The pond's chief gripe with the hive mind lizard Oz and its dullard reptile inhabitants in recent times is the lack of entertainment, when elsewhere much entertainment is to be found.
For the past week, the pond has been vastly entertained by assorted scribblers in the Graudian, helpfully making plans for Nigel.
Yesterday he was given a most excellent Hydeing ... The Nigel Farage v Rupert Lowe prize fight is getting ugly. Has Reform reached its breaking point?
Anyway, Nigel Farage has taken all this as well as you might expect. In terms of what’s happened since, with even Nigel judging that “things have got a little bit out of control”, I’m finding it quite hard to immerse myself fully in every angle. Mainly because I’m worried it’s going to be one of those stories that demeans men – and I’m a passionate supporter of their involvement in politics, whatever people are saying about DEI nowadays.
But the broad brush of it is: a party leader who wants to be PM is too much of an egomaniac to even handle having some MPs; some of his people who hate lawyers have called in the lawyers; some of his people who love free speech have been upset by some words; and some of his people who hate snowflakes have gone to the actual police about what they say is a bit of verbal. Then again, there is an alternative broad brush: Lowe is an old Radleian who admires Tommy Robinson; meanwhile, Elon Musk – a man who owns X but apparently has no access to Google – now thinks Rupert is the fairest of them all and that Nigel “doesn’t have what it takes”. In fact, according to a report in Tuesday’s Financial Times, Elon Musk’s allies suggest he would financially back a credible alternative party to Reform.
And so on, and before that the cracking Crace had also had a go ... A big thank you to Reform for the comic relief in dark times.
So a big thank you to Reform for providing so much comic relief. Never has the UK needed a good laugh more than now. Which isn’t to say that the very public squabble between Nigel Farage and Rupert Lowe was in any way unexpected. Given enough time away from dissecting the niceties of the Nazi salute – these things matter to supporters of Reform. Strictly arm out to the front, not the side – Nige can usually manage to fall out with anyone. Apart from Richard Tice. Dicky only exists as an echo to Farage. Without a mind of his own. His tragedy has been to be born a man of limited intellect and charisma.
And so on, and these days the pond needs comic relief from the grimness on a daily basis. Zoe Williams came good with How did Reform end up in such a mess? Is that a serious question?
Rupert Lowe has been suspended from Reform over claims of bullying and physical intimidation, which he says are without basis. He went on to say, on X, that he was “disappointed, but not surprised” by the allegations, which has a conspiratorial whiff. He has already said the allegations are false, so if he is not surprised to hear them made, it surely indicates that he thinks he is dealing with the kind of people who will expediently exploit any kind of nonsense.
In other words, it’s time to settle in for this fight, which will not end quietly.
Great, a fight, just like Tamworth High, with all the thugby leaguers going at it, and the onlookers chanting "fight, fight, fight" ...
Even the Graudian's editorial provided comedy ... The Guardian view on Nigel Farage: not even Donald Trump is as damaging to Reform as its own leader
The affair revolves around Rupert Lowe, a little‑known businessman, elected as one of Reform UK’s five MPs in 2024 under Mr Farage’s leadership. That should have been the beginning of a forgettable contribution to British public life. Yet, thanks to the intervention of Elon Musk – the world’s richest man and Donald Trump’s “government efficiency” tsar – Mr Lowe has a starring role in Mr Farage’s latest soap opera.
A soap opera, a fight, Jesus Christ Superkings. Now that, as an MGM musical might say, is entertainment. Are you not entertained?
Turn away from all that, turn back to the lizard Oz, and all you get is soporific inducements to turn full somnambule ...
Surely, the tariffs had the reptiles in a frenzy, and there was titillation about Greg turning teal, but over on the extreme far right, it was business as usual ...
Petulant Peta reminded the pond of why it never offered her up for contemplation ... Immigrants welcome to join us, but not change us, The issue with immigration is not just quantity, it’s also quality; the values and attitudes that at least some of our recent migrants are bringing with them, including overseas hatreds we used to think had no place in our country.
What a stupid, bigoted, dogwhistling racist, as if the good old Catholic frogs v. Proddie dogs (or vice versa) didn't constitute an imported overseas hatred.
It might not have much currency these days, but the pond is just as glad to have abandoned it as when it farewelled the Tamworth serve of three vegies and a chop ... for decent grub produced by those who'd forgotten traditional Irish and German values.
Killer was the only alternative, but there was some also some wildly exciting good news.
Yesterday the bromancer returned, to guide the pond out of the wilderness.
It was only an 'umble three minute read, and it vanished from the front page almost as quickly as it appeared, but it filled the pond with relief and excitement.
Someone has to be Ukraine’s midwife to history: it may well be Trump, The shape of any Ukrainian ceasefire has been the case for months, more than a year. Donald Trump certainly never lacks energy and it may possibly be that he gets a decent outcome here.
The bromancer was filled with love for the orange piece-making orangutang and started with one of those uncredited collages for which the reptiles are becoming famous...Donald Trump says the ball over the Ukraine war is now with Vladimir Putin.
The consummate artistry reminded the pond of a Daanyal Saeed story in Crikey, News Corp introduces its own AI model —NewsGPT — to ‘enhance’ not ‘replace’ jobs, News Corp has introduced its own AI model, NewsGPT, which raises issues of ethics, bias and regulation, one expert told Crikey. (sorry, paywall)
Julian Delany, the company’s chief technology officer, sent a memo to staff on Tuesday, first reported by Capital Brief and seen by Crikey, which outlined what its new toy will be used for.
The memo mentioned NewsGPT would be “supporting the creative process” and “streamlining daily tasks”.
This is a question we have to ask after the astonishing developments over the last few hours, in which the US has resumed intelligence and military aid to Ukraine, while Washington and Kyiv have agreed on a ceasefire proposal to put to Russia.
I’m coming to the end of a holiday in Europe, but it’s impossible to take even a few hours away from the Trump bubble of consciousness, which seems to have enveloped the entire world.
Does anyone anywhere on the globe ever have a full minute of mental activity which doesn’t involve Trump?
Talk about flooding the zone.
Like almost everyone I know and respect, I was appalled, truly and utterly appalled, at the bullying by Trump and his vice president, JD Vance, of Volodymyr Zelensky in that bizarre White House pantomime show.
Even worse was Trump’s decision to refuse to support a United Nations resolution critical of Russia, and then his decision to cut off military and intelligence aid to Ukraine. These grievously wicked moves could only add to the leverage possessed by Vladimir Putin, as murderous and dangerous a dictator as the world knows today. Now, Trump has reversed these moves.
Truly and utterly appalled? That sounded a worry ... the bromancer should have been thanking him ...
The reptiles immediately interrupted the ranting about "grievously wicked moves" with an AV distraction ... Ukraine agreed to accept an immediate 30-day ceasefire in the conflict with Russia during talks with U.S. officials in Saudi Arabia, the countries said in a joint statement.
The bromancer took the cue and produced a gigantic billy goat butt ...
This is how the Korean war ended and resulted in a durable ceasefire. There has never been a comprehensive peace agreement on the Korean peninsula, but it has never reverted to war, and South Korea has become a magnificent, prosperous democracy.
Of course, this is very far from established. It could all turn disastrous. And Putin has a big vote in what happens.
At this point the reptiles provided a splendid distraction ...
Malevolent Malware? That helped the bromancer's U-turn go the full 360 doughnut ...
The Europeans have to take vastly more defence responsibility for themselves.
How can it be that 500 million rich, democratic West Europeans cannot deal militarily with 140 million
impoverished, autocratic subjects of modern Russian tsarism?
It’s because the Europeans, like the Australians, have been terrific “bludgers” about defence, always leaving the heavy lifting, and the lion’s share of effort, to the Americans.
The Australian reaction has been almost psychotic.
Indeed, indeed, time for world war three, and a final AV distraction ...The United States has agreed to lift its pause on intelligence sharing and military aid with Ukraine.
Trust the man who ranted about being "truly and utterly appalled" by "grievously wicked moves" to spot the "almost psychotic" in others? Sure can ...as the bromancer blithely quotes the man who wondered if sending AUKUS subs down under was a waste of time and money ...
Richard Marles, a serious contender for the worst defence minister this nation has ever had, says with his usual unctuous equivocation, that Australia is happy to continue to have a dialogue with the US about defence spending.
How spiffingly, Bertie Woosterishly, irrelevant that fatuous remark is.
No ABC interviewer had the wit to ask Marles why, in its last budget, the Albanese government committed less than 2 per cent of GDP to defence? The final figure was 1.99 per cent whereas defence planning documents have promised much more than 2 per cent for years.
Britain, France, Germany and other European powers with vastly bigger economies than ours, and surrounded by allies, have massively increased their defence budgets in order to provide for their own security, as a result of Trump’s albeit crude telling them underlying, hard, fundamental truths.
We don’t need to increase our defence budget because Trump is rude to us. And tariffs on steel exports are nothing in the strategic scheme of things.
But as anyone with an IQ above room temperature, with eyes even half open, who is even in the first stages of waking from deep slumber can see, Trump expects allies to look after themselves militarily.
As Ukraine and Israel demonstrate, if you can do that you might well get some help from your friends.
Having spent the last month in Europe, I’m reluctantly coming to the view that the only people on the whole planet who don’t get this in any way at all are the leaders of the Albanese government.
Over the course of four years, Trump will do many good things and many bad things. If we can’t draw the most obvious lessons from the greatest strategic changes of our lifetimes, that we must immediately acquire independent military capability, we may deserve the fate that we conspire to deliver to ourselves.
Indeed, indeed ...
And so to Killer Creighton of the IPA to complete this day's comedy stylings with Anthony Albanese must focus on ailing economy, not bashing Donald Trump’s tariffs, As a country we should be far more concerned about the reasons – largely self-inflicted – that Whyalla steelworks collapsed rather than about the theoretical future impacts of US tariffs, which we can’t control.
Naturally the reptiles started with a snap of the orange ogre ...Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress.
The pond should note that Killer of the IPA seemed to be swimming against the reptile tide, with a little consternation hinted at in other stories ...
Misleader of the free world?
Nah, leader of Killer Creighton, and it's all going to end spiffingly, Bertie Woosterishly well...
The Prime Minister on Wednesday slammed Donald Trump’s imposition of a 25 per cent tariff on steel and aluminium imports into the US as “completely unjustified” and “against the spirit of our two nations’ enduring friendship”. Trade Minister Don Farrell went further, decrying a “very bad day for our relationship with the United States”.
Albanese might ride this anti-Trump wave to victory, as Carney hopes to in Canada, but such confected outrage will look like a tantrum, an over-reaction on both the economic and political front.
Canada, whose exports have been similarly affected, can afford to mouth off about the US; it isn’t in the same precarious position as Australia, which is practically defenceless, except for the good graces of the US.
There was a Malware fly in the ointment that needed to be given the flick, Malcolm Turnbull on The Project.
It turned out that these tariffs were nothing, perhaps just a farting in our general direction ...
The tariffs shouldn’t directly trouble Australia too much. We are among the rare group of nations with a trade surplus with the US. Our total steel and aluminium exports to the US were a little over $1bn ($1.6bn) last year, a tiny fraction of our total exports to all countries of more than $650bn.
And some – probably most – of the new tariff will be paid ultimately by US consumers, given the real incidence depends on the relative market power of exporters and importers at any given time and location. Every year the US produces only around half of the steel it requires, making it hard for local buyers to pivot to domestic alternatives. And even if they could, Australia could redirect steel and aluminium to other nations.
BlueScope Steel, Australia’s biggest exporter of steel to the US, even said it could benefit overall given its significant operations within the US.
At this point the reptiles introduced huge snaps of a couple of wretches ... Mark Carney, Anthony Albanese
Those snaps set Killer off ...
Remember, the US has several “special relationships”, including with Britain, Israel, Canada and France, depending on who its officials are talking to. Don’t forget uniform tariffs were front and centre in Trump’s re-election platform.
Still, he may have cast his tariffs as a way to Make America Great Again, but they more readily serve as a way to Make America Solvent Again.
What about the free trade agreement Australia supposedly had? Not worth the paper it was written on... and besides Killer was all in on the tariffs kool-aid ...
While other weak-kneed snowflakes whimpered and whined and did their pussy routine ...For American voters, coming down from the Maga Kool-Aid high, there is now a sombre realisation. Tariffs will make many goods more expensive, push up inflation, potentially harm their standard of living, and wreak havoc with the supply chains of millions of small and medium-sized businesses. Larger corporations are also vulnerable to a slowdown in consumer confidence and spending (here), Killer was all in, and still as high as a ketamine-fuelled kite ...
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has laudably found savings in the tens of billions, but without savings in the trillions, tax increases will be necessary to balance the books.
Tariffs are practically the only lever a US president can pull without congress passing a new tax, which is next to impossible given the makeup of congress.
Ah Uncle Elon. The pond won't cover the way he and the Cantaloupe Clown turned the White House into a dealership ... others did that ...(archive link)
At no point did they highlight King Donald's discovery that there were computers in cars ... instead ...
In a remarkable scene, Trump spent about 30 minutes talking with reporters as he kicked the tires on some of the five Teslas that had been parked on the drive of the White House for his shopping pleasure. The display offered a momentary distraction from an economy that has seen rising egg prices and plunging stocks. And it provided a vivid reminder of how transactional Trump can be, openly punishing his enemies and, in this case, just as openly rewarding his friends.
Still, it gave the pond a chance to pause and enjoy this in the Private Eye, which has done the meme rounds ...
As if reading Killer wasn't enough, the reptiles flung in an AV distraction featuring Killer and petulant Peta ... IPA Senior Fellow & Chief Economist Adam Creighton has claimed US President Donald Trump declining to rule out the chance of a recession in the United States is “justifiable honesty”. “I think Trump’s second time around is going to be more honest because he doesn’t have to be re-elected,” Mr Creighton told Sky News host Peta Credlin. “He can be far more honest with the American people and there could well be a recession.”
Would you buy a new car from Honest Don and Uncle Leon? Being brutally honest about the need for mug punters to make a sacrifice and take a recession hit?
Killer would ...
Trump has even promised to cut income tax. It’s not a matter of choosing the best of all possible worlds but the least bad. Tariffs could be a better option than a global financial crisis as faith in the US dollar plummets.
What a pity Killer missed out on the best idea. Take all the tariff money and use it to send cheques out (checks if you will), so that the whole Ponzi scheme could see this tax on consumers pissed up against the wall, and do absolutely nothing for the deficit ... but Killer did see a few clouds, coming from China ...
Trump himself has hinted at some economic turmoil, refusing to rule out a recession. The truth is no one knows; the global economy is a complex, unpredictable beast. Perhaps a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine – and the diminished probability of nuclear war – will offset any loss of economic confidence caused by the tariffs. At any rate, given Trump’s on-again-off-again approach, they might not even last.
For all the bravado, Canberra has been wise at least to rule out any retaliation. If another country wants to artificially inflate prices for their own citizens, then so be it: we don’t have to copy that strategy to our own detriment.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said the tariffs were a “bad day for our country”. Perhaps in the short term they might be, but if they serve as a reminder of our own lack of economic resilience in the face of a fading China boom, they might prove otherwise in the long run.
Ah, the mutton Dutton ... some of the reptiles weren't sounding that pleased, with an EXCLUSIVE ...
Perhaps the pond should have driven down that road, but instead got stuck with a snap of Senator Don Farrell
Oh come on reptiles, keep the memes flowing ...
And so to a final Killer flourish ...
As a country we should be far more concerned about the reasons, largely self-inflicted, that Whyalla steelworks collapsed rather than about the theoretical future impacts of US tariffs, which we can’t control.
The billions of taxpayers’ dollars the federal government is spending to bail out the South Australian facility, not to mention the de facto tax on energy that contributed to its collapse in the first place, dwarf whatever damage the Trump tariffs will cause. If the current government wants a legacy beyond posturing, it should focus its energies here, rather than the tiresome Trump bashing.
Credit where Gina IPA credit was due ... Adam Creighton is a senior fellow at the Institute of Public Affairs.
Be fair, only Killer could end with a reference to tiresome Trump bashing ... step on Gina's idol and expect a roughing up Killer style...
That noted, can someone help him with a tin foil cap, much more effective than a mask?
Luckily the immortal Rowe could ...
Speaking of Trump bashing ...just a soupçon please waiter, Killer has put the pond on a diet ...
Welcome back, Bromancer! We were starting to worry that you’d wandered up the Amazon to join Lloydie, but it turns out you were just on holiday - which will likely result in another series of articles featuring your unique misinterpretation of European affairs. Still, it was good of you to drag yourself away from your hood long enough to provide u with a charming display of naivety. Did you genuinely believe that Trump wouldn’t act towards Ukraine in the manner that he did?
ReplyDeleteWherever the Bromancer is, and whatever he's doing; he's always 'on holiday'. Or at least he's 'working from home'. And notice he didn't engage in any working at all when he's so far away from home on a holiday.
DeleteWhat's outrageous is that the bromancer took his leave in a way that ensured he'd be surrounded by cheese-eating surrender monkeys.
DeleteEurope! And he kept the details secret. Did he seek redemption by spending time in Hungary? Who knows.
Only Canada might have been worse ...
It's a wonder Uncle Leon didn't call him "traitor" on his losing money hand over fist site, that being the preferred term of abuse from the white South African born and bred Roman saluting, chain saw-wielding assailant ...
Given his loathing of “red and green tape tape”, Killer must be beside himself with joy at the news that the US Environmental Protection Agency Agency intends to comprehensively gut the last 50 years worth of anti-pollution regulations and “review” whether greenhouse gases are actually damaging. Expect Gina’s IPA to start making similar noises locally.
ReplyDeleteRelax, there are other ways to fuck the planet, and Killer might go for them...
Deletehttps://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/mar/12/solar-geoengineering-uk
The UK’s gamble on solar geoengineering is like using aspirin for cancer
Raymond Pierrehumbert and Michael Mann
The pond thinks it's more like using cancer to cure cancer ...
Oh my, apparently Faux Noise has actually noticed that Trump's attempt to pretend that he knows something about "economics" isn't working. So:
ReplyDelete"...the network is doing something similar to when former Fox host Tucker Carlson went to Russia and tried to gloss over economic strife. They’re essentially encouraging their viewers to embrace a lower standard of living — and to view it as an act of service toward MAGA’s grand vision for the country'."
Link GB ...
DeleteThe Fox News universe is trying to prep Trump supporters for economic pain
Hosts and guests have all but admitted Trump’s economic policies will harm Americans. Now they’re trying to convince people the pain will be worth it.
https://www.msnbc.com/top-stories/latest/fox-news-trump-tariffs-stocks-economic-pain-rcna195912
And don't forget Tommy, dumbest Senator of them all ...
Now that the cat is officially out of the bag, many contributors and hosts on the president’s favorite news network, Fox News, and its sister channel, Fox Business, seem to have rallied around a common conclusion: Pain is on the horizon.
Last week on Fox Business, for example, conservative economist Brian Wesbury characterized the nation’s economic outlook as “not a heart attack; it’s heartburn.”
As such, pain is coming for Americans, he said, thanks to Trump’s tariff policies:
I think it will slow the economy down a little bit. Then we have to count on cutting spending and cutting taxes, and cutting interest rates, to lift it in other places, so net-net ... we’re going to make it through this. I still expect a recession, but this is not the Great Depression. We’re not in 2000, we’re not in 2009. We’ll have some pain. But we have to, before we get to the game.
“We’ll have some pain” sounds like a pretty grim economic outlook, no?
During a conversation with Fox News host Harris Faulkner, Fox Business host Jackie DeAngelis had a similar message for viewers:
This is going to be hard. It might be a little painful, but the CEO of our country, President Donald Trump, is actually doing something that is really courageous, Harris. Nobody has tried to do this, even though we’ve known for the last 30 years that we need to.
I suspect that “nobody has tried to do this” because tariff-happy policies led to the Great Depression a century ago, and most people want to avoid an outcome like that. DeAngelis said Trump’s tariffs will bring manufacturing back to the United States, a theory discredited by economics experts. When Faulkner asked her how long that will take, DeAngelis said: “It’s going to take some time; it’s going to take years.”
So years of chronic pain, I guess. That’s apparently what’s required of all of us to make America great ... again.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., got on the pain train himself, during an interview with Larry Kudlow on Fox Business:
At the end of the day, President Trump has told people there’s going to be a little bit of pain with this. And there is. That’s fine. You know, the stock market has gone up and down before. It’ll come back.
This one, DP ?
Deletehttps://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/cat-is-officially-out-of-the-bag-as-fox-news-admits-trump-economic-chaos-analyst/ar-AA1AMX22?
"Make America Blood Everywhere.”
DeleteMeasles caused by poor diet.
Politico
"The normally bullish Trump over the weekend declined to rule out the possibility of a full-blown recession as his tariff policies threaten to spark a massive global trade war."
"A White House official, granted anonymity to share the administration’s thinking, dismissed the short-term effects of so-called “animal spirits” — the emotional and psychological factors that impact the markets and consumer sentiment "...
“There was a lot of damage to be undone. It’s hard to rip the Band-Aid off without getting some blood everywhere. It’s setting that short-term expectation to be reasonable.”
...
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/03/10/trump-economy-tariffs-trade-war-00221001
Stephen Colbert - a classic
"You know things are on the right track when your explanation involves the phrase ‘blood everywhere.'”
"ON ONE TRUMP SPOKESPERSON LIKENING THE COLLAPSE TO WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU RIP OFF A BAND-AID
“And I’m no doctor, and not to quibble, but if there’s blood shootin’ out, maybe it’s not time to rip the Band-Aid off. Maybe it’s time to put on a second Band-Aid. Or, call me crazy, maybe bring in somebody who knows how to fix the old blood-hole. Instead of trusting the guy with the hat that says Make America Blood Everywhere.”
"Colbert did manage to find a silver lining in all this plummeting economic news. At least Elon Musk is dropping billions of dollars every day.
“Ha ha! Good one, Heinrich Giggler.”
"ON MUSK JOKING ABOUT LOSING $16 BILLION YESTERDAY ALONE
“And there’s a good reason for that. It’s a phenomenon called ‘everybody f*cking hates that guy.'”
"ON MUSK’S TESLA STOCK LOSING 50 PERCENT OF ITS VALUE SINCE DECEMBER
“How do you illegally boycott something? Buying things is optional. That’s why, when you walk into a West Elm, they don’t lock the door and say, ‘You want out? Then buy a fat candle with three wicks in it. Or five rattan balls in a wicker basket designed to give you splinters. You wanna clean it? You can’t. Now give me $80 or I’m callin’ the cops.'”
"ON TRUMP ACCUSING PEOPLE OF A CRIME FOR NOT BUYING ELON’S CARS
“You’re right Mr. President, ‘everything is computer.’ Which is also the name of the Russian knockoff of The Matrix.”
"ON TRUMP’S RESPONSE TO SEEING THE INTERIOR OF THE TESLA HE BOUGHT TO PROP UP MUSK’S COMPANY
“But you know what, it’s an honest mistake. He just mixed up the two words most associated with Elon Musk, Tesla and Hitler.”
"ON TRUMP PRONOUNCING “TESLA” AS “TESLER”
"And then it was time to move on to another Trump associate causing nation-wide catastrophe.
“You can’t get measles by eating garbage 24 hours a day. You know how I know that? I don’t have measles.”
"ON TRUMP’S HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES HEAD ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR BLAMING THE WORSENING MEASLES OUTBREAK ON POOR NUTRITION
“So really, it’s not measles… it’s we-sles.”
"ON THE 9 OUT OF 10 INFECTION RATE OF MEASLES AMONG PEOPLE EXPOSED
“Maybe so, but that’s not causin’ the measles. Those are two separate issues. ‘Honey, I know I cheated on you, but you have to understand—West Texas is a food desert.'”
"ON RFK’S CLAIMS ABOUT NUTRITION AND MEASLES
“Yes, public health is every man for himself. That’s why those signs on the highway say, ‘Don’t drink and drive—unless it’s your birthday week! Go off, queen!'”
"AFTER KENNEDY CALLED GETTING VACCINATED “A PERSONAL CHOICE”
"Trump Trade War Wipes $4T Off The Stock Market | Rebrand Your Tesla | RFK Jr. On Measles"
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=07n_vy1pVD0
...
https://latenighter.com/news/tues-night-monologues-huckster-in-chief/
The Bro! You dolt! Answer DP..."Um, North Korea?"
ReplyDelete"This is how the Korean war ended and resulted in a durable ceasefire. "There has never been a comprehensive peace agreement on the Korean peninsula, but it has never reverted to war, and South Korea has become a magnificent, prosperous democracy."
Ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahah... chair fall. Flooe.
Still crying and lmfao!
NewsCorpseAI model Bro weights...
replaced "still fucked up" with the word "durable"
hagiography 11.
Elide any others 12.
Bullshit - 1000
Halucinations - set to 0 as newscorpse koolaid floods minds with with amnesia-O-globin, rendering self reflection impossible, allowing shit thru, like a burst colostomy bag.
f'ARC! I'm still laughing and crying -
on the floor...
lelandfe said;
Delete> The videos aren’t always historically accurate to the last detail
"Are they ever?"
lelandfe didn't know he was talking about newscorpseai.
"Show HN: Time Portal – Get dropped into history, guess where you landed"
https://www.eggnog.ai/entertimeportal
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43347306
A bloody I.
What has the US got in common with, Democratic Republic of Congo, Italy, Pakistan and Serbia?
ReplyDelete“unparalleled attack on the rule of law” not seen “since the days of McCarthyism in the twentieth century”
“severely impact constitutional freedoms of peaceful assembly, expression, and association”
“to be wanting to support these only for people who they see as agreeing with them” (just like the newscorpse opinionistas)
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/09/watchlist-decline-civic-freedoms-civicus
"The 200+ Sites an ICE Surveillance Contractor is Monitoring"
https://www.404media.co/the-200-sites-an-ice-surveillance-contractor-is-monitoring/
Hi Dorothy,
ReplyDeleteNice to see the Bromancer back from his hols. Perfect timing too, as now the Ukrainians have just grudgingly accepted Trump’s shit sandwich of a ceasefire deal, Sheridan can downplay the treachery and ramp up the Donald’s diplomatic genius.
On another subject altogether are the pond’s viewing figures still high? You were suspicious that the Tech Bro’s were using Loon Pond to train their AI’s. If that is so we may want to emulate the South Koreans that Greg so admires.
“Small acts of resistance against the AI tidal wave do remain possible in 2025.
Korean users of X, appalled by the platform’s unilateral decision to use their content to train it’s AI model, have taken to describing “destroying Elon Musk’s testicles with a spinning kick” as a healthy and wholesome traditional activity, in order to contaminate the model’s training data”
from Private Eye
Good to hear from you DW, as always, and yes, the pond's hits have been high, and the pond owes it all to the bots. Real readers you could count on body parts, but the reptiles are corrupting AI for all eternity ...
DeleteThe pond loved the Korean strategy, and hopes that AI can make use of all the Uncle Leon memes out there, growing by the day as his stock tanks...
A Timeline Of Elon Musk’s Terrible 24 Hours—A Dark Day For X, Tesla And More
https://www.forbes.com/sites/dereksaul/2025/03/11/a-timeline-of-elon-musks-terrible-24-hours-a-dark-day-for-x-tesla-and-more/
March 11, 8:22 a.m.Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, long one of the most outspoken voices on Wall Street in Musk’s and Tesla’s corner, publishes a critical note on Musk, saying patience is “wearing very thin” and Musk “needs to step up as Tesla CEO at this critical juncture” as there’s been “little to no sign of Musk” at any Tesla facility since Trump took office.
Big Number
$22.8 billion. That’s how much Musk lost off his net worth during Tesla’s Monday nosedive, according to our estimates. That’s more than the entire $22.7 billion fortune held by media mogul Rupert Murdoch.
Chew on that AI ...