Tuesday, April 07, 2026

In which the bro, Joe and Jack try to cope with mad King Donald, and Dame Groan does her standard oil junkie schtick ...

 

It seems the pond's main duty these days is to try to cope with the bromancer trying to cope with mad King Donald.

The bro has always been Trump curious.

Lately he seems to have become increasingly disenchanted, yet still feels compelled to both siderist his suffering.

His latest headline is a classic of the both siderist art form perfected by the NY Times.



The header: Triumph or tragedy? Does Donald Trump have any options left in Iran? The case for acting against Iran was strong, but Trump made many miscalculations and was not prepared for easily foreseen contingencies.

The caption: President Donald J. Trump delivers a message on Holy Week. Picture: Supplied

What on earth is the message King Donald delivered on Holy Week? Obscenity, blasphemy, and the pagan rantings of an ancient Moloch?

Mad King Donald is way less Xian than the pond, and that's saying something.

As for the bro, it's amazing really that anyone could find any hope of a "triumph" in what King Donald has done to the United States and to the planet, yet there it was in the headline, taking up as much room as "tragedy" as the way into the bro's four minute ramble.

The bromancer diligently ferreted through the tea leaves and the chicken's entrails, hoping against hope that he'd see signs of the triumph ...

Donald Trump has two options and one hope in Iran. The options: escalate or leave. The hope: a deal with Tehran that allows him to claim victory and go home. He’s probably happy to leave the Iranian regime intact provided it opens the Strait of Hormuz, and makes at least a pro forma commitment to end its nuclear program.
One Trump tragedy is that he gives many good things a bad name. The case for acting against Iran was strong, but Trump and his administration have made many miscalculations and not prepared for easily foreseen contingencies.
Much worse, the way the President talks, his wild language, endless self-contradictions, and contempt and humiliation for US allies, is doing serious strategic harm to the US and its allies.
Trump’s most recent threat bears repeating. On Truth Social he posted: “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the F..kin’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah.”
This is both an astonishing and contemptible social media post from Trump. It also almost certainly indicates a failure of analysis of the nature of the Iranian regime.
One of the reasons America is so friendless in this military campaign, which is inherently defensible if done properly, is because no one can sign up to Trump’s rhetorical instability, his reversals day by day (only a few days ago, in a formal address to the American people, he said the US had no concerns about the Strait of Hormuz).
The Iranian regime is defined by its activist hatreds of America and Israel, and its social practices of pietistic fundamentalist Shia Islamism. That is a toxic and evil mixture. Trump thinks that every time he threatens Iran, he’s putting its leaders under pressure. The Iranians apparently regard Trump’s wild declarations as a sign of desperation.

You see?

Somehow "inherently defensible" creeps into the narrative, accompanied by a small billy goat butt - "if done properly", which is the sort of thing that happens when the pond attempts a triple pike into the pool and ends up doing a belly flop.

In what possible way could it be "inherently defensible" when in reality that sort of attempt to bomb into submission is inherently stupid and ineffectual, as Vlad the sociopath has discovered to his cost in his long and inherently indefensible monstering of Ukraine.

Even the both siderist NY Times gets this ...

Bombing Kyiv Into Submission? History Says It Won’t Work.
Even though it creates misery and loss, the methodical bombing of civilian centers has more often been shown to rally support for resistance. (*intermittent archive, and you know what that means)

...The victorious allies in World War II did emphasize a strategy of heavily bombing cities, which is part of why countries have come to repeat this so many times since. Cities including Dresden and Tokyo were devastated, killing hundreds of thousands of civilians and forcing millions into homelessness.
Still, historians generally now argue that, even if that did play some role in exhausting those countries, it was largely because of damage to German and Japanese industrial output rather than the terror it caused. Axis countries were also aggressive in bombing enemy cities, casting further doubt on notions that the strategy could be a decisive factor on its own.
And any World War II lessons may be of limited utility in understanding the wars that came after, as countries quickly learned from that conflict to move military production away from city centers. Tellingly, such bombing has seldom worked since.
American war planners discovered this in the Korean War, when bombing Pyongyang only hardened the North’s commitment. A decade later, they tried it again in Vietnam. But an internal Pentagon report concluded that striking Hanoi, the North Vietnamese capital, had been “in retrospect, a colossal misjudgment.”
Iran and Iraq struck each other’s capitals during their 1980s conflict to try to force one side to back down. Instead, both nations were rallied by watching foreign bombs fall on civilian neighborhoods, helping to stretch the war to nearly a decade.
Insurgent groups have likewise adapted this tactic, to little more success.
Northern Irish groups struck repeatedly in London, hoping to dispel British commitment to the territory. Instead, the bombings led to more severe measures by British authorities in Northern Ireland. Palestinian groups that ignited bus and cafe bombs in Israeli cities during a period of conflict in the 2000s found much the same result.
Al Qaeda’s justification for the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks has shifted, but the group has said that one aim was to compel American withdrawal from the Middle East. But Americans, rather than rising up against their country’s overseas deployments as Al Qaeda leaders had hoped, rallied in support of invading Afghanistan and then Iraq.
Though each conflict is different, this pattern is not a coincidence, but is explained by the politics as well as the psychology of warfare. And both appear to apply in Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Capital strikes intended to push a government toward conciliation or retreat instead do much to close off those options.
In practice, such attacks tell targeted leaders that they, and perhaps the very existence of their government, will not be secure until they eliminate the threat through outright victory. They will tend to escalate in response, rather than back down as their attackers hope.
And a negotiated peace, like the one Mr. Putin has urged, becomes harder for those leaders to enter because it means accepting that the threat to the capital will remain.
The public will often reach the same calculus, coming to see their attacker as an implacable threat that can only be neutralized through defeat.
The stiffening resolve inspired by such strikes can be equal parts strategic and emotional.
German rocket and air attacks on British cities during World War II, known as the Blitz, aimed to degrade British production as well as public support for the war, so that Britain would agree to withdraw from the conflict.
Instead, the attacks led to a drastic reduction in British support for peace talks with Germany, polls at the time found, raising pressure on British leaders to uphold the fight.
And German leaders had hoped that turning whole blocks of London into rubble would inspire Britons to turn against the leaders who insisted on staying in the war. But British approval of their government rose to near 90 percent.
The United States has stumbled on this effect several times, but perhaps most powerfully in the Korean and Vietnam Wars, when it sought to force back its Communist adversaries by bombing their towns and cities. Instead, the campaigns convinced those governments, as well as their populations, that they could only be safe by defeating the Americans for good, whatever the cost.

And here we go again, and what a regime to help, as at this point the reptiles flung in a visual distraction ... Demonstrators attend a pro-government gathering in a square in Tehran, Iran. Picture: AP




The pond does like the way that the bromancer consistently side steps around the way that Benji's fundamentalist theocratic government, campaigning for a greater Israel, managed to lure mad King Donald into the war ...

Trump may for the first time in his life have met a foe not motivated by money, self-interest or even national interest, but by ideological, and in this case theocratic, conviction. It’s overwhelmingly to be hoped that the US and Israel succeed in Iran. Nothing would be better for the Middle East, and the world, than for the odious Tehran regime to disappear.
But analytically, we must deal with reality. The Iranian regime is tough and is built for war. It doesn’t care about suffering endured by its society. It has decentralised decision-making. A big chunk of society gets paid by the regime, and a big chunk has committed violence and murder on behalf of the regime. These folks won’t give up control.
The US has degraded Iran’s military capabilities. But Tehran is still firing missiles and drones, and controls the Strait of Hormuz.
It’s now clear Tehran is getting some help from both Russia and China, without any major pushback from Washington, which has its hands full. In the past few days, notwithstanding the devastation of Iran’s air defences, it has shot down a number of US aircraft.
It targets US bases, and Gulf Arab infrastructure, with some precision. Chinese and Russian help not only benefits it materially, but boosts the morale and self-belief of Iran’s rulers.
Any Trump escalation in Iran will lead to further disruption in the global economy and rising oil prices. This is disastrous politically for Trump and Republicans. It’s now all but certain Republicans lose the House in November’s midterm elections. They could well lose the Senate.

What's another bomb? Cars drive on the highway in front of a plume of smoke rising from the Dahieh neighbourhood after an Israeli airstrike on April 5 in Beirut. Picture: Getty Images




Put it another way, as they did in The Times ...



At this point, the bromancer began to waver, to have saucy doubts and fears ...

That provides a disincentive to escalation, but Trump may go that route anyway. He can’t run for re-election, and can’t accept defeat from Iran. But Iran won’t accept defeat either. While Tehran is weakened militarily, it’s earning about twice the revenue from oil sales that it earnt before the war. It’s letting tankers from “friendly” nations, such as China, pass through the Strait of Hormuz and charging a toll.
Geo-strategically, the big winner so far is Russia, earning billions and billions more for its oil, while the missiles and missile interceptors needed by Ukraine are expended and can’t be replaced at the rate they’re being used.
Trump is abusing allies, NATO especially, for not offering military support especially in the Strait of Hormuz. But this Trump demand is again literally incoherent. The US itself is not escorting any tankers through the Strait. It has not proposed a specific operation to clear the Strait. The Strait itself is so narrow, and drones now so cheap and plentiful, that it’s quite likely no operation to clear the Strait, short of invading Iran, is physically possible.
So why is Trump so wilfully mismanaging US allies, at such detriment to the US? US Studies Centre scholar Jared Mondschein offers one insight: “Trump has always seen NATO as something that entangles the US, rather than as a force multiplier as previous presidents did.”
If the Iranian regime survives this war and emerges with control of the Strait of Hormuz, it will likely earn enough revenue to rebuild its military, and it will have more influence on the global economy, and on the Middle East economy, than ever before.

Uh huh, that sounds like ending up way more tragedy than triumph, as the reptiles slipped in a final visual distraction: A protester waves the pre-Islamic Revolution Iranian flag and the Free France flag from World War II during a march against the Islamic Republic of Iran in Paris on April 5. Picture: AFP




But just as soon as the bro sees a little darkness, he turns around and discovers that mad King Donald has been "astonishingly effective":

Trump has often been astonishingly effective at overturning popular wisdom and winning politically – his two presidential victories, surviving all the legal charges thrown at him, decapitating the Venezuelan government, instituting a vast tariff regime without tanking the US or global economies.
This has made him overconfident. The tariffs didn’t work in policy terms. They didn’t cut the US trade deficit, didn’t create massive numbers of new manufacturing jobs, and led to China working out its far more powerful critical minerals weapon. Even to build the replacements to the weapons it’s using in Iran, the US needs Chinese critical minerals.
Trump is becoming more erratic even by his own standards. There is no one in this administration who talks back to him, gives him bad news, cautions him.
The near mass sackings of senior US generals are intensely disturbing. Senior military folks are not warmongers, but instinctively prudent, realistic. They also obey the law. In this most critical conflict, Trump’s hubris may well have led to severe, dangerous miscalculation. Then again, anything is possible, even a good outcome.
Greg Sheridan is The Australian’s foreign editor.

And there you have it.

After all that, still the bromancer holds out hope, even for "even a good outcome".

What can you say, except that he's almost as barking mad as King Donald ...



At this point, the pond should note that the current reptile jihad continues, thanks to a bit of bitter Bita ...




Once they get their teeth into a victim, the vampire reptiles never let go of their jihads, not until the last drop of blood is sucked dry...

Nothing will stop them, not garlic, silver bullets, stakes in the heart, holy water or crucifixes in hand.

As an aside, the pond can't help but immediately think of Boris and Natasha whenever Natasha's name bobs up. (They even scored their own live-action movie)

To note the crusade isn't to endorse or join it and in the normal course of things, the pond would have sent Natasha's hit piece to the intermittent archive ... but the archive is acting kinda funny at the moment, and the pond had trouble saving a link.

For those who care and want to try at some point ...

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation%2Ftaxpayerfunded-academic-cited-romance-novels-as-research-to-secure-900000-grant%2Fnews-story%2Fc3b530ba38957bf4a633ffb20f45077b?amp

(Hang on a mo', it came to life. Hopefully it will stop working again soon and save a stray correspondent from the jihad)

The pond was left wondering what it must feel like to hack away daily at hit pieces for the lizard Oz, with seemingly the sole purpose to generate fear, hate and loathing in the hive mind.

What an empty life ... it's not as if there aren't more obvious targets...




And that brings the pond to that lesser member of the Kelly gang, a certain Joe, who earlier had also tried to sort out mad King Donald for the reptiles ...



The header: Donald Trump faces blowback whether he strikes Iran’s infrastructure or backs down; Striking Iranian power plants risks punishing civilians and handing Tehran a propaganda win.

The caption for a man imitating a cane toad: US President Donald Trump has extended his deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Picture: AFP

The good thing about Joe's piece was that it was just two minutes long, and could be swallowed in a bite, with Joe showing signs of a little more concern than the bromancer:

Donald Trump needs to urgently land a deal with Tehran given his threats to target civilian infrastructure – a step which risks punishing the Iranian people in his ongoing military campaign against the Islamic regime.
The US President has now extended his deadline for the regime to reopen the Strait of Hormuz until Tuesday at 8pm local time (10am Wednesday AEST) before he begins destroying Iran’s power plants and other infrastructure.
If Trump makes good on his threat, Iran will undoubtedly use the strikes for propaganda purposes to try to galvanise popular support against Washington and strengthen its own domestic position.
Doubts are already being raised over the extent to which US attacks on energy plants and other infrastructure will advance the key objectives set out by the administration at the start of the war.
Questions over the legality of potential strikes on civilian infrastructure will also risk staining the legitimacy of the US campaign against an oppressive regime.
More broadly, it may further isolate Washington and draw criticism from trusted allies and partners.
None of the options is good.
The US President faces blowback if he follows through on his threat. But if he continues to extend the deadline, his threats lose credibility.
Another option is the deployment of ground troops, with more than 50,000 US forces now in the Middle East that could be used to help secure the Strait by force, seize the regime’s enriched uranium or capture the oil terminal on Kharg Island to use as leverage – all options fraught with the risk of US casualties.
Six weeks after launching Operation Epic Fury, the frustration of the US President boiled over in his Truth Social post on Easter Sunday where he called on the regime to “open the f..kin’ strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in hell”.
An eleventh-hour deal would give Trump an offramp from the cycle of escalation he now finds himself in, although both sides remain far apart.
The terms of any agreement and what happens to the Strait of Hormuz would be seen as the crucial measure of who holds the upper hand.
Iran is demanding that it retain control over the waterway – an unacceptable outcome for Washington and the world.
A new front has also emerged in the conflict in the form of a deeper and profound rift between the US and Europe. This threatens to be one of the most consequential developments of the conflict so far.
Already Trump’s position on NATO has shifted decisively.
His previous complaint was that the alliance wasn’t working given the free-riding of European partners. But now he has adopted a more confronting and existential position: he no longer believes in NATO at all.
The debate is no longer about European nations paying more.
Trump is now publicly canvassing a withdrawal and making clear that the trust underpinning the alliance has been killed off by the refusal of US allies and partners to secure the Strait of Hormuz.
White House deputy press secretary Anna Kelly told The Australian that “President Trump has made his disappointment with NATO and other allies clear, and as the President emphasised, ‘the United States will remember’.”
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte is due to meet with Trump on Wednesday, an opportunity to try to repair the damage in the transatlantic partnership.
In practical terms, Trump’s disenchantment may have meaningful consequences for Europe and Russia’s Vladimir Putin, including the diversion of US military resources and munitions intended for Ukraine to assist the Iranian war campaign.
A key risk is Trump washing his hands of the conflict in Eastern Europe given his belief the US was abandoned by its allies in the Middle East.

A key risk?

Oh Joe, Joe, mad King Donald abandoned the Ukrainians long ago, and has done everything in his power to help out and enable Vlad the sociopath, and now keeps boasting about how he can emulate Vlad's war criminal behaviour by bombing Iran back to the stone age ...



And now thanks to mad King Donald and the reptiles, the pond comes to a genuine curiosity ...



The header: Donald Trump using the F-word is the least of our problems with the President; There is a bit of General George Patton in Trump, in the way he bullies through with little concern for consequences.

The caption for that snap of a maniacal grin: This is not US President Donald Trump’s first excursion into obscenity. Picture: AFP

The pond confesses to not having thought of Jack Marx for years, and so was completely surprised to see him bob up in the hive mind.

His wiki listing is out of date, and his Facebook page has just 121 followers ... with his last post a couple of years old and about his struggles in rehab.

His return would have been interesting if he'd had something remotely interesting to say ...

It has been said that taboo slang is the last bastion of the intellectually bankrupt. But outrage in the face of it – hand-to-bosom shock at an F-word – is surely the Alamo of the morally fraudulent.
Such impostors are living large this week, on the back of Donald Trump having used the notorious “doing word” in a post on Truth Social. (Those easily offended should be assured, however, that they can approach the following paragraph with confidence.)
“Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran,” the American President wrote. “There will be nothing like it!!! Open the F..kin’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell - JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah. President DONALD J. TRUMP.”

Actually that's not what he said ... this is what he said ...




Yes, he used the "f" word in full, he didn't slip in dots or asterisks or dashes or some other tomfoolery, which is why the reptiles diluting it was full of rich irony - as if they were being run by the google bot overlord who takes a view on what turns up in this blog.

Suddenly Jack's attempt at being a hard hitting takedown artist looked pretty feeble ...

The post was directed at Iran, whose leaders really should have been more offended by Trump’s obviously ironic abuse of the Prophet’s name. But Seyyed Mehdi Tabatabaei, deputy for communications at the Iranian President’s office, seemed more alarmed by the swearing, declaring Trump had “resorted to obscenities and nonsense out of sheer desperation and anger”.
Also deeply hurt was Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene – the devout Christian who was banned from Twitter for “multiple violations of our civic integrity policy” – who called fellow Republican Lauren Boebert a “little bitch” and recommended the then Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, be executed. Greene said everyone in Trump’s administration needed to “beg forgiveness from God” for Donald’s vulgarity. God, it seems, has no problem with corruption, infidelity or homicidal wrath, but really gets upset when confronted by a bit of the old bad language.

Jack decided to dress this latest example of dementia in action as a form of "plain speaking" ... US President Donald Trump is a plain speaker. Picture: AFP




Actually like a lot of swearing, it's merely a sign of impotence, frustration and a limited vocabulary.

When you get down to basics, it's deeply pathetic.

Jack was all in on being naughty, except he still couldn't be properly naughty, at least when it came to the dreaded "f" word (the pond could also sense the evil google bot hovering, ready to strike, but Jack and the reptiles of Oz saved the pond's bacon):

Everyone seems to have forgotten this is not Donald Trump’s first excursion into obscenity. In 2018, he referred to African countries as “shitholes”. In 2020, on Rush Limbaugh’s radio show, he told the Islamic Republic there would be trouble “if you f..k around with us”. And last year he referred to Israel and Iran as two countries that “don’t know what the f..k they’re doing”. When it comes to scandalous utterances, Donald Trump is no Pat Boone.
And then there’s the word itself, irrespective of who is using it. It’s quite bizarre that it’s deemed offensive, considering what it represents. It describes an act of creation – the privatisation of The Big Bang – which is the reason we are all here. We should be more offended by “death”, “murder”, “cancer”, “lack of air”.
My father died last week. I watched him take his last breath. It fell to me to deliver his eulogy, and the choice of words has never been heavier. I felt bossed about by that odd aversion to crude absolutes, like “death”, “dead” and “died”, some pansy voice inside me suggesting “passed”, “passed away” and “no longer with us” instead. I ignored that voice. I’m glad I did. My dad was a plain speaker.
Donald Trump is a plain speaker, too. The unwise do not have the luxury to be manipulative. He says whatever comes into his head, and it’s left to his handlers to clean up the mess. He might be the first politician in history whose words can be absolutely trusted, even if his motives cannot.

Stupid is as stupid scribbles, and the reptiles blessed us with another snap of a man whose words apparently can absolutely be trusted ... except in the many ways he lies and tells porkies and invents alternative realities... US President Donald Trump gestures after speaking at a televised address on the conflict in the Middle East. Picture: AFP




Perhaps with Jack's guidance, the pond might learn to trust King Donald's words in due course ... possibly the process might only take those immortal two weeks the mad king keeps talking about ...

It’s a very American thing to speak with recklessness and discourtesy. General George Patton was good at it, got pounded for saying “the wrong thing”, and for that was forever loved. There’s a bit of Patton in Trump, in the way he bullies through with little concern for consequences.
Patton was no strategist – he believed in charging ahead at full speed, using profane language to inspire his men to follow him (those who recall Franklin Schaffner’s film from 1970 will remember it well). Trump does the same; his army of followers willing to go with him, die with him. They will, too. But they won’t do so because Donald Trump uses bad language. Rude words never hurt anyone. It’s Donald Trump’s mind, the thing with which he sleeps, that is the danger. We should be thankful, I guess, that the window to his mind is yawning open. Even if there are rude words in there, I think we can handle it.
Those focusing on Trump’s profanity are like people beating up fleas in a catfight. The administration he captains is guilty of many things, but ribald language is the least of them. It’s hardly surprising – those in an argument who’ve run out of ammunition always pick on the bad language of their adversary, as if piety is more important than acumen. F..k that.

Oh dear. An attempt at a final flourish, and still the dots got in the way.

That saved the pond from its omniscient overlord, the google bot, but it didn't help Jack maintain his hard-swearing tough guy pose ...

And so to Dame Groan, and the reason the pond dilly-dallied and delayed with Joe and Jack was that it would make the arrival at the Tuesday groaning all the sweeter and more rewarding ...



The header: Our war on fossil fuels is ending in a battle for energy; The so-called ‘experts’ simply did not accept the possibility renewable energy would not replace fossil fuels.

The caption for the wildly exciting snap of gas guzzlers in a queue: Lining up at the bowser for petrol at Costco service station in Kilburn, South Australia. Picture: Brett Hartwig

The trouble with delaying Dame Groan's arrival is that instead of a cosmic explosion, an ecstatic eruption, it's more likely to be just the usual onanisms about renewables and climate science spilling to the ground ...




Dame Groan is an oil and gas junkie.

Always has been, always will be ...and how she hurts at the cruel way they've been treated ...

Australia has been waging a war against fossil fuels for nearly two decades. While Labor governments have fought this battle with the most aggression, Coalition governments have contributed as well. Recall here Morrison’s commitment to net zero 2050 made in 2021 on the eve of the COP climate meeting in Glasgow.
Working on the assumption that the net-zero transition is an economic prize – an assumption that is immediately refuted by dint of the necessary compulsion and large subsidies required to achieve it – Australia has put up multiple barriers to any fossil fuel-based developments.
Add in the false proposition that renewable energy is the cheapest form of energy and we have been led down a path of economic harm and insecurity.
We are now witnessing the consequences of our overdependence on imported fossil fuels – think petrol, diesel, aviation fuel, helium, fertilisers, plastics – and an inability to remedy the situation in an acceptable time frame.
There was always an astonishing naivety – nay, complete ignorance – about the consequences of blocking the use and development of fossil fuels. Far too much attention was given to the electricity grid and the scope for turbines and solar panels to generate electrons to replace ageing coal-fired plants.
The external environmental costs of turbines, solar panels and large-scale batteries have essentially been ignored. True environmentalists should hang their collective heads in shame. As a less dense form of power than coal/gas/nuclear, renewable energy would always require vastly larger land masses, with much larger environmental footprints.
The need for extraordinarily expensive transmission lines has simply added to the catastrophe. There is also the important point that the turbines, solar panels and batteries have relatively short lives relative to coal-fired and nuclear plants, with the associated need for expensive replacement. But here’s the thing: notwithstanding the billions of dollars expended to spur the expansion of renewable energy, there hasn’t been a significant decline in the overall use of fossil fuels here. According to the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, “fossil fuels (coal, oil and gas) accounted for 91 per cent of Australia’s primary energy mix in 2023-24”. In energy terms, Australians consume twice as much in liquid fuels as in electricity.

Okay, so we've read it all before, and the pond is sure we'll read it all again, and as usual, the reptiles will parade the villains who have treated Dame Groan so vilely ... Minister for Climate Change and Energy, Chris Bowen pictured speaking at a press conference outside his electorate office in Fairfield West. Picture: NewsWire / Monique Harmer




Usually the pond would be inclined to slip in another story about how stuffed the planet is ... but not having the intermittent archive to hand means paywalls can get in the way.

What the heck ...

How to Poison an Ocean
Trump envisions a new era of offshore oil drilling. Scientists know all too well how that story ends.
By Jeffrey Marlow (*intermittent archive, still working?)

A teaser trailer ...



Meanwhile, the groaning carried on ...

The so-called “experts” simply didn’t accept the possibility renewable energy wouldn’t replace fossil fuels but would add to it. With the prospect of new data centres and their need for constant power (and water), there is a good chance that the proportion of our energy mix accounted for by fossil fuels could increase.
Far too much emphasis has been placed on the scope for electrification while ignoring the vital and largely uncontested role of fossil fuels in primary iron, cement, fertilisers and plastics. This naivety has been clearly demonstrated by recent events. It’s worth outlining how the war against fossil fuels has been waged by governments across many fronts to understand our current predicament.
To take a recent example, the mandate of the Export Finance and Insurance Corporation had been altered to prevent any investments in fossil fuels. To ensure ongoing oil delivery, however, the Albanese government has had to reverse this mandate.
Then there are the recent amendments to the Environmental Protection and Biosecurity Act, which explicitly exclude fossil fuel projects from using the streamlined assessment pathway.
They cannot obtain the benefit of being classified a “national interest proposal” or be granted an exemption from being a “restricted action” in a conservation zone. The likely effect is to thwart new fossil fuel developments, including drilling for oil.

There followed another snap of assorted villains ... Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Treasurer Jim Chalmers, and Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen hold a joint press conference at Parliament House on the national fuel security crisis and emergency economic measures. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




Dame Groan's lust for oil was worse than a meth addict looking for a fix ...

The mandate of the Future Fund was changed in 2024 to include support for the energy transition as one of three priorities, effectively ruling out large-scale investment in fossil fuels. The federal government funds anti-fossil fuel groups such as the Environmental Defenders Office to pursue legal action against fossil fuel developments. The recently concluded Australia-EU Free Trade Agreement contains “a binding commitment to implement obligations under the Paris Agreement on climate change”.
The point is that the federal government executes its anti-fossil fuel stance in many ways in addition to the massive subsidies made available to the transition of the electricity grid. It is hardly surprising therefore that exploration for oil, for example, has effectively dried up, notwithstanding the fact that there are a number of highly prospective areas in this country.
It was only two decades ago that we were nearly self-sufficient in oil; we are now down to 20 per cent and falling. We no longer have a large-scale urea factory – the Gibson Island plant closed two years ago – and Qenos, the country’s largest producer of polyethylene and polymers, has also shut up shop. Mind you, state governments, including Coalition ones, have also demonstrated hostility to fossil fuels by facilitating the rollout of renewable energy and refusing to green-light any new or replacement coal-fired power plants. They have blocked or significantly delayed fossil fuel exploration and extraction. They have also wasted money on unachievable pipedreams – green hydrogen in South Australia, anyone?
It’s worth noting the economic effects of this intransigent opposition to fossil fuels. According to CBA Economics, “the closure of critical air and shipping routes, especially the Strait of Hormuz, is rupturing fragile global supply chains, slowing down the passage and pushing up prices of a variety of products, including oil, gas, chemicals, resins, fertilisers, cement and grains”.

A last snap of the villain in chief, Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen speaking to an Endeavour Energy employee in Bidwill, Western Sydney launching a local community battery. Picture: Jane Dempster / The Australian




... followed by a last groaning and a sighing, and Dame Groan's despair at the way that we still haven't sufficiently f*cked the earth, the sky and the oceans (*you see Jack, we all end up wimps under the iron rule of the google bot overlord):

The further point is that “the elongated supply chain disruption in the Middle East has exposed vulnerabilities in Australian fuel markets, with the country heavily reliant on importation of liquid fuels such as refined petroleum, diesel and jet fuel to power our domestic energy-intensive industries”. The industries singled out as being particularly vulnerable include agriculture, transport, construction and mining.
The idea of running a “just in time” economy has a certain appeal until consideration is given to the large adverse consequences of disruptions to vital supply chains. It might look cheaper at the time, but the real costs become apparent when the flows of vital inputs to economic activity are impeded and their price skyrockets. We should have learned that lesson from the Covid experience, but it was essentially ignored.
A reserve of petrol/diesel/aviation fuel of around 30 days was always insufficient. It also puts us at significant odds with many other countries. Australia needs to remove immediately the impediments to increasing the domestic availability of liquid fuels lest we find ourselves in this position time and time again.

The pond has said it before and will say it again. If we don't get off being oil and gas and coal junkies, there won't be much of a future ...

The old biddy has done a lot of her time already, but the pond quaintly imagined that white Xian nationalists in the lizard Oz wanted children to inherit an earth.

Instead we're in the last chance theatre watching Godot's last stand or Krapp's last tape ...




It's always in the details ... especially that shadowy figure lurking in the wings that the bromancer never manages to see ...




Good old Sky (no rebrand yet?), good old Covid Sharri, good old war mongering Faux Noise, good old Jesse and his mum ...

Crazy times ... crazy people ...




Monday, April 06, 2026

In which Lord Downer goes biblical, the Caterist goes Ming, and Major Mitchell goes full Pauline ...


The pond had hoped to be able to put aside friendly atheist Easter banter and get back to the main sociopathic extreme far right lizard Oz reptile business - ruining the fragile condition of the planet even more than it is at the moment.

After all, if you happen to read the whole bible - which to its eternal shame, the pond has done a couple of times - after you've got past the begats and the dystopian vision of the old testament, there's only so long you can try to ignore the socialistic, almost full commie, fully woke talk in Christ's new testament teachings (especially if you ignore misogynistic late comers like St Paul, and note that Christ was even prepared to give hookers a fair go, and had not a word to say about teh gaze).

But then Lord Downer had to come along on Easter feria secunda and ruin it all...




The header: Why we must resist the progressive push to abolish our core Australian traditions; An ABC announcer’s reluctance to mention Good Friday while discussing fish sales has highlighted progressive efforts to diminish Christian traditions in Australian society.

The caption for the flag-waving snap: A Royal Australian Navy MH-60R Seahawk flies the flag on Australia Day. The progressive left has taken aim at the national flag and many of our traditions.

The pond was tempted to send this nonsensical blather straight to the intermittent archive - his effort was there early in the Mōnandæg morning -  but it's been acting kinda funny lately, and how could the pond deprive others of the chance to plunge into a dose of white Xian nationalism, His Lordship style, especially as it's all the fault of the ABC:

Last Friday morning an ABC announcer told us there was a big upsurge in sales of fish at the new Sydney Fish Market. When she was speculating as to why, she thought it was because last Friday was a public holiday.
She couldn’t bring herself to remind us that Friday was Good Friday, a day of huge significance to the large number of Australians who are Christians. It is the tradition for Christians on Good Friday to eat fish. That an ABC announcer should avoid any reference to Good Friday should come as no surprise. The ABC, particularly in Sydney, is run by the progressive left.

Dear sweet long absent lord, are we all tykes now? 

Back in the day, the pond can remember proddie swine giving tykes a terribly hard time about eating fish on Friday:

It sounds like the plot of a Dan Brown thriller: A powerful medieval pope makes a secret pact to prop up the fishing industry that ultimately alters global economics. The result: Millions of Catholics around the world end up eating fish on Fridays as part of a religious observance.
This "realpolitik" explanation of why Catholics eat fish on Friday has circulated for so long, many people grew up believing it as fact. Some, myself included, even learned it in Catholic school. It's a humdinger of a tale — the kind conspiracy theorists can really sink their teeth into. But is it true?

The answer at NPR here had this annotation ...

...after Henry became smitten with Anne Boleyn, English fish-eating took a nosedive.
You see, Henry was desperate with desire for Anne — but Anne wanted a wedding ring. The problem was, Henry already had a wife, Catherine of Aragon, and the pope refused to annul that decades' long marriage. So Henry broke off from the Roman Catholic Church, declared himself the head of the Church of England and divorced Catherine so he could marry Anne.
Suddenly, eating fish became political. Fish was seen as a " 'popish flesh' that lost favour as fast as Anglicism took root," as Kate Colquhoun recounts in her book Taste: The Story of Britain Through Its Cooking.

Well yes, they were still carrying on that way about fish-eating in the tykes v proddy wars in Tamworth in the twentieth century, but do go on ...

Fishermen were hurting. So much so that when Henry's young son, Edward VI, took over in 1547, fast days were reinstated by law — "for worldly and civil policy, to spare flesh, and use fish, for the benefit of the commonwealth, where many be fishers, and use the trade of living."
In fact, fish fasting remained surprisingly influential in global economics well into the 20th century.
As one economic analysis noted, U.S. fish prices plummeted soon after Pope Paul VI loosened fasting rules in the 1960s. The Friday meat ban, by the way, still applies to the 40 days of the Lenten fast.
A few years before the Vatican relaxed the rules, Lou Groen, an enterprising McDonald's franchise owner in a largely Catholic part of Cincinnati, found himself struggling to sell burgers on Fridays. His solution? The Filet-O-Fish.
While not exactly the miracle of loaves and fishes, Groen's little battered sandwich has fed millions around the world.

So there's the answer. Food that passingly resembles fish, but tastes like cardboard.

A treatise on fish eating was the last place the pond had expected His Lordship to take his readers, and yet here we are.

The pond decided to let His Lordship have the rest of his say without any theological niceties intruding on the rant ...

Oh sheesh, not the whole bloody war on Xmas thingie again, in bloody April!

Let’s understand what members of the progressive left are trying to achieve. They want to deconstruct existing society and replace it with their conception of a utopian society. To achieve this quiet revolution they not only aim to direct control over the private lives of individuals but they want to destroy many of our traditions, be they public or private.
Some of the traditions they want to abolish are relatively minor and some are significant. Where once we happily sent cards in December wishing people a Merry Christmas, the progressive left just says “Happy Holidays”. Let’s abolish Christmas. In the progressive world, Christianity and Christian celebrations should be downgraded.
That applies to Easter as well. The Easter holidays are just an excuse to have two extra days off. The progressives wouldn’t want to mention why or the origins of these celebrations.
Progressives want to get rid of as many links as we have with Britain, despite the fact modern Australia has its roots in the UK. King’s Counsels are to become senior counsels. Judges should abandon their robes. The monarchy is to be abolished. The national flag should be changed or, if that’s too difficult, other symbolic flags should also be flown alongside it to reduce its status as a symbol of the nation. Australia Day should be replaced altogether. The list is a long one.
Interestingly, while progressives want to abolish most of the traditions of modern Australia, they nevertheless worship the traditions of other cultures. Our progressive Prime Minister acknowledged the beginning of Ramadan but totally ignored Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent. Indeed they don’t object to those non-European traditions being injected into our society as long as our more familiar traditions are abolished, such is the incoherence of the ideology of progressives. They are more defined by what they dislike rather than what they like.
This progressive agenda, which has increasingly gained traction in Australia, should be resisted. It needs to be resisted for two reasons. First, deconstructing existing society and trying to reconstruct it along the lines of some utopian model always fails. You don’t have to go back far in history to see that Robespierre’s France, Lenin’s plans for Russia, Pol Pot’s Cambodia and Hitler and Mussolini’s visions in Europe all ended in disaster. In every case they tried to build a model society, tearing down institutions and traditions to build something completely new in their place. To do that they had to compel people to abandon their way of life, and that involved brutal coercion.
Second, the societies that have thrived have been ones that have maintained strong traditions while embracing modernity and change to ensure society remains workable and prosperous. As circumstances and technology change, so too should institutions and traditions evolve.
Being open to modernity and evolution is common sense. Traditions are the important foundation for the durability and coherence of society.
In a world of constant and rapid change, traditions provide a sense of stability. Traditions anchor people. They connect the past, the present and the future so life doesn’t feel like a random sequence of events. Looked at another way, in a world where modernisation is inevitable and technological change is largely welcome, traditions provide continuity and grounding for society.
Traditions are more than that. They are also about identity. They tell you what group you belong to, whether that’s a family, a nation, or a culture. Without them, a country is just a group of taxpayers who happen to share physical space.

As befits a spray of white Xian nationalism (to hell with the Jews and the Islamics and the secularists), the reptiles featured a foreshadowing of later Anzac action as the sole remaining visual interruption... Abolishing Anzac Day would attack the heart of our national self-image. Picture: Evan Morgan



Perhaps Lord Downer is right, perhaps this tendency to modernity is ruining everything, perhaps people should look to traditional pursuits, which would place them in the mainstream of modern American 'looning ...




Oh you sly old devil, you eye-catching rogue ...

As for the rest, you've heard it a zillion times, and here it is for the zillionth and once time ...

Modern Australia has developed its own traditions across the past 238 years. We honour Anzac Day as the day when we remember those who have sacrificed for the nation. Abolishing Anzac Day would attack the heart of our national self-image.
Australia Day celebrates the founding of modern Australia. To abolish Australia Day is seen by many as a strike against our pride in our nation and its history.
We celebrate Christmas and Easter as Christian holidays because modern Australia was founded as a Christian society. In the last census 43 per cent of Australians identified as Christians, yet only 3.1 per cent identified as Muslims and fewer still as Hindus and Buddhists. While we respect traditions of other societies, we expect our traditions to be properly respected too and our traditions are steeped in history.
As a society we may not be as Christian as we once were – 39 per cent say they have no religion. But Christianity forms the foundation of our modern society; our morality, our human rights, our commitment to the equal value of all individuals regardless of their gender and ethnicity. In our society all these things are derived from Christian teaching.
Then there are the rites of passage: at birth there are everything from baptisms to baby showers. There are weddings and funerals. The format of these traditions has gradually changed. There are fewer weddings in churches and more at the beach. You’re likelier to hear a welcome to country than the Lord‘s Prayer at a wedding! But the institution of marriage has remained because it helps to provide continuity and certainty in relationships that may bring children into the world.
Members of the progressive left mock our traditions. They want to get rid of them. Some recognise politically that such changes will take a great deal of time but the ambition is there to get rid of our traditions. If they succeed they will hollow out our society and we will be nothing more than millions of individuals living on our vast island, disconnected from our past and disconnected from each other.

Ah, it's all the fault of those deviant uppity blacks, carrying on as if they were first in country.

Thank you Lord Downer ...

Before proceeding further, the pond should note a splendid new bit of visual cleverness in the reptile's "news" coverage.

A bifurcated, loosely animated set of rotating images! Look, AI magic, an AI marvel ...




Oh dear, not One Nation again, as Geoff chambered a round and Brownie was so desperate he turned to comrade Bill ... (what next, comrade Dan makes a comeback? Desperate times)

Sorry, the pond had to send them to the intermittent archive, because the Caterist was loose in a quarry and inspecting the flow of floodwaters again ...



The header: Political leaders trade clarity for data-driven clicks in digital era; In an interconnected world in which we rely on a global energy market, the idea we can stand apart is a comforting fiction.

The caption for that sneering man: The messaging of the Prime Minister made a persuasive case for nothing. Picture: Martin Ollman

At the moment, the pond would settle for nothing, with nobody a close second ... but go on, do the Ming the Merciless trick we love so well ...

In the era of TikTokification, political leaders seldom talk to people. They talk to the algorithm, the invisible hand of the digital communications market that rewards not what is true or important but what is likeliest to hold attention.
Anyone who expected Anthony Albanese’s address to the nation last week to be imbued with the gravity of, say, Robert Menzies’ 1939 declaration of war was bound to be disappointed.
Menzies’ radio broadcast was delivered live as an unskippable, unclippable speech, marshalling facts in logical sequence to make a persuasive case for war.
Albanese’s speech, by contrast, was a grab-bag of brief, search engine-optimised statements, making a persuasive case for nothing while failing to resolve competing propositions.
The Prime Minister’s insistence that Australia is “not a participant” in the conflict is not so much wrong as beside the point.
In an interconnected world in which we rely on a global energy market, the idea we can stand apart is a comforting fiction.

The reptiles made sure to note where the fault lay, and a grievous fault it was ... Anthony Albanese failed to spark the nation with his address. Picture: David Beach



That snap of the downcast man inspired the quarry cultist to new heights ...

More important, it avoids the more difficult question: where, in strategic and moral terms, does Australia stand?
Iran is not a distant or neutral actor. Its conduct, including hostile activity on Australian soil, is that of an enemy. A government with a clear strategic compass would recognise the war against Iran is in Australia’s interests. It would acknowledge without equivocation the longstanding basis of its support for Israel.
While the analog era rewarded clarity and conviction, the digital world encourages content banks of safe, repeatable and context-free fragments.
The trend towards data-driven, emotionally calibrated messaging, accelerated by artificial intelligence, helps explain why political language often feels formulaic, repetitive and risk-averse. At consequential moments such as this, that becomes a problem, particularly in the democratic world, where leaders require consent for sacrifice.
In his televised address at the start of the Cuban missile crisis in October 1962, John F. Kennedy delivered one of the finest and most persuasive speeches of his presidency. The build-up of Soviet missiles had been secret, swift and extraordinary, he said. The US didn’t seek conflict but it had been taught a clear lesson in the 1930s: aggressive conduct, if left unchecked, ultimately leads to war.

Hmm, the pond is getting more than a faint whiff of war mongering, backed by this interrupting snap, and Xian messaging from a notorious flogger of Chinese-manufactured bibles ... US President Donald Trump delivers a message on Holy Week – ‘Happy Easter to all, may God bless you, may God bless the United States of America’. Picture: X/WhiteHouse




Some faint sense of reality about the mad King finally entered the flood-water divining Caterist picture ...

Contrast that with Donald Trump’s eight-minute video posted on Truth Social announcing the start of hostilities against Iran on February 28.
The underlying reason for action – to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons – was the same yet the tone was different. Trump promised “a massive and ongoing operation” against “a very wicked, radical dictatorship”. It would raze Iran’s missile industry to the ground, annihilate its navy.
Unlike JFK, Trump has failed to convince nonpartisan Americans to rally around the flag. In 1962, the administration’s action had broad support among Republicans and Democrats. In 2026, support for US action falls mainly along party political lines.
Almost alone among democratic leaders, Trump has embraced social media boldly and provocatively.
His predecessor, Joe Biden, took the more common path of cautious and repetitive framing, using words that would remain safe when clipped and were therefore insufferably bland. His platform-friendly statement to Americans that “we’re going to be OK … making progress … building back better” were easy to remember and even easier to forget.

Boldly and provocatively?

The pond is always impressed by the Caterist's way with words. Others might call it Batshyte Crazy ...

Trump Triggers 25th Amendment Calls With Unhinged Easter Meltdown (intermittent archive)



Oh dear, and then we'd get JD ... out of the battered fish frying pan into the battered fish griller.

But the pond gets the Caterist point.

Why not join this sundowning weirdo on a little excursion, a little journey, even if the Poms are a tad reluctant and yearning to overturn Brexit? British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has also taken a risk-averse approach. Picture: Getty Images




Talk about scaredy cats ...get down with the bold, brave Caterist, always up for risk-taking and bunging on a do ...

Britain’s Keir Starmer has taken the same safe path and is now widely considered to be in his death throes as Prime Minister: bloodless, managerial, risk-averse to the point of opacity.
Like Starmer, Albanese keeps his animating vision, if he has one, close to his chest. Last week’s National Press Club speech bore the hallmarks of modern industrial political communication: modular construction, repetition and emotional calibration. It cycles through the empathetic settings of concern (“I understand”), reassurance (“commonsense approach”) and communal obligation (“looking after people”, “working together”), hiding its moral vagueness under a blanket of emotional warmth.
Albanese’s lips were moving but what was he saying? Was it a war speech? A fuel crisis and national resilience speech? Was it a Future Made in Australia speech, a gambling reform speech or a budget preview? It was all of them and none of them at once. Its core weakness was its failure to answer the hard questions it raises.
Albanese says the degrading of Iran’s military capacity is “a good thing” but doesn’t explain why when Australia is not an active participant, as we have been in other major wars in which the US has engaged. He calls for de-escalation but it is not clear whether Australia supports continuation of the campaign and Trump’s threat to “rain hell” on Iran or if he believes action is strategically justified beyond its original objectives.
Crucially, he does not say what costs Australians should be prepared to bear in return for a noble victory, if there can be one.
Instead the Prime Minister finds himself wedged, like Shakespeare’s Prince of Denmark, caught between passive suffering of the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune and taking arms in the war it entails.

A noble victory? That's what they're calling war crimes these days? The reported wreckage and remains of targeted and crashed US aircraft in central Iran on Sunday. Picture: Sepah News/AFP



For some reason, at that moment the careening Caterist careered off into the digital era...

If the tech-savvy, smart young things who advise Albanese thought their boss would be basking in adulation by the end of the week, they clearly underestimated popular intelligence. At a moment of genuine consequence – global instability, supply shocks and the risk of inflation tipping into recession – people expect leadership.
Yet the PM had almost nothing to say about the cause of the oil shortages that were the ostensible reason for commanding three minutes and 13 seconds of prime time: the US and Israeli military action against a despotic regime that presents a real and present danger to the peace-loving world.
Instead, he seeks to befog the debate with a checklist of policies that conveys a sense of busyness. His government is acting to keep Australia moving, to make the country stronger and fairer, stronger because it is fairer, recognising there is no security in maintaining a status quo that doesn’t work for people. On and on it goes, the rhetorical equivalent of hotel lobby music: short sentences and simple syntax, heavy in emotional legibility but low in analytical density, full of sound and fury and symbolising nothing.
It’s tempting to arrive at Byung-Chul Han’s dismal conclusion in his 2022 book Infocracy: Digitisation and the Crisis of Democracy, which argues democracy will not be defeated by censorship but by overload of information that fragments attention and dissolves shared meaning.
However much technology may dominate our lives, we must be wary of such deterministic narratives and remind ourselves that the pursuit of freedom that inspires democracy is not an ideological construct but a response to human nature.
The political leadership to navigate a path through the digital era in a way that strengthens rather than erodes democracy will one day emerge, even if it is not immediately apparent among current global leaders.

Thank you quarry meister and the pond will pay attention to all the digital lessons to be learned in the King Donald era ...



Forgotten already, her noble work already just digital fush and chups wrappings?

And here the pond was faced with an agonising choice, a bit like a mother caught between choosing one child over the other, when truly both are blessed...




Cruel, inhuman fiends for forcing the pond to make a choice...

Sadly the pond had to send simpleton Simon to the intermittent archive with a god speed and a teaser trailer ...



What a wondrous snap of a bemused, quizzical, perhaps a tad startled beefy boofhead from down Goulburn.

 How the pond was torn, how the pond would have loved to have stayed on with simpleton Simon, and shared the snap that immediately followed...of a man in proper, prayerful, gesticulating Easter form ...




Ye ancient cats and howling dogs, what ghostly figure is that in the background?

But the Major called, and the sacrifice was worth it, because Major Mitchell was dealing with the crisis in his own inimitable way ... by writing a stump speech for Pauline, outlining all the ways she could succeed, if only she followed his Major thoughts ...




The header: How economic decline and voter anger are fuelling the rise of One Nation; Political analysts once dismissed One Nation voters as globalisation’s losers, but the party now threatens to reshape Australian politics.

The caption for that leering Jimbo: Treasurer Jim Chalmers needs backing to use the May 12 budget to stimulate productivity and begin budget repair. Picture: Martin Ollman

The Major was in bigly five minute read form, and for once there wasn't much to appeal to readers of the Australian Daily Zionist News ...but it should produce oodles of converts to the Pauline cause ...

Thirty years ago, political analysts thought One Nation voters were the economic losers of globalisation.
Today globalisation is dead but One Nation is on the rise, polling a quarter of the vote.
Its rise reflects the decline in our nation’s political, media and business culture.
The timidity of both sides of politics since John Howard’s November 2007 election loss is eating away at their electoral support.
This column on February 8 quoted former ABC election analyst Antony Green suggesting Pauline Hanson’s party could win up to 25 federal seats if its support held up. That piece warned Labor might be the big winner as One Nation cannibalised Liberal and National Party seats.
Fast forward to the South Australian election on March 21. One Nation picked up three or four Lower House seats and the Liberals lost 11 to finish with five. Assorted independents won four.
Peter Malinauskas’s Labor government won seven extra seats to finish with 34 in the 47-seat Lower House.

The reptiles interrupted with a snap of that woman, Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party has reeped (sic, the pond only records, and never corrects, being in something of a typo glass house without the wonders of a spell checker) the benefit of working class abandoning Labor. Picture: Martin Ollman.




The Major did his very best to make a good stump speech for Pauline and One Nation ... so many Major talking points...

The pattern could be repeated in Victoria on November 28, where One Nation seems certain to win seats and young Liberal leader Jess Wilson is being hurt by her party’s limitless propensity for self-harm, this time over the preselection of pro-women campaigner Moira Deeming.
It would be a travesty were Labor Premier Jacinta Allan to win with what is easily the worst record in government, state or federal, this century.
Former NSW premier Mike Baird in this newspaper on Wednesday said the economy had been growing at an average 2.5 per cent a year since 2011 but debt had been rising 3 per cent a year. This had left all levels of government with a $48bn annual interest bill.
This “is 2½ times what we spend on policing across the country, it is more than we spend on aged care, it is enough money to upgrade the Bruce Highway six times, build three WestConnex motorways or three Melbourne Metros each and every year”, Mr Baird wrote.
Australia is languishing with poor productivity and high population growth.
These problems disproportionately affect lower socio-economic demographics in the outer suburbs of our large cities, regional towns and rural Australia.
These are One Nation hot spots, and federal Labor knows it too could lose seats in places such as the Hunter.
Yet concern about high immigration is treated by much of the left media as a trojan horse for racism. Never mind few leaders in media, business or politics live in areas where new schools, roads, public transport, hospitals and jobs are not keeping up with population growth.
ABC journalists are more interested in non-means-tested welfare handouts than budget repair.
Productivity is treated as a way to squeeze more from the poor. Journalists have forgotten the 30 years of uninterrupted growth the productivity improvements of the 1980s and 90s gave Australia.
Kos Samaras, from the RedBridge polling group, in The Australian Financial Review on March 30, described the rise of One Nation as a “story about what happens when a significant cohort of Australians spends nearly two decades watching its world dismantled, its concerns dismissed and its votes treated as a problem to be managed rather than a signal to be heard”.
Samaras cites the closure of the car industry in Victoria and South Australia as the beginning of the end of Australian manufacturing.
Rapid declines in steelmaking, textiles, abattoirs and canneries shook the faith of “people with TAFE qualifications, trade certificates and decades of embodied knowledge the market, suddenly, had no use for”.
Samaras rejects the idea that One Nation voters are being manipulated.
“They have lived, for nearly two decades, through the managed decline of the world they were promised, and they have watched the institutions charged with their welfare either accelerate that decline or look away.”
For many, the bipartisan commitment to net-zero emissions is as big a threat to jobs as mass immigration is to living standards.
Labor’s primary vote is near historic lows, despite holding 94 of 150 federal seats. Facing an oil shock that will lift inflation past 5 per cent and could dramatically slow growth, our cautious PM needs to give Treasurer Jim Chalmers room to use the May 12 budget to stimulate productivity and begin budget repair.

The reptiles then slipped in a snap of Peter in the sort of head gear you need when taking pot shots of a Glock 9mm kind at writers' festivals ... Re-elected South Australian Labor Premier Peter Malinauskas. Picture: Eleni Tzanos (When I hear 'culture', I release the safety catch on my Browning!)



Then the Major carried on in reliable reptile renewables bashing way ...

It’s a nightmare for a Treasurer who looks like going into a slowdown with the prospect of at least two more interest rate rises this year.
After the GFC and Covid, Labor really should have been squirrelling away money from the mining boom to prepare for the next economic shock. Unfortunately its idea of reform has been about raising more tax and giving away more money.
Last week it signalled it is looking at the capital gains tax discount on investor housing. This may temporarily quiet complaints about housing affordability but is likely to raise much less money than the Greens claim, while investors will ramp up rents to offset the increased costs of tax changes.
The government – like Nationals leader Matt Canavan and Liberal frontbencher Andrew Hastie – talks about supply chain resilience and making more of what we need here.
Unfortunately, Labor’s Future Made in Australia policies look like an old-fashioned case of picking winners.
We were told last term that Australia was going to lead the world in green hydrogen and green steel. Albanese earmarked a billion taxpayer dollars for the “solar sunshot” plan to make solar panels here but little has happened.
It wold (sic, the pond merely transcribes) be far smarter to boost productivity in things Australia is good at: selling iron ore, coal, gas and uranium.
How about opening gas exploration in places such as Victoria?

Indeed, indeed ...




What could go wrong?

The new Wildland Fire Service will consolidate all Interior Department firefighting efforts as a lacking winter and ongoing drought promises a bad fire season. (Sorry, last two links to intermittent archive)

Well the pond did begin by wondering when we could return to getting back to turning an already dire planet into a worse one, in accordance with the lizard Oz's climate science denying agenda, and here we are, as the Major finishing scribbling his stump speech for Pauline ...

The Australian’s editor-at-large Paul Kelly on March 27 discussed the economic headwinds: inflation – already too high – being further pushed up by oil prices, growth constrained to 2 per cent, and productivity that Chalmers himself says will reach 1.2 per cent annual improvement, but not for another five years. Productivity growth in the Hawke, Keating and Howard years averaged 2.2 per cent.
Albanese and Chalmers have done too little to curb the cost blowout in the National Disability Insurance Scheme.
They encouraged trade union activism in a return to sector-wide industrial bargaining.
Now they plan universal child care rebates for all, up to a family income of $530,000 a year.
They handed out free money in power bill relief and are doing the same with the 50 per cent cut in petrol excise, which will only lift inflation. They used federal money to underwrite wages in aged care and child care, and boosted prices for consumers in the process.
Chalmers tried to hobble the Reserve Bank with a new oversight board: the RBA was then too slow to lift rates and too quick to cut them before last year’s election.
Labor has shored up bulk-billing with a package that delivers doctors $3 for every dollar saved on service delivery to patients.
Australians paying for this folly are moving to a protest party that at least acknowledges their problems.

Oh yes ...



... and the boot stickers were right there for the Major ...




Great days for the far reich ...