Tuesday, May 19, 2026

In which the bromancer and Dame Groan feature in the pond's placeholder ...

 

A few housekeeping notes.

The pond regrets it can't keep the comments section open in the immediate future, and so the moderation bar will kick in after a few more days. That's because the pond has to take steps to moderate the content, or risk upsetting the google bot.

Unfortunately the pond will be offline in every way bar the phone, and won't be able to moderate the moderation in the near future.

Blogger wasn't really set up with mobile phones in mind (huzzah) and the pond never bothered configuring it as an operating system.

The pond will try to extend the moderation curfew with the odd post, but that will be tricky until the pond has made the shift and set up online shop in its new location.

Hopefully the pond will be back (the pond has been told some intruders are shot on sight at its new southern location), though if so, it'll likely be in modified form.

The pond's hours derived from the need to do the blog, then get on with work, but in the pond's new iteration work isn't an issue, so maybe the pond will set a more genteel and leisurely schedule. 

Given the way that most correspondents seem to access the site, no one's that keen to get up early in the morning to enjoy freshly baked, piping hot reptiles served up for breakfast. 

The pond might also limit exposure to the reptiles ... there are any number of wastrels and time wasters at the lizard Oz, and one reptile can be as amusing as three can, especially if the intermittent archive is available to offer samples of the others.

The pond would like to thank all the cartoonists for being unwittingly dragooned into the pond. The pond never attempted to score revenue out of the blog, and one of the reasons is that it didn't wish to trade off on the hard work of others. Rather the pond wanted to draw attention to the glories of local cartoonists plying their trade for the enjoyment of all.

And lastly the pond would like to thank all the pond's correspondents, a small, but trusty, hardy band who long ago graduated as doctors of herpetology studies, and who kept the pond slogging on simply to read the comments section.

Hopefully we'll all resume play, but for the moment, it's time for the last placeholder for a while.

Unfortunately, as expected, the lizard Oz didn't deliver a dream team of reptiles as the placeholder.

There's no Our Henry ... there's just this motley crue ... and yes, the budget jihad, the mother of lizard Oz jihads, was still in full swing.

In no particular order ...

COMMENTARY by Dennis Shanahan
Labor falls into tax trap in the valley of death
The desperation and vehemence of the denials and claims from the PM and Treasurer about scare campaigns are proof in themselves that the death tax debate is getting away from Labor.

The bouffant one took a trip back in time ...



Ye ancient cats and hounds, the reptiles are running really hard on the death and taxes routine, and there's a 'toon for that ...



The canny Cranston lined up for a crack ...

EXCLUSIVE
Surprise stamp duty bill looms after trust crackdown
Labor’s trust issues extend to a looming fight on stamp duty
As businesses and families across the country face the prospect of a tax bill if they are forced to restructure their trusts, the states prepare for a multi-billion-­dollar fight over the revenue.
By Matthew Cranston

There was much wailing and quailing ..

BUDGET 2026
Why Labor’s capital gains overhaul became an internet meme
‘Albo owns 47 per cent of my business’: Why Labor’s CGT overhaul became an internet meme
Small business owners are venting anger over reforms they say could deter investment and hit start-ups hard.
By Jack Quail

Rosie and Julie-Anne were suffused with fear, and happy to spread the fear mongering wide ...

FEARS FOR VULNERABLE
Strike at wealthy hits low-income families
Jim Chalmers has defended Labor’s trust tax raid as targeting wealthy tax avoiders, but estate planners warn everyday families will suffer most.
By Rosie Lewis and Julie-Anne Sprague

Even Ancient Troy chimed in over on the extreme far right ...

A taxing problem: major parties fail test of our future
The real intergenerational problem ALP, Libs missed: paying off debt bomb
Labor and the Coalition have condemned future generations to pay for record spending and debt.
By Troy Bramston
Senior Writer

What a pity none of them tackled the alternative ... a brave, bold back to the future ...




To be fair the reptiles also found space for an essential contribution to the Australian Daily Zionist News... with Frank top of the world ma over on the extreme far right ...

ROYAL COMMISSION
‘Change can happen’: Lowy’s soccer blueprint to tackle antisemitism
Frank Lowy’s powerful antisemitism submission: we changed soccer, and we can also extinguish smouldering racism
In a powerful submission to the antisemitism royal commission, Frank Lowy says change will require the same cultural shifts that saw ethnic divisions in soccer transformed into loyalty.
By Frank Lowy

Frank was also top of the "news" with a "love it or leave it" angle ...

EXCLUSIVE
‘If you don’t like Australia, leave,’ says Lowy
Frank Lowy tells Bondi inquiry his soccer fix could help cure hate
Sir Frank Lowy says the same approach that ended ethnic conflict in Australian soccer could solve the antisemitism crisis – but those who won’t accept our values should face deportation.
By Stephen Rice

But what if soccer bores you senseless? 

What if you've seen endless, inane stories of fans feuding and rioting in the streets?

What if you think that the only way to respond to the astonishing grift at work in the World Cup is to participate in a boycott?

Forget it Jake, that grift, that form of madness, is going to go on forever.

The reptiles did gratify the pond by featuring one of the pond's favourites.

It's lesser, minor bromancer, but the pond would have settled for any reptile writing about anything other than the budget, so this'll do reptiles, this'll do:



The header: Can anyone govern UK effectively – a question also for similar democracies, especially Australia; The UK faces having six prime ministers in seven years as Keir Starmer’s leadership crumbles amid a crisis that mirrors Australia’s own policy failures.

The caption: Protesters at a rally organised by Tommy Robinson pose in front of a banner featuring Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Picture: Carl Court/Getty Images

The bromancer spent a bigly four minutes diagnosing Britain's ills, beginning with a cornball joke that says a lot about his sensa huma ...

When I first visited Britain way back in the 1970s, before Margaret Thatcher transformed the place, it was a terrible mess, its economy notoriously the sick man of Europe. (It was nonetheless fun to be there – the Brits made great jokes out of their misfortunes and an Australian with even a few dollars in his pocket felt rich). Britain’s economic performance was dismal and it was riven by strikes and bitter ideological division.
I remember in a country pub one fellow wanting a smoke and having trouble getting his match to light. In exasperation, he declared: “This match is the only thing in Britain that doesn’t strike!”
Britain’s problems are a bit different today but essentially they throw up the same questions as the 1970s. Can anyone govern Britain effectively?
This question, acute in Britain, can be asked with increasing pertinence about similar democracies, and especially Australia.
Long term, I remain a solid optimist about the Brits – their institutional and cultural inheritance is so great, although modern culture is trying to cut them off from their own legacy. Keir Starmer, in office less than two years, is a very poor prime minister. It now seems he has little chance of surviving more than a month or two.

The reptiles flung in snaps of Keir's rivals, Andy Burnham. Picture: Getty Images; Wes Streeting. Picture: AFP



The bromancer was in his element, dissing Labour ...

The campaign to push him out is a mixture of light opera and musical farce, with a strong dash of ­Dynasty/Dallas-style soap opera centred on sibling hatreds that have no logical explanation. The two main challengers are Wes Streeting, the former health secretary, and Andy Burnham, mayor of Greater Manchester. They and Starmer all appear to share rich mutual detestation while always speaking publicly of each other with saccharine emollience.
Streeting notionally comes from the Labour right, though that’s a long way left of normal voters. Burnham has no ideological fixed address. The joke is: a Blairite, a Brownite (follower of Gordon Brown) and a Corbynista (admirer of loony left Jeremy Corbyn) walk into a pub together and the barman asks: Mr Burnham, what would you like to drink?
To return to parliament, Burnham had to get a Labour MP to resign so he could stand at a by-election. The seat in question is Makerfield. In recent local elections, Nigel Farage’s Reform swept to victory there. Ten years ago, the electorate voted overwhelmingly for Brexit.
So Streeting declared Labour must seek to rejoin the EU. This is the conventional view among ­Labour lefties but the public hates the idea, even those people who think successive governments have made a mess of Brexit.
It’s also, mutedly, more or less official Labour policy.

There came an AV distraction ...

UK Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has dismissed speculation about a potential leadership challenge against Prime Minister Keir Starmer as "froth and nonsense." Political tensions within the Labour Party have continued following significant losses in local elections nearly two weeks ago. The issue of Brexit may become significant in any future leadership contest, as UK MP Wes Streeting and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham have both expressed support for Britain rejoining the European Union.



The bromancer finally turned his keen mind to what ails Britain ...

Burnham thus can’t really denounce it, but having it front of mind increases the chance Burnham loses the by-election. One up to Streeting. But the party rank and file don’t like Streeting. So, sans Burnham, the left would have to put someone else up.
It’s even barely conceivable Starmer could hang on for more tortured months of paralysis if Burnham loses in Makerfield.
Burnham is the only national Labour politician with a positive approval rating. That’s partly because as mayor he doesn’t have to take tough decisions and has no responsibility for issues ripping Britain apart, and for which he has offered no solutions.
Assuming Starmer goes, Britain will have had six PMs in seven years – Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak, Starmer and Starmer’s replacement. Add in David Cameron before May and it’s seven in 10 years. That’s a sign of deeply dysfunctional politics, of a political system, and a society that can’t resolve its public policy contradictions.
People talk, justifiably, of the crisis on the centre right in many democracies. There’s an equal crisis on the centre left. Only three EU governments are left of centre, and they’re in trouble.
Britain’s problems are not mysterious.
They include: massive public debt; uncontrolled welfare spending; the desperate need to increase defence spending; massive disguised unemployment through huge welfare rolls; a loss of social morale and self-confidence; persistent Islamist violence; an education system dedicated to the idea that Britain is evil; a complete loss of trust in institutions, including the mainstream political parties; wildly expensive energy prices arising from net-zero commitments; and the separate but related problems of uncontrolled mass immigration and illegal immigration.

Strange, no mention of Brexit? 

Could it be that the bromancer was all in on that ruinous strategy?

Is it true that the bromancer was something of a Boris and Brexit man?

Indeed he was, and the pond felt the need to send this to the intermittent archive, just for the fun of it...

Brexiteers fighting for liberty and the people’s will

Here you go, a little teaser trailer ...



Meanwhile, the reptiles were featuring a riot ... Anti-migration protesters riot outside Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, South Yorkshire, 2024.



And then the bromancer seamlessly shifted from Labour bashing to Labor bashing, so he too could join in the lizard Oz budget jihad, the mother of all reptile jihads ...

Australia has similar problems. Although the Albanese government is politically dominant, its policy responses are essentially the same as Starmer’s and equally ineffective, indeed destructive in the medium and long term. But we start richer, so will take longer to bankrupt.
A columnist in The Times argued recently that the British people were at fault because they wanted a vast welfare state but didn’t want to pay the taxes to fund it. That seems wise but is actually quite mistaken. Britain, like Australia, is already a very high-tax society. The problem is that putting on even more taxes, especially at the level that would be needed to wipe out deficit spending, is just about impossible because it cripples the economy.
None of the new Albanese/Chalmers taxes will help the economy in any way. They just hinder growth. Britain is at an even worse point in this continuum. Governments have gone down the road of electoral bribery so far they have reached a dead end, where a flimsy but important safety sign warns there is no road ahead, only a cliff.
The Makerfield by-election has quickly become a two-horse race, Labour versus Reform. That’s bad news for the Conservative Party, whose leader, Kemi Badenoch, is immensely likeable and plainly doing a good job, but not yet registering big gains in the polls.
Have the voters deserted the Conservatives forever? Farage has welcomed a number of senior Tory defectors into Reform, and this has slightly reduced his outsider appeal and greatly increased the credibility of Reform as potentially a party of government.
Barnaby Joyce joining One Nation is a similar, though weaker, manifestation of the same dynamic.
Britain will muddle through, but what a mess. Mind you, the 1970s did give us Fawlty Towers.
Greg Sheridan is The Australian’s foreign editor

Please, a little 'toon balance...



The pond suspects that in a month or a year's time the reptiles will still be in the throes of their budget jihad, and the pond is pleased to be shod of it...

And so to the mother of all budget bashers, the old biddy herself ...



The header: Effects of budget shemozzle likely to get worse for Labor; It’s one thing to break a promise delivered 50 times; it’s another thing altogether to deliver a set of policies that can best be described as bungled.

The caption? None, and no credit for the crappy collage, because the graphic is as familiar and as aged as a pair of lizard Oz slippers.

Dame Groan spent a bigly four minutes ranting and railing in a way designed to produce a warm glow in her cult following:

It’s one thing to break a promise delivered 50 times; it’s another thing altogether to deliver a set of policies that can best be described as bungled.
Replete with high compliance costs and unintended consequences, the budget announcements demonstrate both the ineffectiveness and naivety of Treasury to provide advice of an adequate standard. It’s already a shemozzle and it’s likely to get worse in the coming weeks as the flaws and inconsistencies of the announced policy changes emerge.
Rather than representing some sort of gift to the younger generation, the way in which the changes will be grandfathered confers an ongoing gift on anyone who has negatively geared property or a testamentary trust, to give two examples, that will not be available to newcomers.
This facet of the policy may create a lock-in effect whereby those with negatively geared properties simply hold on to them and re-leverage over time. But because of the new capital gains tax arrangements, there will be a strong disincentive to improve the property lest the gains be eaten up in tax. While both Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers talk about improving the rate of home ownership for young people – “getting a fair crack” and all that – the CGT changes apply to all asset classes. You can just imagine the Treasury officials warning about uneven treatment of asset classes.
This is notwithstanding the acknowledgment by the Treasurer that the simple 50 per cent discount method being replaced favours property over shares. But by lumping them into the same method going forward, clear biases remain – particularly against high-growth assets held over relatively short periods of time. Let’s be clear here: what is being proposed is not a return to the Keating system of indexation. Under that arrangement, there was no 30 per cent minimum tax. Moreover, capital gains could be averaged over five years. What was announced in the budget is another beast altogether. It will also be costly to administer.

Of course there had to be a snap of the chief villain: Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers. Picture: Lyndon Mechielsen/Courier Mail



It was classic "we'll all be rooned, and well before Xmas" territory for the old groaner, as she contemplated the dire suffering of the rich:

The impact of the CGT changes on start-ups was quickly identified as a major issue because the new system will impose punitive rates of tax on owners and the staff who generally forgo years of income to achieve success. It is common overseas for there to be specific carve-outs for start-ups – in the US and the UK, for example – but Chalmers’ lame response is that he will consult more on the topic. And what’s with the bizarre proposal of roping in pre-1985 assets that have been CGT-exempt? Surely, this is just a desperate tax grab, reneging on a promise made a long time ago and kept – until now. Again, the compliance costs are substantial.
The fact neither the Treasurer nor Treasury understand the role trusts play in the commercial world has been on full display. Many small businesses are set up as trusts, often in association with bucket companies, because this is the most effective and least costly arrangement for them. There are several reasons for this choice, including asset protection as well as managing tax. But evidently Treasury thinks it knows better.
There is a section in the budget papers that comes close to providing commercial advice to business owners, telling them companies are better than trusts. There is no acknowledgment of the hefty costs associated with restructuring, including the payment of stamp duty to state governments. This impost alone will deter many business owners from considering any change.
There is also the complication of franking credits, which arguably was the issue that determined the outcome of the 2019 election. Where a bucket company is attached to a discretionary trust, the franking credits will not be transferable, implying very high rates of effective tax. This may become an issue the government has to deal with. And why would Chalmers opt to include discretionary testamentary trusts within the scope of the new taxation arrangements for trusts? Again, this is completely bizarre.
These trusts are incorporated in wills often to protect young children in the unhappy event of both parents dying at the same time. They are also a form of asset protection to ensure disgruntled creditors or ex-partners cannot access the proceeds of an estate. As for noting that fixed testamentary trusts will not be affected, this advice is again naive in the extreme. Fixed trusts are, by definition, inflexible and unable to accommodate changing circumstances, and are rarely used.

Trust the pond, the pond's trust is suffering almighty. 

Is there a timetable for things to get better?



The pond can't imagine Dame Groan following that prescription, not when there's groaning to be done:

The government is also on thin ground when it comes to the carve-out for new properties from the ban on negative gearing. Again, this is coming close to offering uninformed and slipshod advice to investors.
The reality is that investment in new apartments in Melbourne and Sydney over recent years have been complete duds. The capital gains have been minimal – 10 times less than the capital growth of stand-alone houses – and many new apartments have defects that must be remedied, often at the expense of the owner. There are also significant problems with the body corporate arrangements a new owner has to deal with.
Of course, anyone who understands basic economics could have predicted this outcome.
A great deal of the gains from investment in property is the return on the land on which it is built. In the case of apartments, there is very little land and there are often few restrictions on new apartment buildings being built close by. It’s a case of buyer beware when it comes to buying new housing stock, something not being mentioned by the government. Evidently, negatively geared owners of new residential real estate will feel a warm inner glow because they are doing something for the nation. It just won’t show up in personal bank statements.
The government is also on thin ground when it boasts about the uptick in home ownership predicted to result from the tax changes – 75,000 over a decade. That’s a mere 7500 a year, which hardly shifts the dial for what is a major shake-up of tax arrangements.
There is also only one direction for rents – and that’s up. The fact is universal negative gearing effectively subsidises renters by shifting some of the costs on to the taxpayer. This impact will be largely lost with the changes, save for new properties and grandfathered investments. There is a lot of water to go under the bridge. The fiasco of the 2014 budget played out over time; this is likely to be repeated in this case. The government will have to tweak several of the settings in response to the information it is given and the likely perverse outcomes.
In the meantime, the only sure winners are accountants, lawyers and valuers.

Is there any upside? 

Well for once Dame Groan identified some winners, though surely she should have included herself and the rest of the reptile jihadists and the lizard Oz as a sure winner. 

Endless columns are now guaranteed, much shrieking, moaning and whining and groaning about budget chaos, and well beyond Xmas, with Dame Groan's "we'll all be rooned" taken up by the rest of the reptile jihadists, her gracious legacy to all...

And that, preserved in gelatinous aspic and the dubious functioning of the intermittent archive, is the reptiles this day, and it will have to serve as a placeholder for anyone turning up to marvel at this weird blog... and the even weirder world of the lizard Oz hive mind.

All that remains to do is to wish everyone well, and turn to the immortal Rowe - alas too early in the week for the infallible Pope to join him - for a farewell 'toon ...



Why they can play that game up until Halloween ...

20 comments:

  1. Hope all goes well in the move, DP. And hurry back. Please !

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. GB,
      I have a feeling that sooner than she imagines, DP will be saying ala
      The Godfather -

      "Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!"

      At least I hope so.
      I appreciated your citing the Flinders Street Station and other Melbourne
      highlights, resulting in my reading up on Melbourne and it's rivalry with
      Sydney.

      Anyway, thanks again to you and Chadwick and Kez and everyone here
      for the ride if it all does end today.

      I have to smile to when I think back to my 1st brush with Australia,
      when we got a Aussie girl at my grade school, around that same time
      Skippy had become a hit and I thrilled to Sonny and Skippy navigating
      a helicopter over Sydney Harbour Bridge when Jerry the pilot passed
      out.
      Oz kids were so cool, while my parents wouldn't even let me drive our car.

      Sit tight, live right and keep the lamp in the window.

      Delete
  2. "The bouffant one took a trip back in time' ... a time in Ol Rup's office (*** “insolent plutocracy”), where the bouffant one was told in the vein of "Kipling asked him what he was really up to. Aitken [Murdoch] is supposed to have replied: "What I want is power. Kiss ’em one day and kick ’em the next”***, and... probably said;
    ... 'I'm not telling you what to write, but if I don't like what you write, you are dead to me'.

    Jihad Mullah Murdoch rules by omission of himself and the family shareholdings, providing the mantra, as Baldwin said and Jimbo did not (see Jimbo below) ***"What the proprietorship of these papers is aiming at is power, and power without responsibility—the prerogative of the harlot throughout the ages."***

    The zero power zero responsibility Bouffant one conjured.... "scare campaigns are proof in themselves that the death tax debate is getting away from Labor."

    Fantastic logic and herpetology reader incitement. Meat to rabid ideologues and fuel for Jihad Lie Campaigns used as fodder for lesser Newscorpse rags, and assorted political rwnj's aka Liebral, NatMyself and Phony's. Clive is his own jihad.

    Jimbo in a presser, singled out The Jihad & Scare Campaigner in Chief Flagshit Inquisitor,  who of course framed the question to make it seem as though Jimbo was actually introducing death taxes.

    Jimbo named the IDF jihad inquisitor's question thrower as a Flagshit Inquisitor, calling the question totally out of bounds aka a lie, and exposing THE "scare campaigns are proof in themselves that the death tax debate is getting away from Labor.".

    Yet, what Jimbo needed to say is...
    ""Baldwin said that the claims in the “Daily Mail” [newscorpse] were false:
          "The first part of that statement is a lie, and the second part of that statement by its implication is untrue. The paragraph itself could only have been written by a cad."

    Because, as DP correctly notes... "the budget jihad, the mother of lizard Oz jihads, was still in full swing.".

    What is this self created, boosted, and enforced imaginary death tax jihad called?
    Journalism? No...
    Lies.

    ***
    "Yet, Baldwin’s plaudits were not universal. He criticized the newspapers of two powerful press barons:
          "The papers conducted by Lord Rothermere and Lord Beaverbrook are not newspapers in the ordinary acceptance of the term. (Cheers.) They are engines of propaganda for the constantly changing policies, desires, personal wishes, personal likes and dislikes of two men. (Loud cheers.)
    ...
    "Baldwin admitted that he had used the stinging description “insolent plutocracy”. He then presented the recent harsh response to his words that was printed in the “Daily Mail”:
    [Jihad]      “These expressions come ill from Mr. Baldwin, since his father left him an immense fortune, which, so far as may be learned from his own speeches, has almost disappeared. It is difficult to see how the leader of a party who has lost his own fortune can hope to restore that of anyone else or of his country.”

    "Baldwin said that the claims in the “Daily Mail” were false:
          "The first part of that statement is a lie, and the second part of that statement by its implication is untrue. The paragraph itself could only have been written by a cad.
    ...
    ‘What the proprietorship of these papers is aiming at is power without responsibility—the prerogative of the harlot throughout the ages.’
    ...
    When Aitken acquired the Daily Express his political views seemed to Kipling to become more and more inconsistent, and one day Kipling asked him what he was really up to. Aitken is supposed to have replied: “What I want is power. Kiss ’em one day and kick ’em the next”; and so on. “I see”, said So, many years later, when Baldwin deemed it necessary to deal sharply with such lords of the press, he obtained leave of his cousin to borrow that telling phrase . . .
    ...
    https://quoteinvestigator.com/2021/07/06/prerogative/

    ReplyDelete
  3. Oh thank you Dorothy - a classic Groan as the curtain falls. The cult will have no trouble recognising the leads to which they must respond - ‘unintended consequences’ - may the Dame preserve us.

    ‘Insiders’ on Sunday introduced Alan Kohler, who gave a succinct account of the origins of the CGT discount. That is was advanced by three business types (who had ten board seats between them and who Winston hoped might become his buddies) as a way to invigorate the share market, with no mention of real estate. As Kohler told it, nine months after that ‘invigoration’ - the stock market crashed. Not even an unintended consequence - merely someone ignoring the adage that the stock market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.

    Which gives the cult chant leaders a segue into the Dame’s lofty ‘anyone who understands basic economics could have predicted this outcome’ - which follows a gratuitous comment on ‘new apartment have defects that must be remedied’. Leave that to the all wise, all powerful ‘market’?

    Oh, and if so much of the capital gain is in the land value - doesn’t that make a case to bring land tax to a higher proportion of the total government revenue?

    We assume the accountant or lawyer with whom the Dame shared a coffee, and from whom she scribbled down some bits about bucket companies and discretionary trusts, was warned that she would repeat the populist cant that those trades would be the only sure winners. Yet she adds a groan or three about ‘compliance costs’, which is cult code for fees going to government agencies rather than to the (much more deserving) accountants and lawyers who have been structuring the circumstances of the wealthy so that, in the words attributed to Dame Leona Helmsley ‘only the little people pay tax’.

    But that is enough, Classic Groan - little structure, tick off the phrases as they appear - as our Esteemed Hostess tells us - ‘her gracious legacy’

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Chadwick, I'll miss your comments.
      While we here are blinded by real estate, the please give me a ten bagger are shooting at the moon.

      Joe, you also may be interested in the crash canaries...
      "Then add to this something important, which is the chart that Katie Martin produced showing what has happened to government bond rates around the world since that stock market euphoria erupted on 30 March. This data is from the FT:
      ...
      https://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2026/05/16/this-could-be-as-bad-as-1929-and-maybe-very-much-worse/

      Delete
    2. Land tax ? Yes, fine as long as I don't have to pay any on the 1/6th of an acre that I "own".

      Delete

    3. Thanks Anon for the link, very disturbing.
      " Anyone with any sense can perceive that we are facing fuel and food shortages, and the risk of massive supply chain disruptions as a consequence of Trump's war against Iran, with a resulting risk of economic meltdown, substantial falls in corporate profits, the risk of corporate failure, and a banking crisis, both in the mainstream and shadow sectors.

      The likelihood that this might be as bad as 1929, with consequences at least as severe if governments do not take action to bail out many of those who will be impacted, is very high indeed.
      "

      Delete
  4. Jihads here, jihads there, news corpses everywhere... "the budget jihad, the mother of lizard Oz jihads, was still in full swing.".

    "Monopoly Round-Up: The Rage of the Billionaires Is Coming
    As students boo commencement speakers touting AI, and communities reject data centers, billionaires are getting nervous and angry. It's going to get worse.
    Matt Stoller
    May 18, 2026
    ...
    "This same derangement syndrome is recurring, only much broader. Over the past few weeks, New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani has been proposing a tax on vacation homes in New York City to balance the budget. As part of this campaign, Mamdani did a video outside Citadel billionaire Ken Griffin’s apartment, which Griffin had purchased in 2019 for $238 million.

    "Griffin went on a rampage, organizing the New York Governor, much of the New York City press, and even Donald Trump, to harass Mamdani. He claimed that Mamdani had put his life in danger, and threatened to move more of his operation to Miami as a result. “Mamdani is making it really clear: New York doesn’t welcome success,” he said.
    ...
    "But the super rich have an outsized voice.
    And that’s always how it goes. During Amazon’s search for a “second headquarters,” Jeff Bezos pulled out of New York City, miffed that there was any local opposition at all. The New York press and the wealthy in New York wailed in unison at the disastrous demands for any community or labor rules. Of course, Amazon continued to expand in the city anyway, and recently has been laying off people in its “second headquarters” in Northern Virginia. So the threats rarely matter, but most people don’t know that.
    ...
    https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/monopoly-round-up-the-rage-of-the

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Most people don't know anything much at all, Anony. All that 'education' utterly wasted.

      Delete
  5. Good luck DP and many thanks from Sandgroper land.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Meanwhile... Colbert gone soon too.

    Careful... Newscorpse... "one-line theory of imperialism. It is “spreading rapidly along modern channels of communication, turning those infected into dribbling zombies writing op-eds about how current events demonstrate the eternal relevance of Thucydides.”  

    "THE SEVEN THUCYDIDES LINES WHICH PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN AND PRESIDENT XI JINPING SHOULD DISCUSS THIS WEEK BUT CAN’T BECAUSE THEY ARE TOO SUPREMACIST, TOO SUSPECTING"
    By John Helmer, Moscow
    ...
    "“Of course Thucydides is a virus,” the British classicist Neville Morley has explained to warn modern readers, including Putin and Xi,  off the American professor’s one-line theory of imperialism. It is “spreading rapidly along modern channels of communication, turning those infected into dribbling zombies writing op-eds about how current events demonstrate the eternal relevance of Thucydides.”  
    ...
    https://johnhelmer.net/the-seven-thucydides-lines-which-president-vladimir-putin-and-president-xi-jinping-should-discuss-this-week-but-cant-because-they-are-too-supremacist-too-suspecting/

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi fellow Loon Ponders. Hope to see you all again when Dorothy returns. Keep well. Cheers!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Curmudgeon of High DudgeonMay 20, 2026, 7:33:00 PM

    Thank you for your efforts. Good Luck!

    ReplyDelete
  9. The Small Hours
    "No more my little song comes back;
    And now of nights I lay
    My head on down, to watch the black
    And wait the unfailing gray.
    Oh, sad are winter nights, and slow;
    And sad’s a song that’s dumb;
    And sad it is to lie and know
    Another dawn will come."
    ~ Dorothy Parker
    https://www.literaryladiesguide.com/classic-women-authors-poetry/enough-rope-poems-by-dorothy-parker-1926-full-text/

    ReplyDelete
  10. Hi all.
    I hope Dorothy, you will appreciate how much I value & appreciate Loonpond. I used to read all, but I needed a spu so often, when my bike rose, I'd just flick through the excellently curated cartoons. Bith your writing and cartoons now are a corpus. In my opinion, a valuable on for future de-hagiographer's.

    I have...
    "A Cartoon History of Australia.
    A social history of Australia in cartoons"
    3rd Ed July 1979
    First published as "Srop Laughing, This is Serious" and combined.
    By Jonathan King
    Savvas Publishing ISBN 072 694 7032

    Dorothy, Loonpond is also worthy of a book & site entitled;
    A Loonpond History of News in Australia 2014 - 2026.
    An irreverent hagiography of hagiography with cartoons.

    For serious Loonpond history buffs... with old browsers... like me... by date...
    https://wayback-classic.net/cgi-bin/history.cgi?q=https%3A%2F%2Floonpond.blogspot.com&utf8=✓

    Wayback Classic is also about as slow as me.
    [Do throw the archive a tenner]

    A sample, by the looks, the fourth page Dorothy ever published (yes DP?), and to prove heavenly bodies keep passing by, and nothing new under the sun...

    #1 SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 2011
    "The Pond's Sunday homily, wherein Pellism, Jensenism, piano limbs and complementarianism of the Adam and Eve kind go on an outing together ...


    WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2011
    "The commentariat, and beware creeping socialism or possibly the Under Toad ...
    ...
    "Could it be that Tony Abbott, after his recent displays of insufferable boorishness, attains power, turns out to be an extremely indifferent PM, much like Fraser, and then spends his latter years boring us to death with his Macbeth-like guilt for the way he seized the throne, scored the precioussss, and then didn't have a clue what to do with it?"
    ...
    "Naturally The Australian came out with the correct spin for such a dire situation, as Matt Chambers produced Sting in BHP's $23bn record.
    ...
    https://web.archive.org/web/20110828040733if_/http://loonpond.blogspot.com/

    And a punchy link or two from DP...
    Monday, August 22, 2011
    "Gerard Henderson, and a host of commentariat victims contend for funniest routine of the week
    ...
    dorothy parker Aug 24, 2011, 8:28:00 AM
    Interesting link Glen H, and I love the way some participants can afford to drop a lazy 10k on being there.

    http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/why-i-spent-10k-trucking-from-perth-to-parly-house/

    10k! Lordy lordy, can someone get me into the trucking business so I can piss money against the wall.

    And sorry EA, but my first question to the Parrot would be ... just what did happen in London ... 

    Meanwhile what a noisy insulting vexatious bird he's turned out to be

    http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/Revved-up-by-Alan-Jones-the-angry-mob-turned-on-me/
    ...
    https://web.archive.org/web/20190219032441/http://loonpond.blogspot.com/2011/08/gerard-henderson-and-host-of.html#comments

    Dorothy & Hepertology Students note: the above links to the Punch now resolve to... go on... one guess...
    Newscorpse! Today's tosh. Which is why DP, the future will need a hard copy of the Valuable Venerable Loonpond to correct the future. More valuable than rare earths.

    Over to the historians. Oh, and the cartoons are great.

    I'd like a coffee table book of toons with assorted DP commentary. I'd pay up to $80 for such a tome, signed by you DP, and with a limited print run, antiquarian book sellers in the future will be able to uncover long scrubbed Rupert news abuse. Valuable to combat the disinformation and next generation ignorance. I offer my services to prepare such a work of art.

    Thanks for all the fish Dot.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Loonpond at the MCA!
    When?..."until the pond has made the shift and set up online shop in its new location.". I'd donate time and effort to assist in making a Loonpond exhibition. Commenters?

    Dorothy, your corpus imo is as valuable as;
    1) ...
    "A Cartoon History of Australia.
    A social history of Australia in cartoons"
    By Jonathan King
    Savvas Publishing ISBN 072 694 7032
    2) Not a Souvenir at the MCA highlights the commodification and misrepresentation of First Nations people – and invites the public to reckon with their complicity
    Dee Jefferson
    Wed 20 May 2026
    ...
    "but created by non-Indigenous people, often caricatured, exoticised or kitsch.

    "It wasn’t until in his teens that Albert started to understand the political connotations of these objects; in his 20s, he coined the term “Aboriginalia”
    https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/ng-interactive/2026/may/20/tony-albert-not-a-souvenir-mca-museum-contemporary-art-aboriginalia-into-art
    3) "Gucci slippers, rare first editions and a $250,000 watch: broadcaster John Laws’ estate to go under the hammer"
    https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/may/20/john-laws-estate-auction-luxury-watches-gucci-slippers
    4) "Why data sleuths are archiving the Jeffrey Epstein files: ‘We want to provide some clarity’
    Tommy Carstensen oversees one of the most sophisticated archives of Epstein materials, while Tristan Lee’s database allows searches of faces who appear in the files
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/19/jeffrey-epstein-files-data-sleuths-archives

    To coin a name, Loonpond is "... created by non-fairminded people, often caricatured, exoticised or kitsch"...
    Newsinalia
    Hagiographicnewsanalia
    (Suggestion welcome)

    Loonpond is worthy of study, a book, and show at the MCA.

    Please vote YES commenters.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Meanwhile, DP, here's something to check your reading history against:

    https://www.theguardian.com/books/ng-interactive/2026/may/12/the-100-best-novels-of-all-time

    100 My Ántonia
    99 The Go-Between
    98 The Road
    97 Catch-22
    96 Pedro Páramo
    95 The Return of the Native
    94 The Known World
    93 Invisible Cities
    92 Sentimental Education
    91 Life and Fate
    90 Jacob's Room
    89 The Left Hand of Darkness
    88 Ragtime
    87 The Line of Beauty
    86 The Turn of the Screw
    85 The Vegetarian
    84 The Talented Mr Ripley
    83 A Farewell to Arms
    82 The End of the Affair
    81 Buddenbrooks
    80 Rebecca
    79 Go Tell It on the Mountain
    78 A House for Mr Biswas
    77 The Rainbow
    76 Dracula
    75 The Bluest Eye
    74 Nervous Conditions
    73 Austerlitz
    72 Our Mutual Friend
    71 Kindred
    70 Jude the Obscure
    69 Crime and Punishment
    68 Blood Meridian
    67 The Man Without Qualities
    66 The Master and Margarita
    65 The Color Purple
    64 The Good Soldier
    63 White Teeth
    62 Half of a Yellow Sun
    61 The Rings of Saturn
    60 Howards End
    59 Never Let Me Go
    58 Disgrace
    57 The Sound and the Fury
    56 Mansfield Park
    55 The Waves
    54 Orlando
    53 The Transit of Venus
    52 The Golden Bowl
    51 My Brilliant Friend
    50 Wide Sargasso Sea
    49 A Fine Balance
    48 The Metamorphosis
    47 Vanity Fair
    46 The Leopard
    45 The Golden Notebook
    44 Giovanni's Room
    43 Housekeeping
    42 The Magic Mountain
    41 Heart of Darkness
    40 Song of Solomon
    39 Their Eyes Were Watching God
    38 The Age of Innocence
    37 Invisible Man
    36 The Handmaid's Tale
    35 Great Expectations
    34 Wolf Hall
    33 David Copperfield
    32 The God of Small Things
    31 The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
    30 Frankenstein
    29 Pale Fire
    28 The Brothers Karamazov
    27 The Trial
    26 Don Quixote
    25 Lolita
    24 The Remains of the Day
    23 Midnight's Children
    22 Things Fall Apart
    21 The Portrait of a Lady
    20 Wuthering Heights
    19 The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
    18 Persuasion
    17 One Hundred Years of Solitude
    16 Nineteen Eighty-Four
    15 Moby-Dick
    14 Mrs Dalloway
    13 Emma
    12 Bleak House
    11 The Great Gatsby
    10 Madame Bovary
    9 Pride and Prejudice
    8 Jane Eyre
    7 War and Peace
    6 Anna Karenina
    5 In Search of Lost Time
    4 To the Lighthouse
    3 Ulysses
    2 Beloved
    1 Middlemarch

    ReplyDelete
  13. This is just a test to see if the pond is still accepting comments...

    ReplyDelete
  14. Hoping you might see this when you come back on air, DP:

    Friday essay: How to Sell a Genocide exposes the double standards of reporting on Gaza
    https://theconversation.com/friday-essay-how-to-sell-a-genocide-exposes-the-double-standards-of-reporting-on-gaza-281223

    ReplyDelete
  15. Thanks DP. And Mrs DP too.
    Hope the crockery made it.

    The BBBB gun...
    BBBB English: “No, 100% it doesn’t, [actually look like communism] but it does actually, if you think about at one end of the spectrum,
    [Koolaid threshold reached]  laissez-faire, zero government involvement in the economy, [BBBB, this is called total anachy] and at the other end of the spectrum, a command economy that is entirely run by the government, [Oops! Totalitarianism] this budget does move the needle strongly towards the latter.”

    Had to post the Venerable Mead taking aim - (within the constraints of the Guardian's legal department) at Binary Bullshitter Ben English, editor of the lesser 'corpse tag - The Tele, saying...

    Venerable Meade;"English was so keen to talk about his Communist front page – which featured a hammer and sickle – he dropped his usual reticence to talk to non-News Corp media and appeared on 2SER’s Fourth Estate media show. When the host, Tina Quinn, asked him to explain his understanding of communism and how it related to the budget, he said:

    Binary Bullshitter Ben English;“It’s pretty basic and it’s a philosophical and ideological basis. And that is a redistribution of capital from asset owners to workers, to the proletariat, which is very faithful to the article of Karl Marx. And that’s what we’re looking at here.”

    "But when challenged about what elements of the budget screamed communism, English appeared to backtrack."

    Binary Bullshitter Ben English bludgeoning

    Weekly Beast
    "Are we heading for communism after the budget? The Tele’s editor thinks the needle is moving
    Amanda Meade

    "Ben English muses on the redistribution of capital from asset owners ‘to the proletariat’ following post-budget hammer-and-sickle front page. Plus: Politico arrives … somewhere
    Fri 5 Jun 2026
    https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/jun/05/federal-budget-response-communism-ben-english-telegraph-editor

    And, BBBB is bringing zombies back to life! Oh. Not really, just ghost's to haunt us... "brings The Daily Telegraph’s stories and journalists to life through video,”

    BBBB re; "DTTV is a vertical video experience that brings The Daily Telegraph’s stories and journalists to life through video,” English added.
    “It will enhance our content, adding a dynamic dimension to stories that would otherwise remain as text and static images.
    “Our style is straightforward, informative and conversational. It’s our journalists telling it like it is, like only they can. That’s our point of difference.”
    From...
    "Daily Tele launches DTTV: ‘This is the future of news’
    by Tess Connery
    Posted on 4 June 2024
    https://www.mediaweek.com.au/daily-tele-launches-dttv-this-is-the-future-of-news/

    Karma to Koolaid, to brain eaten zombies, and now to ghosts. Only at newscorpse.

    ReplyDelete

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