Saturday, March 14, 2026

Sure, the lizard Oz has open access this weekend, but the pond still has Dame Slap, the bromancer and the Ughmann ...

 

The wretched, desperate reptiles have attempted to ruin the pond's business model by offering "free digital access" this weekend.

What a feeble ploy. As if the pond would simply fold its tent and steal into the night at this temporary offer of freedumb. Does one sunny day make a summer? Does swallowing a gnat make up for straining at a camel?

The pond was built for tough times, and had experienced a surge of inspirational hope from that visionary genius Melania ...

“As a visionary, I know success is not born overnight, but rather, takes shape after a long, and sometimes challenging process,” she said. “Often alone at the top, I follow my passion, listen to my instinct, and always maintain a laser focus. In solitude, my creative mind dances—filling my imagination with originality. Attention to detail, demanding schedules, and multi-tasking are everyday realities when building towards success. This principle resonates across all my roles: as a mother, humanitarian, philanthropist, and entrepreneur. As well as with my new film, where I shaped its creative direction, served as producer, managed post-production, and activated the marketing campaign.”...
“Curiosity is a core value that keeps me ahead of the curve,” she said. “Curiosity begets knowledge, opening doors to ideas and industries that I may have otherwise overlooked. This unrestricted mindset has led me to build across very different sectors: fashion, digital assets, publishing, accessories, skincare, commercial television, and of course, filmmaking. The lessons I learned when launching my earliest ventures, such as how to build a brand, create superior product design, and activate an advertising campaign, remain just as relevant today. Markets evolve, technologies change, but the fundamentals of thoughtful leadership and continuous learning are everlasting.” (Mediaite)

Exquisite.

Markets might evolve, technologies might change, the lizard Oz might be free this weekend, but the fundamentals of continuous learning are everlasting and the pond's mind dances in the dark.

And thus inspired, how could the pond fail to mention the Currish Snail's valiant attempt to revive the days of Stalin, celebrated by the venerable Meade yesterday ... Disappearing act: Tony Burke erased from Courier Mail as News Corp tabloid alters image

What a must read trouper she is, always venturing into the belly of the beast on a weekly basis ...

...Weekly Beast has confirmed none of the official pictures supplied to the media by Burke’s office featured the players without the minister. It was a good news story for the government after all, and they wanted a smiling minister in the pics.
The digital disappearing trick was apparently the work of the Courier Mail. The readers were not alerted to the fact that the official photograph was digitally altered, as is the usual practice. We asked the Courier Mail why they removed Burke, why they didn’t disclose the use of editing software to their readers and why they attributed a doctored photograph to the department. We received no response.

Talk about a return to the good old days. 

It reminded the pond of a favourite photo celebrated by Masha Gessen in The New Yorker in The Photo Book That Captured How the Soviet Regime Made the Truth Disappear (possible paywall)



Burke should be honoured to be given the Stalinist treatment, though some might think that's the trouble when it comes to ideology - it's always hard to sort the fascists at the Snail from Stalin's Commie swine. 

They equally wish that 1984 had come on schedule, and now the Snail is doing its best to keep that year's Stalinist spirit alive.

Meanwhile, the war goes on, and sad to say, the local reptiles simply can't match the American hordes, from the relentless war-mongering of Hannity to Jim Cramer suggesting carpet bombing the country 'Nam style ...

But they do their best, and the weekend is when the heavy hitters come out to gaze at their navels and gather fluff in extended bouts of morose bleating.

The pond will make one concession to this new, chaotic, anarchistic land of lizard Oz freedumb. 

It will presume that punters will have taken the reptile freebie offer and plunged into Cameron's report, which was top of the lizard Oz ma, early in the morning ...



Sheesh, it's a 16 minute read, it's worse than a "Ned" Everest,  and everything in it will have changed or been revised in a day's time.

Cameron recognised the dismal futility of prediction in his final note ...

...just how much weaker the new Iran will be remains to be seen. Much depends on how long Trump chooses to continue to fight this war. And that is a question no one – probably not even Trump – can answer yet.

Much has been done, but yet much remains to be done, and the answer lies in the soil.

Instead of that kind of verbiage, the pond turned to Dame Slap, almost as visionary as Melania ...



The pond will concede that free digital access does trump the pond. 

What an astonishing chance to click on the yarn and see the extraordinary, albeit uncredited, graphic of King Donald's arms in Shiva motion.

Exquisite.

And when confronted by a mention of Gerard Baker in the WSJ, no matter, because the reptiles want punters to stay inside the hive mind, so a simple click took you away from Dame Slap to this ...




And so on, and so the pond can't blame anyone for seizing on the reptile feast like a Banquo at a wedding banquet, but the pond will maintain its traditional methodology, because this was sublime essence of Dame Slap MAGA cap wearer:

At least since the advent of mass communications and the birth of modern journalism, political leaders have had a relatively orthodox way of speaking and writing. Those listening to them and reading them – especially journalists and other political watchers – have likewise had a relatively orthodox way of analysing those speeches and writings. That orthodoxy respects and expects logic, predictability and consistency. To get top marks, add some humour, a little homespun morality and some soaring rhetoric.
Gerard Baker of The Wall Street Journal gave a textbook critique of the communication techniques of Donald Trump and his administration in these pages this week, concluding that Trump and co are a miserable failure.
“We can’t be expected to raise our eyes to the shining beacon of our noble ideals if we can’t see through the acrid smoke of our leaders’ intemperate, incontinent, infantilising verbiage,” Baker wrote. That’s all true. And now my advice, with respect, about Baker’s masterly analysis of the received wisdom is this: rip it up.

Inevitably there was a snap of Dame Slap's hero, designed to make her feel moist, Donald Trump speaks during a press conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House. Picture: AFP)



The insights tumbled out with astonishing rapidity, as if the Dame had been given an Uzi ...

Trump has been around long enough for political watchers – and voters – to know that trying to understand him, let alone measure him, through the political Ps and Qs of previous leaders is as frustrating as it is pointless. There has never been a US president like Trump and possibly won’t be another one for a very long time, if ever. The surprise is that many still express disappointment about that, expecting that Trump may read their words of advice and perhaps conform, even slightly, to the historical standard for his last term in office. It won’t happen.
At some point, American politics will resume (kind of) normal programming, meaning that future presidents will do what past ones have done. There will be a return to (mostly) carefully calibrated words and agreed talking points. Whether their words uplift us or not may depend a great deal on whether we support their brand of politics.
Ronald Reagan, known as the Great Communicator, sure knew how to use words to sell important ideas, but it’s not everyone’s cup of tea to hear that the “nine most terrifying words in the English language are: ‘I’m from the government, and I’m here to help.’ ”
It’s not unreasonable to be attached to what has gone before. History taught us to expect soaring words to convince us about a war, for example. Winston Churchill famously said “victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be; for without victory there is no survival”. Trump is different. Speaking about Iran from his golf club in Florida this week, he said: “They better not try anything cute or it’s going to be the end of that country.”

What a cheenius, so much better than that ancient memory, Ronald and Nancy Reagan waving and clasping hands in victory at Reagan's first inauguration, on January 20, 1981. Picture: via Getty Images




Hmm, did Nancy's devotion to astrology and such like portend the fate of Jackie O? Never mind ...

Here’s Lyndon B. Johnson flogging his Great Society to voters: “The city of man serves not only the needs of the body and the demands of commerce but the desire for beauty and the hunger for community.” Trump is different. Explaining his America First policy to voters, he said: “Whatever they tariff us, other countries, we will tariff them.”
Educated elites will always prefer the moving rhetoric of a Churchill or the folksy brilliance of a Reagan or the progressive eloquence of a Barack Obama.
Alas, Obama v Trump is another futile contest. Obama was, at times, a magnificent speaker; as far as we can tell, he is a decent human being of unblemished personal integrity. Certainly, he is mostly adored by the media and political commentators. Trump, not so much. But the maverick Trump may well prove to be a much more consequential president. Time will tell.
In the meantime we may as well get over our attachment to the norms of politics, where even political leaders who can’t string words together like Churchill or Reagan will, whether talking about domestic policies or international crises, conform to a stock standard style of speaking: they will be cautious, knowing that every word will be parsed for meaning and will become a measuring stick for their performance.

Please pause to hiss, Former US President Barack Obama. Picture: AFP




Time to get things done ...

There is no normal programming under Trump – and he’s entirely at home with that. And so are plenty of average punters in America who seem to prefer Trump’s straight-talking “don’t try anything cute” leadership. In Australia, saying you like even some things about Trump is best done in private and shared only with your dog.
It’s not just that Trump’s words matter less than his actions. His unpredictable, shifting, messy and mercurial style, be it about war or tariffs, is how he gets things done.
This is discombobulating for those of us who are used to expecting a certain consistency and clarity, to the extent that political leaders offer that. And let’s not get carried away with that either. Flip flops are part of the political toolkit for most leaders.
But by normal standards Trump is a trailblazer on moving the goalposts. What he is clear about on Monday, demanding regime change in Iran, changes by Friday, when what he is clear about is that the mission in Iran has become about getting rid of the nukes.
Maybe Trump watched too much Get Smart as a kid. At times he sounds like the comic spy Maxwell Smart, who was famous for his “would you believe” routines. Like this one: “At this very moment, this warehouse is being surrounded by 100 cops with Doberman pinschers … Would you believe it? A hundred cops with Doberman pinschers … Would you believe 10 security guards and a bloodhound? … How about a boy scout with rabies?”

Back to a reassuring, calming image, Donald Trump speaks to the press after landing on Air Force One on March 11. Picture: Getty Images




What a treasure for MAGA cap wearers of the Dame Slap kind ..

That said, those who want to write Trump off as a buffoon are the silly ones. He often goes too far, in ways that shock us, but the result is often far better than where we started. He skewered the deeply flawed progressive commandment DEI, went too far trying to punish universities, but ultimately allowed a more honest reckoning of a policy that was innately unfair.
Is Trump’s unpredictability innate, deliberate, clever or plain dumb? Some and all of those, at different times. Deliberate and clever in the sense that as the negotiator-in-chief, Trump knows that uncertainty keeps the other side on their toes, be they European countries, Gulf states or Iran. It means that not even allies can take for granted what has gone before Trump.
And why should they take the past for granted? America has done all the heavy lifting on European security for years. Trump ensured that European members of NATO finally realised – after decades of putting their heads in the sands and ignoring previous US presidents – that they needed to pay more for their own security. A few decades ago, there were grand promises from NATO members to beef-up defence spending to 2 per cent of their country’s GDP. In 2014, three NATO members were doing that. In 2025, 31 countries delivered on that commitment – and at the NATO summit in The Hague last year, NATO members upped that commitment to 5 per cent of GDP by 2035. This monumental shift in defence spending by European countries didn’t happen under Joe Biden or Obama or George W. Bush.

Indeed, indeed ...




Sorry, the actual distraction, not that Seth Meyer graphics department offering, Trump speaks to the media aboard Air Force One on October 24, 2025, on the way to high-stakes trade talks with Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, saying that he would also like to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on his trip. Picture: AFP



On with the worshipping ...

Trump’s aggro style is also innate, one suspects. Love him or really loathe him, the 45th and 47th American President is about as authentic a leader as the world will ever see. That is no solace when Trump is being plain dumb, by offending his closest allies for no good reason, telling a World Economic Forum in January that NATO troops “stayed a little off the front lines” in Afghanistan.
Trump’s brash, unpredictable style is genuinely disappointing for those who want decorum in politics. Worse, his manner is terribly troubling for those who want to know what the heck he will do tomorrow. But remember that Trump’s bewildering approach to leadership is also confusing his enemies. And that may be a good thing.
The new line-up of ruling mullahs in Iran truly has no idea what Trump has planned, largely because Trump may not have worked it out either. It might then be worth us cavilling less about Trump’s unique style of political leadership if that leads to befuddled confusion among Iran’s mullahs.
Even the nickname he earned – TACO – cannot be applied consistently. Trump’s attacks on Iran – last year and in the latest devastating bombing campaign – show that sometimes Trump doesn’t chicken out.

How to make a purse out of a sow's ear? Easy if you're Dame Slap ... Trump’s bewildering approach to leadership is also confusing his enemies. Picture: AFP




Oh we're all completely confused, and bewildered, and how good is that, and marvel at the way that smug smirk sent Dame Slap into a final fawn ...

To be sure, the US President may well get gun shy. He may move the mission goalposts again, calling an end to hostilities in Iran because of domestic pressures, but he has most certainly changed Iran, if not the regime, by reducing its military capabilities. Iran built up its military capabilities under Obama and Biden.
Remember Obama’s famous “red line” with Syria? Obama promised “enormous consequences” and said he would “change my calculus” on American military intervention in Syria’s civil war if Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons. In 2013 Assad used a deadly nerve gas, killing more than 1000 rebels. And Obama blinked.
Trump’s determination to neuter Iran’s military may well alter regional politics in the Middle East. For years, while assuring investors they were peaceful and thriving economies, Gulf states, especially the United Arab Emirates, did deals with the devils in Tehran, allowing the mullahs to use front companies to use the banking systems of Arab countries to bypass international sanctions. Now those same Arab countries are being bombed by Iran. Perhaps this reality will drive Arab countries towards a tighter regional pact that recognises that Iran is led by a terrorist regime.
The monumental changes in the Middle East can’t be measured now, it is far too premature, but there are signs that offer cautious optimism.
True, there is no soaring rhetoric, no logical, reasoned explanation of his Middle East policy. That’s not Trump’s modus operandi. And he’s not going to change.
This is his last term. POTUS Trump is certainly having a red-hot go at overturning the accepted wisdom of history. He hasn’t met a sacred cow he won’t turn into minced meat, in his own mercurial and messy way. And that includes taking a knife to orthodox political leadership.
So we may as well stop wishing for something different. The ride may not be pleasant but it is possible that we end up in a world that has confronted some unpleasant realities.

The pond was so delighted by the freedumb to hand that it decided to plunge deep into the hive mind below Dame Slap's offerings ...




Stunning stuff, and a reminder to pond correspondents that there's no point being slackers ...

See how the hive mind chips in with astonishing insights ...




Oh William, William ... your bus is waiting ...




And so to the bromancer, and for some strange inexplicable reason, the bromancer went MIA on foreign affairs, the war and the whole damned thing, and instead decided to join the Canavan caravan ...




Sheesh, 8 minutes of the bromancer on the Canavan caravan, but at least it distracted from King Donald ... and the war, and the Ruskis getting an edge in Vlad the Sociopath's war on Ukraine ...

Selecting senator Matt Canavan as the Nationals’ new leader is the most important single action the Coalition has taken to come to terms with the crisis of centre-right politics, the rise of populism and the collapse of legitimacy across institutions that is roiling Australia and manifests in some form in virtually every Western democratic society.
Polls now put Pauline Hanson’s One Nation ahead of the Coalition with about 25 per cent support. That’s astonishing, a profound crisis for the centre right. Two things stand out. One Nation’s vote is also just behind Labor’s, which is down on its low primary vote at the last election. Our perverse electoral system delivered Labor a seats landslide but voters are deserting Labor too.
Second, the Coalition plus One Nation and other bits and pieces on the right score just under half the primary vote. The electoral swing to the left is overstated.
Across the democratic world, both right and left populism is surging. On February 26 the second by-election under Keir Starmer’s British Labour government was convincingly won by the Green Party, which is even more extreme than the Australian Greens. Nigel Farage’s Reform UK came second.
The electorate in Greater Manchester (under different names) has been held by Labour since the 1930s. The Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats both scored less than 2 per cent. Neither Labour nor the Conservatives was competitive. The other, earlier by-election since Starmer’s triumph in 2024 was also in a safe Labour seat. It was won by Reform. Voters don’t like the major parties.

The reptiles threw in an AV distraction, which freedumb seekers might well be able to play ...

German spy agency labels far-right AfD 'extremist'
Germany's domestic intelligence agency on Friday classified the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) as an extremist entity that threatens democracy, a move enabling it to better monitor the party that came second in February's federal election. Sean Hogan reports.




What a chance to have a free beer with the reptiles ... even better than the DW reports that litter ABC News ...and what a relief, because relax, it's not all about the way that coal batters ... the cunning bro had simply used the Canavan caravan to indulge in a world tour showing off his catholic tastes ...

In the US, Donald Trump’s populism has displaced traditional Republican politics. In Italy Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and her Brothers of Italy party have completely eclipsed the Christian Democrats. In France, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally has displaced the Gaullists in opposition. In Germany, Alternative for Germany is growing and challenging the Christian Democrats, who rule federally but only in an unnatural deformity of a coalition with the Social Democrats (as though Angus Taylor were prime minister and Anthony Albanese deputy prime minister).
Importantly, not all right-of-centre populists are the same. Alternative for Germany I think genuinely extreme, whereas Meloni is Europe’s most impressive head of government.
Left-wing populism is also on the rise. The British Greens are virulently anti-Israel to the point of antisemitism and ran in an electorate with a 30 per cent Muslim minority by smearing the left-wing Starmer government as being too pro-Israel. They ran the normal Greens nonsense on economics.
They are a deeply weird party even by Greens standards. Their leader, Zack Polanski, once claimed he could increase the size of women’s breasts through hypnosis. Yet the British Greens, in numerous polls, are now running second nationally to Reform, with the Conservatives third and Labour fourth. The extreme, nutty and nasty Greens could be a big part of a future UK government.
New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani won a huge victory with vile anti-Israel policies (what’s that got to do with being mayor? Good question), all sorts of new anti-business taxes and extravagant economic giveaways.

There's nothing like defaming Islamics to get the bromancer going,  New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist, heralded the first time a mayor of New York City used Islam’s holy text to be sworn in. Picture: Andres Kudacki/AP




The bromancer was up for deep currents and complex issues, and sorted them out in his usual simpleton, simplistic way ...

There’s no guarantee Trump won’t be succeeded in the White House by someone from the Democratic Party’s populist left. Elderly socialist Bernie Sanders twice went close to winning the Democrats’ nomination.
These are deep currents and complex issues, but let’s try to identify a few key trends.
Western electorates are suffering economic stagnation, slow or negligible economic growth and often, certainly in Australia, real decline in living standards. They are ageing societies, child-averse and ever more welfare dependent. They’re disoriented by social change at a dizzying pace, through often unplanned and uncontrolled mass immigration, some of it attracted by Western welfare, and through successive technology revolutions from social media to artificial intelligence.
Almost all Western societies now have sizeable Muslim minorities (a bit more than a million in Australia), which means that anti-Israel attitudes are important in left-wing populism. Green crusading extremism and identity politics become populist cudgels for semi-educated graduates long instructed to hate their own societies. Scandals such as the Jeffrey Epstein affair add to the contempt voters have for elites.
Populism traffics heavily in culture and symbols, and here left and right clash viciously, but they often converge on much economic policy, namely governments making wildly inefficient, non-means-tested payments to voters. Thus the Albanese government abolishes much student debt, pays voters money to compensate for energy price rises caused by government policy, finances universal childcare, NDIS expenditure grows exponentially, etc.
Voters increasingly think all mainstream parties useless if not corrupt and try alternatives, especially ones that seem authentic and promise disruption. Cue Trump, Farage, Meloni, Le Pen etc.

The world tour came to a juddering halt, no thanks to the red head ... Polls now put Pauline Hanson’s One Nation ahead of the Coalition with about 25 per cent support. Picture: NewsWire / Simon Dallinger




The bro was outraged. While everyone knows that Mamdani is vile, there has to be some kind of limit:

Hanson scores not because One Nation offers coherent policies (which it doesn’t) but because she’s plainly authentic and has been consistent on a few issues. She’s against net-zero energy policy. She wants net-zero immigration. And she wants much less Muslim immigration.
I think she’s wrong on immigration. Her recent comment suggesting there were no “good Muslims” (which she later partly withdrew) was offensive in principle and utterly ridiculous. Yet its very ridiculousness created its cut-through. It’s Trump-like. If you want to vote to reduce Islamic immigration, Hanson’s got through to you.
Notwithstanding Hanson’s offensive and ridiculous Muslim comment, Tony Abbott is surely right to argue that One Nation is today more moderate and mainstream than it was in 1998. It’s no longer a party of nuts and ratbags that gets 3 per cent support. Barnaby Joyce, for all his travails long one of the big cats in Australian politics, gives it a daily media presence beyond Hanson.

Ah, the bromancer, still deeply in love with the onion muncher. What an enduring romance for the ages.

Now for a truly terrifying sight ... Greens Senator David Shoebridge this week described Coalition politicians as ‘scumbags’. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




Time to get back on that Canavan caravan ...

I think One Nation today far more moderate and sensible than the Greens, far less offensive and prejudiced. If the choice is between a One Nation MP and a Greens MP, the nation is better served with a One Nation MP. The Coalition should compete with One Nation the way Labor competes with the Greens. The progressive media never calls out Greens extremism – Greens senator David Shoebridge in the Senate this week described Coalition politicians as “scumbags”, one of a million examples of routine Greens abuse, not to mention countless party statements that are effectively antisemitic – and never demands Labor preference Greens last.
In the coming Farrer by-election, the Libs and Nats will preference each other but would then be smart to put One Nation ahead of Labor and the teal-like independent. When One Nation polls 25 per cent, putting it last insults its voters.
Canavan is important because he’s a big, authentic personality; he has been consistent on key issues such as net zero; he believes things passionately; he’s a mainstream, good-humoured, relatable guy; he’ll win the energy debate if he gets a fair hearing; and he’s full of energy. Subjective factors count. The populist era favours big personalities. Australia will be better off if the Coalition remains the dominant centre-right force. To do this it must mainly fight Labor; convince voters it has economic solutions; and compete vigorously with One Nation but reject the progressive double standard that demonises it while giving the Greens a fraudulent pass. A broad coalition of the right versus the Labor-Greens-teals coalition of the left is the most coherent politics we’ll get. It could be much worse.
Greg Sheridan is The Australian’s foreign editor.

The pond regrets that the bromancer's piece attracted far less sound and fury than did Dame Slap's ... but all the same, here's a short plunge into the hive mind...



What a way to celebrate the hope of the vote ...




At this point the pond should confess that it woke up to a BBC world service science show proposing that the climate is warming much faster than thought.

It was an old story, having turned up in the Graudian a week before ...




For climate geeks and nerds, this is the link to the study ...


It was what the pond needed as a reminder before plunging into the strange world of that unreformed seminarian, the Ughmann ...




What an astonishing piece of art, with nary a hint of AI about it, just pure undiluted Salvador Dalí.

Frankly the pond doesn't think that Frank has ever come up with a better example of the hive mind at work ... A visual metaphor for the ‘green dream’ confronting the overwhelming reality of fossil fuel dominance in the global energy landscape. Sources: Gemini. Artwork by Frank Ling

Well done Frank, what an astonishing visual artist you are, full of profound metaphors that have echos of Melania ... though sadly your bigly genius was followed by an interminable 10 minute read with the Ughmann, or so the reptiles clocked it, though for the pond it felt like eternity captured in an oil barrel ...

When a US nuclear submarine torpedoed an Iranian warship last week, the three Australians on board the American boat were reportedly ordered to their bunks.
This astonishing news nugget was unearthed by The Nightly’s Andrew Greene and the government has not denied it. We do not know whether our sailors were instructed to pull the doona over their heads, but Acting Defence Minister Pat Conroy did confirm that “they played absolutely no role in the offensive operation”.

Recognising that this was a compleat turn off, the reptiles quickly flung in the shaken and stirred Bond of Sky Noise down under (still no re-brand?)



Albanese revealed Australians were on the US submarine that sank an Iranian frigate
Sky News host Caleb Bond backs Prime Minister Albanese after he revealed three Australians were on board the US submarine that sank an Iranian frigate. “The Prime Minister exclusively confirmed to Sky News today that three Australians were on board the US submarine that sank an Iranian frigate this week,” Mr Bond said. “They were on board the sub as part of the AUKUS agreement to give Australian sailors experience on nuclear submarines. “Now the Greens have been trying to make out like this means we have boots on the ground or something. That's not what's happening. “A few Australians happened to be present when a naval submarine was on a naval mission. Nothing more, nothing less.”

That sent the Ughmann into a frenzy of grim realities, and never mind the grim reality of climate science:

It is hard to conjure a more perfect metaphor for Australia’s mindset in the face of grim realities: when the world gets rough, Australia reaches for the security blanket. We prefer the comfort of bedtime stories about international law, global order and middle-power potency to hard truths about real political and material power.
One of the Albanese government’s favourite fables is that the world is undergoing a rapid energy transition to cut carbon emissions. In this tale the shift from fossil fuels is swift, painless and profitable as the globe is saved from Armageddon by multinational wheels whirring in electric harmony. Hydrocarbons vanish as wind, solar and batteries power nations, electric vehicles hum through the streets and green industries sprout like flowers on the graves of dark satanic mills. Australia emerges as a clean energy superpower.
This story is echoed by a revolutionary guard of energy-illiterate politicians, bureaucrats, activists and subsidy-harvesting businesses. They are now on a unity ticket claiming the war-induced shortage of oil and gas proves Australia’s energy security lies in ditching fossil fuels and hitching our fortunes to the whims of the weather.
To believe this you have to ignore a basic truth: fossil fuels built the modern world and still sustain it. Wealth is energy converted into work. The more energy a society commands, the richer it becomes. The price of oil and gas underpins the price of everything.
Australia is rich in hydrocarbons and could shield itself from global shocks by exploiting the wealth beneath our feet. Instead our rulers have chosen to restrict the fuels that power our economy.

Gas 'em all ... The North West Shelf gas project, a testament to Australia’s significant hydrocarbon wealth. Exploiting such resources could shield the nation from global energy shocks, yet current policies restrict access to the fuels that power our economy. Picture: Supplied




Gotta love that burn off, and the Ughmann maintained the burn ...

The irony is stark: the loudest voices warning about energy scarcity are the ones working hardest to create it.
The latest Gulf war is a brutal reminder of which fuels actually matter. This war is being waged by combatants who know that targeting energy sources cripples nations. Iran may be helpless to stop American and Israeli strikes but it can inflict worldwide pain by choking oil and gas supply through the Strait of Hormuz and bombing the regional infrastructure that keeps hydrocarbons moving: refineries, export terminals and fuel depots. This is now a global energy war.
Despite decades of talk about transition, the world still runs predominantly on oil, gas and coal. When the flow of those fuels slows, the consequences rip through the international economy.
Not convinced? Try this pop quiz.

For some perverse reason, the reptiles decided to interrupt the quiz with a couple of snaps ... Oil tankers and ships line up in the Strait of Hormuz as seen from Khor Fakkan, United Arab Emirates, on March 11, 2026. Picture: AP;The Thailand-flagged cargo ship Mayuree Naree engulfed in black smoke in the Strait of Hormuz, after an attack by Iranian forces. Picture: AFP




Then the Ughmann could get on with a standard bit of renewables bashing ...

After 20 years of “transitioning”, what percentage of Australia’s total energy demand do you reckon comes from fossil fuels and how much from wind, solar, hydropower and the egregiously named biofuels?
Primary energy is the best measure of how an economy actually runs because it counts all the fuels that power it, not just electricity generation. That matters because the things that keep the real economy moving, such as transport, mining and agriculture, run overwhelmingly on liquid fuels.
We do not have to guess at the numbers because they are reported by the government in Australian Energy Statistics under energy consumption.
“Fossil fuels (coal, oil and gas) accounted for 91 per cent of Australia’s primary energy mix in 2023-24,” the government website says. “Oil accounted for the largest share of Australia’s primary energy mix in 2023-24 at 41 per cent, followed by coal and gas both at 25 per cent. Renewable energy sources accounted for 9 per cent.”
To put this in perspective, the global primary energy mix is about 82 per cent fossil fuel dependent. So even by the hydrocarbon-guzzling standards of the world, Australia is unusually gluttonous and nowhere more so than in transport.

Oh yes, it's all going splendidly well, helped along by an entirely meaningless decimation of Iranian schoolgirls, Global oil storage, a stark reminder of the world’s 82 per cent reliance on fossil fuels for its primary energy mix. Picture: Getty




There's nothing like oils to get Sol and the Ughmann excited ...

This is because we live in a huge, geographically dispersed nation where most of our goods travel by road.
This point was underscored in the final report of the 2020 Liquid Fuel Security Review.
“Liquid fuel is the backbone of the Australian economy,” the report says. “It underpins every aspect of our daily life, from our groceries to our commute to work and our emergency services. On average, each Australian uses nearly three times more energy from liquid fuel than they do from electricity.”
Given our heavy dependence on liquid fuel, and recognising that we live on an island, how much of our own oil do we produce and refine?

Forget EVs, remember to keep on trucking, .Liquid fuel, transported across vast distances by road trains like this, is the backbone of Australia’s economy, making the nation unusually dependent on hydrocarbons for transport. Picture: News Corp




On the Ughmann drove, deeper into the important business of f*cking the planet (*google bot aware):

“Over the past two decades, our overall domestic production and reserves have been in decline,” the fuel security report says. “In today’s market, Australia imports over 90 per cent of the refined products and crude oil we need to meet our demand.”
About 80 per cent of the diesel, petrol and jet fuel here comes from refineries in Singapore and South Korea. Only about 20 per cent is produced at the country’s two remaining refineries in Brisbane and Geelong, and they rely largely on imported crude. It all arrives in a steady stream of about two tanker deliveries a day under long-term contracts, with prices typically benchmarked to the Singapore fuel market.
For now those supply chains are working. The pressure here has come from a surge in demand as bulk buyers, particularly in industries that depend on diesel, move to secure fuel. Major suppliers are prioritising contracted customers, but some independent wholesalers that relied heavily on the spot market have struggled as cargoes dried up.
The deeper risk is the reliance the Asian refineries have on Middle Eastern crude. If the source of oil fails or foreign governments prioritise domestic markets, existing contracts could be revoked. Some energy traders and refiners supplying other countries have already declared force majeure, the contractual clause that allows them to suspend deliveries when extraordinary events make them impossible.
Australia is profoundly exposed. Decisions made in other nations will determine our fate because we have deliberately chosen to become an energy vassal.
Repeating the point that we live on an island, and these risks are obvious, surely we stockpile fuel? We do and the numbers are reported in the government’s minimum stockholding obligations. The last readout says we have 36 days’ worth of petrol, 32 of diesel and 29 days of jet fuel. This is a vanishingly small amount in reserve.
The world is now being reminded that the International Energy Agency was created after the oil shock of 1973 and its primary task was to build a buffer against supply disruptions. Australia is one of the IEA member states that signed an agreement that required each to hold oil stocks equivalent to at least 90 days of net imports. Australia has been in breach of this agreement since 2012. This column has been banging on about this, in several venues, since 2016, clearly with no effect. All political parties are responsible for where we find ourselves today.
The stockpile system was designed to cushion the world against sudden supply disruptions by releasing oil into the market during a crisis. Stabilising supply also helps prevent the kind of price spikes that can tip the global economy into recession. That is why there will now be a co-ordinated release of fuel from the member countries.

Of course it might have been simpler for the demented narcissist intent on distracting from the Trumpstein files not to have taken his frustrations out on Iranian schoolgirls, but what a chance for the Ughmann ... As fuel supplies are choked, the pain of inflation extends beyond the bowser, impacting the price of every item on supermarket shelves, driven by the cost of road freight. Picture: Getty




And so to the final gobbet ...

Proper energy security is a deeper problem and one no Australian government has ever been serious about tackling. We might get lucky this time, but one day our luck will run out.
You do not need much imagination to conjure a scenario where our fuel lifeline of supplies from Asian refineries is cut. That trade comes through the South China Sea. What do we imagine will happen to those supply lines if there is ever a war over Taiwan?
The longer the world’s supply of fuel is choked, the more the pain will grow. It will be measured here in inflation, not just in fuel prices but in every piece of road freight. All we can do is hope that The Gulf war ends soon and that this crisis is enough to spark some real change in our leaders’ approach to energy security.
Right now, depending on the day, the price of oil and gas rises and falls on the musings about the war made by the American President.
Stung by the domestic price rises, Donald Trump has said he will call the conflict to an end soonish. Interesting that he believes he can turn wars on and off and that those he attacks have no say in the matter. What if the survivors of the Iranian regime have no interest in shouldering arms?
The end of the despotic medieval mullahs’ tyranny over its citizens is devoutly to be wished, but it seems unlikely. And while Trump’s war aims meander, the Iranian regime has one crystal-clear goal: survival. The hangman’s noose tends to concentrate the mind.
If the only way Iran’s mullahs can inflict real pain on the US and the rest of the West is to push the globe into a recession, that is what they will do.
They can also focus all of their effort on a strait that lies just off their coast and is only about 33km wide at its narrowest point, with tanker traffic confined to shipping lanes about 3km wide in each direction. They do not even have to sink ships. The trade stopped when war risk insurance disappeared and tanker owners refused to sail.
Trump says the US will underwrite insurance and lead convoys with warships. If form is any guide that service will not come cheap. It is also doubtful he will want any Australian sailors on board.

To be fair, the pond should note that the Ughmann also had his followers...




Ah, the hive mind, free to those who want to abandon all hope for the entire weekend.

Have at it, and to celebrate the pond will offer a few add-on attractions not to be found in the hive mind, a sampling of 'toons,  including TT ...





And just to prove the pond can also do AV distractions, a little viewing ...



Friday, March 13, 2026

In which Our Henry saves the Western Civilisation test, the onion muncher goes full jihad, and Killer is in an exuberant mood ...

 

The pond showed incredible restraint this week.

The reptiles' droppings have been littered with the usual blather about the Judaeo-Xian tradition, and suddenly a dire threat emerged from left Commie dictatorship field.

But the pond wanted to save the threat for Our Henry to handle in his Friday missive. 

How China Learned to Love the Classics
The Chinese Communist Party has embraced the study of Greek and Latin—as, in some ways, an antidote to the modern West. (*sorry, paywall; the pond still can't get the archive to work, but for those who can, who knows, it might work, or might not)
By Chang Che

Mother of mercy, how could this be?

...Even as foreign textbooks are banned and news broadcasts portray Western societies as gun-toting hellscapes, Chinese universities are hiring Greco-Roman classicists. One Beijing university recently completed a new translation of Plato. Another university established a research center, led by an Oxford professor, that puts ancient Chinese texts in conversation with other classical textual traditions, including Greek and Latin. The reason for the classics fervor varies depending on whom you ask, but most scholars agree that Chinese officials tend to see the Western classics as a complement to their politics. In recent years, Xi has made “cultural confidence” a cornerstone of national policy, referring to pride in Chinese traditions and values. Across China, archeological museums and exhibitions are multiplying, and neglected villages are being refurbished into stage-set “ancient” towns. At universities, the study of ancient Chinese texts has historically been scattered across disciplines; now, under government direction, universities are trying to gather that scholarship in new classics departments where, one theory goes, ancient truths can be nurtured and passed down. In 2024, Renmin University, in Beijing, became the first university in China to offer an undergraduate major in Chinese classical studies. Last March, Sichuan University opened a classics department, aiming to educate students to be “conversant in both Chinese and Western learning.” “When China looks at the world, they want to be like Greece,” Martin Kern, a Princeton Sinologist and keynote speaker at the World Conference of Classics, told me. “Greece is for Europe what China is for East Asia. You guys have Socrates. We have Confucius.”
By now, it is almost a cliché to say that the Western classics are in crisis. During the past half dozen years, around ten universities and colleges have closed their classics departments or programs, with some folded into larger humanities units. Western classicists look to the classics revival in China with a mix of awe, envy, and hesitation: a geopolitical rival could very well value their discipline more than their home institutions. In 2023, Shadi Bartsch, a classicist at the University of Chicago, covered the cresting interest among Chinese intellectuals, in ancient Greek and Roman texts, in “Plato Goes to China.” From late Qing reformers inspired by Athenian citizenship to nationalists who draw on Plato to bolster China’s political ideology, Bartsch shows how supple ancient texts are in the hands of interpreters. Yet she also acknowledged the upsides of a foreign government’s support for her field. “There is real interest in the question of whether China is going to become the main protector of the western classics,” she told me over e-mail.

Dear sweet long absent lord, it's a den of woke correctness and wild connections...

...In the enlarged vision of the classics slowly taking shape in the American academy, Yanxiao has found an intellectual foothold. He studies interactions between the eastern half of the Roman Empire and East Asia, and sheds light on how popular art forms were often misunderstood by their ancient critics. In the fall of 2024, he flew to Princeton, where he delivered a lecture on Roman pantomime, a dance form that once dominated theatres across the Mediterranean. Comparing élite Roman accounts that dismissed pantomime as a vulgar import from the East with the way K-pop had been received by some Anglophone critics, Yanxiao reframed pantomime as a transformative hybrid of “East” and “West”—between the Empire’s eastern provinces and Rome—rather than a corrupt derivative. Padilla Peralta, who attended the lecture, called the paper “spectacular.” Yanxiao had proved, Padilla Peralta told me, that people of diverse backgrounds, and the “interventions” they brought to the field, led to a “richening of the historical fabric, not to its impoverishment.”

The pond was so titillated the temptation was to go on quoting, but the main point - that the Chinese are now taking over the classics - is clear enough.

The pond didn't expect Our Henry to be up to speed on this, but what a challenge for one of the lizard Oz's most pompous, portentous pedants.

Only this prating coxcomb could show the perfidious Chinese that the whole gigantic edifice of Western Civilisation wasn't up for grabs - but only if he mentioned Thucydides or some other Greek and Roman luminaries in his column this week. 

Or else they might end up being quoted in 人民日报 (Rénmín Rìbào or People's Daily if you will).

Was he up to the challenge? Could he save the Judaeo-Xian tradition? Stop the long march of Chinese Marxists through the institutions?

In its anxiety, the pond abandoned any pretence at paying attention to the news of the day or to others. Instead, with shaking hands, and baited breath, the pond rushed to Our Henry ...



The header: No concession from regime​ that glories in the apocalypse; Gripped by paranoid delusions and steeped in antisemitic fantasies, Iran’s clerical-military regime prefers destruction to compromise.

The caption:  Iranian pro-government supporters mourn as they hold the picture of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Picture: Getty Images

Oh dear, not a good sign, it seems Our Henry has been triggered and has erupted into full jihadist/crusader mode...

And yet the reptiles showed this day how easy it is to jump from a war zone to a contemplation of your wealth ...




What an inspiration, but the hole in bucket man couldn't take the hint and refused to advise the hive mind of his wealth ...

Two weeks of bombardment have done more damage to Iran’s military infrastructure than 46 years of sanctions and diplomacy combined. But those decades of pressure teach a lesson it would be dangerous to ignore.
This is not a regime that moderates under pressure. It hardens. Forged in searing conflict, its institutional architecture encodes a single response to every challenge: entrench, double down, escalate.
Understanding why requires looking at the war that made it what it is. When Saddam Hussein invaded in September 1980, expecting a revolution in chaos to be readily dismembered, he miscalculated fatally. The war he started did not destroy the Islamic Republic; it consolidated it.
Eight years of attrition empowered the regime’s most radical elements. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps emerged as a vast empire inside the state. The Guardian Council, the Assembly of Experts and the clerical foundations were embedded by acclamation in the constitutional order under wartime pressures that made any alternative seem like treachery.
The Iraq war also gave the regime its theology of action. Volunteering for the front, supreme leader Ruhollah Khomeini proclaimed, was a religious obligation. Thousands of boys aged 12 or younger were inducted into the militia, taught the virtues of martyrdom, and sent across Iraqi minefields to clear them with their bodies.

The reptiles compounded Our Henry's paranoia ... A sea of hands reach out to greet Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini following his arrival at Tehran airport in 1979.




The pond was becoming more alarmed by the minute. The devious Chinese were on a classics winner and by this point, the pond would have settled for almost any historical reference ...

A regime that spends its children this way does not learn restraint. Nor does it view even disastrous losses as evidence that ambitions must shrink.
Underlying that indifference to pain is an eschatology that turns defeat into confirmation. Its central paradigm is Husayn’s refusal to yield at Karbala, where the Prophet’s grandson was martyred in 680 – the model of righteous action for Shia Islam. The Shia formula, “every day is Ashura, every land is Karbala”, makes the founding trauma a permanent present: every defeat becomes a new Karbala, renewing the obligation to resist and the promise of vindication.
The Islamic Republic has applied that grammar since its blood-soaked birth: each martyrdom is a deposit in an eschatological account whose balance is guaranteed by God; each setback confirms righteousness, the magnitude of sacrifice measuring the infinite bounty to come.
Exactly the same mindset characterises Iran’s proxies. When the 2006 war left South Lebanon in ruins, Hezbollah’s Na’im Qassem called the destruction a “divine victory” that heralded the appearance of the Mahdi, the long-awaited redeemer. “The fire did not burn the mujahidin,” Qassem declared, “it burned their enemies”; angels had given Hezbollah’s combatants wings to reach their everlasting reward.
This self-sealing logic – that defeat purifies rather than disconfirms the struggle – has deep historical precedents. After the Second Crusade ended in catastrophe in 1148, Bernard of Clairvaux concluded that God had ordained the crusade’s failure to chastise the participants’ sins. The divinely mandated response, he said, was not withdrawal but renewed effort. The Crusades continued for centuries more, their costs vastly outweighing any conceivable gains, each disaster redefined as sanctification.

The Crusades? 

That's the best Our Henry has got, and even worse, he's calling the Crusades a disaster? 

Was that echoed by the snap of another disaster in the making, the CIA (and the Pom) backing of Saddam? Iraqi President Saddam Hussein waves to the crowd in Baghdad in October 1995.




The pond read on with a mounting sense of despair ...

The parallel is not merely instructive: it is structural. For movements organised around sacred history, devastating losses rarely end the struggle. And in the Iranian theocracy’s case, virulent antisemitism and crude demonology make backing down harder still.
From the earliest stages of his career, Khomeini classified Jews alongside dogs, pigs and urine as sources of ritual defilement. Even worse, they sought global dominance, plotting its conquest at secret conclaves. The Prophet had fought the Jews of Medina; the battle against Zionism was merely that conflict’s latest phase – a conflict destined to end in extermination, not negotiation.
Compounding the paranoia, Khomeini fused those delusions with the apocalyptic mythology of Sayyid Qutb’s “Our Struggle with the Jews”, which depicted Judaism as a demonic curse on mankind. The Jews’ survival and success, he concluded, was not due to resilience, ability and determination; it reflected a diabolical capacity to “muster satanic forces through witchcraft”.
Those demonic powers are, in the theology of Iran’s leaders, real, active and pervasive. And while America is – literally – the Great Satan, its regional agent, poisoning Muslim territory, is Israel.
That is why Iran’s war on Jews is non-negotiable. Recognition of the Jewish state would be theologically impermissible – the closure of a conflict the eschatological narrative requires remain open. At most, a hudna may be offered, modelled on the Prophet’s Treaty of Hudaibiyya: a tactical pause in preparation for the next round, just as that treaty was merely the prelude to Mecca’s conquest.
Seen from within this mindset, concessions are a confession of weakness – and weakness invites eventual annihilation. Clausewitz captured the logic: “So long as I have not overthrown my opponent, I am bound to fear he may overthrow me.”

Carl? Herr Hitler's favourite military theorist, though perhaps as much misunderstood as frequently quoted by Adolf and the Nazis?

This isn't Thucydides, nor even Caesar's Gallic Wars ...

For the sprawling clerical-security complex, the threat is as much material as it is theological. The ulama have grown from 25,000 seminary students in 1979 to between 350,000 and 500,000; their foundations – Setad alone estimated at $US95bn ($133bn) – control assets rivalling national budgets, and the IRGC supports hundreds of thousands of direct dependents. Counting families, the regime’s stakeholders number in the millions.
Compromises that leave Israel and the West intact and the regime’s enemies emboldened are therefore not merely anathema. They are a fatal risk to the ruling caste’s prosperity.

There came a final snap... Hezbollah supporters gather to mourn the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Beirut. Picture: AP




Our Henry refused the last chance to redeem himself, turning instead to a strange view of the 'Nam war, with the Vietnamese apparently broken ...

That same logic explains the endless bouts of savage repression. When demonstrations first broke out, supreme leader Ali Khamenei decreed that “sedition is worse than killing” and imposed punishments, from flogging to hanging, to match. Reflecting that decree, the reformist pressures of the 1990s were met by the systematic assassination of secular intellectuals. The Green Movement of 2009 produced mass arrests; the Mahsa Amini protests of 2022, executions and Basij deployments against crowds. Now, the regime has butchered 20,000 or more of its own citizens to quell dissent.
Yet breaking points do exist, even in regimes that seem unbreakable. The 1972 Christmas bombing brought Hanoi to terms after years of fruitless negotiations

Oh yes, they were broken, so, so broken ...




And so to the wrap ...

Two months of relentless NATO air power over Serbia persuaded Slobodan Miloševic that the Dayton dispensation could be enforced.
Moreover, the regime’s foundations are weaker than ever. Recent surveys show religious observance plummeting, with a majority of Iranians considering religion unimportant – a sharp reversal of the 1979 fundamentalist wave, and a measure of the regime’s loss of popular allegiance. With support ebbing, each outbreak of protest has mobilised greater numbers, requiring an increasingly murderous response that fuels seething hatred.
Force works against adversaries of this kind – but the iron carapace of eschatological certainty does not yield to graduated pressure. Only shattering it will do. Half-measures are worse than useless: they are taken as evidence the adversary’s resolve has limits.
The priority should therefore be a sustained, if necessary escalating, offensive – degrading capabilities, starving the regime of revenues and eliminating its proxies. But even if the war simply breaks the regime’s defences, reduces its assets to rubble and decimates its leadership, the threat Iran poses will be dramatically reduced.
The lesson those 46 years of sanctions and diplomacy failed to teach, two weeks of force have made inescapable: any hedging on support for effective military pressure will not be viewed in Tehran as prudence. It will be read as a licence for murder, aggression and terror. And once again, we will be in its sights.

So Chairman Xi has won. 

The classics now belong to the Chinese. Our Henry has abandoned the field and all that's left is a new kind of jihadist mortification.




Speaking of jihadists, after years of most excellent military service, the onion muncher was also out and about in the field, and in warrior war footing mode ...



The header: Once a trusted US ally, Canberra is now all talk, no action; How can Australians learn how to operate nuclear-powered submarines if they go missing when the pressure is on?

The caption: Australia under Anthony Albanese has become a strategic shirker. Picture: Getty Images

The sublime, ineffable stupidity of the onion muncher was embedded in that question in the header: How can Australians learn how to operate nuclear-powered submarines if they go missing when the pressure is on?

What a prize maroon, and the pond knew there'd be no salvation of Western Civilisation in this encounter. More likely the notion would disappear down the WC...

Australian forces have long been fastidious about “rules of engagement”, but sending personnel to their bunks while their US submarine torpedoed an Iranian frigate takes this combat caution to new levels.
What kind of an ally puts its sailors on warships as tourists, should action beckon? And how can Australians learn how to operate nuclear-powered submarines if they go missing when the pressure is on?
The whole point of an alliance, as opposed to a protectorate, is that allies are prepared to take risks on each other’s behalf. Allies put their armed forces into combat to support each other, as opposed to simply subcontracting their national security to someone else.
It’s precisely because America’s European allies have treated NATO as a protectorate, requiring almost no responsibility from them, that the durability of the world’s greatest alliance in now in doubt.
And by opting out of the Iran war, even Britain and Australia, formerly America’s most reliable brothers-in-arms, have become strategic shirkers, leaving the US to do all the heavy lifting without us.

Amazing really, that this strutting bantam should attempt to outdo Tony Bleagh, yet here we are ... Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has confirmed three Australian personnel were on the US submarine which sank an Iranian ship.




There's never been a war that the onion muncher hasn't wanted to send others off to ...

What’s not to support in the American-Israeli strike on Iran? The mullahs’ regime has routinely threatened to obliterate both America and Israel (the two “Satans”); has waged direct or proxy war against nearly all its neighbours; has sponsored terrorism around the globe (including the firebombing of Jewish premises in Australia and attacks on anti-regime campaigners in Britain), and; has killed untold numbers of its own citizens, tens of thousands just two months ago.
Even if the current air assault does no more than utterly destroy the Iranian war machine and further set back its nuclear ambitions, Donald Trump and Bibi Netanyahu have done the whole world a massive favour.
Australia says it supports the US action but has not lifted a finger to help. Indeed, by requiring our personnel on the USS Charlotte Los Angeles-class submarine to stand down, we may actually have hindered US operations (even if only in a minor way). Imagine the captain being told that three of his crew were now passengers; imagine the Australian personnel facing the humiliation of standing aside from their crewmates’ mission?
Everything the Albanese government does exposes the fact that its senior members see themselves as social justice activists rather than the national security warriors these times demand.
Even though Labor ministers, from the PM down, admit that these are the most dangerous strategic circumstances since the late 1930s, not only does the Albanese government stubbornly refuse to lift defence spending, it’s cannibalising every other element of our armed forces in order to pay for AUKUS submarines sometime next decade.

Naturally the onion muncher was fully on board with Benji and King Donald ... Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump have done the whole world a massive favour. Picture: AFP




Nauseating in all the ways that the onion muncher has managed in an extensive career as war monger ...

This is despite the acknowledged immediate and multiplying threats to a “rules-based global order” that has only existed while America and its allies have been able to intimidate predators from challenging it.
But it’s not just a failure to take seriously our current military preparedness. As exemplified by the red-carding of our personnel on the USS Charlotte, there seems to be a near pathological aversion to using lethal force, even though that’s the whole point of having armed forces.
The Albanese government’s initial response to the attack on Iran was Penny Wong’s call for “de-escalation”; in others words, stop fighting. Although the Prime Minister eventually overruled his Foreign Minister with a statement in support of US efforts, he stressed that he’d had no prior warning of the attack, had not been asked for military help, and had no expectation of any such request in the future. Even though it had been obvious for weeks that the US was gathering forces for an assault; and previous prime ministers, including Bob Hawke, would have picked up the phone to ask the president of the day how Australia might usefully contribute.
When the Albanese government refused to send a frigate to secure freedom of navigation in the Red Sea in December 2023, it was the first time since the ANZUS alliance in 1951 that Australia had declined an American request for military help. Rather than our ships being fully engaged elsewhere, as claimed, the real reason (I thought at the time) was fear that our ships weren’t up to the job, or political cowardice at being seen to assist Israel’s campaign against Iran’s proxies.
But now it’s worse than that: the Albanese government seems to suffer from a kind of practical pacifism, where the only circumstances our armed forces might conceivably be permitted to fire a shot in anger is at an enemy actually bombing Darwin.

There came a final snap ... Mr Trump needs Australia to start lifting a finger to help. Picture: AP




The pond was overwhelmed by a desire to slip in a matching 'toon ...




Then there was a final gobbet ...

What’s all but certain is that the current government’s reply to any US request for help, even in our own region, such as in the Taiwan Strait, would be that “we’d like to but we can’t”.
It’s telling that when the Emirati government did, this week, ask us to assist in its self-defence, our response was to send an unarmed aircraft for the command and control of fighter jets other than our own; plus the despatch of missiles for someone else to fire.
While Donald Trump has eventually praised our PM for offering asylum to Iranian women footballers, it seems the government only moved after he had demanded it on social media. At some point, the US President, who’s supposed to give Australia up to five Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines, is going to ask about its impact on US firepower. Could a country that benches personnel already embarked on a US sub ever be trusted to be at America’s side when it really counts?

What a relief that this wretched sock puppet can now only fulminate on the sidelines, a devotee of authoritarians of the Orbán kind relegated to the bench like a Tottenham goalie (sorry, Mr Crace, the pond only pays attention because of a devotion to your work).

As for that talk of asylum ...



And as for King Donald's jihad, it's all going tremendously well ...




At this point the pond should note a few regrets. 

Having been unable to get the intermittent archive working, the pond can only record yesterday's appearance of the craven Craven with a teaser trailer ...




What an insufferable wretch. That's more than enough of that brand of drivel.

And the pond regrets it can't do a deep dive into the bouffant one blaming the latest crisis on Albo - apparently that immortal Rowe 'toon referencing Gericault flew right over his head ...





Dammit, they should have personally escorted the oil through that bloody strait, and never mind a few drones ...

And with that, on with the bonus, because how can the pond ignore Killer Creighton in exuberant, triumphant mood?



The header: At last, Coalition fields its best economic team in decades; Taylor channels the economics of Thatcher and Reagan; Canavan embodies more of the nationalist policies associated with Donald Trump. Will the partnership work?

The caption for the beaming lads: Andrew Hastie, Matt Canavan and Angus Taylor form a formidable trio. Picture: Martin Ollman

Strangely Killer could only manage three minutes celebrating the arrival of the Canavan caravan, and his teaming with the prime Angus boofhead from down Goulburn way:

If academic achievements in economics counted politically, the Coalition would win in a landslide at the next election.
Senator Matt Canavan’s elevation to Nationals leader this week has cemented – with Angus Taylor at the helm of the Liberals – the strongest Coalition leadership duo ever in terms of economic qualifications.
The left’s caricature of Canavan as a coal-obsessed, parochial Queenslander ignores his first-class honours degree in economics from the University of Queensland, earned back when that was still difficult. His trademark opposition to net zero is informed: he spent six years at the Productivity Commission analysing the ballooning array of highly inefficient climate change policies that began strangling Australian industry in the late 2000s. The Productivity Commission’s then chair, Gary Banks, made him a director before he was 30.

A coal-obsessed deep northerner? Never!



(Found in the Junkee archive)

The IPA was wild-eyed with excitement and all in, Institute of Public Affairs Director of Research Morgan Begg praises National Leader Matt Canavan for his focus on family issues within Australia. “I think this is a great outcome for the National Party,” Mr Begg told Sky News Digital Presenter Gabriella Power. “How refreshing it is to hear a political leader speak plainly and honestly about the problems in our country at the moment.”



Killer was as excited as he's ever been, no doubt because the Canavan caravan shared Killer's distrust of vaccines... (he was fully down with it)

Taylor’s CV is even more impressive: university medal in economics at Sydney, before coming second at Oxford, as a Rhodes Scholar, in the MPhil in Economics, a famously brutal course.
When appointed partner at McKinsey he was the youngest in the world and the quickest to get there. If Taylor is lazy, as some anonymous colleagues snipe, he’s either Einstein or they are hypocrites. Both their theses were prescient: Canavan’s on private money before the rise of Bitcoin, and Taylor scrutinised oligopoly in the beer and petrol sectors.
If the Australian media followed The Economist’s style guide and condemned anyone with a PhD to being a mere Mr or Ms (unless they hold a university title or practise medicine), the public might be more aware of the Coalition’s new intellectual warriors, and less wowed by Dr Jim Chalmers’ PhD on Paul Keating, which some might consider a less analytically difficult credential.
Perhaps it’s a good thing their everyday vernacular has obscured their qualifications. Political history is littered with pompous failures. As John Hewson famously illustrated in the 1990s, policy ambition and academic smarts are no guarantee for political success. Indeed, Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers keep Labor’s brightest economic mind, Andrew Charlton, relatively obscured.
Still, it’s not clear their smarts, however impressive, will be a political plus. Canavan is unlikely to defer to the Liberal leader so readily as his predecessors might have.

How he loved the beefy boofhead ....Angus Taylor has an impressive CV including the university medal in economics at Sydney University. Picture: Martin Ollman




Indeed, indeed ...



Killer kept fawning in a way that was most un-Killer like ...

Canavan’s elevation has touched a nerve with Pauline Hanson’s One Nation, which on some polls has become the most popular and potentially powerful political force in the nation.
“Canavan joins the likes of the ABC, The Guardian and left-wing fact checkers who have started a war against One Nation to try and tear us down,” Senator Hanson fumed this week, telling voters her party was “the only one truly dedicated to leading the agenda on ending net zero, cutting immigration”.
Her concern is understandable as the Nationals under Canavan pose a major threat – albeit a small one at this stage – to One Nation’s spectacular rise. His views are far closer to hers, and indeed to those of his former boss and ex-National, Barnaby Joyce, than to outgoing leader David Littleproud. The Coalition’s new-found potential makes its lack of policy even more embarrassing. No one expects Hewson levels of detail but, almost a year since its electoral thrashing, the Liberal Party website lists only obsolete 2025 election policies.
Months after formally dumping net zero, the Liberals seems too scared to critique it. Moreover, they refuse to seriously condone the electorate’s increasingly overwhelming desire to slash the quantum of immigration, not only tweak the origin criteria here and there.

The reptiles rounded out the yarn with a double banger of snaps, Treasurer Jim Chalmers. Andrew Charlton.

 



Killer came to his final gobbet, with the three minute coming still exultant, still in mirabile dictu mood ... though some might doubt if a formerly ranting, raving deep north ratbag of the first water had the ability to transform, shape shift himself into something approaching a rational-sounding politician ...

Hanson might not have fancy degrees, but her party has the most comprehensive range of policies across numerous areas, from tax and free speech to energy and medical cannabis (pro). Sure, they might be light on details, but the direction is clear, and for a small party without having ever had the resources of government, that’s all that can be expected. On the two biggest policy issues of our time – immigration and energy – even uninformed voters know where One Nation stands.
Canavan’s desire to defend his party’s turf against One Nation might make it more difficult for him and Taylor to agree. Deep down he probably believes the “uniparty” criticism often levelled at the Labor-Liberal establishment. Taylor channels the economics of Thatcher and Reagan; Canavan embodies more of the nationalist policies associated with Donald Trump, a toxic figure to many Liberals but one embraced by Hanson. Canavan is unafraid to embrace less orthodox economic policies and a more isolationist foreign policy, still anathema to the Liberal Party that still venerates the economic policies of the Howard government.
Far more than with Sussan Ley and Littleproud, Taylor and Canavan reflect the two intellectual wings of the modern right in the Western world, which are at loggerheads in the US and risk tearing the Republican Party apart.
Neither of the Coalition leaders are shrinking violets. They will almost certainly make for more entertaining and intellectual politics but it remains to be seen whether it translates into electoral success.
Adam Creighton is Institute of Public Affairs chief economist.

Great times ahead for Western Civilisation it seems...with King Donald in a Gulliver moment ...



And now, for those who cherished petulant Peta's talk yesterday of the need for patriots to talk patriotic history, here's a reminder of how much she and Vlad the Sociopath have in common with such blather ...Russian schools introduce obligatory history exams, education based on "Love for the Motherland"




Last but not least, the infallible Pope was also out and about this day, but he was looking at a matter entirely ignored by the lizard Oz.

Do a search of the front page of the digital edition of the hive mind for "NACC" and you score 0/0 mentions. Ditto the liar from the Shire.

So that's how the infallible Pope ends up last, like a shag on a rock, simply because there's no way for the pond to segue to this matter from the reptiles, determined to send it to the cornfield ...