Our new aristocracy

Our new aristocracy. By Damien Coates in The Spectator.

Did you know?

A few weeks ago, Senator Dave Sharma used Senate Estimates to question why a government-appointed fuel security coordinator was being paid the equivalent of almost $1 million a year.

Most Australians had probably never heard of the role. Many would struggle to explain what a fuel security coordinator actually does. Yet instinctively, they understood something else: whatever this is, it isn’t ordinary life.

That reaction says something important about modern Australia.

An aristocracy?

For most of history, societies had aristocracies. Kings, nobles and landed elites occupied a world far removed from the people they governed. They enjoyed privileges unavailable to ordinary citizens and exercised influence over institutions that shaped national life.

We like to think we abolished all that. In reality, we may have simply reinvented it.

The old aristocracy wore crowns, inherited titles, and lived in palaces.

The new aristocracy wears lanyards, holds postgraduate qualifications, and works from government departments, regulatory agencies, universities, publicly funded organisations and sprawling bureaucracies. …

Trust is fraying:

What Australians have always distrusted is privilege. Particularly privilege that pretends not to be privilege.

The owner of a successful construction company who earns a fortune rarely attracts much resentment. He built something. He employed people. He took risks. Australians understand that bargain.

But a growing number of people look at modern institutions and see something very different. They see departmental secretaries earning salaries most taxpayers can scarcely imagine. They see agency heads, regulators, university executives, consultants, and publicly funded administrators occupying positions of extraordinary comfort while presiding over outcomes that appear to be getting worse rather than better. [They took no risks.]

  • Housing is less affordable.
  • Infrastructure is under strain.
  • Energy costs are rising.
  • Government is larger than ever.

Yet the managerial class continues to expand.

In Australia, almost one in five workers is now employed directly by government. Around that sits an even larger ecosystem of consultants, regulators, policy advisers, university administrators, NGO executives, and publicly funded professionals. Together, they constitute a class that exercises enormous influence over public life while often remaining insulated from the consequences of the decisions they make. …

 

 

Above it all, insulated by oodles of low-risk taxpayer money:

The people deciding housing policy generally own homes.

The people advocating population growth rarely compete for rental properties in outer suburbs.

The people designing energy policy seldom worry about whether they can afford next month’s power bill.

The people making decisions increasingly inhabit a different Australia from the people living with those decisions. And ordinary Australians know it.

That is why comparisons with the monarchy are more instructive than many realise.

For example, PM Anthony Albanese, who only ever worked for the Labor Party, has had multiple properties:

 

The pretending is particularly irritating:

The British monarchy never pretended to be ordinary. Its legitimacy was built upon distance. Kings did not claim to understand the daily struggles of farmers and labourers. Aristocrats did not pretend they were simply average citizens temporarily entrusted with power.

The divide was obvious.

Modern elites often ask for something far more ambitious. They seek the authority that comes from expertise while simultaneously demanding the trust that comes from relatability.

Increasingly, they enjoy neither.

Politicians tell voters they understand housing stress while owning multiple properties. Bureaucrats explain the necessity of policies whose consequences they rarely experience firsthand. Institutional leaders speak constantly about community while living lives increasingly disconnected from the communities they govern.

The problem is not that elites exist. Every successful society has elites. The problem is that modern elites frequently deny they are elites at all.

They speak the language of equality while occupying positions of extraordinary privilege. They present themselves as representatives of ordinary Australians while inhabiting professional and economic worlds that bear little resemblance to ordinary life. …

Populism is the tell that the elites are failing:

The rise of populist movements, the collapse of confidence in institutions and the growing hostility toward experts are not random developments. They are symptoms of a widening gap between those who exercise authority and those expected to accept it.

Democracies ultimately depend upon legitimacy. Legitimacy depends upon trust. And trust becomes difficult to sustain when large numbers of people conclude that those making decisions no longer understand the country they are governing.

And the recent tax changes didn’t help. The elite keeps swelling, so they need ever more tax income:

We deserve to feel safe in our own country

We deserve to feel safe in our own country. By Bec Freedom.

Last Monday, on the 18th of May, at around 6am, one of our own became a victim of the very thing we are trying to raise awareness about.

She was violently carjacked by machete-wielding African youth in Victoria. @soundstarter had stopped at the laundromat in Keysborough to dry her work jacket on the way to work. She was waiting out the front in her car when she was confronted by an aggressive African man who opened her car door and aggressively attempted to drag her out.

She fought back and tried to push and kick him away while he threw several punches at her face and body. Another African man then approached the altercation armed with a machete. Although she put up a fight, they managed to violently drag her out and took off in her car, which contained all of her belongings-her phone, credit cards, identification, and keys to her home.

Thankfully, onlookers heard the noise and ran over to help her. There were no serious injuries, but due to their aggressive and violent nature, she is quite badly bruised and scratched up.

She has had to change the locks on her house and, thankfully, already had a security and camera system installed. She is understandably still shaken up but wanted her story shared to help raise awareness.

Police reports were filed and her car has now been located. The car wasn’t smashed or set on fire-it was just dumped after they’d had their fun. Her phone and credit cards were also located and had been thrown away, which goes to show these weren’t poor struggling immigrants who attacked for monetary gain.

This was African machete violence and theft committed by two men aged between 16 and 20. Why? Because they can and they know they get away with it due to a weak court system.

This was an opportunistic, violent, and aggressive crime committed by foreigners who prove time and time again that they do not belong here, nor do they deserve a chance at a better life in our country.

We have become so desensitised to these attacks constantly happening, especially in Victoria. We speak about them in our spaces, make posts about them, and see them on the news.

But when it happens to you or someone you know, it’s a scary reminder of just how real this problem actually is. We need to get louder. We need to make more noise, because the reality is that any one of us could be next.

The only thing that will fix this is removing those who do not belong. We need instant deportations of criminal immigrants and the remigration of foreigners.

 

 

It’s happening here too — there is now an Australian Restore movement:

 

Get involved — real life activism

Get involved — real life activism. By Cameron at the National Workers Alliance.

I would like real life activism.

To the influencers who are rage-posting daily, who are monetizing their content while people get angry and frustrated, I know that education and awareness is important …

So stop watching the doom posters and put some time and energy into activism …

Under the current system there is no political solution. …

Every major city has ethnic enclaves, there is sectarian violence, and as social cohesion continues to break down, the separation will continue. White flight is happening.

Here they are protesting against Victorian Premier’s thousand-dollars-a-head event hosted by two MPs representing immigrant-dominated electorates. The Premier slips in a side door and will not answer questions.

Founder and leader of NWA Matt Trihey and a handful of other activists held photos of victims of immigrant crime, including teenager Declan Cutler and doctor Ash Gordon, both killed by African gang members, at the main entrance. …

This private function was $1000 a ticket and was attended by majority foreigners

Jacinta Allen will proudly sell out to foreign investors while ignoring the rising crime

 

It’s not an “insurrection” when the left do it

It’s not an “insurrection” when the left do it.

Major clashes occurred on the weekend between New Jersey police and anti-ICE rioters in Newark. Super physical fights against the police and authorities, by lefties who cannot get their way at the ballot box.

Leftist rioters are attacking the NJ police with rocks, and antifa is throwing flashbangs back at them.

 


Ari Fleischer:

The Democrats do a January 6th every day, every week. Their target is ICE.

J6 was a riot. THIS is in insurrection.

Glenn Reynolds:

This is much more violent than January 6. January 6 was American citizens acting like Americans. This is enemies of America acting like enemies.

Commenters:

I’m looking at hundreds of people that should be in jail for assaulting police. …

How can you throw freaking flashbangs and rocks at police and just walk away with ZERO consequences? …

Why aren’t they being arrested? Trump designated Antifa as a terrorist organization…don’t terrorists usually get arrested? …

How can this happen? It’s New Jersey, that’s how. You arrest them and they’ll be out in 4 hours, no bail and then they’ll take the train back to NYC.

I’ll bet there aren’t undercover FBI agents among the protestors, spurring them on, like on J6.

UPDATE: Antifa Thugs in Portland and Newark, Laying Siege to ICE detention facilities are PAID. By Bitchuneedsoap.

I messaged a group admin asking how my family in NJ could help the Delaney Hall protesters. Within minutes she sent me a supply list and a Venmo donation link.

The supply list wasn’t water bottles. It was P100 respirators (tear gas grade), military-spec impact goggles, welding gloves for picking up hot tear gas canisters, helmets, body armor, and Sudecon chemical decontamination wipes. That’s a military/law enforcement product most people have never heard of.

The Venmo link: @cosechanj. That account belongs to Jenny Garcia. She’s the main organizer of the Delaney Hall protests.

Quoted in the American Prospect, Newsweek, and TIME. Listed as the official press contact.

She is not a volunteer. She is a professional organizer.

Venmo feeds are public. I pulled hers.

Payments labeled “Commissary” (money for detained immigrants to buy food inside the facility). “Commissary / phone accounts fund” (keeping detainees’ phones active). “DSA meeting” (Democratic Socialists of America). “Mutual aid.” “F ICE.” …

So who pays Jenny Garcia? She holds three titles at three organizations.

  1. Detention Watch Network. DC-based. $7.2 million in assets. Ford Foundation funded.
  2. AFSC. Classified as a church. No public donors. Tides Foundation gave them $221K.
  3. Cosecha NJ. The @cosechanj Venmo name. Files two 990s. Reports $0 in salaries. Every year. Every officer. Nobody gets paid.

Foundation money pays Garcia through DWN and AFSC. She organizes under Cosecha’s name. Cosecha claims to pay nobody.

Nick Sortor:

The area around ICE Newark is DEAD SILENT after NJSP FORCED rioters out of the area

Tens of THOUSANDS of dollars worth of supplies are just abandoned outside the facility. It is genuinely mindblowing how much money is poured into riot supplies.

These are not grassroots demonstrators, but bought and paid for by left wing foundations.

The Lies We Are Forced To Live

The Lies We Are Forced To Live. By Logan Lamont in Quadrant.

The greatest dishonesty in modern Western society is no longer individual lying. It is institutional lying. Entire systems now participate in the deliberate suppression of uncomfortable truths.

At the same time, ordinary citizens are expected to remain silent, pretend not to notice, and publicly repeat narratives they often know to be incomplete or false. …

The truth is not avoided because it is untrue. It is avoided because it is politically dangerous….

Trust evaporating:

A society can survive disagreement. It can survive conflict. It can survive political division. What cannot survive indefinitely is the systematic destruction of trust.

Once people conclude that governments, media organisations, universities, and public institutions are deliberately hiding facts from them, the entire moral authority of those institutions begins to collapse. That is exactly what is now happening across much of the Western world.

Example:

Take violent crime. Not crime in the abstract, but the actual violent reality is increasingly confronting ordinary people in many Western cities. Knife attacks. Sexual assaults. Home invasions. Gang violence. Youth intimidation. Public disorder. Riots. Organised criminality. The public sees it. Police deal with it. Courts process it. Governments track it internally. Journalists know the details.

Yet increasingly, key facts surrounding serious crime are hidden, softened, obscured, or selectively omitted if those facts risk producing politically inconvenient conclusions.

  • Why are perpetrator descriptions sometimes vague to the point of absurdity?
  • Why is ethnicity often omitted?
  • Why are migration backgrounds hidden?
  • Why are gang affiliations downplayed?
  • Why do journalists suddenly become cautious when certain demographic realities emerge?
  • And perhaps the biggest question of all: why are these standards applied selectively?

Because modern Western societies have made a political decision that some truths are too dangerous for the public to discuss openly. … The fear is public reaction to honest information.

  • If violent crime disproportionately emerges from certain demographic groups, authorities fear accusations of racism.
  • If immigration patterns correlate with social tension or increased criminality in particular areas, politicians fear backlash against immigration policy.
  • If multiculturalism appears to produce fragmentation rather than cohesion in some communities, entire institutions become desperate to avoid acknowledging it openly.

So instead of confronting reality honestly, they attempt to manage perception.

The West has imported rape culture, literally. Our women are getting raped in unprecedented numbers by immigrants from the third world. We all know it, but to say so it forbidden. What is especially galling is that it is forbidden by the same moral preeners who claim that western culture is a rape culture and all us western men are guilty — and who imported actual rape culture to secure more votes to secure taxpayer funded jobs from leftist governments. Follow the money.

Language becomes sanitised. Riots become “community tensions.” Illegal immigrants become “undocumented migrants.” Ethnic gang violence becomes “youth unrest.” Religious extremism becomes “mental health concerns.” The wording changes because the underlying truth is politically explosive.

But changing language does not change reality. … Reality eventually overwhelms narrative. …

We notice:

The public is not blind. Citizens notice patterns. They notice when journalists emphasise race in one story but hide it in another. They notice when some offenders are endlessly contextualised while others are instantly condemned as symbols of wider social problems. They notice when police descriptions become suspiciously incomplete. They notice when authorities appear more concerned about avoiding accusations of prejudice than protecting ordinary citizens. …

 

You don’t say:

The modern media increasingly behaves less like an institution dedicated to truth and more like a system of narrative management. Facts are filtered through ideological priorities before reaching the public.

Information is not always outright fabricated, but it is carefully curated. Certain realities are amplified. Others are buried. Certain groups are protected from scrutiny while others remain permanently open to criticism. This double standard is one of the most corrosive aspects of modern public life.

We increasingly punish observation itself. Simply noticing patterns can now attract accusations of racism or hatred, even when official statistics, police reports, or court records support those patterns. Citizens are effectively told that acknowledging reality is morally unacceptable if reality conflicts with approved ideological narratives.

The big government crowd suppressed honest discussion. Our response is Trump. Farage (or Lowe), and Hanson:

Facts are not racist. Crime statistics are not racist. Police records are not racist. Court proceedings are not racist. Reality is not racist. The refusal to discuss reality honestly does not eliminate problems. It merely drives discussion underground, where anger hardens into resentment.

Moderate voices disappear because reasonable public debate becomes impossible. Into that vacuum step extremists, conspiracy theorists, and political opportunists willing to say openly what mainstream institutions refuse to address responsibly. Then the same elites who created the silence express horror at rising populism.

Increasingly, honesty carries risk. Careers can be destroyed. Businesses targeted. Reputations ruined. Social ostracism imposed. Not necessarily for lying, but for saying aloud what others privately know to be true. That is not a healthy civilisation. …

Cowards who get their paychecks from big government (perhaps via an NGO)

The most alarming part of all this is that many people now participate willingly in the dishonesty.

  • Journalists know when stories are selectively framed.
  • Politicians know when they are avoiding obvious realities.
  • Bureaucrats know when statistics are being softened.
  • Academics know when research conclusions are politically constrained.

Yet enormous numbers continue participating because the professional consequences of honesty have become severe.

We still get to vote.

Unlike in the old Soviet Union and its satellites, where the big government class and its media were regarded with contempt by most citizens. It could get a lot worse here in the West.

Not all immigrants are the same

Not all immigrants are the same. By Eric S. Raymond.

Castes in India have been maintaining almost perfect endogamy [marriage only to others in the same caste] for thousands of years. About the only significant category of exceptions is that if you have an exceptionally beautiful daughter you might succeed in getting her taken as a concubine by a higher-caste man, so their offspring might jump a rank.

With no significant gene flow between jatis [Hindu castes], divergences in important traits like IQ and time preference not only don’t smooth out, but actually amplify due to genetic drift and differing selective pressures.

Highest-caste Indians have an IQ distribution a lot like Europeans. Low-caste Indians…don’t.

This doesn’t mean all low-caste Indians are stupid; Gaussian distributions don’t work that way. It does mean that importing 10,000 low-caste Indians has very different implications for the host society then importing 10,000 Brahmins.

Segue to the recent news stories about American families getting killed by illiterate Indian truck drivers doing crazy stupid things on the roadways. Those truck drivers are not Brahmins.

This is a recent phenomenon because, until one of our political parties decided to import the entire Third World for vote-farming purposes, we were cream-skimming India. Now we’re not, and this makes a serious difference.

Take note, Canberra.

A commenter makes a wider point:

India’s castes crash into America’s delusions of equality with confusing and devastating results.

The next step is to realize that America did the “cream skimming” thing to Europe at its founding. America has always been exceptional and in defiance of regression to the mean.

 

Australia’s house prices to fall by most in 40 years

Australia’s house prices to fall by most in 40 years. By Robert Gotliebsen in The Australian.

Treasury Secretary Jenny Wilkinson’s plan to “change the distribution of home ownership” requires reducing the price of dwellings, led by Australia’s largest dwelling market, Sydney.

A large number of recent buyers could soon owe more on their dwelling than it is worth — so called negative equity.

Victoria:

In Melbourne, the state government version of Canberra’s “change the distribution of home ownership” program used property taxes to slash swelling values. It worked and achieved a 20 to 30 per cent slump in the value of dwellings priced between $1.5m and $10m.

There was a substantially smaller fall in property prices outside that range. Melburnians are now bracing for the impact of the Jim Chalmers/Wilkinson dose of “change the distribution of home ownership” taxes — a potential double dose.

Sydney:

Sydney’s largest apartment developer, Harry Triguboff, says “people are scared”. Triguboff said unit prices had already dropped 3 or 4 per cent this year.

But he now warns that the extent of the market slowdown is “understated”. Those people who are claiming prices will only drop 3 or 4 per cent are only saying that “because they are scared to go broke”. “They know very well prices will drop a lot more,” he says.

Australia:

Investment analysts MacroBusiness have been warning about high Australian consumer debt and high dwelling prices for some time, but after the budget they rang their warning bell much louder, stating that “we are bracing for the biggest housing correction in at least 40 years”. …

Impacts include:

A looming fall in dwelling transactions and prices will slash state government revenue via stamp duty. NSW Premier Chris Minns has made an early revenue decline estimate of $5bn. Victorian revenue will be devastated. …

Among the other secondary victims will be the 300,000 Australians who were encouraged by the government to use a government guarantee covering 15 per cent of the debt in order to borrow 95 per cent of peak dwelling prices. They had better not lose their jobs because they are in negative equity.

Politics:

There is no doubt Chalmers and Wilkinson are engaged in a massive social engineering project. Had they kept their attack to only one of the major measures, the impact would have been manageable.

But attacking capital gains, negative gearing and trusts in the same budget represented an unprecedented blow to parts of middle- and lower-income Australia.

We have a left-wing government and public service which together saw a unique opportunity to advance their combined agenda, given the division in opposition ranks.

Given the triple dose of untruths resulting from false election promises, they might be in for a nasty surprise — Pauline Hanson as prime minister.

Prediction about the future is hard, so don’t take the magnitude of the falls as gospel. In any case, they will be offset or disguised by growing inflation.

Yes, housing prices must fall. But the falls should be grandfathered in, perhaps leaving house prices flat while letting inflation do its work. Simply stopping (or reversing) mass migration from the third world would lower rents and house prices nicely.

One Nation surges ahead of Labor: Poll

One Nation surges ahead of Labor: Poll. By Phillip Coorey in The Financial Review.

One Nation has surged past Labor to become Australia’s most popular political party …

The latest The Australian Financial Review/Redbridge Group/Accent Research poll reveals primary support for One Nation has jumped four percentage points to 31 per cent since the pre-budget poll a month ago, while Labor’s primary vote fell three points to 28 per cent.

 

 

Redbridge director Tony Barry:

“The downstream effects of the budget and another interest rate rise is Labor have lost more vote share, but the Coalition aren’t the beneficiaries on a primary vote basis,” he said.

“With almost two-thirds of the electorate now saying Australia is heading in the wrong direction, that pervasive negative mood sentiment is fuelling more anti-establishment support and a view among a growing cohort of voters that the answer lies outside established norms and major parties.”

Meanwhile, Pauline Hanson said on Sky News this weekend that she is up to the job of leading the country.

Liberals want to work with One Nation:

Liberal MP Garth Hamilton: ““She has one of the highest profiles of politicians in Australia. Please come back and work with us.” …

Opposition energy spokesman Dan Tehan has not ruled out working with One Nation – or working under a One Nation prime ministership. …

“My view has always been that all of the parties in the centre-right need to work together if we are going to be able to defeat the Labor Party,

Tony Abbott:

Mr Abbott said it was “humiliating” that “the Prime Minister can’t do a public event without standing in front of three flags, not the one national flag that represents us all, and can’t open his mouth without suggesting that some Australians are more worthy of acknowledgement than others”.

“I just think this is wrong, I think it’s got to change,” he told ABC RN.

“Australia belongs to all of us, not just to some of us. And if you’re starting a speech, I think you should acknowledge everyone.”

Humiliating and divisive

How a relentless progressive orthodoxy is politicising life and crushing debate in Australia

How a relentless progressive orthodoxy is politicising life and crushing debate in Australia. By Greg Sheridan in The Australian.

Welcome to Australia, the nation Labor rigged. Not just Labor, but the progressive left establishment across society has established a state ideology, a system of orthodox beliefs (more unrelenting than medieval Christianity), which is increasingly imposed across all walks of life. The tendency is towards a one-party state, even if different party labels are preserved.

The Albanese/Chalmers budget is a giant step towards creating a southern hemisphere European welfare state. This relies on ultimately ruinous levels and types of welfare.

It greatly exaggerates the power of the state in all spheres of life, and tends to crony capitalism and corporate state structures. It brings a vast machinery of political orthodoxy — progressive ideology — which it’s increasingly difficult to be free of.

In a democracy the state is meant to be, as far as possible, politically neutral. In Australia, institutions that should be neutral have been politicised, while fresh institutions have been created for political purposes. Governments spend billions of dollars to coerce Australians into seeing reality through a leftist, progressivist lens, then enforcing them to live their lives accordingly. …

Ever bigger government now funds one side of every political debate:

Governments have established a vast forest of wealthy organisations designed to propagate a progressivist left worldview.

The Australian Human Rights Commission is a prime example. With a few exceptions it takes a progressivist/left view of human rights. It has very little to say in defence of free speech. Before the Bondi terror attacks it had little to say about antisemitism. But a Critical Theory and ideological view of the alleged fundamental injustice of Australia permeates its work. Thus this week we had the absurdity of the Sex Discrimination Commissioner expressing concern that transgender women could be discriminated against on the basis of potential pregnancy. …

Australian Human Rights Commission president Hugh De Kretser claims the fundamental injustice of British settlement in Australia has never been addressed, and advocates treaties with Aboriginal groups as a way of improving the human rights of Aboriginal Australians. A classical view of human rights would emphasise universal citizenship, with race having no part in official civic life. Why should the government fund the propagation of only one side, the left/progressivist side, of this issue?

The government funds the Environment Defenders Office to litigate against development projects. This involves enhancing, magnifying, helping political campaigns against these developments. Those who believe in development get no such government money.

Super and the unions have become another center of big government/leftist power:

The Australian superannuation industry has acquired vast financial power. As a result it also has political power. …

Compulsory super in Australia is really a form of tax. Many super funds have union officials on their boards. Super funds shouldn’t campaign politically about the treatment of super funds. These funds have also become part of the progressivist consensus in industry and investment.

Governments funnel huge amounts of money to trade unions. Unions now represent just 9 per cent of the private sector workforce, yet they’ve never been richer or more powerful. Government money is given to them for training and many other purposes. …

Universities:

University research grants are often enough mocked for their absurdity — anti-racist dentistry, drag shows for scientists, etc. But this nuttiness is a sideshow. It’s the deep, pervasive, overwhelming orthodoxy throughout publicly funded universities, with exceptions, that is simultaneously intellectually stultifying, corrosive in its exaggerated hostility to Western traditions, and ultimately undemocratic.

An autocracy doesn’t need an opposition ready to take over the reins of government, obviously. The opposition is just ceremonial, if it is allowed to exist at all.

There are thousands of other examples. The Albanese government, perhaps the most profligate in Australian history, found one area where it could economise. It cut staffing levels for the opposition.

In nearly 50 years of journalism, I can never remember House of Reps question time, the only part of parliament regularly broadcast to a large TV audience, being so rigged against giving the opposition any chance to make a point effectively, or meaningfully contest ideas and policies.

Totalitarianism is where government asserts total control over the lives of its citizens, regulating nearly every aspect of public and private behavior through coercion, repression, and propaganda. It is characterized by a single-party rule, the suppression of all opposition, and the enforcement of an official ideology that permeates education, media, and morality.

Clearly that is the direction in which Australia is currently headed.

Australia is one of the oldest continuous democracies in the world, but this relentless left/progressive orthodoxy is inherently authoritarian. It politicises normal areas of life such as school education, while ruling many normal views out of order for actual political discussion.

The best study of such tendencies remains George Orwell’s 1984. Big Brother determines the thoughts of its citizens. Subtlety and nuance are crushed. The only permitted opinions are double plus good, or double plus bad. This reflects the simplistic binaries that always underlie left/progressive orthodoxy, notwithstanding its pompous jargon and blather. For the left, the world is simplistically divided between oppressor and oppressed, hate-filled reactionary and enlightened progressive.

The author said “authoritarianism,” but technically “totalitarianism” fits the bill better, though we aren’t fully there yet. Perhaps it is fairer to say we are heading in an increasingly totalitarian direction, led by an authoritarian government. Obviously we still have many freedoms, but not as many as five years ago, or 20 years ago, let alone 80 years ago.

Advanced manufacturing and AI: Australia just makes it all too hard

Advanced manufacturing and AI: Australia just makes it all too hard. By Bran Black in The Australian, Mr Black is the CEO of the Business Council of Australia.

I returned to Australia this week after leading a delegation of Australian chief executives through New York and Washington, where we met with senior investors, members of congress, administration officials, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the New York Stock Exchange and leaders from some of the world’s largest investment and technology companies.

The message we heard repeatedly was clear, consistent and urgent – Australia is extraordinarily well positioned to benefit from the next wave of global investment driven by artificial intelligence. But the world will not wait for ­Australia.

On the flight home from Washington to Dallas before returning to Australia, I sat next to an American investment banker heading to Hong Kong. When he heard I was Australian, he immediately said he’d heard about Australia’s recent changes to capital gains tax and our miles of red tape and regulation.

Then he said something alarming. “I wouldn’t invest in Australia right now.” …

One senior figure told us Australia was “almost the perfect place in the world” for the infrastructure required to power the AI revolution. But we also heard growing concern that Australia risks regulating, delaying and debating itself out of the opportunity. One phrase came up repeatedly throughout the trip: “Just make it happen.” …

Missing out (take note, Mr Albanese):

Around the world, governments and businesses are moving fast to secure the investment, energy systems, data infrastructure and supply chains that will underpin the next generation of economic growth.

Huge amounts of global capital are on offer. Decisions are being made and projects are being approved. And the next six to 12 months are widely seen as critical.

We heard estimates of up to $US1 trillion in capital potentially being deployed globally over coming years into the infrastructure required to support AI. That means data centres, electricity generation, transmission, cooling systems, and advanced manufacturing. …

Australia should be one of the leading destinations for that investment. But investment flows to where confidence exists. And increasingly, international investors are questioning whether Australia is still capable of saying “yes” to major projects quickly and consistently.

Again and again, concerns were raised about regulatory complexity, approvals delays and ­policy uncertainty. Whether it’s changing tax settings, debates around capital gains tax, or overlapping planning systems, these ­issues are not viewed in isolation internationally. Together, they fuel an existing narrative we’ve now heard in boardrooms from Tokyo to New York that Australia just makes it all too hard.

Poorer Australians, coming up.

Australia’s feminized pubic square

Australia’s feminized pubic square. By Stephanie Bastiaan in The Spectator.

The institutions hollowing out women’s sex-based rights are not run by shadowy men in back rooms. They are run, increasingly, by women: a majority-female federal Labor government, a public service that is 60 per cent women, a thicket of agencies where the gatekeepers of our rights are overwhelmingly female – and they all seem to sit on the same side of progressive politics. …

We were promised that putting more women in charge would deliver better outcomes. Women are now at or above parity at almost every level of the public service. So where are the better outcomes? Quantity is not quality. Filling the room with women who all think identically is not diversity — it is a monoculture wearing the costume of progress.

Giggle vs Tickle is the new misogyny:

I have often heard gender ideology described as a new kind of misogyny — and in its material impact, it is. The Giggle v Tickle ruling, in my personal view, confirmed it: a man’s claim to womanhood now outranks the reality of sex, and it is women who have the most to lose — in sport, in single-sex spaces, in the services built for them. …

However, in Australia, gender ideology is, at its core, a woman-driven problem. …

The women’s suffrage movement was grounded in biological reality — that women were unequal under the law for the simple fact of being female. Somewhere along the way, that cause talked itself out of its own premise. ‘Sex matters’ became ‘sex is a feeling’, and a movement that began by defending women ended unable to say with confidence what a woman is.

When Australia’s Sex Discrimination Commissioner, Anna Cody — the official charged with administering a law whose entire architecture rests on the category of sex — cannot, or will not, define ‘biological men’, you are not looking at an outlier. You are looking at a pattern. From Equality Australia’s patron Governor-General Sam Mostyn to academics like Paula Gerber, the women in our most prominent public roles haven’t just accommodated gender ideology — it is my opinion that they have promoted it throughout their careers.

Show us the money!

So why have so many embraced an ideology that works against their own sex? Part of the answer lies in a moral economy that treats victimhood as the highest currency. We are the majority of the public service and of university graduates, yet the story too many women still tell is one of subjugation.

Independent analysis finds our national broadcaster’s coverage on gender ideology, produced by a majority-female workforce, is heavily skewed toward trans-activism. Presenters whose names are synonymous with ‘the female perspective’ on our screens have built careers on women in public life, yet that perspective is rarely turned toward the women who insist that ‘female’ still means something….

The women dismantling our rights do it in our name, and often at the taxpayer’s expense. The women defending them do it at their own cost. History will not confuse the two.

Iran War Update

Iran War Update.

President Trump:

Iran must agree that they will never have a Nuclear Weapon or Bomb.

The Hormuz Strait must be immediately open, no tolls, for unrestricted shipping traffic, in both directions.

All water mines (bombs), if any, will be terminated …

Ships caught in the Strait due to our amazing and unprecedented Naval Blockade, which will now be lifted, may start the process of “heading home!” …

The enriched material, sometimes referred to as “Nuclear Dust,” which is buried deep underground with virtually collapsed mountains, caused by our powerful B2 Bomber attack 11 months ago, sitting on top of it, will be unearthed by the United States (which, it is agreed, is the only Country, along with China, with the mechanical capability of doing so!), in close coordination and conjunction with the Islamic Republic of Iran, plus the International Atomic Energy Agency, and DESTROYED.

No money will be exchanged, until further notice.

Other items, of far less importance, have been agreed to.

I will be meeting now, in the Situation Room, to make a final determination.

Newt Gingrich makes the vital point that Trump is acting as the head of a coalition, not as the head of just the US:

After spending this week reviewing the Iranian war I am now convinced President Trump is on the edge of an historic victory.

The real breakthrough for me came as I reviewed President Trump’s decisions and maneuvers not from the standpoint of American unilateralism but from the standpoint of the leader of a remarkable historic coalition, the largest coalition ever put together in the modern Middle East. Everyone understands that Israel is an important ally. What is little discussed is the depth of support from the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and other countries in the region. It has to be sobering for the Iranian dictatorship to realize that it does not have a single ally willing to challenge the American naval blockade.

Slowly, gradually, timidly, our European allies are lining up to help with the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz. A great deal of President Trump’s maneuvers against Iran make sense once he is seen as a coalition leader and not just as a unilateral American President.

I spent a lot of the last couple weeks reviewing kinetic options including wining the battle of the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz and if necessary using the shocking and shattering level of force President Nixon and Secretary Kissinger used against Hanoi and Haiphong in Christmas 1972 (which both leaders believed convinced the North Vietnamese to agree to a truce and the freeing of American POWs).

If this were a unilateral American campaign I could enthusiastically support a more aggressive kinetic campaign. However it is also clear it would shatter the coalition because our Arab allies are convinced Iran could still do enormous damage to their oil fields and infrastructure.

Coalitions are inherently slower than unilateral campaigns. However coalitions ultimately bring vastly more power to the fight.

I am as frustrated as everyone else by the pace of talking with the dictatorship but having reviewed the correlation of forces and the options available to the coalition on one side and the Iranian religiously motivated dictatorship on the other I am prepared to assert that President Trump’s coalition leadership (something almost none of his critics want to acknowledge) is within reach of an enormous historic victory.

And if the Iranian dictatorship ultimately proves it is hopelessly committed to a suicidal position there will be plenty of time for a kinetic campaign of enormous power and effectiveness. Either way we are on the edge of an astonishing victory for our values and for a safer Middle East.

Interesting. Let’s see what happens.

Ukraine war update

Ukraine war update. Look at modern war, where human solders are hunted down by drones laden with explosives

Here’s recent footage from Ukrainian FPV drones impacting Russian soldiers:

 

And here’s Russian drones hunting Ukrainian soldiers:

 

The Ukrainians have more and better drones now, largely due to a more innovative and free-wheeling development and procurement system. As a result, they have turned the tide and are now seen as winning (slightly).

After four years of sanctions, the Russian economy is hurting badly. Maybe Russia is laying the groundwork for a withdrawal — the following might be true:

hat-tip David Archibald