ""94yo Brian Hadley Anderson gave No campaign $1 million to ‘balance’ corporate Australia’s ‘attack on nation’
The West Australian Fri, 2 February 2024 5:00AM
"A 94-year-old retired car dealing magnate who pumped more than $1 million into the No campaign against the Voice to Parliament insists he is “not political” and simply wanted to “balance” the big spending of corporate Australia that was out to “denigrate” our “great country”.
"Brian Hadley Anderson — through his company Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd — donated a total of $1.025m to the No campaign run by conservative group Advance Australia in late 2022, according to Australian Electoral Commission data published on Thursday."
Just a little bit of intrusive realism:
ReplyDelete"SMRs are not ready for deployment yet. The earliest they could be built in Australia would be in the 2040s. That’s too late to help with the push to net zero by 2050."
https://theconversation.com/small-modular-reactors-have-promise-but-we-found-theyre-unlikely-to-help-australia-hit-net-zero-by-2050-235198
And just a little bit more (realism, that is):
ReplyDelete“'What’s been reported in the media is simply not true, Musk told conservative commentator Jordan Peterson in an interview aired on Monday. I am not donating $45 million a month to Trump'.”
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/elon-musk-insists-he-is-not-spending-45m-a-month-to-get-donald-trump-elected/ar-BB1qvFkv
Maybe this is why:
DeleteTesla earnings nearly halved as price cuts put pressure on profits
https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/jul/23/tesla-quarterly-earnings-elon-musk
Mea culpa.
ReplyDelete"We can no longer assume that a story is true because it appears in the paper"
This article is more than 9 years old
John Quiggin
"We are now in an age of transition. 20th century assumptions about mass media, and particularly the press are breaking down, but nothing has emerged to replace them
Fri 22 Aug 2014
"We can no longer assume that a news story is true (let alone “fair and balanced”) simply because it appears on broadsheet paper. We have to make our own judgements about the credibility, or otherwise, of any given publication. ... There is no way, apart from experience and observation, to tell which sources are reliable and which are not."
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/aug/22/we-can-no-longer-assume-that-a-story-is-true-because-it-appears-in-the-paper
I would have thought that this 'essential truth' was actually centuries old. I can't recall a time when any trust we might have in 'broadsheets' wasn't very conditional indeed.
DeleteSome of the self-titled 'journalists' that used to write for the Melbourne Age would do The Australian proud.
And now, for just a soupcon of self-praise:
ReplyDeleteCompulsory voting in Australia is 100 years old. We should celebrate how special it makes our democracy
https://theconversation.com/compulsory-voting-in-australia-is-100-years-old-we-should-celebrate-how-special-it-makes-our-democracy-234801
"This record is typically traced back to the pioneering in the 1850s of the secret ballot (sometimes called the 'Australian ballot') in a number of the Australian colonies and the embrace of other advanced democratic measures in the second half of the 19th century.
Beginning in the 1850s, Australia was a pioneer of the secret ballot. Dave Hunt/AAP
These included manhood suffrage, payment of MPs and the extension of the franchise to women, beginning in South Australia in 1894. The innovations continued in the 20th century with such things as preferential voting and non-partisan bureaucratic electoral administration.
Second, Australia is alone in embracing compulsory voting among the Anglophone democracies to which it typically compares itself. The electoral systems of Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the United States are all based on voluntary voting.
Do you think Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the United States will ever catch up to us ?
PS: the really important thing about extending the vote to women in SA was that although it was second to do this (after NZ) it was the very first place in the "modern" world to extend the right to be elected to parliament to women.
DeleteOops, yes that was all me.
DeleteWhile libertarians are inclined to rabbit on about freedumb, one of the virtues of compulsory voting is that it helps avoid the tendency to extremism, while preferential voting avoids the sort of wild swings that bedevil the UK's first past the post system. It also helps to have a relatively competent pack of cardigan wearers in charge of staging the elections, thereby avoiding the shameless gerrymandering, rigging, cheating and Tammany Hall behaviour of the two main parties in the USA, with the GOP having lately shown the most skill with those dark arts ...
DeleteWe should be really quite proud of our ancestors. How did they get so much right so soon ?
DeleteWell, GB, they were wrong in so many other ways. Look at our Constitution, written by the smartest men in the room, yet none of them said, maybe we should have more flexibility in this Constitution. Maybe the world will be a lot different in say, 1940. Look back 40 years, we didn't have steamships, the telegraph, electric light, and then some say these new motor cars will change things (even replace the horse), and Mr Hargrave is talking about flying machines... maybe we should put in a system to review the Constitution every 30 years?
DeleteNah, they said, this document is perfect, and nothing will replace the horse!
Strewth, Joe, you expect our ancestors to have been universal geniuses, even (almost) capable of making predictions especially about the future. Naah, not a hope. But still a good effort with our electoral practices and improving them over time.
DeleteMaybe it came from those Chartists that were exported to the 'Australian dominions' back in those early days..
And just a little more reading:
ReplyDeleteThe era of privatisation is nearly over. But cleaning up the mess left behind will take years
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/jul/24/privatisation-public-sector-australia-uk-nsw-roads-thames-water
Yep, that man Quiggin once again.
Yes, GB, but wasn't it grand to learn that our very own bank had helped with the enshittification of England's waters ... ah Macquarie, you've done it again ...
DeleteAnd another one bites the dust:
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/4ByU1va1Iuo?list=RDEMsTxuEhuS1X4r3KbYWbrfPw
The New Hitler Rap
ReplyDelete(Apologies to the late, great Mel Brooks)
Well hi there sheeple, you know me
I'm back to save the country from democracy
And here's my little running mate, JD Vance
I'm Der Feuhrer - he's der flunkey
It's a true bromance!
I saw the neo-Nazis down in Charlottesville
And I watched the MAGA minions swarmin' Capitol Hill
Then I had a great idea (cos I'm such a smarty)
That I need to get more bigots in my nasty party
Then we'll win the election (well, kinda sorta)
And before you know it - Hello New Order!
So I called up my good buddies to discuss my plan
(Xinping, Putin, and my man Orban)
They said "Whatcha got Donny?
What's it gonna be?"
I said "How about this one?
World War Three!"
Double album needed. Go Kez.
DeleteSeconded 😎
DeleteThirded 😄
DeleteCheers all!
Delete
ReplyDeleteOh the contrast, between the drivel in The Oz, and this article Running Kamala Harris may actually be a political masterstroke for the Democrats (in The Guardian) which uses facts! eg
"Since 2020, 16 million young people have become eligible to vote, and 12 million people, most of them older, have died. Biden beat Trump by 30 points among young people, according to the exit polls, and he lost among the oldest voters (52% for Trump, 47% for Biden). So the fundamental composition of our nation’s electorate is more progressive, more diverse and more favorable to Democrats right now than it was in 2020."
+ Kamala got Biden's ? $140m, and has already trumped...!
ReplyDelete"Historic flood of cash pours into Harris campaign and allied groups
www.washingtonpost.com › 2024/07/23
53 minutes ago · Democrats reported raising more than $250 million since Biden announced he was leaving the presidential race and endorsed Harris".
We need to talk about Australia's abysmal political donation 'laws'.
"Big Deal begins with Christiaan mocking the fact that the US democracy has been taken over by big money, but he soon realises that the situation in his home country is not all that different.
https://makeitabigdeal.org
Clive and ""94yo Brian Hadley Anderson gave No campaign $1 million to ‘balance’ corporate Australia’s ‘attack on nation’
The West Australian
Fri, 2 February 2024 5:00AM
"A 94-year-old retired car dealing magnate who pumped more than $1 million into the No campaign against the Voice to Parliament insists he is “not political” and simply wanted to “balance” the big spending of corporate Australia that was out to “denigrate” our “great country”.
"Brian Hadley Anderson — through his company Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd — donated a total of $1.025m to the No campaign run by conservative group Advance Australia in late 2022, according to Australian Electoral Commission data published on Thursday."