The day had to come, and Thursday was always the most likely day.
The day that finally came is the day that the pond had not the slightest interest in reading or presenting portions of the lizard Oz.
The absence of petulant Peta didn't help.
In the event of a total bust, the pond would have dared to go there. Except there was no there there and visible this day.
The lead story had all the appeal of a sighting of Pauline in a burqa ...
Revealed: Tony Burke’s secret talks over returning ISIS brides
The Home Affairs Minister held secret talks with Save the Children and asked a public servant to leave for ‘frank’ discussions, leaked meeting notes reveal | READ THE SECRET MEETING NOTES
By Greg Brown and Liam Mendes
The pond realises that the reptiles were doing their best kind of eggbeater - EXCLUSIVE, SECRET - but the pond had not the slightest interest in the resulting omelet.
Over on the extreme far right, Dame Slap finally abandoned her Linda obsession, only to descend into an Orwellian abyss, with her usual misogynist routine ... (can a reptile female scribbler hate women? You betcha):
This target-setting exercise is little more than a vast social science experiment whose only certain outcome will be to drown productivity in paperwork.
By Janet Albrechtsen
Columnist
She really has become an unreadable pile of bile.
The pond will grudgingly do a litany of all the try hards and losers and dropkicks trying to summon attention, compleat with intermittent archive links, so that those outside the lizard Oz paywall can share the pond's gruntlement, or not, as the case may be.
The economy was one routine.
One angle was the "we'll all be rooned" routine ...
When you get under the hood of the fragile national economy, there is a chasm between the Albanese government’s rhetoric and real world experience for millions of Australians.
By Geoff Chambers
Political editor
On the other hand, news that the GDP was growing produced a different angle on the "we'll all be rooned" routine, so it's either an economic storm of no growth or an economic storm of too much growth:
‘Spend and grow’ raises rates fears as GDP jump fastest in two years
Australia has recorded its fastest economic growth in two years, but economists warn excessive government spending could trigger inflation and force interest rate rises.
By Matthew Cranston
There was also Jack the Insider, complaining about there not being enough policing of internet sharks, an odd angle given the way that the tired old sharks in News Corp are always circling, and the only policing they've ever copped is the occasional slap with a warm lettuce leaf (here no taxes, no taxes here):
Anika Wells declared ‘we can’t control the ocean, we can police the sharks’, which is odd given that some platforms have been exempted where there are a lot of dorsal fins circling.
By Jack the Insider
Columnist
A certain Langford was wheeled in to tackle defence:
We risk repeating history unless the government confronts a simple truth: capability is delivered by the military, not the bureaucracy.
By Ian Langford
Just to prove that the pond read to the end of this word salad:
The truth is this: these reforms can work, and they may be the last chance to get acquisition right before the strategic environment forces our hand. But success will depend not on structure alone but on whether Defence finally accepts that accountability cannot be shared into insignificance. Someone must own the requirement. Someone must own the delivery. Someone must answer when it fails. If this reform accomplishes that, it will be remembered as a turning point. If not, it will join the long list of inquiries, reviews and restructures that changed everything and fixed nothing.
Ian Langford is executive director of Security & Defence PLuS.
The truth is this sir.
You are no bromancer.
The bromancer would never have scribbled The truth is this: these reforms can work.
Hang your head in shame sir.
Or perhaps good luck in your quest to be that someone.
The pond realised it had to make some kind of effort, and so settled on Louise as a token offering:
The header: One-size American political philosophy is wrong fit for us, Parts of the NatCon agenda feels less like a home-grown evolution and more like a shiny import from an American intellectual subculture.
The caption showing a King Donald in catchy gear: Some of the NatCon nat-con agenda feels less like a homegrown evolution and more like a shiny new import from an American intellectual subculture. Picture: Angela Weiss/AFP
Now Louise is no petulant Peta, and some might ask, why Louise?
Well there's a clue in this profile, where you can also see the changes she personally made to the beefy boofhead's wiki listing ...
When Angus was recommended to the Party apparatchiks by John Howard and approached to stand for Parliament in 2013, the family moved to a farm near Goldburn and Louise seems to have been left at a loose end.
In 2014 Louise ceased her legal life and became a full time press secretary and campaign aide for her husband.
There's a whole lot more there in that listing - the wiki war is particular fun:
Delicious, and that's just a sample.
There's way more, and there are footnotes as well, and her diligent work for the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way surely makes her thoughts worthy of a savouring.
The pond thinks what Louise has to say, if not part of the sinister Big Sister movement, at least fits into the Big Brother cause.
Louise shows particular skill deploring the disunited states way, while expertly cherry picking all that's currently roiling King Donald's reign:
Some of this is appearing in Australian political discourse through the efforts of the new National Conservative Institute led by my friend Dan Ryan. Good on the nat cons; fresh thinking about the centre-right’s future is essential at this existential moment.
But the adoption of nat-con thinking – without careful consideration of its origins and objectives – means the time has come for genuine debate, in good faith.
The nat-con impulse to kill off some excesses of our liberal (that is, progressive) society is one I share. Just for starters, diversity, equity and inclusion and identity politics are a scourge; the chemical mutilation of children will go down in history as an unfathomable tragedy; and the ideologically driven energy transition inflicted on rural Australia by the most authoritarian and incompetent government in the nation’s history must be exposed and reconsidered. But we don’t need a nat-con switcheroo to address this and more.
Some of the nat-con agenda feels less like a homegrown evolution and more like a shiny new import from an American intellectual subculture. Conservatives in Australia have spent too long being deferential to the left’s cultural fashions. But the answer is not to imitate the left by building our own moralising state. We don’t need American nat-con cosplay – we need confident Australian conservatism: freedom, responsibility, pluralism, thrift, respect for institutions and confidence in ordinary Australians to build their own lives.
You see? Louise deplores those bloody Yank furriners, but happily berates TG folk, DEI, and climate science.
It's kinda King Donald lite.
To help Louise, the reptiles dragged in talk of Marge and a sighting of Sleepy Don in drooping eyelids mode, no doubt after a five hour truthing binge: Sky News US Analyst Michael Ware claims Marjorie Taylor Greene’s resignation symbolises a fracture between Trump and the MAGA movement’s “core principles.” “She represents the MAGA drive for affordability, which President Trump, in all the polling, is completely underwater on,” Mr Ware told Sky News Australia. “His polling is so underwater; a snorkel wouldn’t help him right now.”
Having Louise on board at the pond at least provided some spacing for a 'toon cavalcade, starting with yesterday's infallible Pope ...
Of course if you relied on the lizard Oz for information, you wouldn't have the foggiest clue what that 'toon joke was all about ...
Back to Louise, arguing her case with the skill of a barrister:
Most famously he said: “A state without the means of some change is without the means of its conservation.” But then: “A state without the means of conservation is without means of its change.”
The nat-con instinct runs in the opposite direction, in the US at least. They correctly lament the modern liberal (that is, progressive) order as hollow and corrosive but wrongly conclude that the remedy is a state willing to assert a single moral and cultural vision. That’s a radical idea for any liberal (in the good sense) democracy.
By golly, a reference worthy of our Henry, and to help, the reptiles showed an actual portrait of the man ... Edmund Burke reminds us society is too complex to be redesigned by rational abstraction; too precious to be engineered through ideology.
The pond isn't saying that it's genuine, certifiable Our Henry - Friday is only a sleep away - but it's good imitation Our Henry, a sort of philosophical fairy floss version ...
Now marvel at the way Louise manages to disavow King Donald, Marge heresy-lite:
Likewise with cancel culture. Many of us have spent years pointing to the left’s illiberal policing of dissent. Yet on the American new right we see loyalty tests, purges of rhetorical deviation and shutting down of inconvenient speech. What was once pilloried by conservatives is now mimicked. We’re also seeing the factions splintering and hijacked by currents of anti-Semitism. That’s what happens when you attempt ex post facto to build a new political philosophy around a single person such as Donald Trump, who doesn’t have one.
The same one-size-fits-all nat-con posture extends to economics, where fawning over America First protectionism does not inspire confidence. Trump’s tariffs have seriously raised grocery prices, smashed US farmers and achieved none of the promised industrial revival. And that is in an economy of continental scale with 110 million households. Australia – a small, outward-facing trading nation – would be crippled by such policies.
If the centre-right party in Australia becomes a party of big government, interventionism and picking winners, we end up on Labor’s turf – and Labor will always outbid us in that game. The result is a soft-socialist equilibrium, not a liberal-democratic one. Australia’s prosperity has always come from openness: selling what we are good at, importing what others do better, and letting private players, not governments, allocate capital. By definition the nat-con agenda would trounce this.
There is another point: the political and cultural objectives of the MAGA right – including the nat cons – are deeply American in temperament. As Laura Field shows in Furious Minds, the movement draws on the elitist Straussian tradition in US academe, the Christian-integralist tradition of pre-Vatican II theology and an American instinct towards heroic “virtuous” statecraft coupled with a romantic notion that a strong yet passive nation can somehow withdraw from strategic obligations.
There is an elitist, undemocratic and highly prescriptive streak in all of this. None of these currents translates to Australian soil. Our political traditions are modest, secular, highly democratic, pragmatic and suspicious of grand ideological crusades. We do not – and could never – build political identity around belief systems.
Young Australians need economic hope and personal freedom, not ideological policing from left or right. They need the ability to work, create, choose, compete and thrive without being dragooned by any faction. They do not want a 1950s restoration.
Stirring stuff, and for a minute there, the pond thought that Louise might be berating the much loved Australian Daily Catholic News (alternating with the Australian Daily Zionist News);
...the movement draws on the elitist Straussian tradition in US academe, the Christian-integralist tradition of pre-Vatican II theology
Take that bromancer and onion muncher... no Latin mass for you lot.
To help stir the pot a little more, the reptiles dragged in the Bolter ... Sky News host Andrew Bolt is joined by ‘Triggered with Samara Gill’ host Samara Gill to underline the political right shaking up global politics. “Donald Trump in the US, Nigel Farage in Britain,” Mr Bolt said. “The latest polls show a big drop in support for Farage’s Reform Party … but the Conservatives have now got off the floor and nearly caught up with Labour.”
Making plans for Nigel?
Shaken but not stirred, though perhaps a little triggered, and what a good chance to catch up with TT and sleepy Don ...
The Liberals’ Burke-Mill-Menzies inheritance provides all we need and more to campaign to dismantle a fantastical energy and climate regime that is destroying our economy, reduce immigration heavily in the national interest, revitalise defence and national security – with new policies to support families and social cohesion. Rather than throwing out the baby with the bathwater for a wobbling US intellectual fad, we should have the courage to know we can and will win the arguments if we remain focused on and actually fight for the core values of the inheritance we have been given, in our own Australian way.
Louise Clegg worked as a barrister specialising in public law and employment law.
The Dame "... really has become an unreadable pile of bile."... and MIA..."Now it's true that the reptiles this day completely missed out on the real excitement currently going down in the"... Lehmann ProBONObo Limp.
ReplyDeleteMIA. Unreadable because The Dame & Sarnoff's man(child) & pro-bono-bo lost. I assumed I'd see DP excoriating a blurb today about ProBONObo Burrows & Lehrmann aka Mrs Taylor , "Louise ceased her legal life", so she didn't shoot herself in the foot, like ProBONObo Burrows. Yet Louise managed also to shoot herself in the wiki foot. Footuotous.
3 shot torts, by Lehrmann & Burrows.
1. Zali Burrows, PROfessional BONObo... bordering on vexatious is ... "Lehrmann’s lawyer Zali Burrows claimed outside court that her client was “an inspiration to those who say they’ve been wrongly accused”.
2. Zali Burrows, PROfessional BONObo... "stood as a candidate for the Palmer United Party in the seat of Blaxland in the federal election of 2013."
3.. Zali Burrows, PROfessional BONObo...
"Criminal lawyer Zali Burrows loses her bankruptcy appeal"
Birds of a feather...
"4. Lehrmann’s growing debt
Lehrmann put on pause his debt of $2m in costs for the original defamation trial only to lose the appeal. The 30-year-old now has to add significant costs for Ten and Wilkinson to his debt.
"The court has heard he can’t afford legal representation and has no funds to repay the debt. His lawyers acted pro bono in both trials and he is a full-time law student."
Bruce... who had...
"... actual knowledge on the part of Mr Lehrmann that Ms Higgins did not consent to sexual intercourse”
Lehman's "laywer"...
"Criminal lawyer Zali Burrows loses her bankruptcy appeal
June 13, 2023
...
"Burrows has represented former Auburn mayor Salim Mehajer, murderer Bassam Hamzy and terrorist Hamdi Alqudsi, and briefed counsel on behalf of several clients held in immigration detention in human rights cases. She stood as a candidate for the Palmer United Party in the seat of Blaxland in the federal election of 2013.
She filed a separate claim in the NSW Supreme Court on October 20 last year to have the $130,000 order against her set aside, alleging that Macpherson Kelley Lawyers had acted fraudulently in obtaining the order.
In December, she applied to the Federal Circuit and Family Court for an extension to the bankruptcy notice until that matter could be heard. However, Judge Nicholas Manousaridis dismissed her application, finding that she had “no reasonable prospects” of setting aside the judgment debt on any of her fraud claims.
Burrows has since lodged an amended statement of claim in the Supreme Court, alleging Macpherson Kelley made false statements to the court in 2020 ..."
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/criminal-lawyer-zali-burrows-loses-her-bankruptcy-appeal-20230613-p5dg4a.html
"Five takeaways from Bruce Lehrmann’s failed defamation case appeal
...
"1. Appeal judges went further than the trial judge on rape finding
"The full bench of the federal court, justices Michael Wigney, Craig Colvin and Wendy Abraham, went further than Justice Michael Lee in finding Lehrmann was aware that Higgins did not consent to sexual intercourse in Parliament House in 2019.
...
"5. Lehrmann’s lawyer claimed her client is an ‘inspiration’
Lehrmann’s lawyer Zali Burrows claimed outside court that her client was “an inspiration to those who say they’ve been wrongly accused”.
Her contention that Lehrmann was denied procedural fairness and natural justice was rejected by the court.
...
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/dec/03/bruce-lehrmann-appeal-defamation-case-key-takeaways-ntwnfb
Two bonobos sitting in a tree,
One a rapist, both bankrupt see,
Latitude by law to shoot from the hip
Now walking shirtless to High Court tip,
Limping & alone with a 3 shot tort,
Both Brazen & stupid, an affront m'lord.
( Kez, where are you? )
ReplyDeleteSometimes when Edmund Burke is mentioned, I am overcome with a demonic impulse and must mention Burke's other famous remark:
The most obvious Division of Society is into Rich and Poor; and it is no less obvious, that the Number of the former bear a great Disproportion those of the latter. The whole Business of the Poor is to administer to the Idleness, Folly, and Luxury of the Rich; and that of the Rich, in return, is to find the best Methods of confirming the Slavery and increasing the Burthens of the Poor. In a State of Nature, it is an invariable Law, that a Man's Acquisition are in proportion to his Labours. In a State of Artificial Society, it is a Law constant and as invariable, that those who labour most, enjoy the fewest Things; and that those who labour not at all, have the greatest Number of Enjoyments...
Edmund Burke (1729-97), A Vindication of Natural Society, 1756 (p536)
🤑🤑🤑
DeleteKing Donald's companion:
“Aristotle observes, that a democracy has many striking points of resemblance with a tyranny. Of this I am certain, that in a democracy, the majority of the citizens is capable of exercising the most cruel oppressions upon the minority, whenever strong divisions prevail in that kind of polity, as they often must; and that oppression of the minority will extend to far greater numbers, and will be carried on with much greater fury, than can almost ever be apprehended from the dominion of a single sceptre. In such a popular persecution, individual sufferers are in a much more deplorable condition than in any other. Under a cruel prince they have the balmy compassion of mankind to assuage the smart of their wounds; they have the plaudits of the people to animate their generous constancy under their sufferings; but those who are subjected to wrong under multitudes, are deprived of all external consolation. They seem deserted by mankind; overpowered by a conspiracy of their whole species.”
― Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France
Yeah, the only things in favour of a 'democracy' is that nobody is a permanent (lifetime) ruler and we can change our rulers, and our rules, without an (armed) revolution.
DeleteNow if only we could opt for 'rule by sortition' it wouldn't be too bad a system. "Worst form of government except for all the others".
Joe - yes, we might discuss Dame Beef's rating of Burke's 'most famous' quotation, but that is too much like the 'discussions' where blokes gather on the composition of the all time greatest Aussie 11, or 'Saints', or - enter the team sport whose preformances have drawn too much of your life to date.
ReplyDeleteWe certainly can share the fun of putting out other quotes, unquestionably from Burke (he did write lots of things) that demonstrate the gap between what he said, and what those who wish to draw on the mantle of 'conservative' now claim to be the elements of conservatism.
Oh - and as we both know, he was particularly hard on those who studied law, but then offered themselves to be elected to the body that made laws, without showing any actual distinction in their own practice of law.
🦹🦹🦹
Delete“In the court of King Donald, a person of learning, of unquestioned merit, and of unsuspected loyalty, was put to death for no other reason, than that he had a pedantic countenance which displeased the king. This very monster of mankind appeared in the beginning of his reign to be a person of virtue. Many of the greatest tyrants on the records of history have begun their reigns in the fairest manner. But the truth is, this unnatural power corrupts both the heart and the understanding. And to prevent the least hope of amendment, a king is ever surrounded by a crowd of infamous flatterers, who find their account in keeping him from the least light of reason, till all ideas of rectitude and justice are utterly erased from his mind. When King Donald had in his fury inhumanly butchered one of his best friends and bravest captains, as well as the odd fisher person, and perhaps the odd Somali; on the return of reason he began to conceive an horror suitable to the guilt of such a murder. In this juncture his council came to his assistance. But what did his council? They found him out a Hogsbreath who gave him comfort. And in what manner did this Kegsbreath comfort him for the loss of such a man, and heal his conscience, flagrant with the smart of such a crime? You have the matter at length in Plutarch. He told him, "that let a sovereign do what he wilt, all his actions are just and lawful, because they are his.”
― Edmund Burke, The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 01
Wouldn't go for Saints, Chad, they've only ever won one premiership (in 1966) and don't look like ever winning another. Otherwise:
Delete"Power corrupts, and absolute power is a total joy to the ruler."
The beauty of articles such as today’s offering from Lady Beef is that the authors consistently ascribe deep philosophical underpinnings to a political organisation which, over 80 years, has given no indication that it is guided by such principles. Even now, looking at the array of mediocrities currently occupying the Federal Opposition benches, I get the impression that a few may have heard of Burke - possibly via scribblings such as today’s - while even few would know of Mill. They all know of Ming of course, but beyond mumbling a few phrases such as “the forgotten people” I doubt they can outline much of Menzies’ philosophy. Perhaps because he never really had one.
ReplyDeleteWell Ming was just a feckless country boy who, on his retirement, needed his supporters to club together to buy him a house to live in (in Haverbrack Ave Malvern IIRC) because he'd made such a muck of his affairs up till then.
Delete