This day the Australian Daily Zionist News was in full flight ...
As a coda, Col was on hand on the extreme far right to follow the Benji line ...
Iran has long demonstrated it will never concede its uranium enrichment program regardless of military or economic pressure.
By Colin Rubenstein
Contributor
Colin Rubenstein is executive director of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council.
Ironically a little further down the page came ...
Iran to let nuclear inspectors in, allowed to sell oil in dollars
JD Vance says IAEA inspectors may be back in Iran from as early as this week, the US clears the way for Tehran to sell oil in dollars, including to American buyers | FOLLOW LIVE
Staff writers and agencies.
Who knows what might happen with a couch lover in charge?
One thing seems likely ... Benji misplayed his hand.
None of this had any interest for the pond, except for noting Geoff chambering another round with the need to "stop the Left’s false equivocation between antisemitism and Islamophobia".
Really? In recent times, for an atheist observing from the outside who prefers to be called conservative rather than leftist, they seem more than a fair match.
Perhaps Geoff has forgotten that back in 2019 it was an Australian who conducted a massacre in a Christchurch mosque with a body count of 51 dead, 89 injured, 40 by gunfire, a total which shades the Bondi massacre, not that this is a competition to be celebrated.
And when you consider the current ethnic cleansing being conducted by the current government of Israel, it seems like a dedicated attempt to match the behaviour of the mad mullahs towards their own people in Iran, not that this is a competition to be celebrated.
But more than enough already, because the pond watched live the teary farewell of Sir Keir, and knew that the reptiles would pay some attention.
It's truly remarkable to be able to chew through so many PMs in so few years, and then to have a blow in from the north take on the job with no preliminaries, and no desire to call an election to confirm his legitimacy, despite having abused Rishi Sunak for his failure on that score.
The reptiles called on the malignant Magnay to have several says ...
Starmer resigns as British PM, Burnham set to run unopposed
Sir Keir will remain in the job until a new Labour leader is chosen, with Wes Streeting withdrawing from the contest and backing hot favourite Andy Burnham.
By Jacquelin Magnay
Keir Starmer will be remembered as one of the worst British prime ministers in recent history but his resignation will usher in a period of tumult.
By Jacquelin Magnay
Europe Correspondent
That was all very well, and Magnay conformed to the reptile agenda, but the pond was of course compelled by the bromancer's take, a man with an almost infinite, Boris-like capacity for getting it wrong.
The caption for a shameless liar who shamelessly misled the country, and how satisfying he should set the tone for this bromancer outing: Boris Johnson wears boxing gloves emblazoned with “Get Brexit Done”. Picture: Frank Augstein / AFP
The bromancer spent a bigly four minutes peddling assorted big lies, dancing on sundry graves by peddling hogwash about the benefits of Brexit.
Say what you will, when the bromancer is wildly in error, he sticks to his gun with the rigid stupidity that would have made him a dead cert as an advisor to Boris, or perhaps these days, Nige ...
Of course, there’s a paradox. Britain has been very badly governed for the past 10 years, as Keir Starmer’s defenestration richly demonstrates. As I wrote last weekend, it’s appallingly governed now. But Brexit means when British politics finally gets around to tackling its problems, its institutions have the national freedom to do so effectively.
One of the key problems is that the bromancer routinely talks to the wrong people, and he seems to be doing that in spades in his current trip to Old Blighty.
The Moggster, long an irrelevance, will always take the time to talk to any passing colonial dropkick willing to listen, and so it came to pass with the bromancer's return to his spiritual home...
But he says of Johnson: “In Brexit, he delivered the most important constitutional reform in Britain in centuries. It was fundamentally important. It restored democratic control to parliament.”
All nonsense, drivel as pure as a heated English summer of course, and as a distraction, the reptiles slipped in a snap: Keir Starmer speaks to members of the media on the sidelines of the G7 summit. Picture: Isabel Infantes / Getty Images
The bromancer carried on like a pork chop just as the British government is trying to undo the Brexit damage and sidle up to the EU - what with mad King Donald on the loose - see the Beeb's A decade on from Brexit, the new PM has big calls to make on Europe
Europe might be a bit of a mess, but there isn't any joy across the Atlantic, as Keir discovered to his cost, but inevitably the bromancer wasn't having any of it ...
No such thing happened. All the claimed economic costs of Brexit are similarly fatuous.
Let’s subject the claims to the most elementary empirical test. How have comparable European economies such as France and Germany gone in the past 10 years? They had what the eurocrats would regard as the incomparable benefits of continued EU membership while Britain did not.
In fact, over the past 10 years, the French and German economies have fared worse than the British economy. Starmer, on most measures, is the most unpopular man to have been UK prime minister. Yet he was less unpopular than Chancellor Friedrich Merz in Germany and President Emmanuel Macron in France.
The pond realises that the bromancer has no head for figures, and so decided a little trolling wouldn't hurt, and so reverted to the Graudian's celebration of the tenth anniversary of the folly:
Forecasters were wrong about an immediate recession but right that we would be worse off outside the EU
Richard Partington Senior economics correspondent
There are none so deaf as those determined not to hear.
Strangely, looking at that graph was more appealing than looking at the interrupting snap of Jacob Rees-Mogg...
Rather than delve into the data, the bromancer preferred rhetoric of the bro kind:
Could the cause of success and failure over the past decade actually reside instead in the content of government policy?
Brexit didn’t guarantee good government, it provided the opportunity for good government. Some of that has come about for Britain, such as free trade agreements with the US, India and Australia. Freedom to manoeuvre on tariffs. A more flexible policy on artificial intelligence than the eurosclerotic behemoth could ever deliver.
But on the biggest things, of course, the British government is not delivering.
Dear sweet long absent lord of delusion, the free trade agreement with the US? The pond wants whatever the bromancer is on ...and hopes he doesn't do a search for the benefits, or it might depress him...
As for India and Australia, what a hoot. Freedom to manoeuvre with King Donald on tariffs? Good luck with that. And a chance to lie down and be screwed by AI? Wonders will never cease.
The reptiles next interrupted with a snap of a man who, having helped introduce the ruinous Brexit, is now making plans to ruin little England some more...Nigel Farage celebrates and poses for photographers at Brexit
The bromancer went on a big rhetorical jag, what with welfare wastrels and Covid, as if Boris didn't have anything to do with any of that ...
Bizarrely, Burnham attributes this to 40 years of, allegedly, Thatcherism, neoliberalism, austerity, privatisation and deregulation. Frankly, that analysis is hallucinogenic.
More than half of all British households now receive more in welfare than they pay in tax. The welfare system is totally out of control. Far from being neoliberal, the budget is in vast, chronic deficit. In May, the government borrowed more than £23bn ($43.4bn), more than half of which was to service the interest on existing debt.
Under Covid lockdowns, the country squandered hundreds of billions of pounds. No one in politics opposed this and no one was prepared to tell the British people that at some stage it would all have to be paid back.
The reptiles decided to put up snaps of the two likely contenders, though really Kemi's party is working hard to be completely irrelevant ...Andy Burnham; Kemi Badenoch
The bromancer kept on resorting to the usual suspects ... uppity furriners, Covid and welfare wastrels, thereby suggesting a limited palate, but when you have a litany, best stick with it...
The long and badly managed fallout of Covid, massive government expenditure, debt and transfer payments, net-zero policies producing the most expensive energy in the world – these are infinitely more the causes of Britain’s travails than the fictional “neoliberalism”, much less “austerity”, of Burnham’s imagination.
One aspect of the three by-elections was fascinating – the degree of tactical voting.
In Britain’s first-past-the-post system, if you vote for a candidate who doesn’t come first or second your vote is wasted. Under Australia’s preferential voting system you get a second chance.
British voters are becoming adept at tactical voting. A habitual Liberal-Democrat voter might vote Labour to defeat the Conservative, a Conservative voter might vote Reform to defeat Labour. The demonisation of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK may well lead to tactical voting to keep it out in many electorates. (That may apply to One Nation in Australia.)
Overall it makes the next British election very hard to pick. More than ever before it will have the character of 650 by-elections.
Neo-liberalism is a ludicrously fictitious bogeyman. Brexit means any government has the policy power to fix the nation’s problems.
Will it have the courage, competence and grip to do so? That’s the question, just as it should be. The whole world can thank Brexit for that happy outcome.
Greg Sheridan is The Australian’s foreign editor.
Thank Brexit, thank that fraud Boris? Only in the bromancer's alternative bizarro world ...
Why was the pond reminded of the current state of play down under?
Reform, One Nation, King Donald, peas in a bromancer pod.
On the deregulation front, the departure of the man responsible for inspiring the 2008 financial disaster was well down the page...and then it had to be borrowed from the WSJ ...
Former US Fed chairman Alan Greenspan dies at 100
Alan Greenspan, a rock-star Fed chairman whose legacy was dimmed by the financial crisis, dies at age 100
The ‘maestro’ rivalled the US president for global influence. But his faith in financial markets’ ability to police themselves became an Achilles’ heel.
By Nick Timiraos
Bizarrely Dame Slap was also on the regulatory case. It's a few days old, but better noted than never ...
A disastrous 30-year-old law shielded accounting firms from liability, creating the toxic moral hazard behind the KPMG scandal.
By Janet Albrechtsen
Relax, it's all about being woke, what with unreconstructed greed passing as woke these days in the hive mind, but what better way could be found to introduce Dame Groan's regular Tuesday rant about us all being rooned by Xmas?
The header: Treasury was once the premier agency for economic counsel. Not any longer; Was Jim Chalmers the principal villain or was it the faulty advice provided by inexperienced, bungling Treasury officials?
There was no caption for the snap, but that's because everyone in the hive mind knows who these downcast/grim looking villains are ...
Dame Groan was in feisty form, ready for a full four minutes of abuse, and didn't get past the first sentence before she rolled out "fiasco":
Treasury would be fully aware that Labor doesn’t like small businesses, which are incapable of being unionised. There are no downsides to recommending measures that harm them, if only inadvertently. Labor also distrusts most small business owners. Are they just doing what they’re doing to rip off the tax system? Do they treat their workers in the same way as big business?
So, when Treasury officials recommended that the capital gains tax changes be broadened beyond housing to include all capital gains, including those made by small business owners, the Treasurer would have seen this as an attractive option. The addition to revenue would be very welcome and he could crow about reducing tax for working Australians – OK, by only $250 in over a year’s time.
Treasury’s effective dismissal of the additional compliance costs of the indexation method – 14 steps are required to calculate liabilities – is one thing. But its support for what will become one of the highest CGT rates in the world is another thing altogether.
How to sooth the hive mind after rolling out those disasters? Show a snap of Petey boy: Peter Costello arrives at the 30th Anniversary of the Howard Government. Picture: The Australian / Nadir Kinani
Dame Groan was ropeable at sundry students who'd failed to absorb her teaching:
One important issue that a genuine economist would have picked up is the suitability of the consumer price index as the factor to be used for indexation. In fact, it is completely unsuitable, with a much more defensible index being the long-term government bond rate. It was used in Wayne Swan’s ill-fated mining tax calculation, the one aspect of that tax that the government of the day got right.
What a CGT should be trying to capture is the surplus above the risk-adjusted return given the nature of small business activity. The preferred route at this stage would be to stick with the CGT discount method, both because of its incredibly low compliance costs and the fact it is widely understood. Its bias towards high-growth assets is a good thing; it’s not a defect.
Let’s not forget that the discount method was introduced after thorough investigation by the 1999 business tax review commissioned by treasurer Peter Costello and led by John Ralph, culminating in a report of several hundred pages. Those were the days. Labor fully supported the change.
Now if the 50 per cent discount was deemed to be too high, there was always the option of reducing it, say to 40 per cent or 35 per cent. In fact, this is one of the proposals that had been widely floated by the busy advocates of tax reform, including MP Allegra Spender.
Oh dear, not Allegra, that'll send Dame Groan right off: Allegra Spender. Picture: Sam Ruttyn
It might be worse ...
Thank the long absent lord, Dame Groan never worries about the big picture.
Instead she was so exasperated she had to resort to dot points:
But check out the ludicrous list to qualify.
- The company must be genuinely focused on developing one or more new or significantly improved innovations for commercialisation.
- The business relating to that innovation must have a high growth potential.
- The company must demonstrate that it has the potential to be able to successfully scale up that business.
- The company must demonstrate that it has the potential to be able to address a broader than local market, including global markets, through that business.
- The company must demonstrate that it has the potential to be able to have competitive advantages for that business.
Shocking stuff and Dame Groan was in despair...
Chalmers also would be wise just to drop the changes to the taxation of trusts, having been forced to back away from his bizarre attack on discretionary testamentary trusts. It is estimated that about 400,000 small businesses are set up as trusts and the imposition of a minimum 30 per cent tax will force many of them to the wall. This is made worse by the double taxing of bucket companies that often are set up by businesses in association with discretionary trusts.
As for the naive advice offered up in the budget papers that small businesses currently set up as trusts should simply restructure as companies, the cost of doing so is basically overlooked. The payment of stamp duty to state governments alone will make this route impossible for many small businesses.
Just to compound Dame Groan's grief, the reptiles insisted on a snap of the Cold Chisel man, Labor Party President Wayne Swan
Dammit, enough of that working class nonsense, let's hear it for those rich enough to be able to construct a trust to hide their wealth:
There’s no obvious solution to making charities tax-exempt from trust distributions, although a way out may have been found in respect of realised capital gains.
One of the most depressing aspects of the past several weeks has been the obvious decline in the professional capacity of the Treasury to offer well-informed and economically sensible advice.
Once upon a time, Treasury was the premier agency for excellent economic counsel; not any longer. Mind you, if you head to Treasury’s website, you will learn about the Inclusion and Diversity Strategy 2023-2028, “where difference is celebrated and used to activate innovative ideas, policies and practices”.
It doesn’t extend to ensuring that Treasury officials are fully prepared to answer questions from senators. But evidently within Treasury, “diversity, wellbeing and integrity are embedded in a supportive culture that enables people to thrive”.
It’s just a pity there is not more focus on having the most capable and experienced people providing the highest quality advice to the benefit of all Australians.
Oh dear, the pond knows who that is, and what a pity Dame Groan didn't make it clearer:
It’s just a pity there is not more focus on having the most capable and experienced people, like me, the most fair and experienced groaner in the land, providing the highest quality advice to the benefit of all Australians.
Fixed it.
The pond trusts that the usual suspects enjoyed this outing ... as David Rowe turned up to help celebrate the latest twist in the little England saga ...
Is there no end to entertaining circuses?
The Bromancer re Brexit: "It's complete eyewash".
ReplyDeleteEyewash ? What refuge of rightwing ignorance does that come from ? And whatever happened to 'hogwash' ?
Trust the Bromancer to decry “faux experts”, and then immediately launch into his usual role as a faux expert. A decade on from the disaster that was the Brexit vote and he’s still awestruck by the liars, shonks and grifters who were its advocates. What a rube, what an easy mark he is, still so easily dazzled and bamboozled after all this time.
ReplyDeleteSo tell us, Bro, what does Britain have to offer these days? Sure, it’s a nice historical theme park, though some of the main attractions - particularly the Royals - are looking a bit moth-eaten and run down. Other than that ? There’s no real industry to speak of; it had little left in the way of natural resources; it can’t even feed itself, and it’s agricultural sector, once so reliant on migrant labour, has been particularly hard hit. Exports and imports are a tangle of regulations and slow processes. Its role as a central hub for Europe-wide management of the financial and business sectors has gone. The consequent lack of opportunities for its best and.brightest reduces their motivation to stay, and the aging population increasingly needs the support provided by the immigration they decry. The class consciousness, insularity, north-south divide, England vs the rest of the UK tensions, are all as strong as ever. Yet those same charlatans who pushed Brexit, and willingly gullible blow-ins like the Bro, continue to claim that success is looming, the long-gone Empire will somehow return, and Britannia will once again rule - if only it wasn’t for these immigrants, legal and otherwise, particularly those brown and Muslim ones. It’d be laughable if it wasn’t so pathetic, and fanbois like the Bro are the most pathetic of all.
Btw, the Bro looked absolutely dreadful in his most recent photo. The poor mug is clearly still not in the best of health - which makes his continued use of the hair dye particularly ludicrous.
Sorry Anony, but I don't reckon the Bromancer qualifies as any kind of "expert", not even the faux kind.
DeleteAnd yes, the (mis)united Kingdom is a blinkin' wreck.
Further reading at The Economist ...
ReplyDeleteTen years on, how the Brexit vote changed Britain
In many small ways, and mostly for the worse
https://archive.md/4ETGY
At 12.15am on June 24th 2016, Sunderland became the poster child for Brexit. The port on England’s north-eastern coast was the first city to declare that it had voted to leave the European Union. Over 60% of Sunderland’s inhabitants wanted out, despite veiled warnings from Nissan that Brexit might cause it to close its car factory (a major local employer). As a working-class area whose shipbuilding glory days were long gone, the port came to embody left-behind Britain’s desire to give global elites a bloody nose.
Economists try to quantify the damage from Brexit. Some say GDP per person is 8% lower than it could have been; others say 2.5%. Growth in most other G7 rich economies has been faster (see chart 1). In Sunderland Remain’s worst economic fears did not come to pass (the Nissan factory limps on) but leaving has quickened the decline of British manufacturing (the plant now produces 46% fewer cars). Sunderland has not become a deregulated Singapore-on-the-Wear.
Brexit has brought myriad day-to-day annoyances. Dominic Gardner, who runs a road-repair business in Sunderland, finds it harder to import parts. The paperwork is “phenomenally frustrating”. His colleague Mike complains about long passport queues when on holiday. (Mike’s Polish neighbour is “laughing” because he “goes straight through security”.) From exporting cheese to taking your dog abroad, life in Brexit Britain is simply harder.
This is clearest in manufacturing. Much like the rest of Europe, Britain’s industrial base was shrinking before 2016, squeezed by Chinese competition and high energy costs. But since then Britain’s share of global goods exports has fallen particularly quickly, dropping from 2.6% to 2.1% in 2025. That is a 17% decrease (over the same period, the EU’s share fell by only 6%). Trade with the continent is mostly tariff-free under the Brexit deal, but is buried in rules and paperwork, from customs declarations to rules-of-origin requirements. For a country that sent 48% of goods exports to the EU in 2016, that is a big new burden...
And so on ... follow link for charts and much more.
What was that ancient saying: "How are the mighty fallen". Except that the UK hasn't been in any way "mighty" for quite a while now. But at least it's providing an excellent example for the USA under the reign of the mighty Trump. And he's working just as hard as he can (which isn't very much) to follow it.
DeleteThe discussion on 'The Bulwark' about Trump's wonderful work on the Reflection Pool did bring to mind one of the common quotes from Henry L Mencken, who lived into year 1956, which was 10 years into Donald's own life, - 'For every complex problem there is at least one answer that is clear, simple, and wrong.'. Seems Donald did not absorb anything from the writings of Mencken., because that piece of HLM's wisdom has snagged DJT's shoelaces for much of his life.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteGiven the Bro's rantings, it's maybe a good time to mention Richard Murphy's article What would happen if the UK tried to, or did, repay its national debt?.