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Monday

9.2 out of 10 based on 10 ratings

101 comments to Monday

  • #
    David Maddison

    I think Australia’s dumbed-down masses should be given exactly what they voted for.

    Shut down the coal, gas and diesel power plants immediately as per the plans of those “genius” power systems “engineers” Albo and Blackout Bowen.

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    • #
      Johnny Rotten

      What a terrible era in which idiots govern the blind.

      William Shakespeare

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      • #
        David Maddison

        Agreed, but that quote is not from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar to which it is usually misattributed but a paraphrase of King Lear.

        Tis the time’s plague when madmen lead the blind. Act IV, Scene 1.

        But from Julius Caesar we do have:

        The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves” Act I, Scene 2

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        • #
          Turtle

          Good work. Lear was positively sane compared to our leaders.

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        • #
          Eng_Ian

          When they rewrite the Shakespeare classics you may find it in that version. Although the words/terms will be changed to ensure that they don’t cause offense to any minority group nor religion, especially those with reading difficulties. Maybe just re-release as a movie or two.

          I’m thinking the plays will get a lot shorter. In the future, keeping an earlier version in your home library could soon become an offence with real jail time.

          How long before that comes into play? Remember when the human rights woman said that discussions around the dinner table could be an issue, (or words to that effect).

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    • #
      TdeF

      It’s no different to the UK and most of Europe. Spain for example. You cannot expect ignorant self serving politicians to lead. They are too surprised to have the job. A single blackout is an electoral disaster. As for running the business which is Australia, they do not have a clue. Neither side does.

      But the success of Donald Trump, Elon Musk and friends is spectacular. There is nothing like someone who does not need or even want the job or the luxury retirement. Like Winston Churchill. But these are very rare people. And J.D. Vance and Nigel Farage and Vivek Ramaswamy stand out as high performers with a mission to fix what is broken. And that’s a lot.

      Possibly the biggest problem is with the enclaves of privileged public servants in Washington, Canberra, Whitehall who write endless laws that politicians do not understand and slowly bring power and money to themselves. The endless punitive carbon laws are generally not understood even by those who pass them into power. Or the aboriginal laws. It’s all virtue signalling.

      What Australia needs is the dismantling of all such laws and departments. I note that the most damaging of them, the original Renewable Energy(Electricity) Act of 2001 did not even use the words carbon or tax once. But it has ripped a hundred billion dollars from the pockets of ordinary Australians to pay for windmills and solar panels owned by others who profit from the unwitting gift. That was the start of public service activism, wrecking the joint. The 35% Safeguard Mechanism milking of carbon dioxide into Green gift certificates is just outrageous theft.

      But I doubt Albanese or Bowen have any idea what they are doing. They cannot believe their luck.

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      • #
        Gerard Basten

        Back in the eighties, there was a saying in Victoria that 3 electricity blackouts in a term meant electoral defeat at the next election. This was a period fraught with many strikes in persuit of shorter working hours, especially in NSW.

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        • #
          Bruce

          By the late Nineties, the “wisdom” was:

          Q. How do you get into small business in Victoria?

          A. Start with a big business.

          But now, we witness the strange alliance of the corporate statists with the bolshvists.

          “Poor fellow, my country” indeed.

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      • #
        KP

        ” There is nothing like someone who does not need or even want the job or the luxury retirement. ”

        Yes, good to see you agree democracy is a terrible form of Govt. Politicians shouldn’t exist, and our Govt should be picked like a jury.

        20

    • #
      OldOzzie

      Shut down the coal, gas and diesel power plants immediately as per the plans of those “genius” power systems “engineers” Albo and Blackout Bowen.

      The Australian Editorial – Power failure proves again that all roads lead to gas

      Like a blast from the past, the last-minute intrusion by former UN climate chief Christiana Figueres into Australia’s domestic affairs was a reminder that old habits die hard.

      Spouting the usual nonsense, without any evidence, that Cyclone Alfred, which struck Brisbane in March, was connected to climate change, Ms Figueres was tone-deaf to the more recent developments that matter. The danger in Ms Figueres’s intervention is the succour it gives to those still seeking to sabotage our industrial capacity and standard of living.

      This week’s electricity system failure in Spain and other parts of Europe proves the point.

      Comments by Alcoa, which owns the Portland aluminium smelter, Victoria’s biggest electricity user, bring the message home. In regard to the Spanish blackout, Alcoa said if power authorities could not quickly understand what had happened and the solution, the company would have to reconsider its operations there.

      On Thursday in 2024 AEMO had to intervene in the market 1800 times to direct gas, hydro and coal-fired generators to synchronise to the grid to provide critical system stability.

      This is up from six manual interventions to maintain a secure grid in 2016 and 321 interventions in 2020. These interventions are the only way AEMO’s control room operators can manage periods when large volumes of unused power are flowing into the main grid from rooftop solar systems and other inverter-based resources. As coal-fired plants retire, AEMO says 22 large synchronous machines will be needed to keep the grid stable and secure. Even still, Mr Westerman says, “flexible gas-powered generation will remain the ultimate backstop in a high-renewable power system”. And for gas to play its “critical role” as a backstop for reliability, there must also be enough gas in our domestic networks to meet demand.

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    • #
      STJOHNOFGRAFTON

      I agree with your sentiments about the ‘dumbed down masses’. During election campaigns we network and have meetings on voting strategies. As a result word gets around and we find we get asked for voting advice by others who have never bothered to understand the system or tune in to the campaign. I think most voters are apathetic. They rely on how to vote cards to make their choice easy. It’s like copying someone elses homework because you haven’t been paying attention in class. Many of these voters become terminally dumb. They’re happy swallowing the comforting lies of certain pettifogging politicians and the propaganda of the fourth estate. Some of the dumbed down masses will only wake up when it’s too late to do anything to save themselves from going the way of the rest of the doomed herd. Unfortunately, the dumbed down masses become a drag on those of us who strive to use our electoral system intelligently to facilitate gains to our prosperity and freedom.

      20

    • #
      Vladimir

      Been there, saw that,
      The worse – the better.
      The quicker that happen – the less people will be hurt.

      00

  • #
    David Maddison

    Australians should be proud. They have now voted for Net Zero IQ politicians.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    I don’t know anyone that voted for Greens, Labor or Teals (or worse) but I make a conscious choice not to associate with Leftists.

    However, if I ever do meet someone who is suffering due to the Net Zero IQ politicians they voted for, I will have zero sympathy for them.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    I think the next task for productive, thinking Australians is work out how to survive the next years and possibly even a decade or more of Labor rule.

    It’s not obvious to me how personal hard-earned and saved for wealth and assets can be preserved, apart from physical gold which is not safe or practical to keep. Or leave the country (in which case they’ll tax you when you leave).

    Certainly, death taxes and assets taxes are on the way, starting with taxes on unrealised capital gains on superannuation (retirement) funds. Oh, they renamed death duties by the woke name of “inheritance tax”.

    And of course there’ll be more lifestyle taxes such as on energy and “luxuries” for the objective of lowering the standard of living of non-Elites.

    All the products of your hard work and savings are up for a grab by the socialist Government (except those of the Elites).

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14676567/Anthony-Albanese-super-capital-gains-tax.html

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    • #
      RickWill

      Labor’s gift of OPM for household batteries will help reduce the cost of living for many home owners.

      Reducing household energy cost to the electricity connection fee is now an economic option for many households. Victoria has also subsidised removal of gas.

      So the pragmatic approach to protect wealth is to reduce cost of living. For homeowners, that is the cost of food and energy. For food, shop at ALDI first – it is consistently lower price and better value than the other two. “Fresh” produce from the big two requires a new definition for “fresh”. Our local Sunday market has competitive prices to supermarkets but the food is fresh in the common meaning of the word and lasts weeks rather than days.

      The general view is that all currencies with lose value against the USD under Trump but speculating on foreign currency can be a big loser. Term deposit rates are still attractive and are keeping pace with real inflation. China needs foreign income so Chinese made stuff is now coming into Australia at cost price. That is deflationary for manufactured goods. The Trump tariffs and energy policies are also lowering fuel prices around the world -deflationary – unleaded near me today 165.9/litre, diesel 173.9/litre.

      So protecting wealth, as always, is taking the pragmatic path under the cards dealt. Some people actually move to another country to lower cost of living and live well but at lower cost.

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      • #
        Graeme4

        Only one in 40 home solar owners have added a battery, and judging from the comments in The Australian on this subject, the thinking remainder are not planning to do so, having quickly realised that they wouldn’t recover the capital outlay during the battery’s short life.

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        • #
          Simon Thompson

          I bought a battery as a hedge against steeper power prices in the future- at current prices I do not “Profit” from my modest $3500 system, but being basically self sufficient with very little grid import reassures me. BTW has anyone noticed the dollar devalue against gold? Did Albo get up and tell the punters the Gold price in AUD was $2640 an ounce when he was elected? It is now $5057 an ounce. Thing is, Gold hasn’t changed at all, but the AUD has devalued to just over half its value. Really nothing to write to Padre in Italy about!

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          • #
            David Maddison

            Did Albo get up and tell the punters the Gold price in AUD was $2640 an ounce when he was elected? It is now $5057 an ounce. Thing is, Gold hasn’t changed at all, but the AUD has devalued to just over half its value.

            It’s frightening.

            And why didn’t the Liberals say anything about it?

            But don’t worry.

            Albo will keep handing out heaps of “free stuff”.

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      • #
        David Maddison

        OPM?

        10

    • #
      el+gordo

      ‘The new legislation to tax unrealised gains on super rather than the capital gains tax practice of only taxing something once it’s been sold would be revolutionary.’

      It might work, certainly popular with the lower classes, but it will depend on the makeup of the Senate.

      To sell the idea they would need to have a project in mind, like funding the construction of a very fast train network to alleviate the housing problem. It would dove tail nicely with those who work from home a good part of the week.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    George Christensen analysis (extract from Nation First email).

    https://nationfirst.substack.com/p/the-sabotage-of-peter-dutton

    Let’s not sugar-coat it—Peter Dutton was never meant to win this election.

    Not because he lacked the leadership. Not because Australians didn’t want change. But because his own party made damn sure he’d lose.

    -Peter Dutton’s campaign was deliberately undermined by internal factions in the Liberal Party who feared his conservative leadership.

    -A clear and strategic campaign plan from Dutton’s office was sabotaged by party insiders through delay, message dilution, and refusal to fund ads.

    -Leaks and internal betrayals by moderates, Photios loyalists, and even elements of the NSW Right were coordinated to destabilise Dutton.

    -The party’s focus on winning back Teal seats alienated the conservative base and ignored the desires of suburban and rural Australians.

    -The loss was not due to Dutton’s ideology, but to a calculated effort by internal rivals to ensure his defeat and preserve their own influence.

    This wasn’t a stuff-up. It wasn’t bad luck. This was premeditated political sabotage—a coordinated takedown by factional cowards, backstabbing opportunists, and hollow men whose loyalty lies not with voters, not with the country, but with their own futures.

    They’re already trying to rewrite history. The media narrative is locked and loaded: Dutton was too right wing to win. Rubbish. If anything, he was too restrained. He didn’t step to the right—he stepped aside. He avoided the fights he could’ve won. He muted his instincts in the hope of keeping the wreckers in the tent.

    It wasn’t enough. It was never going to be enough.

    Months ago, Dutton had the momentum. He was ahead in the polls. Australians were listening. There was a clear plan, forged before Christmas, to start 2025 with a political onslaught: hit the ground running in January, frame the debate, take the fight to Labor early.

    That plan came directly from Dutton’s office. A 12-point blueprint for restoring the nation—a structured, disciplined pitch to voters who were crying out for direction. It may not have been flashy, but it was real. It had intent. It had direction.

    And the political machine killed it.

    SEE LINK FOR REST

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  • #
    David Maddison

    It looks like the Greens “dear leader” Bandt has lost his seat of Melbournistan.

    His replacement will however be only a slightly less bad Labor member.

    https://tallyroom.aec.gov.au/HouseDivisionPage-31496-228.htm

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  • #
    Tonyb

    The Media over here are saying that the OZ opposition ran a very poor campaign and started making mistakes when they were leading back in February, whilst that of the governing party ran a pretty good-if uninspiring- one.

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    • #
      Johnny Rotten

      Correct.

      A child age 6 years could have run a better Campaign.

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    • #
      Tides of Mudgee

      Tonyb, read David Maddison at No. 5 above and you’ll see why. It is inconceivable that even politicians can be so stupid and mind-numbingly foolish, it’s throwing the baby out with the bathwater and shooting yourself in the foot and stabbing yourself in the back and making an own goal all at the same time. Duh duh and duh. ToM

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    • #
      Rowjay

      started making mistakes when they were leading back in February

      A bit harsh on the Libs – they were overtaken by the tariffquake whose epicentre was at the White House.
      It was a 9 on the wrecker scale and the tsunami that followed selectively wiped out conservatives on both sides of the Pacific.
      The reverse hockey stick on the linked graphs below says it all…

      https://www.pollbludger.net/fed2025/bludgertrack/

      12

      • #
        Robert Swan

        Rowjay,

        … the tariffquake

        The alarm was not an effect of the tariffs though. American tariffs on Australian beef (say) would tend to increase its availability in Australia and *lower* beef prices here. Not all that alarming, is it? But did you ever see it reported along those lines?

        The tariffquake was a matter of propaganda.

        As far as the weekend’s result goes, I thought JoNovians were more or less prepared for it, so am a bit surprised at the gnashing of teeth here.

        Dutton and Albanese are about equally dismal in my opinion. As Jo pointed out in one of her posts, Trump should still be in the White House when our next federal election is due. If Trump’s policies have made America great again in that time, maybe we will have a more interesting option than Dutton next time.

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        • #
          Rowjay

          The alarm was not an effect of the tariffs though

          I was being diplomatic to the bloggers here.

          The not-so-diplomatic assessment:

          “Dutton, perhaps overenthusiastically, endorsed President Trump’s victory without recognizing how difficult that would make his position — not with the bolted-on right, but with the swing voters, the center of the center, where all elections are won in Australia,” he said.

          A poll released last month by the Lowy Institute, a research foundation, found only 36% of Australians expressed any level of trust in the United States — the lowest in the annual poll’s two-decade history.

          https://www.nbcnews.com/world/asia/canada-trump-drag-conservatives-another-election-australia-rcna203325

          The “the center of the center” voters were spooked.

          00

      • #
        Tides of Mudgee

        Rowjay, being white-anted from within certainly didn’t help. ToM

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        • #
          Rowjay

          being white-anted from within certainly didn’t help

          Agreed – never does, although Dutton tried hard to remain on his course.
          Australia’s voting demographic has changed drastically – the baby-boomers are now becoming fossilised and now the centre-right has to somehow connect to the young voters. Either that or wait for the internal Labor power struggle to re-emerge.

          00

      • #
        Vladimir

        Lost good friends during first Trump’s term because they hated him with passion.
        Yesterday a friend from US stopped talking to me because I called Trump a traitor.

        00

  • #
    Peter C

    They’re already trying to rewrite history. The media narrative is locked and loaded: Dutton was too right wing to win. Rubbish. If anything, he was too restrained. He didn’t step to the right—he stepped aside. He avoided the fights he could’ve won. He muted his instincts in the hope of keeping the wreckers in the tent.

    George Christiansen may be right about this. He blames “faceless men” in the NSW branch of the Liberal party but does not name any names.
    The Liberal party and hence the country is in big trouble.

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    • #
      David Maddison

      He refers to the so-called “moderates” and Photios faction. The “moderates”, despite the name, are the far Left of the party, essentially Labor infiltrators.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    There is some evidence that the long sought after Planet 9 has been found.

    Obviously, further evidence and confirmation is required.

    https://youtu.be/SLi4KuE9IAE

    And another question, when it swoops closer to the sun, does it have any influence on climate such as Ice Ages? It’s orbital period will be thousands or tens of thousands of years.

    40

  • #
    Tonyb

    House of commons bans most charging of EV’s. Perhaps that will be extended to other closed parking areas…..and tunnels…..and bridges……and ferries?..and apartment blocks…

    https://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com/2025/05/03/parliament-ev-chargers-to-be-removed-for-safety-reasons/#comments

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    • #
      David Maddison

      They are probably terrified of an event reminiscent of the Gunpowder Plot of 1605.

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      • #
        Eng_Ian

        That plot, (by some Guy), was focused on just the parliament.

        Nett zero is much wider reaching. I’d compare the two, Guy’s fireworks to the Tsar Bomba.

        Some people wouldn’t care less about the earlier attempted effort but most would raise alarm about the latter. Strange the people didn’t get to vote on this.

        40

    • #
      OldOzzie

      The Politics of EVs Have Changed

      Thirty-five Democrats joined the GOP to repeal California’s EV mandate.

      By The WSJ Editorial Board May 4, 2025

      The times they are a changin’, especially on progressive climate dogma.

      On Thursday the House voted in strong bipartisan fashion to overturn the EV mandate the Biden Administration let California impose on the rest of America.

      The vote was 246-164 for a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution to repeal the waiver that the Environmental Protection Agency granted California for its EV mandate. The waiver provision was written to let California address smog. But Sacramento Democrats lobbied the Biden EPA to let it apply to carbon emissions.

      The mandate is ludicrously impossible to meet. It says zero-emissions vehicles would have to account for 43% of an auto maker’s sales by 2027 in California and the dozen other states that have signed up for its rules. It rises to 68% by 2030.

      Major car makers other than Tesla are nowhere near those sales targets. It also amounts to another case of California’s regulatory imperialism on the rest of the U.S. since car makers would have to adjust their assembly lines to meet the Golden State’s standards.

      The House vote is especially striking because of the 35 Democratic ayes. That included three of six Democrats from Michigan, three of five from Ohio, four of 12 from Texas, and even two from the High Climate Church of California (Luis Correa and George Whitesides). Let’s hope they’re not excommunicated by Pope Gavin (Newsom) I.

      The vote underscores that one salutary effect of the 2024 election is the introduction of at least some economic realism into the climate policy debate.

      40

  • #
    Alex

    Australia is still behind the point on the curve that Britain has reached. Britain is in a state of collapse thanks to the (Extreme) Left (Labour) and Fake-Right (Tories).. Everything has gone bust. The Labour party lied to the people to steal their vote, now the people have realised that they’ve been had. The by-elections of three days ago have given Farage a massive vote of confidence taking a massive vote away from both parties. If an election had to be held today Farage would become the prime minister of Britain. Let Australia’s Labour run its course and commit suicide like the US Democrats are doing with 27% approval rating.

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    • #
      Tides of Mudgee

      “Everything has gone bust. The Labour party lied to the people to steal their vote.”. Gosh that sounds familiar. Lies like “I didn’t fall off the stage that you all just saw on the news” and the biggun last election “$275 reduction in power bills” that have risen upwards of $1000 in the meantime. There have been endless lies for his entire Prime Ministership. If he were Pinocchio his nose would stretch from Sydney to Perth. And they voted again for another 3 years of this madness. What does it take for people to WAKE UP? ToM

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      • #
        another ian

        I gather that the originating model is –

        “I deny that I kicked down stairs.

        I was kicked at the top of the stairs and fell down of my own accord”

        00

  • #
    Alex

    The international (fake news) media has banned news about Farage’s massive victory. I’m expecting a police ‘investigation’ on him, ending up like Marie le Pen, in prison. They tried it on an Italian minister for impeding the landing of illegal migrants. We have Gulags now in Europe. Christians have been imprisoned, critics of Hamas supporters accused of hate speech, etc etc etc. Down the cliff, we go.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    Which demographic voted for Labor?

    Was it a preponderance of the young, stupid and indoctrinated freshly out of the communist indoctrination centres once known as “schools” and “universities”?

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    • #
      Murray Shaw

      Did see somewhere that this was the first election where the Boomers were not the biggest demographic.
      We were not the greatest generation, that was our parents, but we continued their work. Our children were too coddled and “given” too much without effort, they are what I call the entitled generation, nor sure if they are the XY or Z generation.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    If Australia ever gets another conservative government they must defund Their ABC.

    It no longer serves any useful purpose but just provides one sided Far Left political propaganda.

    It’s does not represent the views of all taxpayers who fund it.

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    • #
      Forrest Gardener

      The problem with reigning in their ABC is that the response will be that any cut in funding to their ABC will result in the immediate demise of peppa pig or the bananas in pyjamas. And the ability to hide behind that spin gives so much political cover that attempts at reform are stymied.

      A public policy worthy of advocacy is efficient government. Not necessarily starting with their ABC but systematically eliminate the deliberate waste of taxes and borrowings which is the life blood of advocacy groups and associated hangers on. Find some low hanging fruit first. And really go to town highlighting that waste.

      It is a message which is self-spinning in favour of reason. It has the added benefit of driving the bad guys nuts trying to unspin the spin.

      That is potentially the greatest lesson from Trump’s first 100 days in the US.

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    • #
      TdeF

      And the SBS. Who needs multicultural media in the internet age?
      And the CSIRO. Who do what exactly?
      And the BOM. It’s all computerized. And they refuse to digitize the inherited records prior to 1909, possibly the best in the world.
      and the endless climate departments. Politicians controlling and taxing the weather. It’s a dream.

      50

  • #
    David Maddison

    With the mandate given to the socialists, they will no doubt open up the floodgates to violent, uneducated, misogynistic, anti-Western Third World immigrants, all future Labor voters, all to be placed in critical Labor electorates. All to ensure Labor is in power forever.

    This is what the Democrats tried to do in America but they had TRUMP to stop them.

    We have nobody.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    What is the “logic” of someone who votes for Labor?

    Is it all the “free stuff”, the destruction of Western society and its values, or what is their motivation?

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    • #
      Forrest Gardener

      As I once thought of my children’s choice in partners, there is no accounting for taste.

      Gosh I’m full of it this morning.

      30

    • #
      RickWill

      Free stuff is compelling. It is the way a democracy can be separated from free market. It becomes less messy and more easily managed.

      Australia is able to ride its mineral wealth feeding Chinese manufacturing. A strong China, Korea and Japan guarantees Australia’s income.

      Australia is likely the only country that can get close to NetZero if you do not count the carbon used to produce its imports. Australia is back to running current account deficits, which eventually catches up like it has in the UK. But Australia’s position is now better than the UK. UK has run out of castles and department stores to sell to Arabs. Australia still has mountains of iron ore, rich bauxite deposits and the best met coal in the world along with a most of natural gas.

      10

    • #
      OldOzzie

      NDIS needs to be fraud-proofed

      Almost 12 years after the launch of the National Disability Insurance Scheme in July 2013, its public administration and guardrails against fraud and inefficiency need a thorough overhaul, regardless of Saturday’s election result.

      The failures and misdeeds of an NDIS provider company, Cocoon SDA Care, co-founded by a former bankrupt, Zaffar Khan, have potentially harmed some of the scheme’s most vulnerable clients as well as company staff and the public purse.

      National crime correspondent David Murray reports that Cocoon SDA Care, which operates in all states, left a South Australian man with disabilities confined to his home after charging the taxpayer-funded scheme $50,000 for care services that were never provided, according to whistleblowers. Cocoon also was claiming payments from the NDIS for providing one-on-one care for the man when he had a housemate also under care, and for times when he was in the care of another provider.

      The company then stalled on repaying the money. It continued operating while failing to keep up with superannuation payments to staff since at least last year. Workers also complain that they are owed wages and entitlements.

      Amid allegations of misuse of taxpayer funding and a taskforce of several agencies, launched 2½ years ago to investigate fraudulent abuse of the NDIS in general, the business has been rushing to get clients to switch over to new companies with ties to Mr Khan and his associates, insiders have told The Australian.

      Several points in this costly mess need to be addressed.

      First, how was a company co-founded by Mr Khan, who previously went bankrupt after the failure of his Ideal Cabs business that he says trained the unemployed to drive taxis, engaged to provide NDIS services? Second, why were several red flags surrounding him ignored?

      A key questions that should be asked is: in engaging the company as a service provider, what due diligence did the NDIS undertake, and did it act on it? Cracking down on fraud was a major part of the Albanese government’s strategy to limit the growth in costs of the NDIS to 8 per cent a year.

      In March, the budget papers showed the NDIS would cost $48.5bn this financial year. It is forecast to cost $52.3bn in 2025-26, rising to $63.4bn by 2028-29.

      20

    • #
      Brenda Spence

      Climate change fear? Nuclear fear?

      00

  • #
    David Maddison

    How close is Australia to a Spanish-style grid failure?

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    • #
      Graeme4

      May depend on which grid you are connected to. WA doesn’t have very much large-scale solar, relying instead on home solar during the day, supported by plenty of cheap gas. The state Labor govt may destroy this delicate balance by closing WA’s coal power stations, but so far they remain open and doing a great job. As to your “National” grid, who knows what will happen, but blackouts surely must start once a few coal power stations are closed.

      40

      • #
        Eng_Ian

        Have a look at your midday electrical supply. Household supply is going to be the undoing in WA. At least a large single supplier could be told to turn off or reduce output. Not possible for the roof tops.

        WA may be the first guinea pig over the line and into a black start. There ain’t no extension lead from France to help there.

        30

    • #
      RickWill

      The battery gift will help stave off collapse if there are enough done in time. The test will be around November this year. Household batteries will improve the duck curve by increasing daytime demand and reducing evening peaks.

      The threat is poor availability of coal units. These are now down to the bone with little margin for any serious unit failures. That test will come in late June and probably every June for the next few years.

      10

      • #
        David Maddison

        Is the battery of use if you don’t have panels, e g. could you purchase cheaper off peak power to charge the batteries?

        00

  • #
    David Maddison

    TWEET from Rand Paul.

    Time for justice.

    https://x.com/RandPaul/status/1918710865743790492

    Anthony Fauci thought he set off into the sunset and we forgot about him, but that’s the furthest thing from the truth. He will be held accountable for his role in the pandemic and the COVID cover-up.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    TRUMP to build new ball room at White House and he’s paying for it out of his own pocket.

    From Farcebook.

    🔥 JUST IN: President Donald Trump announces he is building a new ball room at the White House that could cost millions…

    … and he’s PAYING FOR IT HIMSELF!

    President Trump: “We’re going to make and build a ballroom, which they’ve wanted for probably a hundred years at the White House. And it’ll be a world-class, beautiful ballroom.”

    Reporter: “A ballroom that could cost millions of dollars. He says he will pay for it himself.”

    President Trump: “I’m not gonna ask the government for money. I’ll fund it, and I’m sure we’ll have some donations too.”

    HT Eric Daughtery

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      Murray Shaw

      What a breath of fresh air that man is in the political world.
      The first person, in my lifetime, in political life that has not tried/worked to enrich him/herself in the job.
      The same could be said for Elon Musk, and Vivek Ramaswamy, both very successful in the private sector, now donating their time and effort to MAGA.

      Salute those men! And they think Australia is the “lucky” country. Well we just ran out of luck!

      200

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      TdeF

      Only Trump and Melania would want a ballroom. Grand homes always had a ballroom. And European women love to dance. But only Trump would need the ballroom.

      10

  • #
    David Maddison

    The seat of Goldstein in Victoriastan is extremely close (95 votes difference at this moment).

    https://tallyroom.aec.gov.au/HouseDivisionPage-31496-214.htm

    Zoe Daniel (Teal Party, fake independent) vs Tim Wilson (Liberal).

    It’s likely however that postal votes will favour Tim Wilson.

    80

    • #
      Forrest Gardener

      On a personal level my mother lived in Goldstein.

      As a life long liberal voter I could never understand her disdain for Tim Wilson. That was until we moved into the area to look after her in the last few years of her life and I met Tim Wilson at the polling booth on election day. His mother was with him spruiking for votes.

      At the same time there was a quiet suffocating self censorship among voters waiting to do their civic duty. In a nutshell the teals were just so nice. They were very well organized with an all elderly female team who were arranged in concentric circles around the polling booth. None of them sought your vote. They just smiled and said hello like your grandmother would.

      In my mind I imagined I had stumbled upon a geriatric version of the Hitler Youth. And at the same time there was an intangible something I found repulsive about Tim Wilson.

      The atmosphere in Fisher is completely different. And I live in a small town which inexplicably to me was one of the few booths which voted majority Labor.

      And now I’ll just join Rip Van Winkle and wait for my opportunity to do something which will make a difference. If that ever happens.

      70

      • #
        TdeF

        There is a genuine dislike for Tim Wilson in the area. They are not homophobic. They just don’t like him.

        20

        • #
          TdeF

          “Approximately 2,000 postal votes will also be counted in most electoral divisions on election night.

          This has been done previously at by-elections but is a first for this federal election. It provides a trendline for postal votes that analysts can use to assist in predicting results.

          The majority of postal vote counting commences in the days following a federal election. The AEC can receive completed postal vote packs up until 13 days after election day.”

          Of the 7,000 postal votes so far counted, Wilson gets 58% and Daniels 21%. 3:1.

          So with a lead of only 95 votes, Zoe Daniels is likely to lose. It would take only another 500 postal votes.

          10

  • #
    David Maddison

    How do The Teals get away with claiming to be independents when they are clearly an organisation with the same branding plus they have the same far Left ideology and vote with Greens nearly all the time.

    By claiming to be independent they are exempt from the disclosure and other rules governing political parties.

    Who funds them anyway? They are presumably funded by a billionaire Elite subsidy harvester.

    100

  • #
    David Maddison

    Yesterday I went to the Lake Goldsmith Steam Rally. Whether by accident or design, the whole site is surrounded by windmills. The windmills are horrible and have destroyed a tranquil rural landscape.

    You can see the permanent Steam Rally site here. This picture might predate the windmills.

    https://maps.app.goo.gl/bPvwTQDRHFo3SAu79

    The surrounding wind farm is owned by the Chicomms and one of Australia’s largest wind subsidy-harvesting operations with 149 windmills and claimed nameplate of 521MW, a meaningless number, obviously.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockyard_Hill_Wind_Farm?wprov=sfla1

    Rally website:

    https://www.lakegoldsmithsteamrally.org.au/

    I was also told that when they installed the subsidy harvesting devices, they altered drainage and made the site more prone to flooding. But an “engineer” signed off on the new drainage arrangements and the Rally organisers can’t afford to litigate.

    70

  • #
    GTB

    I don’t know if anyone done this, but I would like to congratulate Spain on achieving net zero. It might have only been for a few hours but they did it. Obviously it has taken fanatical determination to beat other countries to run on mostly “renewable” power. Even though the power company gave notice that Spain would go net zero, the people were still court by surprise. Which country will be next?

    80

  • #
    another ian

    FWIW

    “The Indoor Plumbing Test
    what can AI enable you to do that you couldn’t already do by other means?”

    The most important invention – the I-phone or plumbing?

    https://freddiedeboer.substack.com/p/the-shitting-in-the-yard-test

    Via https://instapundit.com/718019/#disqus_thread

    00

  • #
    David Maddison

    All government, in its essence, is a conspiracy against the superior man: its one permanent object is to oppress him and cripple him. If it be aristocratic in organization, then it seeks to protect the man who is superior only in law against the man who is superior in fact; if it be democratic, then it seeks to protect the man who is inferior in every way against both. One of its primary functions is to regiment men by force, to make them as much alike as possible and as dependent upon one another as possible, to search out and combat originality among them. All it can see in an original idea is potential change, and hence an invasion of its prerogatives. The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself, without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane and intolerable, and so, if he is romantic, he tries to change it. And even if he is not romantic personally he is very apt to spread discontent among those who are.

    “Le Contrat Social”, in: Prejudices: Third Series (1922)

    See full quote at:

    https://www.panarchy.org/mencken/contratsocial.html

    30

  • #
    OldOzzie

    With 3 in the Family with multi country Husband & Wife, I remembered Lew Kuan Yew’s thoughts on this problem, as reading many comments in The Australian on the Election, that were saying “We need to learn Mandarin”.

    Lee Kuan Yew on Mandarin Learning

    Lee Kuan Yew, the founding father of modern Singapore, often discussed the challenges of learning Mandarin Chinese compared to English. He highlighted the complexity of the Chinese writing system, which consists of over 8,000 characters, in contrast to the simplicity of the English alphabet, which has only 26 letters.

    Lee emphasized that the primary difficulty in learning Mandarin is not the language itself, especially for speakers of other Sinitic languages, but rather the Chinese characters as its near-exclusive script. He believed that the complexity of the characters posed a significant barrier to learning and retention, making it more challenging for students to master the language compared to English, which has a simpler and more straightforward writing system.

    Even Mao Zedong, the leader of the People’s Republic of China, recognized the challenges posed by the Chinese character set. Mao considered the possibility of reforming the writing system, potentially adopting a phonetic script to make it easier to learn and use. This reflects a broader recognition of the practical difficulties associated with the traditional Chinese writing system.

    Lee Kuan Yew’s insights into the challenges of learning Mandarin highlight the importance of early exposure and consistent practice in mastering the language. He advocated for methods such as writing and delivering speeches, listening to Mandarin recordings, and using technological tools to aid in learning. These strategies can help overcome the inherent complexities of the Chinese language and make it more accessible to learners.

    This in turn led me to his SPEECH BY MINISTER MENTOR LEE KUAN YEW AT THE PARLIAMENTARY DEBATE ON THE REPORT OF THE CHINESE LANGUAGE CURRICULUM AND PEDAGOGY REVIEW COMMITTEE ON THURSDAY, 25 NOVEMBER 2004 which I have sent to all my Family

    Incredible Man, able to cover many languages including Latin

    50

    • #
      David Maddison

      All children have to learn English but they also have to learn a second language of either Mandarin, Malay or Tamil according to their officially registered ethnicity.

      10

  • #
    another ian

    FWIW

    “Putting The Alarmist Spin On The Earth’s Rotation”

    https://wattsupwiththat.com/2025/05/04/putting-the-alarmist-spin-on-the-earths-rotation/

    3/5th of 5/8ths of – – –

    10

    • #
      another ian

      And

      “Wrong, The Hill, Climate Driven Corn Insurance Cost Projections Mislead the Public”

      “It’s astonishing that The Hill would publish such an article based on shaky, unverified models without at least checking real-world data trends on agricultural productivity and extreme weather. For over four decades, U.S. farmers have thrived even as temperatures have modestly risen. This editorial exemplifies the poor research and blind acceptance of climate alarmism that too often passes for journalism today. Instead of challenging dubious claims, The Hill parrots them, spreading fear and misinformation to the public.”

      https://wattsupwiththat.com/2025/05/04/wrong-the-hill-climate-driven-corn-insurance-cost-projections-mislead-the-public/

      10

  • #
    TdeF

    What surprised me was Dutton’s nuclear stance.

    With so much coal in Australia, our biggest export, he could have stood on bringing back coal. Even high efficiency power plants which would lower CO2 since 83% of our power is still coal. And stretch coal further.

    Plus lowering the cost of electricity dramatically, something Albanese lied about last time.

    Ending the carbon taxes, especially the 35% tax on every big company which actually does something for Australians. Like every airline.

    Most Australians would have backed him.

    No political party is backing coal. But it’s what the people want. Everywhere. Cheap, reliable power. And after 37 years of End of the UN man made World Global Warming, you could laugh the Global Warming pushers off the stage. The UN gave us the Wuhan Flu. And we don’t need their carbon ripoffs. The world’s biggest countries, 95% of the planet does not have carbon taxes.

    30

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    OldOzzie

    How to respond to ‘May the fourth be with you.’4th/5th May – Take 5

    Labor day QLD – May Day NT

    On Star Wars Day, which is celebrated on May 4th, fans often greet each other with the phrase “May the fourth be with you.”

    00

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