Big mistake, cardigan wearers.
The pond is so used to listening to the Beeb nightly on what's allegedly a local news radio station that calling in the Beeb to act as scabs and strike-breakers only made the pond wonder when there might come a campaign to replace the entire ABC with the Beeb.
What a refreshing diversion to be able to take in the Beeb's televisual news on News 24 without the usual local ambulance chasing.
Trust Jack the Insider to make the obvious jokes for the gloating reptiles ...
And so on ...
Sadly, with the intermittent archive still acting kinda funny, the pond has had to resort to teaser trailers again... and the odd relieving 'toon:
This is a taste of petulant Peta, in the same state angst-ridden, existential brooding about the perils of Pauline as all the other reptiles:
It must be terrifying for the reptiles to discover that One Nation has assiduously read them and taken on board their migrant and Islamophobia, and their climate denialism and love of coal and lust to nuke the country, not to save the planet, just to nuke it ...
Unfortunately there's no way to drag in some alternative to the reptiles.
The best way to deal with them is simply to avoid them, but that's not in the pond's job description.
And that's why the pond ended up yet again with Dame Groan, turning in her usual dinkum groaning, and for once she had something to groan about, or at least the good citizens of Wodonga did, with the pond yesterday observing this at a petrol station in Wodonga, while indulging in a relaxing EV charge ...
Once again the old groaner sought to blame local pollies for the mindless excursions of mad king Donald, deep into adventurist excursions...
The header: Australia supply chain crisis: The worst is yet to come; For a country that produces as much food as we do, why on earth are we facing shortages of products like this?
The caption for Frank's astonishing work: Higher fuel costs feed into so many other prices that impact inflation. Artwork: Frank Ling
It was only a three minute groaning, but the pond was exceptionally pleased, because you don't see the sort of artwork offered up by Frank as the key illustration every day of the week.
What an astonishing image erupting from the bowels of a graphics department at the top of its game, and as for the caption advising that higher fuel costs impacted other costs, it was the sort of economics lesson that can only be called visonary.
It inspired Dame Groan to even greater, 'we'll all be rooned' heights ...
Both figures are essentially meaningless as they relate to a period before the conflict in the Middle East and the rapid escalation of the oil price, which is floating above and below the $US100 mark.
It’s not just the higher price of fuel per se but the fact that this price feeds into so many other prices that makes it important.
The Treasurer is canny enough to acknowledge that the February CPI figures are not indicative of what is to come. Addressing a large group of big business executives, he even talked about an inflation figure close to 7 per cent, with the impact of the current global uncertainty paralleling the global financial crisis.
What these past two weeks or so have demonstrated to people is the importance of hydrocarbons in our daily lives. It’s not just the price and availability of fuel at the servo; it goes well beyond this. Diesel is more important than petrol in enabling the farmers and regional communities to continue their productive activities, including getting foodstuffs to market.
The pond must confess to also being bowled over by the illustration for the AV distraction ... Australia's headline inflation figure has fallen from 3.8 per cent to 3.7 per cent.
Once upon a time it used to be illegal to reproduce images of currency, but the pond likes to walk on the wild side ...
The price of oil feeds directly into construction costs, particularly through much more expensive PVC pipes.
This couldn’t be happening at a worse time.
There are also unexpected worries such as the shortage of helium – a by-product of gas processing – which is required for the operation of MRI machines. We can all live without party balloons; MRI machines are a different matter.
For all the discussion of the problems of supply chain blockages during Covid and the need to be better prepared in the future, it’s not clear anything material has been done. The Productivity Commission prepared a useful report, Vulnerable Supply Chains, that was released in 2021.
It turns out that businesses and people are inclined to underestimate the chance of adverse events occurring with substantial consequences. But we should expect the government to do a better job at this – to provide insurance where the actions of private businesses and individuals fail to do so.
The government should be able to identify critical and essential import supply chains and assess the adequacy of their risk management. Some of the tools include stockpiling, long-term contracts and diversification of supply. Support for local production may be justified in some instances.
The immediate economic future is highly uncertain and unlikely to be quickly resolved even if events in the Middle East calm down quickly. The damage to the large LNG plant in Qatar will take a long time to repair. The consequences for the global LNG market will be substantial, and Australia may be a net beneficiary.
We may need to use the surety of our LNG supplies – don’t even think about imposing an export levy that would be passed on to customers – to secure guaranteed supplies of fuel, urea and other items we may need.
With only a few weeks before the budget, Jim Chalmers is staying firm in his resolve to achieve several changes, including on spending restraint, taxation reform and productivity. If the Prime Minister stays true to form, his instinct will be to refrain from scaring the horses and apply a degree of pump-priming in the form of some cost-of-living measures.
It will be interesting to watch this conflict play out. Whatever happens, the immediate economic outlook looks grim as people deal with the high degree of uncertainty and higher living expenses.
Pitiful ... but the pond guesses that indies must do whatever it takes to score a mention in the hive mind.
Finally, instead of the reptiles sending in the bromancer to fix the middle east, or serve up "Ned" sighing at clouds, or even the emeritus chairman explaining how the current excursion was anything but a wondrous folly designed to ruin the world, the reptiles decided to advice on strategies for impending war.
What to do? Bring back the bromancer so the world can be truly stuffed, and we'll have a war with China by Xmas!
DP said; "Unfortunately there's no way to drag in some alternative to the reptiles."
ReplyDelete"The best way to deal with them is simply to avoid them, but that's not in the pond's job description."
Just so DP, and so says a fellow traveller in no uncertain terms...
"Do not cite, post or link to News Corp stories. Do not patronise its advertisers. Do not refer to its organs as media outlets, or its employees as journalists. Do not participate in the pretence that an ideological crusade is just another legitimate part of the information landscape; that the deeply abnormal is really normal."
From;
"Watching media that aren’t
Charles Richardson
Australia, Media, Political issues
11 August 2020
...
"The problem is worldwide, and it matters.
...
"The lesson, which should have been obvious from the start, is that calling something a media organisation doesn’t make it one. The people the AFL employs might be trained as journalists or have a journalistic background, and they might wish that they were doing journalism. But they’re not. They are public relations people, doing public relations. That’s their job.
Which brings us to the other, more significant item from last night. (It actually preceded the AFL one.) Last Thursday, the Australian published a front page story by long-term News Corp operative Dennis Shanahan that featured supposed “secret modelling” of prospective Covid-19 cases in Victoria, showing an alarming rise expected to peak at around 1,100 a day in mid- to late August.
"As Barry showed, and as seasoned observers might have guessed anyway, the story was nonsense. The figures did not come from the government, the graph appeared to have been copied from a stray Twitter user, the story had not been checked with the government beforehand and the Australian declined to answer Barry’s questions about it.
"All pretty much par for the course. The story fitted News’s political agenda, so that was all that mattered. But this is not primarily, at least in my view, about the evils of News Corp, but about the way it’s treated in the media – something that Barry’s framing again failed to fully convey.
"News Corp is not a media organisation, it is a propaganda organisation. To treat its stories as news reports and its employees as journalists may be flattering to those individuals, but it is simply wrong.
...
https://worldisnotenough.org/2020/08/11/watching-media-that-arent/
Here ar two nuanced South Australian election breakdowns with details not propaganda, spin & existential crocodile tears...
Via J-D, at JQ's blog "The breakup of the Liberal Party: The Trumpist right departs for One Nation
MARCH 23, 2026 JOHN QUIGGIN
https://johnquiggin.com/2026/03/23/the-breakup-of-the-liberal-party-the-trumpist-right-departs-for-one-nation/comment-page-1/
"South Australia answers the question"
Charles Richardson
Australia, Elections, Party matters 23 March 2026
https://worldisnotenough.org/2026/03/23/south-australia-answers-the-question/