Lately, what with assorted reptile jihads going down as befits the Australian Daily Zionist News, climate science denialism seems to have taken a back seat, and the consequences of the recent wild weather gone unremarked.
The reptiles at the Nine rags have tried to compensate ...
Nick O'Malley
Environment and Climate Editor
King Donald makes an easy target ...
Naturally, the Trump administration wants to destroy it.
In March, Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency said it could save $US150,000 by ending the observatory’s lease on an office and in the administration’s midyear budget proposal, it flagged ending the organisation’s funding. The assault on the Mauna Loa Observatory is part of a far wider attack on climate science and action mounted by the Trump administration over the past year.
Some highlights: In April, the administration disbanded the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, which had once been home to the climatologist James Hansen, whose 1988 testimony before Congress was key to introducing the world to the climate threat.
In August, Trump ordered a halt in the construction of the near-complete $US4 billion Revolution Wind project, a wind farm of 114 turbines off the coast of Rhode Island that by next year would have been providing enough electricity for 350,000 homes if the developer had been allowed to finish the job. Courts intervened, though days before Christmas, Trump again sought to force a halt to Revolution, and a second project called Empire Wind, also nearing completion.
Trump has raged against wind energy ever since turbines were built near his golf course in Scotland. “I’ve studied it better than anybody I know,” he said in a 2019 speech. “I never understood wind. You know, I know windmills very much. They’re noisy. They kill the birds.”
In September, Trump’s address to the United Nations General Assembly devolved into a rant against climate science and renewable energy. “This ‘climate change’, it’s the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world,” Trump said. “All of these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad reasons, were wrong.”
Trump told world leaders, who listened in silence: “I’m really good at predicting things. I don’t say that in a braggadocious way, but it’s true. I’ve been right about everything. And I’m telling you that if you don’t get away from this green energy scam, your country is going to fail.
“Radicalised environmentalists,” he said, wanted to “kill all the cows.“
And so on, and Bianca joined in ...
That’s the question a desperate-sounding Jeremy posed on local ABC talkback radio as he drove through central Victoria, which has been ravaged by bushfires for the past week, while his family was on the Great Ocean Road trapped by floodwaters.
Queenslanders have been warned to brace for further flooding and heavy swells in coming days, as another cyclone threatens to form off the coast – even as recovery from ex-cyclone Koji continues.
In both NSW and Victoria, authorities on the weekend warned people to limit the time they spend outdoors to reduce exposure to bushfire smoke. That smoke, it should be remembered, contains toxic particles from everything incinerated in the fires – not just trees and grass, but buildings, factories, vehicles, and more.
Communities in southern New South Wales have been hit by fires. Communities in Queensland’s central highlands were urged to evacuate on Thursday morning as the Mackenzie River inched ever closer to its peak. Large areas of Western Australia remain gripped by severe heatwaves and fires.
Hundreds have been made homeless by the Victorian bushfires. Many more are now homeless – tourists, thankfully temporarily – due to the flash flooding that swept through the Great Ocean Road and Gippsland on Thursday.
These are not just “weather events”, and it’s not like we haven’t been warned. Climate scientists have been sounding the alarm for decades about the devastation that unchecked fossil fuel production and consumption, and the resulting warming, will bring.
They have warned that a warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, which exacerbates sudden storms, just like the one that smashed through the Great Ocean Road.
And yet, there is a maddening tendency to treat each environmental crisis that climate change throws at us as another isolated incident.
Surely, that pretence must now fall.
There was even a graph, in approved ABC Finance report style...
It's all a bit late.
Not that the pond is bitter, but see how that graph was performing back in 2010?
The pond remembers the glory days when the Nine rags, then under the name of Fairfax, hosted ratbags of the Paul Sheehan kind ...
Beware the climate of conformity (that's an intermittent archive link back to 2009)
The book's 500 pages and 230,000 words and 2311 footnotes are the product of 40 years' research and a depth and breadth of scholarship. As Plimer writes: "An understanding of climate requires an amalgamation of astronomy, solar physics, geology, geochronology, geochemistry, sedimentology, tectonics, palaeontology, palaeoecology, glaciology, climatology, meteorology, oceanography, ecology, archaeology and history."
The most important point to remember about Plimer is that he is Australia's most eminent geologist. As such, he thinks about time very differently from most of us. He takes the long, long view. He looks at climate over geological, archaeological, historical and modern time. He writes: "Past climate changes, sea-level changes and catastrophes are written in stone."
Much of what we have read about climate change, he argues, is rubbish, especially the computer modelling on which much current scientific opinion is based, which he describes as "primitive". Errors and distortions in computer modelling will be exposed in time. (As if on cue, the United Nations' peak scientific body on climate change was obliged to make an embarrassing admission last week that some of its computers models were wrong.)
And so on, and that's when it mattered, and that's when things might have been set in motion.
Instead the Nine rags went all in on click bait trolling with the likes of Miranda the Devine...
Green ideas must take blame for deaths (*archive link)
The Devine was in her prime back in February 2009:
So many people need not have died so horribly. The warnings have been there for a decade. If politicians are intent on whipping up a lynch mob to divert attention from their own culpability, it is not arsonists who should be hanging from lamp-posts but greenies.
Devine flourished in those days:
Planet doomsayers need a cold shower (*archive link)
His dense book, crammed with 2311 footnotes, is a comprehensive scientific refutation of the beliefs underpinning the idea of human-caused climate change.
"It is meant to be an overwhelming demolition job," said Plimer on the phone from Adelaide where he is preparing a field trip this weekend to Broken Hill to study rocks.
He wrote the book, "for those out there with an open mind wanting to know more about how the planet works. The mind is like a parachute. It only works when it is open".
From the geologist's perspective he says our climate has always changed in cycles, affected by such variables as the orbit of the planet and our distance from the sun, which itself produces variable amounts of radiation. One of the lessons of 500 million years of history, he says, is that there is no relationship between carbon dioxide and temperature.
Sorry Nick, sorry Bianca, it's long way past too late, and how much better if young Warwick had driven your rag into bankruptcy and oblivion.
Your rag helped pave the way for the onion muncher and his kind, and now the Devine panders to King Donald, climate science denialist in chief. Your rag was an enabler, complicit in the folly, for which we now see the fruits.
Of course your rag struggled to match the out and proud loonacy of the lizard Oz, and characters of the Lloydie of the Amazon kind. Cf Crikey ... (sorry paywall, but this is all of it):
Back to reptile studies and the reason the pond did that extended Tootle is that today is a comprehensive bust.
The pond should note that yesterday rabid Zionist Our Henry was out and about, gambolling in company with Gawenda ...
The pond will do no more than provide intermittent archive links ...
This is more than just a storm in a teacup. Our culture is being shredded;
In demanding a platform, Randa Abdel-Fattah seeks to convert into a right what is merely a privilege: a privilege whose sole condition is the mutual respect she has repeatedly rejected.That ought to be uncontentious.
By Henry Ergas and Alex McDermott
The pond only notes it for diligent students and for those wanting to have a chortle at a rabidly intolerant bigot ranting about the need for tolerance in relation to this storm in a lizard Oz jihad teacup.
Another notable Zionist was also out and about and was still hanging around like a bad smell this morning ...
How Louise Adler burned down the Adelaide Writers’ Week house
Is this the biggest fiction? Louise Adler resigned over ‘Jewish lobby’ influence. Yet she allegedly tried to cancel a Pulitzer Prize winner herself, exposing contradictions in her free speech stance.
By Michael Gawenda
Is there anything lower or more intellectually debasing than joining in a lizard Oz jihad? While alleging that apparently the board had no agency whatsoever in the matter?
One thing's certain - Jew on Jew action can be as wild as ethnic cleansing in Gaza.
As for debasement, Dame Slap blowing in from Planet Janet above the Faraway Tree was on hand to provide a definitive answer:
Powers and mandates mean nothing without courage. No law – current or new – is a substitute for guts.
By Janet Albrechtsen
Columnist
Remember when the reptile jihad was all about legislation and the quicker the better to pander to the Zionist lobby? But remember, the reptile spirit is to get them coming, and then going, and then coming and going again...
Have at her if you will, but the pond suspects that changing the behaviour of the current genocidal government of Israel might help.
As for the rest, the reason it's a bust is that this day's fare is what the pond calls headline nodders...
For some weird reason the reptiles have taken to encouraging chairman Xi and his minions on the Taiwan matter...
Taiwan is a province of China, just as Tasmania is a state of Australia. This is the only correct understanding of the ‘one China’ principle.
By Xiao Qian
Dredging up China's ambassador like a cat gorged with platitudes gives the reptiles a chance to boast of an EXCLUSIVE
By Anthony Galloway
The pond likes to imagine that back in the 1930s the reptiles would regularly have provided space for Herr Joachim von Ribbentrop advising "prepare for reunified Germany, envoy warns".
What EXCLUSIVES those would have been...
How King Donald's Greenland putsch has empowered rogue states ...
Yet again the pond was reminded of that quote from The Wire:
Royce's ex-chief of staff, Coleman Parker, to Norman: "They always disappoint. Closer you get, the more you look. All of them."
Never mind, the pond always believes, with Scarlett, that tamarrah will be a better day ...or at least another one.
And so to end this day, the pond could have indulged in a survey of fine King Donald tweets ...
But that's for the likes of BuzzFeed.
Instead a note by a correspondent sent the pond haring off to cartoons in ancient 1950s times ... where McCarthyism suggests King Donald isn't the exception, so much as the rule ...
There were a couple of sites worth a squiz ...Let Me Finish ...
He’s assisted by Mole MacCarony, an extreme germophobe who walks around with a Flit gun that he sprays at just about everybody and everything, and later takes issue with migratory birds as well. He’s also incredibly near-sighted, as befits his species. He’s based on Patrick McCarran, an anti-communist senator from Nevada who supported limiting immigration and denying visas for ideological reasons.
The two of them join Deacon Mushrat’s bird-watching club, with Malarkey taking it over by threatening the Deacon with a shotgun, and starts casting suspicion on everyone.
The two are assumed to have killed each other in June 1953, but they both later reappear at a time when McCarthy was no longer being taken as seriously. MacCarony receives a taste of his own medicine when Albert accuses him of kidnapping with absolutely no evidence, and then starts a bomb scare when he mistakes a young woodchuck’s gibberish for subversive foreign speech. In August 1954, Malarkey shows up in the company of a badger named Charlie. He was named after someone called “Indian Charlie” whom McCarthy cited as his childhood mentor, but is drawn to look like Richard Nixon.
Malarkey, MacCarony, and Charlie all wear sacks on their heads a few times, and while of course McCarthy wasn’t affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan, Kelly wanted to point out the similarity of their paranoid prejudice. The satire is silly and absurd, yet would presumably have hit close to home when the strips first ran and McCarthy was surprisingly popular. After all, if you DIDN’T support him, he was liable to brand you a communist.
A few more samples ...
In that panel you can see Roy Cohn whispering into McCarthy's ear, and the ghost of Roy is still whispering into King Donald's ear to this very day ...
Re Herb Lock, here's a few cartoons, found at PBS ...
Ian Plimer, and the Staging of Public Debate
Angi Buettner
Victoria University of Wellington
And so to keeping ancient cartoon spirits alive ...
"It's all a bit late."
ReplyDeleteIt always is. The ancient wisdom that "Prevention is better than cure" is almost always ignored or forgotten or, if one is a member of Murdochratia, poo-poohed resoundingly.
And therefore almost nothing bad is ever prevented. Just ask those folks down on the Great Ocean Road.
How hard is it to ignore indigenous peoples, wars, and inhabitants stated preferences? Easy...
ReplyDelete"Taiwan is a province of China, just as Tasmania is a state of Australia"
~ By Xiao Qian,
Chief Propagandist, Australia
I'd lmfao if this wasn't so serious.
Free speech in Limited Newspeak is... platforming propaganda for authoritarian states, for clicks.
'News' as a business model driven by... crapified consumerism.
🍏🍎🍏
DeleteXiao Qian: "Taiwan is a province of China, just as Tasmania is a state of Australia."
ReplyDeleteYeah, but with just a few major differences:
1. Tasmania is itself, and is part of, a democracy not an insurmountable autocracy
2. Tasmania, like all of Australia's states has its own laws and legal system
3. Tasmania can peacefully leave the Australia Federation, though it would take a constitutional referendum to do it legally.
Rule: Never believe anything a member of the Chinese autocracy says about Taiwan
Fyi:
Deletehttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-07/should-tasmania-cut-ties-with-the-mainland/10687936
🍎🍏🍎
DeleteJust a Roman Circus.
ReplyDeleteHey, RingmasterXiao Qian, your ideas, and newscorpse publishing them, is not an idea to be sold, but a proxy for...
A Roman Circus...
"the place where savage beasts fight each other for the pleasure of the people is called “the Roman circus”, not “the marketplace”.
From...
The Workshop of ideas
2025-07-04
Have you heard of “the marketplace of ideas”? I certainly did, and too many times.
...
"The Wikipedia article on “marketplace of ideas” says that it’s US Supreme Court Justice Holmes that first used the concept – in an opinion on the constitutionality of making illegal the expressison of your views against armament.
"Indeed, the metaphor is that of the meme. Ideas are like viruses that jump from head to head, killing incompatible ones with might, only the strongest will prevail. That’s literally it. It’s a darwinist interpretation of politics. Where people, actual people, don’t even have any agency. They are the battlefield. We The People, are the theater, the scene on which the actual play runs, we ain’t actors of the play. The marketplace of ideas is on top of us, and stamps us. We are at best witnesses to the might of the ideas.
"Also What The Actual Fuck do you think a marketplace is?! Have you ever gone to a market, Justice Holmes? You probably have a domestic to go there for you. So, for your information, the place where savage beasts fight each other for the pleasure of the people is called “the Roman circus”, not “the marketplace”. A marketplace is a place you go to exchange money for stuff, like leeks. As far as I am aware, my coins did not fight the leeks to know which one will prevail in glorious battle.
And it doesn’t end there. Like the way “free speech” got distorted to the level of meaninglessness in US Supreme Court decisions. It would be laughable if it wasn’t the reason the US is now n°2 in the list of shithole countries in any sensible vacation guides.
But we like free speech right? We like to hear from both1 sides, compare the ideas, and then pick the best ones.1
"The only two, if you have a deranged two party system like the US.
"Do we? Do we? In fact we don’t! We just like to hear easily rebutable nonsense that is opposition-shaped and nod approvingly at people who says to us what we want to hear. I’ve done activism, I’ve talked to people I disagree with, and boy is it annoying and unpleasant. Engaging sensibly with opposing views, judging it, and adopting it when it passes muster is not how politics works, nor is it how you adopt new ideas. Isn’t it glaringly obvious? Have you ever done that? Who do you think you are fooling?
"So, fuck – you say –, how do people change opinions? What’s the point of politics if people can’t adopt new ideas? What is to be done?
...
https://nicopap.ch/blogs/perso/the-workshop-of-ideas/
Via...
"Nora 01.17.26 at 9:07 pm
"I just so happened to have written a little polemic on the subject last year." ...
https://crookedtimber.org/2026/01/07/changing-beliefs-moving-house-suggestion-for-a-change-of-metaphor/#comment-862685
To all warmongers and Romanesque perverted circus operatoratives, as
Cee Lo Green says...
"FUCK YOU"!
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=pc0mxOXbWIU
Hi Dorothy,
ReplyDelete“The most important point to remember about Plimer is that he is Australia's most eminent geologist. As such, he thinks about time very differently from most of us. He takes the long, long view.”
“One of the lessons of 500 million years of history, he says, is that there is no relationship between carbon dioxide and temperature.”
Why is Plimer’s long, long view limited to just 500 million years when the age of the earth is reliably estimated to be 4.54 billion years old with a small margin of error of about 50 million years?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Earth
Why are the preceding 4 billion years of no interest to this eminent geologist?
Could it be that he doesn’t want to discuss the Cryogenian Period which is believed to have occurred some time prior to 650 million years ago. This is the basis of the Snowball Earth hypothesis - that a global ice age led to all or nearly all the surface water on the planet becoming frozen.
A possible mechanism for triggering a Snowball Earth could have been a severe reduction in the atmospheric concentration of greenhouse gases most likely caused by early life in the seas capturing CO2 via photosynthesis.
It is also likely that the trigger for melting Snowball Earth was a vast increase in greenhouse gases primarily from volcanic activity.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowball_Earth
This would certainly suggest there is a significant relationship between carbon dioxide and temperature.
Still Plimer is evidently very tricky to pin down on criticisms of his assertion that there is no anthropogenic global warming.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/blog/2009/dec/14/climate-change-sceptic-ian-plimer
Sorry for only including a mere 3 footnotes.
Not only the Cryogenian period, DW, but also the Permian-Triassic mass extinction:
Deletehttps://www.sciencealert.com/earth-became-a-hothouse-250-million-years-ago-and-we-finally-know-why
Really, for anybody who knows about the dinosaurs in Antarctica time is is clear that there has been many significant changes of climate in the last billion or two years. It's also obvious that very many species did not survive a lot of the changes, both hot and cold.
Plimer was once a member of Australian Skeptics (that's the Greek form with k instead of the Roman c) and he was an arrogant idiot - and a major reason why I left the Skeptics.
Ian "I can't see it" Plimer is now Mr Black Damp
DeleteAs CO2 is a colourless gas, Ian P is unable to see it. He can see rocks. He thinks dry ice is... hard water.
Nor can Ian see plants... "Its concentration in Earth's pre-industrial atmosphere since late in the Precambrian was regulated by organisms and geological features. Plants, algae and cyanobacteria use energy from sunlight to synthesize carbohydrates from carbon dioxide and water in a process called photosynthesis, which produces oxygen as a waste product.[13]"
And as Gas chromatography was not invented in 500BC, so how can you tell!
And Ian has never died of asphyxiation in a mine, so how would you know! ...
Gina ventilates mines you too know!...
"Blackdamp is encountered in enclosed environments such as mines, sewers, wells, tunnels and ships' holds. It occurs with particular frequency in abandoned or poorly ventilated coal mines."
"Blackdamp (also known as stythe or choke damp), sometimes found in enclosed environments such as mines, sewers, wells, tunnels and ships' holds, is an asphyxiant, reducing the available oxygen content of air to a level incapable of sustaining human or animal life. It is not a single gas but a mixture of unbreathable gases left after oxygen is removed from the air; it typically consists of nitrogen, carbon dioxide and water vapour." Wikipedia
So many ways not to see!