Wednesday, April 01, 2026

In which the Iranian folly troubles the bromancer, Baker of the WSJ, and Joe, lesser member of the Kelly gang, in different ways ...

 

Without wanting to sound like Our Henry, the pond came across this William Hazlitt quote while reading Andrew O'Hagan's Stay Classy in the LRB.(*intermittent archive link, very intermittent this day)

O'Hagan was giving a right royal bollocking to randy Andy, the man formerly known as Prince, and wretched Fergie, but given that we're living in the time of King Donald and his court of corrupt minions, it seems equally applicable...

...The goods of fortune, the baits of power, the indulgences of vanity, may be accumulated without end, and the taste for them increases as it is gratified: the love of virtue, the pursuit of truth, grow stale and dull in the dissipation of a court. Virtue is thought cribbed and morose, knowledge pedantic, while every sense is pampered, and every folly tolerated. Everything tends naturally to personal aggrandisement and unrestrained self-will. It is easier for monarchs as well as other men "to tread the primrose path of dalliance" than "to scale the steep and thorny road to haven" The vices, when they have leave from power and authority, go greater lengths than the virtues; example justifies almost every excess, and "nice customs curtesy to great kings." 

It's all the happier timing with the news that the two kings will still be meeting up to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the sundering of the two kingdoms ...

...The air of a court is not assuredly that which is most favourable to the practice of sefl-denial and strict morality. We increase the temptations of wealth, of power, ands pleasure a thousand-fold, while we can give no additional force to the antagonist principles of reason, disinterested integrity and goodness of heart. It is to be wondered that courts and palaces have produced so many monsters of avarice, cruelty, and lust? The adept in voluptuousness is not likely to be a proportionable proficient in humanity. To feed on plate or be clothed in purple, is not to feel for the hungry and the naked. He who has the greatest power put into his hands, will only become more impatient of any restraint in the use of it. To have the welfare and the lives of millions placed at our disposal, is a sort of warrant, a challenge to squander them without mercy. An arbitrary monarch set over the head so his fellows does not identify himself with them, or learn to comprehend their rights or sympathize with their interests, but looks down upon them as of a different species from himself, as insect crawling on the face of the earth, that he may trample on at his pleasure, or if he spares them, it is an act of royal grace; -- he is besotted with power. Blinded with prerogative, an alien to his nature, a traitor to his trust, and instead of being the organ of public feeling and public opinion, is an excrescence and an anomaly in the state, a bloated mass of morbid humours and proud flesh! 

And so on ... a time of writing it could be found in modern font here (the internet archive version is a little harder on modern eyes but reeks of authenticity).

How did the United States start off so grandly and end up a corrupt kingdom (or a banana republic, pretty much the same thing).

There's a clue in those two lines...

Virtue is thought cribbed and morose, knowledge pedantic, while every sense is pampered, and every folly tolerated. Everything tends naturally to personal aggrandisement and unrestrained self-will.

Welcome to the world of the Emeritus Chairman, and the land of the lizard Oz, feeding climate science denialism to the hive mind (knowledge pedantic), and tolerating every form of folly, dressed up as swill.

First up the pond must abandon the sort of sick and sorry revelations coming together courtesy of the tabloid combo of the Daily Beast......

ICE Barbie’s Husband Humiliates Her With Sick ‘Barbie Models’ Fetish
BARBIE WORLD
The Noems’ marriage is yet again under the spotlight after bombshell revelations. (sorry, the intermittent archive is playing up)

And the UK's Daily Terror..

Secret double life of Kristi Noem's crossdressing husband Bryon: The pouting 'busty bimbo' photos and trove of explicit messages

It's not that the pond doesn't appreciate any attempt to out-nero Nero, or crush Caligula with a clever modern variant - let anyone without a kink throw the first Barbie doll - it's just that the pond is dedicated to the hive mind of the lizard Oz, and the bromancer was out yet again today, attempting to grapple with King Donald's folly ...

If you didn't blink, you'd find him just below a reptile panic, as they dragged out Mike Baird, dusted off the mothballs and the dead moths and produced a set of headlines for the ages ...




The pond was tremendously reassured to discover that the reptiles still considered Baird a thing, but out of all that hysteria, the pond, as it always does, stuck with the bromancer ...



The header: Donald Trump’s chaotic Iran war gamble risks global energy crisis and US credibility; Trump’s contradictory Iran war statements have created global energy chaos, with the US President threatening to bomb civilian infrastructure while his own officials predict victory in weeks.

The caption for the meaningless snap: Commercial vessels off the coast of Dubai. Picture: AFP

At last it seems that the bromancer's loyalty to King Donald and his minions might be wearing a tad thing.

There might now be too many straws impacting this camel's back:

The global energy crisis arising from the Iran war has barely begun. It will get much worse before it gets any better. And it could well get catastrophically worse. Even if Donald Trump and whoever is now running Iran conclude a deal tomorrow, it will take months to re-establish anything like energy normality.
But an increasingly serious problem is Trump’s endless self-contradictory statements, declarations, deadlines, ultimatums and alternating suggestions he is finished with it all and will leave Iran in a minute, or that he plans to bomb Iranian society into terrible permanent humanitarian crisis and may well launch a partial ground invasion as well.
Trump remains an extreme risk taker and gambler. If, in alliance with Israel, he finally succeeds in dislodging the mullahs and destroying their nuclear program forever – and that is by no means impossible – then history may judge this a highly successful intervention.
But the chance that it ends in chaos, continued oil disruption, or even a wounded and in many ways diminished Iran with unprecedented control over the Strait of Hormuz and determined to rebuild for revenge, is equally possible.
No one can tell what Trump thinks will be an acceptable outcome because he contradicts himself several times a day.

Inevitably there came a snap of the king, US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One. Picture: AP




As usual, the pond felt the need to match it with a 'toon ...




The bromancer appeared to be trying to position himself as a voice in the wilderness, a voice outside the coterie of the King's loyalists ...

Trump loyalists paint this as a shrewd misdirection of the enemy, a crafty negotiating technique. But it has enormous costs. There are no allies beyond Israel actively working with the US in this military campaign. This is for three reasons. Trump doesn’t consult allies. He frequently insults them. And he hasn’t laid out any consistent military or strategic plan beyond the relentless bombing of Iran.
Trump’s administration can’t speak with consistency because Trump himself doesn’t speak with any consistency. At no point has Trump laid out to the American people a coherent rationale for what he’s doing. His approval ratings are at their lowest ever this term, and only a minority of Americans support the war at all. strong majority opposes it, while there is a huge consensus against using US ground troops.
You could write a thousand books tracing Trump’s contradictions on Iran. Consider just a couple of the most extreme. Trump posted on Truth Social that if he didn’t get a deal from the Iranians soon, which included fully opening the Strait of Hormuz as well as his other requirements of Iran abandoning uranium enrichment and limiting its missiles, the US would attack and demolish “all of their (Iran’s) Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells, and Kharg Island (and possibly all desalinisation plants)”.
This is one of the most extraordinary statements ever made by an American president. To attack desalination plants as policy is a direct attack on life-giving, non-military, civilian infrastructure, designed to cause the death of ­civilians through the removal of drinking water. Washington has always rightly insisted it never intentionally attacks civilians. No one else in Trump’s administration talks like this.
But how does this square with other Trump administration statements this week? Secretary of State Marco Rubio says the war will be finished in “weeks not months”. Other White House spokespeople say the war is still on its original six- to eight-week timeline, which means a couple more weeks at the most.
Yet Trump has moved thousands of US marines and ground troops into the area. If the US took Kharg island, as Trump this week threatened, that would ensure a campaign of many more weeks. You can take Kharg Island, or you can leave in two weeks, you can’t do both.
Trump says he’s negotiating with new, more reasonable Iranians; Rubio says it’s opaque how decisions are made in Iran just now.

The exasperation seemed to be building, so the reptiles hastily flung in an AV distraction, Shahria Ahi, the former adviser to Reza Pahlavi, is one of the attendees at the Iran Freedom Congress, which aims to address a major problem for Iran that has now become a problem for the world.

The bromancer turned to the WSJ for guidance, though as that's a part of the empire that urged on King Donald to his Iranian folly, it might not help ...

The Wall Street Journal reports rump telling his closest aides he might declare victory and finish all bombing even without any deal on opening the Strait of Hormuz. The idea would be to put Iran under diplomatic pressure to allow free passage through the strait, or get Europe to take the lead.
More likely, Iran would favour ships from strategically friendly nations and charge a big tariff for others. It would terrify and blackmail the Gulf states.
That sort of exit not only flatly contradicts Trump’s Truth Social post, it could leave the Middle East, and global energy markets, in worse shape than when Trump went in. Whatever his war aims were, they surely didn’t include total Iranian control of the Strait of Hormuz and permanent disruption to the global oil, gas and fertiliser markets, all of which are vital for economies, and indeed human life, around the world.
The credibility and reliability of the words of the American president have, since at least World War II, been a vital stabilising factor in global geo-strategic balances. It is not to suffer from Trump Derangement Syndrome to observe that in needlessly ­sacrificing that, Trump is throwing away a precious asset for no benefit.
Nor is it sensible or sustainable for those around the world who strongly want the US and Israel to prevail in Iran to feel that they cannot criticise Trump. For the more politicians avoid reality, the more they too lose credibility.

Sorry, bromancer, this late turning and wheeling in the sky came far too late. You've never had any credibility, so worry not about any loss of it ...

In despair, the bromancer turned to berating locals, indirectly handing a sideswipe to the beefy performative boofhead ...

Both sides of Australian politics support the US action in Iran in principle. Neither side has made any significant contribution to the one overriding Australian responsibility – which is for Australia to be much more energy and fuel self-reliant, resilient and prepared.
Opposition Leader Angus Taylor said Australia should actively support US-led efforts to keep the Strait of Hormuz. However, he sensibly told The Australian: “The lack of investment in our naval fleet makes it much harder to offer any naval support.”
Andrew Hastie rightly observed on the ABC’s Insiders program that our ships can’t go to the Gulf because they don’t have the necessary self-protection capabilities. He’s the only senior politician I’ve heard make that fundamental point. Otherwise, all talk about supporting or not ­supporting activities in the Gulf is just performative blather, the kind of fantasy dialogue and avoidance of plain speaking which has helped destroy the credibility of mainstream politics.
There’s an unpredicted casualty of the Iran war for you.

Sheesh, grim days...



Over on the extreme far right, things got even grimmer, as Dame Slap carried on in a way that only someone on Planet Janet, situated above the Faraway Tree can do ...

Lady Justice conned again by ‘believe all women’ fad
In the ACT, the zealots are perfectly capable of taking not only an innocent defendant’s liberty, dignity and reputation, but his money too, leaving an innocent man shattered and on the edge of suicide.
Janet Albrechtsen
Columnist

Given the very intermittent behaviour of the archive - at time of writing it's consistently offering 504 Gateway Time-outs (a server side issue) - the pond thought it might just offer up the URL and anyone wanting to try later might have better luck.

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary%2Flady-justice-conned-again-by-believe-all-women-fad%2Fnews-story%2F530242d75b80e872076efe8450b90123?amp

Anyway, there was just one hoot line, which came right at the end.

When will the ideologues ever be satiated?

On her best days, Dame Slap can still produce tremendous one liners. Barking mad, but in her ideological battiness, occasional good fund.

Ditto for aforementioned Mike Baird ...

Australia’s debt is now shaped by our states
As we move towards the most important budget in decades, there must be an understanding that we’re running out of easy options.
By Mike Baird
Contributor

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary%2Faustralias-debt-is-now-shaped-by-our-states%2Fnews-story%2F757845d67cfa5d0f2365dc6da8d2eb34?amp

Couldn't run a state, why do you expect him to write a  decent column?

And finally there was Nick, trying to redeem himself by appearing centrist:

Trump bump 2.0: voters look for the adult in the room
Trump’s global chaos has created an unexpected political lifeline for moderate leaders who stand up to him, with voters increasingly choosing stability over populist insurgency.
By Nick Dyrenfurth
Contributor

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary%2Fthe-trump-bump-20-is-here-and-it-is-not-what-populists-were-expecting%2Fnews-story%2F32ffbe002942e4c666d576943cada367?amp

Nah, too late Nick ... Curtin's still rolling in his grave.

Meanwhile, on the domestic front, the poor old bouffant one was sounding just as gloomy, just as grim ... 

Unfortunately the intermittent archive was being more intermittent than usual - this might work or it might not - but luckily the gist of the whine could be summed up in just a couple of gobbets.




The pond trimmed out an unnecessary AV distraction, and flung in a distracting 'toon to reassure the bouffant one ...




And then with a final short gobbet, it was done...



Excellent stuff ... is it time yet to bring the lettuce out of retirement and put up against prime Angus, already showing signs of what a beefy beefhead out in the Goulburn sun for too long starts to smell like?



At this point, the pond should note that the reptiles have studiously avoided that further turning of a fundamentalist theocracy into a fascist state ...



That came from the UK Terror of all places ...and there was some attempt at push back from full fascism ...

Call for law to be annulled
The bill appears to conflict with Israel’s Basic Laws, which prohibit arbitrary discrimination.
Shortly after it was passed, a leading human rights group announced that it had filed a petition with the Supreme Court demanding the legislation’s annulment.
“The law creates two parallel tracks, both designed to apply to Palestinians,” the Association for Civil Rights in Israel said in a statement.
“In military courts – which have jurisdiction over West Bank Palestinians – it establishes a near-mandatory death sentence,” the rights group said.
In civilian courts, the law’s stipulation that defendants must have acted “with the aim of negating the existence” of Israel “structurally excludes Jewish perpetrators”, the group added.
The association argued the law should be annulled on both jurisdictional and constitutional grounds.
During the debate in parliament, Ram Ben Barak, an opposition lawmaker and former deputy Mossad director, expressed outrage at the legislation.
“Do you understand what it means that there is one law for Arabs in Judea and Samaria, and a different law for the general public for which the State of Israel is responsible?” he asked fellow parliamentarians, using the Israeli name for the West Bank.
“It says that Hamas has defeated us. It has defeated us because we have lost all our values.”

Meanwhile, the push for a Greater Israel - to the river in Lebanon - and the ethnic cleansing continued apace, as Ukraine receded into the distance, and Gaza became an afterthought.

The reptiles at war theme continued  in the lizard Oz with a truly wretched offering, apparently designed to make the local bromancer look good.



The header: You may already have won the Iran war; Someone will soon make a case that Operation Epic Fury is the greatest triumph of arms since Agincourt – or the most disastrous defeat since the Romans were out-generalled by Hannibal.

The caption for a gratifyingly amorphous and stunningly meaningless snap, a rich introduction to the word salad to follow: Israel is continuing to batter Tehran with air strikes. Picture: AFP.

Baker, this day of the WSJ, and therefore one of the employees of the Emeritus Chairman who encouraged the Iran War folly, tried his hand at a bit of both siderism worthy of the NY Times.

He played the role of a doubting Thomas, though his underlying faith shone through every verbal tic and conjunction:

“I wish I was as cocksure of anything as Tom Macaulay is of everything.”
The plaintive observation, ascribed to the early Victorian British prime minister Viscount Melbourne about the acerbically self-confident historian Thomas Babington Macaulay, remains the motto of the thoughtfully sceptical man through the ages. Some of us still harbour doubt about the consequences of actions in a complex world. But we live in an era when instantaneous certitude about everything, an iron conviction in subjective judgment in the face of objective uncertainty, is the only guarantee of a hearing.
This is in part a corollary of the hyperpartisanship that characterises our modern political conversation. If you believe your side represents the only route to virtue and the other side the sure path to perdition, you’ve already taken a position of metaphysical certainty.
Such assuredness is acceptable from politicians. No one wants to hear a leader publicly fret over the range of possible outcomes of a course he’s chosen. But since the line between partisan engagement and independent observation has been blurred, similar devotion to the veracity of one’s own judgment is obligatory in the commentator class too.
So it comes as no surprise that less than a month into the latest war, almost everyone seems certain not only about the outcome of the war, but about what it means for decades to come.
Last week the Economist, a publication with a long and spotty track record of declarative certitude in the face of unpredictability, announced the war was an American failure. “A month of bombing has achieved nothing,” its cover thundered.
The academy is on the same page. Robert Pape, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, insists the war is a “longtime disaster” and the “most catastrophic failure of air power we have ever seen”.

Quick, bring in a chickenhawk and honour his service: Former US national security adviser John Bolton has suggested America focus on clearing the Strait of Hormuz as soon as possible which “may require military force”. “But I also think this is clear evidence we’re making progress on destabilising the regime,” he told Sky News Australia. This comes after Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed there were “some fractures going on there internally” in Iran’s leadership circle.




Baker of the WSJ remained resolute in his uncertainty, and his abject lack of confidence in anything:

No fog of war for these seers. They have scrutinised the battlefield from the vantage points of St James’s, SW1, and Hyde Park, 60637, and, like ancient augurs, have divined the outcome: It’s over for the US and Israel, with devastation rippling for years.
There is no less confidence on the other side. Torsten Slok, chief economist at private equity firm Apollo, dismissed the war’s alarming fallout in commodity, equity and bond markets, and said it would “ultimately result in 50 years of stability in oil markets, supply chains and geopolitics”.
Marc Thiessen, a speechwriter for president George W. Bush (whose administration isn’t especially noted for the accuracy of its observations) and now a columnist for The Washington Post, said on Fox News that Donald Trump’s war would go down as “possibly the greatest military campaign … since the American Revolution”. Move over, Dwight D. Eisenhower; step aside, Ulysses S. Grant.
Since rhetorical extremism in the pursuit of persuasion is all the rage, why stop there? Surely someone will soon make the case that Operation Epic Fury is the greatest triumph of arms since Henry V’s longbowmen routed the superior French numbers at Agincourt. Or, according to your taste, it already represents the most disastrous defeat for a major power since the Romans were out-generalled at Cannae by Hannibal.

What a tremendous fudger he is, as the reptiles tried to match his uncertainty in the caption, Rubio says Trump prefers diplomacy but vows strikes if Hormuz stays shut, while analysts warn over chokepoints & Iran vows to keep leverage.




Nothing is but what is not seems to be the best way forward, the way to evade and deflect:

I am not against bold opinion commentary, as you might have noticed, but this level of certainty about a war that is four weeks old and with plainly many more phases to come, is simply unsupportable. As we stand, the outcome isn’t knowable with any level of confidence; it surely rests on events at a tactical and strategic level in coming weeks and months that we can’t know.
It is evident that the US and Israel have enjoyed extraordinary military success in eliminating much of Iran’s leadership and military capabilities. But Iran’s regime has succeeded at a political and economic level – first by simply surviving the onslaught to date and second by exercising its stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz.
These are all limited and contingent successes. Again, their ultimate outcome is conditional on the extent to which the US is able to break that stranglehold and either force out the regime or at least cow it into submission. And that in turn is conditional on a host of at this stage unknowable developments: the deployment of ground forces; the contribution of neighbours and others to the shipping challenge.
Some of us who acknowledge our uncertainty may be simply reflecting a larger uncertainty about the wisdom of this war in the first place.
In the same way, to declare now that it is already won or lost is merely to affirm one’s prior and continuing political and ideological prejudices, delivered to an audience that wants to hear nothing else.

By golly, and there was the pond thinking that Donald Rumsfeld had gone on to bigger things. Who knew he'd reincarnate as a WSJ columnist explaining that there are conditional matters that are unknowable. So many unknown unknowns, so little time.

And so to wrap up proceedings with the lesser member of the Kelly gang, also brooding about the war.



The header: Hormuz handover: Trump risks handing Iran a strategic victory: Donald Trump could be forced down a rabbit hole he never intended to enter.

The caption for an image of a king ever more closely resembling a clown: The American operation is on track to achieve a major tactical victory. It will weaken Iran by degrading its missile and nuclear programs while up-ending its political and military chain of command. Picture: Getty Images

Joe could only lather up three minutes, and unlike Baker of the WSJ, he was full of righteous certainty, and full of "musts", with the first "must" opening fire at the get go ...

Iran must not be allowed to emerge from the Middle East conflict with the lasting ability to control the Strait of Hormuz, an outcome that would elevate the regime as the gatekeeper of global energy flows, with the power to trigger a worldwide recession at will.
This would deliver a decisive blow to American power and global standing, exposing the limits of Donald Trump’s unilateralism and his vision of a US less bound by the constraints and responsibilities of a multilateral order under increasing strain.
Yet critics hoping for the administration to have its wings clipped in the fight against Iran as a check on Trump’s “American First” foreign policy revolution stand on the wrong side of history and for a regime that for 47 years has terrorised the world while oppressing and killing its own people.

The reptiles urgently rushed in a man apparently standing on Joe's right side of history ... US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth says if Iran were wise, “they will cut a deal” with US President Donald Trump. “Just one month in, only one month, we set the terms,” Mr Hegseth said. “The upcoming days will be decisive. Iran knows that, and there is almost nothing they can militarily do about it. “Yes, they will still shoot some missiles, but we will shoot them down. “They will go underground, but we will find them.”




See below for a little note on Kegsbreath ... as saucy doubts and fears began to creep into Joe's text, producing more 'mustiness' than 'must' ...

'There is no doubt the American operation against Iran is noble in intention. But every day that passes reveals that Operation Epic Fury risks empowering Iran in strategic terms given its failure – so far – to break the political will of the regime.
Instead, it may achieve the opposite.
The American operation is on track to achieve a major tactical victory. It will weaken Iran by degrading its missile and nuclear programs while up-ending its political and military chain of command.
Yet, the war will be judged on how it changes the strategic calculus in the region.
If the regime survives the US onslaught with control over the Hormuz Strait – one of the world’s most vital choke-points through which one fifth of global oil supply passes – it will have saddled the globe with a dangerous new problem.
Tehran will emerge from the conflict with greater leverage over the global economy and a new revenue stream worth billions every month if it continues to charge $2m for safe passage through the strait.
This is not a tenable outcome.
Yet the Wall Street Journal is reporting that Trump may do exactly this and walk away from the war – leaving Iran in control over the strait.
This is the inverse of the famous warning from then Secretary of State Collin Powell to George W Bush over the 2003 invasion of Iraq: “You break it, you own it.”
Commentators are now characterising the US position as: “We break it, you fix it.”
The fear for Trump is that a mission to secure the Strait of Hormuz would drag out the conflict beyond his six week timeline.
Already the US President is telling the rest of the world the closure of the waterway is its problem rather than America’s.
Posting on his Truth Social platform on Tuesday local time, he said that US allies should “build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait, and just take it.”
“You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself, the USA won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us.”

Way to go King Donald ... and even petulant Peta seemed a tad worried, Sky News host Peta Credlin reacts to a story by The Wall Street Journal today. “The Wall Street Journal says today that reportedly Trump is open to ending the war without actually reopening the Strait of Hormuz,” Ms Credlin said. “How on earth would that work?”




The pond would usually slip in a 'toon at a King Donald sighting, but perhaps it's enough to recycle that Colbert joke about that sign behind the king looking awfully like the FU Institute ...(what's more it was a google bot safe joke).

And then it was just a doddle to finish off Joe, poised in mid-air, caught up by indecision, perhaps losing his timing somewhat early in his career ...

Senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Aaron David Miller, a former State Department official and veteran Middle East negotiator told The Australian that a “war of choice has now turned into war of necessity.”
“It’s now a global crisis,” he said. “Fertiliser, helium, natural gas, oil and hydrocarbons are not getting through.”
“The winners right now are Putin and Netanyahu,” he said. ‘The Chinese are somewhere in between. The losers are the Gulf States and the civilians that are caught up in this.”
Already, the US troop footprint in the Middle East has surged to more than 50,000 but any ground operation in Iran would be fraught with risk and the near certainty of US casualties.
Trump could be forced down a rabbit hole he never intended to enter.Miller said it was possible for the US to seize the strait with enough combat power and boots on the ground, but pointed to the experience in Iraq and Afghanistan where America stayed for 20 years in the two longest wars in US history.
He also warned that an attempt to seize or destroy Kharg Island – Iran’s central oil exporting hub – would inflict further pain on the global economy while doing little to weaken the regime’s resolve.
“The picture right now doesn’t look very promising to me,” he said. “Things have been done that no-one ever anticipated. Oil may be over $100 a barrel till the end of the year. And if there’s more damage to oil infrastructure in Iran and the Gulf the price could be higher.”
The military campaign is poised at a delicate moment and Trump faces the most important decisions of his presidency.
If he walks away without clearing the Hormuz Strait he will hand Iran a strategic victory and harm America’s international reputation. But if he doubles down, the options for retaking the strait are fraught with risk and the prospect of a longer and more bloody military campaign.

Looking good ...




And so to that note on Kegsbreath.

The pond simply couldn't resist this note in The New Republic by Greg Sargent ...

Does God want America to kill as many of our enemies as we can—in as violent a fashion as possible? We have a defense secretary who apparently thinks so.

Inter alia ...




And so on and on, with fundamentalist theocracies on the go, and white Xian nationalism destroying the world, and what better way to celebrate proceedings than with the immortal Rowe ...




That naturally segues into that celebration in the Washington Mall ... with another of the King's thrones on display ...




There was of course a plaque. There should always be a gilt gold lined plaque, and not just on teeth ...





On that Kegsbreath theme ...Bill Kristol remarking on the way he himself once was, proud Iraq war warrior ...


 


 And now for something different ...


 


Tuesday, March 31, 2026

In which the bromancer, Dame Groan, and pearls of wisdom are the day's entertainment ...

 

Are you not entertained?



That elegant King Donald design reminded the pond of Topol singing this lyric (slightly modified) ...

I'd build a big tall ballroom with bumps and columns by the dozen
Right in the middle of the town
A fine gold roof with real marble floors below
There would be one long staircase just going up
And one even longer coming down
And one more leading nowhere, just for show ...

As for the reptiles providing entertainment? 

Alas, it's not so easy this Tuesday ... with the bromancer out and about ...

At last it's finally dawned on the bromancer that things might be a bit tricky thanks to the deeds of King Donald and his minions, and even worse, encouraged by the chairman emeritus in his folly ...

The bromancer, being a 97pound weakling who always got sand kicked in his face on the beach, is ripe for a Charles Atlas course, and is obsessed with the usual nerdish, weakling stuff which fills up his snowflake whining on a regular basis ...



The header: We’re an energy rich nation that’s chosen to be weak; The Iran war is a full-blown global crisis, a crisis in oil, gas and fertiliser. It devastatingly demonstrates Australia’s vulnerability.

The caption for the triptych of villains: Anthony Albanese, Jim Chalmers and Chris Bowen hold a joint press conference at Parliament House regarding the national fuel security crisis. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman

All the bromancer revealed in his four minute ramble is how easy it is to slip slide from his previous blather about a just war - neigh, an Xian white nationalist holy war - into wringing hands about the consequences, and blaming the wrong people for all that's gone wrong, is currently going wrong, and will keep going wrong for the foreseeable future ...

The Albanese government is floundering, as the nation is floundering, in response to the global economic crisis brought about by the Iran war.
Australia looks determined to learn every wrong lesson and make every wrong response.
Make no mistake. This is a full-blown global crisis, a crisis in oil, gas and fertiliser. It devastatingly demonstrates Australia’s vulnerability.
Two ominous new developments suggest this conflict may go on for quite some time. Donald Trump is sending thousands of US marines from several different locations to the region. This may be for negotiating leverage, but it may also mean he plans at least a limited ground operation.
The likeliest such operation would be to take Kharg Island, through which Iran gets 90 per cent of its oil income. That could take weeks and involve massive new conflict. The other big development is the Yemeni Houthis entering the war on Iran’s side.
So far they’ve only fired mis­siles at Israel and these appear to have been intercepted. But they could easily hit Saudi energy infrastructure, as they have in the past. Worse, they could again strike shipping in the Red Sea, especially the Bab el-Mandeb Strait.

How to describe the bromancer? 

The pond floundered recently trying to describe Dame Slap's pandering portrait of the beefy boofhead's wife, and so turned to John Hanscombe's recent effort in The Echnida to revive the term "drongo", which was once big in Tamworth, but has fallen out of favour ...

...Hanson was on song again last week, doubling down on her support for Trump, oblivious to the effect the war was having on her own constituency. Oblivious, too, to polling that shows most Australians do not support the war or Donald Trump. Most of us think he's the drongo-in-chief.
Then there was the Coalition call for the government to slash EV and home battery subsidies to fund a cut to the fuel excise. At the very moment Australians are reminded that solar power stored in batteries doesn't have to navigate the Strait of Hormuz and that EVs might be a better idea than diesel-guzzling utes, only a drongo would suggest making us even more dependent on fossil fuels.
The Nationals launched the No Fuel Here platform, encouraging users to report fuel shortages in regional areas. One problem was they had no intention of publishing the data collected, which instead would go to MPs. Another was the fine print saying that by using the platform, users agreed to receive material from the Nationals. In other words, a clumsy attempt at email harvesting from a bunch of drongos. (sorry, newsletter, no link)

Drongo!

The bromancer is exactly that sort of drongo.

Meanwhile the reptiles were offering a distraction from the bromancing drongo, featuring the Greater Israel campaign (sssh, don't mention the ethnic cleansing) ... A woman stands amid Hezbollah flags on March 29, 2026, in the Choueifat area on the outskirts of Beirut. Picture: AFP


The drongo of the moment kept blathering away ...

The Houthis have limited missile stocks but appear to have plenty of drones. Without a navy and without much national infrastructure, the Houthis during the Gaza war provided what US naval commanders described as the most intense naval battle the US had fought since World War II.
The lethality of asymmetric warfare waged by drones has increased exponentially. The disruption to global energy markets could yet get much worse.
Australia’s situation is intensely vulnerable and constitutes a species of the theatre of the absurd. We possess the natural resources of an entire continent, just for us, a mere 28 million people, yet our hallucinogenic, Green-dominated politics has become so self-damaging that we import the vast majority of resources we use.
The Albanese government responds as it does to all national challenges – it will just spend loads more money.
Let’s deal with this at first principles. We’re rich because we export coal, iron ore and natural gas. Some other stuff, too, but those are the big three. Our crippling commitment to the fiction of net zero means we won’t develop any of these resources at home.
We insanely use the money we make from exporting fossil fuels to subsidise hugely expensive non-fossil fuel sources of energy domestically, but then because our economy still actually runs on fossil fuels we import vast quantities of refined fossil fuel.
Thus, we are a diesel economy. We export billions of dollars worth of coal to China. As the Page Research Centre’s brilliant new report, All at Sea: Fuel, War and Australia’s Achilles’ Heel, points out, we could easily make the diesel in Australia but we choose to import it.
China burns hundreds of millions of tonnes of coal a year to make diesel out of coal. We don’t do that ourselves because it produces a lot of emissions.

Ah, the old war with China routine, and never mind that China is taking leaps and bounds to turn itself into that new fangled notion of an electrostate.

Hanscombe was interesting on the origins of "drongo", though it's familiar enough for those who care and easily found online... (with more "d's" here, and never mind the asbestos lady's attempts to ruin the institution) ...

...from stage right, comes another drongo, Clive Palmer. Failing at the last election, he's re-entered the populist political fray with new sickly yellow advertisements. Last time it was the Trumpet of Patriots; this time it's the "New Deal", borrowed from Franklin Roosevelt's Depression-era reconstruction program. If at first, second, third or fourth, you don't succeed, try and fail again.
Which takes us neatly back to the origin of the expression drongo. Drongo was the name of a 1920s racehorse which never won a race after 37 starts and became the butt of jokes. A century later and the old slang word has a whole new currency.

Don't think the lizard Oz can match the drongo power of Clive?

Get past this meaningless snap ... A general view of the Port of Kharg Island Oil Terminal, 25 km from the Iranian coast. Picture: Getty Images



...and you can enjoy the drongo powers of the drongo bromancer in full flight ...

At least one Australian company believes it could do it with much lower emissions, but governments won’t go near any research on technology like that because of our net-zero commitments and obsessions.
At much lower levels of emissions, we could make diesel from gas. We are always going to be a diesel economy. There’s no substitute.
We’re already in a mess in this crisis yet the crisis hasn’t really begun. We have more oil than before the war began. But any oil we’re receiving now was dispatched on its long voyage well before this war began. Yet we’ve had hundreds of service stations without fuel and costs have shot through the roof.
This is especially so for artificial fertilisers, which are central to agricultural production and based on hydrocarbons.
The fertiliser itself is now much more expensive. The cost of transporting it is much more expensive. Some farmers, therefore, won’t plant cereals this year.
The whole world is still completely dependent on hydrocarbons. Renewable energy has added to fossil fuels but not made any significant impact in replacing them.
The Australian government’s own Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water website reports: “Fossil fuels (coal, oil and gas) accounted for 91 per cent of Australia’s primary energy mix in 2023-24.” The primary energy mix goes beyond just electricity generation and includes transport, mining, agriculture, industry and the rest.

What a hoot. Embedded in the promo for the AV distraction is the immortal line "says expert", and just as you're expecting a real expert, you're served up the bromancer blathering to petulant Peta, two drongos, or numbskulls if you don't want to be dinkum ...

Sky News contributor Greg Sheridan says the US going to war with Iran is an “acute dilemma” with “no easy solution”. “This is an acute dilemma, and there’s no easy solution … Iran has proved itself to be worse than we thought,” Mr Sheridan told Sky News host Peta Credlin. “What other regime has just slaughtered 40,000 of its own citizens, what other regime is attacking desalination plants on which human lives depend in neighbouring states which are non-combatants, what other state has 400kg of uranium, illegally enriched to 60 per cent? ... This is a fanatical, devoted, regime, with an ideology that celebrates suicide.”



The pond had to enlarge that so the "says expert" can be seen.

Anyone can call themselves an expert at the lizard Oz ...

And so to a final word from the reptile expert drongo in chief ... doing the standard reptiles renewables schtick, with a grudging admission that maybe we should make a token gesture towards climate science ... but not too much, because who believes in climate science when we can blow the joint up, thanks to King Donald and the Emeritus Chairman ...

It’s reasonable to try to run a clean environment and even reduce greenhouse gas emissions on a per capita basis. But we’ve decided, insanely, to ape the worst of West European policy in trying to convert to an entirely renewables energy basis. We can’t do it. It won’t ever happen. And we can afford, even temporarily, the grotesque indulgence of it all only because of our exports of raw fossil fuels, which other people then add value to.
The Nationals’ Alison Penfold made the blindingly obvious point in parliament: “If these fuels are important enough to stockpile, they are important enough to produce.” Her Nationals’ colleague, Anne Webster, quoted Geoscience Australia estimates we could have 17 billion barrels of oil we haven’t developed. Our shale oil alone could supply us for 43 years.
Australia is uniquely vulnerable and uniquely culpable for its vulnerability. We are at the end of the world’s longest supply chains. We face many potential choke points beyond the Strait of Hormuz or the Red Sea.
Yet despite our vulnerability, we have among the smallest fuel reserves of any OECD nation. The Albanese government has been in office for four years and has no right to blame this on the admittedly woeful performance of the Coalition government before it. And we have no merchant fleet to move energy. And no defence force to protect it.
Our economic problems are supply problems. We’re perhaps the only nation in the world that could be energy self-sufficient but has chosen not to be.
The opposition, having finally rejected net zero, must campaign furiously on the issue if Australia is to have a chance of preserving its sovereignty.

But the bromancer gave up his sovereignty long ago to an American-owned company, with its Emeritus Chairman encouraging King Donald to embark on a folly. 

Of such supine stuff are drongos made...



And so to the Groaning of the day ...


The header: Expect Jim’s ‘reform’ budget to come with some big caveats; Using the false cloak of intergenerational inequality, Chalmers may still decide to push on with his ill-considered changes to tax.

The caption? Yet again the reptiles forgot to tag it, but everyone knows it's the chief villain, the main heel, Dame Groan's bête noire, and the reptiles loved that image of his grim mug so much, you can see it repeated down the page.

This was a standard four minute groaning, and truth to tell, these days the sighing and the whining and the whingeing and the groaning tends to be water off the pond's duck-like back.

The pond really only persists with the Dame because of her cult following ...

The conflict in the Middle East has thrown the preparation for this year’s budget into disarray. Jim Chalmers had been talking it up as the statement that would finally deliver real reform.
He even went to the trouble of classifying its contents into spending restraint, tax reform and productivity. At this stage it looks unlikely he’ll deliver. Using the false cloak of intergenerational inequality, Chalmers may still decide to push on with a series of ill-considered and ill-timed changes to the taxation of capital/savings.
The pressure to be seen as a reforming Treasurer may be sufficient to prevent common sense from prevailing.
One issue that came to a head on Monday following national cabinet was the reduction in the petrol excise rate to compensate households and businesses for the impact of higher fuel costs. Apart from the budgetary costs of doing so, there is also the vexed issue of whether this action would add to underlying inflation when inflation is running well above the annual target band of 2 to 3 per cent. This will make it even likelier that the Reserve Bank will lift the cash rate again before the May budget.
The Coalition pushed for the excise to be cut, suggesting it be funded by eliminating some other spending. The government has not proposed any saving offsets.

Nothing to see here by way of visual distractions ... Anthony Albanese holds a joint press conference at Parliament House. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman.



There are likely some might care, but this was a siren song the pond had heard too many times. 

There was no reason to be strapped to the mast...

Because the excise is a flat tax, the higher price for fuel does not raise any additional revenue. Higher volumes will have that effect, but this surge in demand may not last. There will be additional GST revenue because of the higher fuel prices but this ends up with the states. Some environmentalists have seized this opportunity to call for the elimination of the diesel fuel rebate that applies to off-road use by miners and farmers, in particular. But the purpose of the rebate is widely misunderstood; it is for off-road use only and avoids a distorting tax on tax.
By this stage of the year, the Treasury will be close to finalising many details in the budget, particularly in relation to the domestic and international economic outlook contained in Statement 2, Budget Paper No.1. The final figures in the tables and commentary will have to be delayed to the last minute, although these figures find their way into the estimates of the receipts and payments over the forward estimates.
The Treasurer’s recent interest in spending restraint contrasts with his record as the top money man. When he first took the reins, government spending was $627bn or 24.3 per cent of GDP. This financial year it is expected to reach $787bn or 26.9 per cent of GDP.
And note that these figures don’t include the massive ramp-up in off-budget spending. It’s a wonder Chalmers hasn’t attracted the moniker: Hey, Big Spender. He still likes to quote the meaningless figure of $114bn of savings and reprioritisations the government has achieved. That of course is a gross figure, with actual spending rising by $160bn since 2022-23.
Chalmers also makes the ridiculous claim that government debt is now lower under Labor even as it floats past the $1 trillion mark. Trying to make a pointless comparison with something written down in 2022 in the pre-election economic and fiscal outlook smacks of desperation, although the fact he is not picked up by journalists is also depressing.
According to the most recent figures, the fastest growing spending items in the budget include debt servicing, the National Disability Insurance Scheme, hospitals, aged care, childcare and defence. There will be talk about restricting the growth of outlays on the NDIS, in particular. But without significant structural reforms it’s impossible to see spending being kept below the growth of the economy.

The pond only perked up as Dame Groan revealed her socialist inclinations by endorsing a road tax ...and even approved of employing cardigan wearers to work out the how of it ...

There have been rumours that a national road user charge is being contemplated, which will become more important if electric vehicles increase in popularity. There are technical limits on the ability of the states to do this; it will be up to the federal government to enact such a scheme. But whether the timing would be fortuitous is unclear. The best approach is probably to commission a practical review and to seek constructive input from those most affected.

Pause for an AV distraction ...

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says Australians are paying a “hefty price” for the impact of the war in Iran. “The war in the Middle East is doing a great deal of damage to the global economy, and Australians are paying a hefty price for that,” Mr Chalmers said during Question Time. “What we’ve announced today are additional steps to try and ease some of the pressures that Australians are feeling as a consequence of that war in the Middle East.”



Then Dame Groan could resume by having a go at EVs.

The pond takes it as a sign that EVs are at last taking off, and so the reptiles are threatened.

Again it was formulated in a way cultists would love ... "tax the rich", a mantra the reptiles seem to love in principle, but rarely in practice ...

One policy begging for reform or elimination is the fringe benefit tax exemption for novated leases of EVs. This is one of the most inefficient schemes around; it favours those on higher incomes and is costing the budget billions of dollars in forgone revenue. The cost has more than tripled from earlier estimates, with a figure of nearly $3bn in 2028-29 alone.
Unsurprisingly, interested parties, including those providing novated leases, have been trying to dissuade the government from making changes. But if Chalmers is serious about making real budget savings, this looks like low-hanging fruit. As cheap China-made EVs flood the market, it’s not clear that any form of subsidy is required for potential EV buyers.
There is also the Cheaper Home Batteries scheme that was so badly designed that its estimated costs tripled shortly after it was introduced. At one stage a figure of more than $7bn was estimated as the cost of subsidising relatively well-off households for installing oversized batteries.

Yep, EVs are on the move, and batteries and solar and reptiles of the Dame Groan kind are suddenly socialist...

My advice is to lower your expectations about the forthcoming budget. The reform will be piecemeal and arbitrary and won’t make any material difference to the budget’s bottom line, at least in the short term, but will annoy a group of voters who typically don’t vote Labor.
There will be a few heroic assumptions about reining in spending that won’t come to pass but may impress on the day. Any future economic downside will be the fault of events outside the control of the government, a point Chalmers will be keen to emphasise. Just don’t mention stagflation and falling living standards.

Sadly, the pond finds it can leave Dame Groan's advice parked at the door ... especially as she offered piecemeal and arbitrary advice in a column more dismal than usual ...

Heck, just fang it ...



And now for completists, thanks to the intermittent archive working early this morning, the pond is able to range over reptile offerings with teaser trailers ...

Excise cut a repeat of Covid-era handouts
The inflation dragon was never slayed. Instead, it is now hovering over Australia, blowing fire storms across the regions and cities.
By Geoff Chambers
Political editor

Geoff could only manage a couple of minutes of time wasting...



One thing the pond will note ... on the weekend, the Hume highway was exceptionally quiet ... 

Only EVs and a few trucks dared roam the range last Sunday, as the pond discovered this incredibly cute offering in Gundagai ...




So far from home ...

And so to another offering, this one again just two minutes ...

Please explain: Why Anthony Albanese should get on the phone with Donald Trump
A call to the White House is perhaps more difficult than giving away $2.5bn to try to appease the punters on petrol.
By Dennis Shanahan



This is the reason the pond doesn't pay much attention to the lesser drongos on the far right just offering filler for the day.

The bouffant one ended with a word salad ...

...public concern and growing doubts and confusion about the aims and cost of the Trump ­attack on Iran have led Albanese to publicly complain about a lack of clarity over the US actions, which doesn’t put Trump off side but qualifies the Australian ­position.
“I want to see more certainty in what the objectives of the war are, and I want to see a de-escalation. So, a de-escalation is in the global economy’s interests,” the Prime Minister said as he added $2.55bn to the budget bill.
Making his position on Iran clear he declared: “I have nothing but contempt for the Iranian regime.”
But, listing the shifting objectives of the US military action, Albanese said “what is going to occur” needs to be spelt out.
The last time Albanese had a “warm” conversation with Trump was on March 10, at 2am, to discuss the fate of the Iranian women footballers who were seeking asylum at the time.
And, although there is regular contact between the administrations there hasn’t been a leaders’ conversation since then and nor has the US yet appointed an ambassador to Canberra.
Given Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong once suggested the then prime minister, Scott Morrison, should just get on the phone to Trump, perhaps the present Prime Minister should do the same, but that’s probably more difficult than just giving away $2.5bn to try to appease the punters on petrol.

As if you can reason with a mad King, or do deals, knowing he lies all the time, and breaks deals as easily as he lies.

The pond got rid of the canny Cranston even more quickly ...

Here we go again … Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers spend their way out of Iran War fuel crisis
The fuel excises cut is a clear signal the budget will include more new spending justified by an attempt at saving the economy from a Covid-style recession.
By Matthew Cranston



Of course the reptiles face a problem in all this, as does the government.

It was the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way wot suggested it, as noted in his Facebook video ...(a link does not endorse Facebook or suggest anyone should visit)

Finally, Labor has taken our advice and halved the fuel excise tax. It’s a step in the right direction, but it raises another big question, why is the Prime Minister always the last to lead in a national crisis?

Awkward, so all the reptiles can do is raise saucy doubts and fears, and conjure up the inflation dragon, and talk of Covid days and such like, while downplaying the way the big spend was something both sides agreed on.

But mention of the beefy boofhead did remind the pond that tucked below the fold were some pearls of wisdom.

The pond usually doesn't pay attention to these pearls, but this one raised some interesting questions for the beefy boofhead ... though it came by way of an attack on the pasty Hastie ...




A class war?

Was the dropper of these pearls of wisdom aware that Dame Groan had suggested ... gasp ... taxing the rich? Or at least the EV/solar rich...

Before the pond could get onto the question of whether the pasty Hastie endorsed Dame Groan's views, there was a visual interruption featuring the usual villains, chortling at the thought of their evil deeds ... Jim Chalmers and Anthony Albanese during Question Time at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




Then the irritating grain of sand in the flesh kept on ...but what did it all mean?

The pond took it as a sign that the pasty Hastie scored a big hit with his ABC interview, and the reptiles are now in panic mode ...

Or take Hastie’s assertion that America’s Iran war is a “huge miscalculation”: a big call to make at this stage of the conflict.
If this is Hastie’s considered military view, it is certainly worth listening to. But this line has been taken by US isolationists and anti-Trump Democrats who are desperate for this enterprise to fail.

What a classic. Now it's not a war, nor even a special military operation, nor even an excursion. Now it's an enterprise, and no doubt soon will be applying for Pty. Ltd. status.

But do go on ...

And when Hastie declares “multinationals and big business” in Australia “have lost their social licence”, is he backing the left’s view that Canberra’s politicians and bureaucrats should assert more control over them?
Hastie suggests neoliberalism is all but dead. In this regard, at least, he is on a unity ticket with Anthony Albanese and the modern Labor Party, which in the late 1990s under Kim Beazley denounced the Hawke-Keating policy legacy.
Yet if he’s worried about our dire economic predicament and wants to see young people climb the ladder of opportunity, he should be directing his rhetorical fire at the Albanese government’s neo-socialism.
Let’s discard the undergraduate labels and consider what neoliberalism means in practice.
It was the policy model embraced by Bob Hawke, Paul Keating and John Howard in this country. It was not an ideological project but a pragmatic one. By dismantling protectionist barriers, deregulating our domestic markets, means-testing welfare and lowering income tax burdens, they aimed to unlock the economy’s growth potential. It was the original abundance agenda.

The reptiles used the moment to try to flog their wares, but the wretched illustration was more than enough to put the pond off ...

PREMIUM
Andrew Hastie's hit-back at Trump
Become a member to access our premium video content



Really reptiles? You can't even get the distracting snap's proportions right, and yet you want people to splurge their shekels?

And so to even more panic:

As the fiscal, regulatory and taxation footprint of government was wound back, the scope for individuals and companies to aim big and prosper increased.
The growing economic pie this created weakened the politics of envy and class division in this country, strengthening our social cohesion and national pride.
And as our economy become more flexible and resilient, our ability to ride out global economic and security shocks increased.
It is no accident that as we’ve progressively dismantled the policy legacy of Hawke, Keating and Howard, the economic and social foundations of this country have been weakened and, with them, our ability to defend ourselves from foreign and local threats.
When Hastie rejects neoliberalism, does he have in mind a right-wing version of the Albanese government, junking net zero but pursuing some other centrally devised vision or plan?
Tony Blair was wrong. In politics, there is no third way. If you demonise the market system, you must by default be a supporter of statism. If Hastie merely means that, in a more fractured world, we should strengthen our national defence force and develop some sovereign capabilities while remaining a market-based economy, that is another matter.
But in that case, the “look at me” neoliberal critique does not have to be made.

What a sublime black and white approach.

The reptiles flung in a final distraction ...

Bondi Partners Senior Adviser Peter McGauran says Shadow Industry and Sovereign Capability Minister Andrew Hastie has the “gift of clarity”. Mr McGauran told Sky News Australia that Andrew Hastie is “an issue” for Opposition Leader Angus Taylor. “He’s definitely getting into areas that are the province of others.”



And there followed one last pearler of alarm...

Hastie is clearly rattled by the rise of One Nation. He is right to challenge a Liberal Party that is in denial about the existential threat it poses. But is he offering a coherent, carefully thought through way forward for conservatives or is he an ideological bowerbird, picking up ideas from wherever he can find them, including JD Vance and the Labor Party?
Perhaps Hastie’s many pronouncements are his way of working out just what he thinks, a bit like a teenager who says they are a socialist one day and libertarian the next. That is not necessarily a bad thing – unlike so many of his peers, Hastie is thinking about the world and responding to popular frustrations, but at some point he needs to find his political due north.
If he wants to be a future leader of the Liberal Party and this country and not just a gadfly at the margins, it needs to be sooner rather than later.
David Pearl is a former Treasury assistant secretary.

It needs to be sooner rather than later?

The pond had thought the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way was pretty safe for the moment, what with Dame Slap writing up uxorious, gushing texts about his partner in life, and the other reptiles sounding all in, but suddenly rattled reptiles are calling for another leadership challenge, and the sooner the better.

Bring it on, there can never be enough entertainment when it comes to prime Angus beef.

Second thoughts, haven't we got enough entertainment already?




Finally, he's not the best talent talking to camera, but compared to the lizard Oz's practitioners of the dismal science, he's not entirely wrong either ...(there's a transcript here for those that find that easier)