The Musk Empire is leading humanity into space

The Musk Empire is leading humanity into space. By Glenn Reynolds.

Damn, how I wish [science fiction author] Jerry Pournelle could be watching this. …

When I was still a kid, I read Jerry’s column “A Step Farther Out” in Galaxy magazine religiously. Jerry saw it all coming: vertical takeoff and landing spaceships, the need to lower costs to orbit, and the absolute necessity for both reusability and launch volume to make things cheap enough, and reliable enough, to build an interplanetary economy. He wrote about the immense resources of space (both in terms of energy and material), and the wide-open human future they could support. …

There are still bugs to work out, and capabilities to add, but what we saw on Friday was a full-fledged interplanetary spaceship. Starship v.3 is big enough to carry cargoes to the Moon and Mars. It uses methane fuel which … can be manufactured on-site from the Martian atmosphere using 19th Century chemical technology.  …

It will also support missions to asteroids, which are loaded with precious and valuable metals, carbon compounds, and other useful stuff. (Even rock is useful for radiation shielding, and using stuff that’s already in space is generally cheaper than launching it from Earth.)

A moon base is practical with Starship. Artemis, for all the hype, uses NASA’s SLS rocket, which is based on technology over half a century old — Congress mandated that it use Space Shuttle technology — and costs literally billions per launch.

Large structures in Earth orbit are practical with Starship. Elon wants to build data centers in orbit, and others are following his lead. …

Space solar power plants, converting the 24-hour, unfiltered sunlight of outer space into electricity that is beamed to Earth via microwave (a technology long-since demonstrated) are practical with Starship.

And it’s not just lift capacity. The Musk empire also stresses AI and robotics. When we were thinking about large space structures in the 1970s we assumed they’d be built by humans, like offshore oil rigs. In my Space Law seminar last fall we did some rough modeling on how much faster you could build them using robots controlled by AI. The answer was rough, but clear: Much, much faster. And more cheaply, and without labor issues. …

 

 

After the mission concluded, the SpaceX crew was chanting “USA! USA!” Jerry always said that it was nearly certain that space would ultimately be settled by humans, but that it would make a big difference which humans got there first.

The USA is the planet’s beacon of freedom and hope — and, frankly, the only country that could have supported the development of a company like SpaceX, with a freewheeling and creative yet utterly results-oriented culture. If we get there first, the coming millennium will look very different than it would if it was, say, China who got there first.

The US still wins things.

If Elon Musk were in Australia, Anthony Albanese would be a 47% partner in all he does. How demotivating!

Bigger government or less government? Suddenly there’s a choice in Australia

Bigger government or less government? Suddenly there’s a choice in Australia. By Greg Sheridan in The Australian.

Bigger government:

Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers delivered a nation-changing budget that decisively cast off the milquetoast centrism they’d affected … It embraced instead the wild big ­government, massive spending, hyper-regulating approach of Gough Whitlam and Jim Cairns in the disastrous 1972 to 1975 Labor administration, which so savagely damaged the Australian economy.

This is a budget of historic consequence, a nation-changing moment.

Less government:

Opposition Leader Angus Taylor’s speech in reply was equally historic. Just as Labor is proposing a European approach but worse than Europe, which no Australian government has attempted since Whitlam, Taylor is proposing a counter-revolution.

Taylor’s declaratory ambition is as great as that of Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan and Malcolm Fraser, the big conservatives the dysfunctional 1970s threw up. …

Taylor has committed to specifics which the Liberals can’t now run away from. They would transform Australia if implemented. Taylor’s key promise is to index tax brackets. At the moment, inflation relentlessly pushes income earners into higher tax brackets — bracket creep. It’s confiscatory and guarantees ever bigger government. It’s dishonest. Government grows by stealth.

Chalmers claims Taylor’s policy would cost $250bn over a decade. That demonstrates bracket creep’s moral and economic infamy. For anything which tax indexation “costs” is the extra amount government will take from taxpayers through bracket creep.

Taylor isn’t promising tax cuts, just tax neutrality. Government has become addicted to relentless, ultimately ruinous, tax increases. Nonetheless, Taylor’s tax indexation would be hard to sustain.

If a government wanted to do new things it would need to explicitly raise new taxes or cut out something else.

CGT and net zero, strangely keeping quiet:

Taylor promised to reverse the weird, damaging increases in tax on capital gains. He explicitly, even fiercely, rejected net zero. That’s Coalition policy yet hardly any Liberal frontbencher talks about it. But you can’t win arguments by silence. Opposition Treasury spokesman Tim Wilson, in a generally good Press Club speech, didn’t mention net zero and only cited tax indexation once.

You can’t prosecute policy revolution from opposition by stealth. Every sinew of Coalition effort must proclaim the Taylor revolution for it to have any chance.

Given how cynical voters are about mainstream politicians, if the Coalition doesn’t follow through, voters will conclude that once more it’s not serious. …

Losing by copying the UK:

Australia is drifting into very dangerous 1970s-style stagnation. The US is leaving us in its dust on per capita living standards and productivity. Our economy is growing weaker and narrower.

Loser’s tax:

Australia’s tax arrangements are monumentally uncompetitive.

Consider four tax realities.

1. Our top marginal income tax rate of 47 per cent is one of the highest in the world. The US and Canada have top rates in the 30s (even with state taxes, lower overall rates than Australia). Most ­European nations have lower top rates than ours.

2. Our top rate cuts in at an absurdly low salary level, $190,000. In 2007, the top rate cut in at $180,000. This inertia is insane. In the US, the top rate cuts in at well over $US600,000, nearly $1m. In Europe’s biggest economy, Germany, the top rate cuts in at more than €270,000, which is well over $400,000.

3. Our corporate tax rate, of 30 per cent for sizeable companies, is one of the highest in the developed world.

4. Our tax on capital gains is now one of the highest in the world. Hardly a country taxes capital gains at the same rate as salary income. Capital gain involves greater risk and economies need capital formation. Some, such as Singapore and New Zealand, don’t tax capital gains at all.

Australia’s tax regime is neither internationally competitive nor pro-growth. …

Dr Jim Chalmers:

Only two Labor treasurers have had PhDs — Jim Cairns [Whitlam’s treasurer] and Jim Chalmers. Neither was in economics. They studied instead Labor history. Like all true tribalists they suffered acute sub-cultural myopia. They didn’t know the world, they knew Labor lore and legend. …

Abbott, Turnbull, Morrison:

The Liberals’ dismal nine years in office is evident in one detail. The top marginal tax rate — now recognised as grossly too high by NSW Labor Premier Chris Minns, among countless others — was unchanged in that whole time.

We’re going to get poorer before any improvements. Of course, if mass immigration continues, we will never recover.

Dave Hughes issues rips into the PM with brutal spray

Dave Hughes issues rips into the PM with brutal spray. By Kylie Stephens at The Daily Mail.

Aussie comedian Dave Hughes has called on Anthony Albanese to call an election two years early unless the federal government scraps its major tax reforms.

The Prime Minister and Treasurer Jim Chalmers have come under heavy fire in recent weeks over claims they broke election promises by restricting negative gearing to new investment properties and introducing a minimum 30 per cent capital gains tax (CGT). …

Hughes took to social media to slam the government in a furious spray while detailing a conversation he had just had with a business owner in Brisbane about the Federal Budget.

‘The capital gains tax has killed him. He’s got a 100 staff and doesn’t know what he’s going to do as he has no motivation anymore,’ Hughes began. …

Hughes said that he would never have voted for the Albanese government had he known the CGT discounts would be axed within a year.

 

 

‘I voted for Albo and Chalmers. They did not have a mandate for changing CGT,’ he said.

‘It’s now the highest in the world. No one is going to want to invest in Australia.

‘What the f*** are you doing?’

‘This affects every working Australian, and everyone who actually pays tax.

‘And you’ve just doubled the take on it to waste, because you’re f***king incompetent.’ …

‘You didn’t have a mandate for it. You lied blatantly, so it’s not valid.’

At least John Howard called an election before he implemented the GST. We had the opportunity to vote it down.

Albo has lost John Hughes. How many others? The tax changes could spell the end for this Labor Government.

Foolish Albanese doesn’t understand the pricing of risk, so we all lose

Foolish Albanese doesn’t understand the pricing of risk, so we all lose. By Janet Albrechtsen in The Australian.

This country was built on the back of risk-takers. From explorers like James Cook and Matthew Flinders to military men like John Monash, the risk-takers have left a mark for the better on this country.

Australia has flourished from farmers taking risks on the land, and migrants boarding ships to a country they knew little about. In business, too, the risk-takers have transformed Australia, from miners like Lang Hancock to media titans such as Rupert Murdoch and Kerry Packer.

The risk-takers aren’t all big names. The country has 2.5 million small businesses, meaning an even larger number of Australians are taking risks every day. …

The Labor Party people who made this budget have no clue about business risk:

The Prime Minister is a former Labor Party official and research officer. Though the federal Treasurer has put Dr in front of this name, this has not added gravitas to his skill set. His CV, before taking charge of the Australian economy, was political adviser, academic researcher and chief-of-staff to Wayne Swan.

The Finance Minister was a community housing worker and ACT political staffer. The Foreign Minister was a union lawyer, industrial officer, and policy adviser. The Defence Minister was a lawyer at ALP-aligned law firm Slater & Gordon and a union official. The Immigration Minister was a union organiser and industrial officer. The Education Minister was a policy adviser and political staffer.

In other words, no risk-takers there. No one with any clue about the pressures of being responsible for a profit and loss account, navigating business red tape, signing contracts with suppliers and creditors, dealing with workplace rules that invite litigation.

With no hint on their CVs of any previous experience understanding what it’s like to run a business, no wonder the budget is bonkers. …

Ideology takes the place of experience:

One of the hoariest myths in the socialist lexicon is that it’s “fair” to tax income from labour just the same as income from capital. This has its roots in the kind of class warfare and ideology we all thought had disappeared when the Berlin Wall fell. We had all hoped that while Albanese may have felt safe in telling the 1991 ALP national conference in a debate on inheritance tax that “accumulated income in the form of capital is for all socialists at least part of the source of many social injustices”, he had learned a bit more about the real world since then.

Sadly, no. …

Income and capital are very different. They have different sources and drivers and it is decidedly unfair to tax them in the same way or at the same levels. …

Capital gains are uncertain and require the taking of risk. Employment income is generally predictable, certain and risk-free.

It’s like the difference between equity and debt — one is high risk but potentially high reward (or no reward) while the other offers certainty and thus no upside or downside. No economically literate person suggests the cost of debt should be the same as the cost of equity.

The Albanese-Chalmers taxation principle ignores human nature. Why would any sane person invest in a risky venture if the taxman treats you the same as if you invested in a risk-free venture?

Without some incentive to take risk or to innovate by investing capital, new business growth dies, and the economy suffers. If you doubt this, talk to some of the venture capitalists and start-up entrepreneurs who are dismayed by the budget changes to capital gains tax.

 

Money will walk (By Brad Thomson in The Australian.)

Gina Rinehart says the Albanese government’s capital gains tax changes will ultimately hurt the federal budget bottom line as mining and other business investment moves offshore.

Mrs Rinehart said the tax changes were ill considered and left wage earners facing a double whammy if they chose to invest in mining to boost their wealth in what was already one of the highest taxing jurisdictions in the world. …

“These CGT changes will make it even harder for junior and medium explorers to raise the money needed to search for and develop new projects,” she told The Australian.

“Smaller and medium mining companies rely heavily on investors willing to back high-risk exploration years before there is any return. If you reduce the incentive and ability for people to invest, you reduce future discoveries, future mines, future jobs, future revenue and future growth for Australia at a time when our country sure needs it.

“Additionally, what is also being missed in the CGT increase is that people are investing money they have already paid tax on through PAYG and other taxes, and yet any profits they make on that reinvestment is now going to be subject to even higher taxes.”

Most financial scams work by mispricing risk. A high-risk product is sold as lower risk than it really is, thereby apparently justifying a higher price. The mark doesn’t know or can’t assess the risk accurately.

Albanese’s tax changes ignore risk almost completely, treating employees and investors the same. At one fell swoop, all investment activity has been penalized and all risks have been adversely repriced. Where it can, much of that money will now leave Australia. The outlook 20 years ahead is poor.

The awfulness of HR and young bigotesses

The awfulness of HR and young bigotesses. By Emerald Apple.

My most unhinged run-in with HR was while working at a biotech company as a senior scientist, a long time ago.

They were doing racism audits, and me being an Asian, they targeted me in an inquisition-style interrogation. In essence, it was about 30 minutes of them… Gen Z women with a chip on their shoulders, trying to make me say that I experienced racism at the company.

It was them framing every little comment, quip, joke, and conversation that my ‘white’ coworkers had with me into some sort of racist dog whistle. They wanted me to “out” my work friends as “racists” so that HR could crucify them. I knew they were recording the whole time, so I had to be very careful with my words.

I kept my answers brutally short, usually with a single-word answer of “no”, or that lacks context, or that’s a misframing.

They were literally trying to manufacture problems to go after people to justify their existence. They were trying to goad me, to extract the “right” answers from me that I refused to play their stupid game.

After the interview was over, and after their little racism witch hunt didn’t work, they moved on to other targets, other minorities, other stupid problems no one cared about.

 

 

We were recently hounded by a race-obsessed young woman eager to find infractions, so she could gather praise from her PC elders, at a family function in Canberra. Of course, she is in danger because — inevitably — she will realize that left wing woke nonsense doesn’t fly in the real world, outside of HR departments, some NGOs, and academia. The come down might be earth shattering for her, with serious consequences. It’s not as though it hasn’t happened before.

The Liberal Party still mouthing uniparty waffle on Net Zero

The Liberal Party still mouthing uniparty waffle on Net Zero. By Joanne Nova.

Polls in the AFR today point to a wipe-out of the old centre-right. … One Nation could win a blockbuster tally of between 46 and 59 seats in the Australian Parliament. The Liberal Party would be reduced to between 7 to 21 seats and the Nationals to zero.

 

It’s the Blob versus The People, but the Liberals are on the Blob’s side. One Nation voters know this is a fight for the country against corruption and globalist power, and they’re hardly going to be won over by a team that says they’ll stick with the UN because they’re a bit busy. What is Angus Taylor thinking?

The Coalition’s half-pregnant policy position is that Net Zero absolutely has to go, but the Paris Agreement absolutely has to stay. … There is no principle here except something else is going on and the Liberals don’t want to tell us what it is. …

The difference between Net Zero and Paris is mere wordplay:

Senator Malcolm Roberts of One Nation explains that “No, Angus Taylor & Matt Canavan, it is not just ‘a piece of paper’”. That’s just a word game, and it’s clear the spirit and intent of Net Zero lives in there.

The phrase ‘Net Zero’ was deliberately left out of the Paris Agreement, as it was deemed too politically charged. Instead, they inserted the legal definition of Net Zero into Article 4.1:

“Parties aim to reach global peaking of greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible … so as to achieve a balance between anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases in the second half of this century…”

According to Onassis, Farhana Yamin is credited with ‘getting the goal of Net Zero emissions by 2050 into the 2015 Paris Agreement’ and was a key IPCC architect. She later joined Extinction Rebellion. Even Wikipedia says, ‘Net Zero was basic to the goals of the Paris Agreement’ with the IPCC’s follow-up to Paris, the Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5*C, popularising Net Zero as a short-hand for the phrase already used in the original document. …

The Paris Agreement is a legal tool to pave the way to cement the intent in domestic legislation. …

China was caught funding eco-lawfare suits in the USA to sabotage American energy dominance. Do we want to make it easier?

The UN has told Australia (but not China) that digging up our own gas might be a breach of “international law”. In another instance, a Blobocrat Court has ruled that perfect weather is a “human right”.

Even if the UN hasn’t succeeded yet in legally bombing a nation back to the stone age, we know it wants to. …

Suggestion for the Liberal Party:

If the Liberals keep pushing these contradictory messages which are obviously hiding their true intent, they look weak. If they are just doing this so the Liberals in Teal seats have a safety line, it isn’t worth it. Give the Teal voters the full force of the UN quagmire and failures and the fence sitters will be all yours.

This is the sort of Uniparty waffle that will lose even more voters to One Nation.

Probably not related. Ms Nova included this picture in her blogpost, but I don’t really get it. Something to do with sea level rise? The uniparty net zero monster? Anyway, it looked cool so here you are:

UPDATE: Joanne says it’s the Paris agreement, green on the outside but sick and deadly on the inside. Or something.

Social media and Modern Politics

Social media and Modern Politics. By Toby Ralph in The Australian. Toby Ralph is a marketer and researcher specialising in persuasion. He has worked on more than 50 elections globally.

Politics, like retail, pornography and organised religion, has gone where the eyeballs are, and they are now permanently staring at phones…

While a television commercial for a political party might reach everybody watching the footy, a social media campaign can reach divorced men aged 38 to 54 in outer suburban Queensland who own a HiLux, dislike immigration, watch hunting videos and are three mortgage repayments away from joining a populist uprising. This excites vote hunters. …

One reason that One Nation is succeeding:

One Nation succeeds because grievance is the native language of social media. Outrage engages and persuades faster than policy, and anger shares better than nuance. Platforms built to maximise engagement inevitably reward emotional intensity, tribalism and conflict. A furious man recording a rant from inside his ute will usually outperform a carefully researched Treasury explanation delivered by some bloke in a navy blazer standing in front of three Australian flags. …

The article omits that the main reason for the rise of One Nation is that One Nation is the only party offering what most people want right now. Immigration has become the biggest issue now, and One Nation are the only party credibly offering to severely curb it. Ditto Net Zero.

If One Nation’s vote was rising merely because it aired grievances on social media, why didn’t it do better from 2010 onwards after social media started? Because immigration has only become a huge, obvious problem in the last few years, as Albanese imports two million more voters from the third world, and Bondi etc.. Duh.

The audience:

Most persuadable voters aren’t political obsessives. Persuasion in politics involves seducing people who actively don’t want to engage with politics.

They don’t spend evenings reading policy papers or debating economic theory. They distrust politicians, avoid ideological intensity and would generally prefer not to think about government at all. Many wouldn’t vote if they could avoid the fine and are more concerned with who’s rooting who on Married At First Sight and how to stop the bank repossessing the ­family SUV. …

Persuasion works at the soft edge of credibility, by finding a belief and pushing it further until it converts to behavioural change. That distinction is increasingly lost in Australian politics. …

Farrer by-election lesson:

A recent example was the Farrer by-election, where One Nation secured a landslide victory despite massive activist spending against it. GetUp reportedly spent around $600,000 campaigning in the seat, saturating digital platforms with highly researched advertising, focus-grouped messaging and sophisticated targeting. Then despite starting as equal favourites, they lost badly.

Their operation was a success. The patient died. Partly because the messenger was wrong. In many regional and outer suburban electorates, organisations like GetUp are viewed not as grassroots movements but as manifestations of precisely the urban elite voters feel already dominate political attention. The campaign unintentionally reinforced the very grievance structures One Nation thrives upon.

Focus groups fail — the “shy Tory” effect:

But there was another problem. The research itself was manifestly misleading, for it suggested all was fine, the messaging was right and the independent was in the box seat, yet they no longer were.

Modern research suffers from a fundamental flaw. It relies upon people honestly articulating what they believe in artificial environments surrounded by strangers. Focus groups produce what psychologists politely call social desirability bias, and what normal people recognise as people bullshitting because they don’t want to look bad in front of others. …

In the groups they unconsciously conform, moderate controversial opinions and mirror perceived social expectations, then consultants charge enormous sums reporting data generated by Peter and Peggy from Penrith who were probably fibbing and may not even fully understand their own motivations.

The political class readily mistake articulated opinion for actual behaviour, particularly if it suits their internal narrative. We saw misleading focus group research during the Indigenous voice referendum, the federal election and again in Farrer.

How to measure opinions when they might be “disapproved of” (i.e anti-globaslist):

My preferred methodology is much cruder and, I’d argue, more useful. Stimulus boards combined with one-on-one intercept interviews conducted in pubs, shopping centres, cafes and cinema foyers with people who haven’t been recruited to have an opinion and therefore don’t feel obligated to manufacture one.

You get very different, deeper answers when an ­individual isn’t trapped in a fluorescent-lit room with others, trying to impress earnest sociology graduates. …

Social media politics is simpler and dumber:

This is how information is now consumed by people under 40.

Social media has profoundly transformed the structure of political communication because in the Attention Economy it has altered the mechanics of human attention itself. Before persuading voters, politicians must first avoid being scrolled past while somebody explains five secret tricks to hacking airline loyalty programs.

That fundamentally advantages simplicity, emotion and conflict.

Many politicians still approach social media as though they are filming a workplace safety induction video from 2007. Those succeeding understand the platforms reward speed, emotional clarity and conversational tone. …

The mistake political professionals repeatedly make is assuming complexity performs well online. It doesn’t. Content that cuts through is usually emotionally understandable within three seconds.

Which is terrible news for anybody hoping social media might usher in a golden age of reflective democratic debate. Instead, politics increasingly competes within a giant algorithmic entertainment slurry alongside influencers, comedians, gambling advertisements, fitness coaches, Only Fans wannabes, pseudo-intellectual podcasts and a never-ending industrial conveyor belt of attention-seeking opportunists. …

Social media platforms disproportionately reward emotional grievance, outsider identity and anti-establishment sentiment. Traditional parties still partly communicate as though voters are citizens deliberating thoughtfully upon the national interest.

Well aren’t you a dinosaur, reading a site like this 🙂

The ABC fans the flames of hatred in Australia

The ABC fans the flames of hatred in Australia. By Chris Kenny in The Australian.

The crisis of antisemitism in this country and the rest of the Western world cannot reasonably be assessed without reference to the media dynamics that have helped create an environment of anti-Israel sentiment. …

Commissioner Virginia Bell [Albanese’s woke choise to head the Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion, after the Bondi massacre] cannot ignore the role of the ABC, SBS and other media if she is to seriously examine the fomenting of antisemitism and pay due respect to the submissions before her. …

Downplaying the genocidal barbarity of Hamas on Oct. 7:

Former foreign correspondent for The Age and senior producer for CNN Augustine Zycher … details how the ABC and SBS have “displayed a pattern of omitting critical reporting and evidence about the Conflict-Related Sexual Violence war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Hamas”. …

“When you remove the full truth about the massacre and the sexual violence, the reasons for the conflict become distorted, it is no longer presented as a war instigated by Hamas with a barbaric assault on Israeli civilians.”

Instead of the war being perceived as Israel’s effort to defeat Hamas and free hostages, the distorted coverage promotes the Hamas propaganda narrative about a war against Palestinian ­civilians. “This has effectively contributed to the demonisation of ­Israel and Jews,” her submission contends. “It directly feeds the hate expressed in weekly demonstrations and propaganda against Israel and ‘Zionists’.” …

Playing the sympathy card for their side:

Katherine Mannix is a former senior researcher for ABC Television … identified how relentless coverage of the war has been reduced to “human interest” coverage. “The ‘human interest’ shown invariably involved dead Palestinian children, distraught Palestinian mothers and those allegedly starving, with commentary that primarily described that suffering.

“There is an argument for human interest stories, but not in the news and not consistently from one side during a war,” Mannix explains. “In effectively presenting Hamas’ case to the Australian public on a nightly basis, while seeking the appearance of objectivity, ABC news reporters contributed to an environment where Jews were portrayed not as the victims but the victimisers, the genocidal murderers of children.” …

Lying by omission:

She detailed, with supportive evidence, how Hamas had infiltrated aid agencies and distorted coverage, including through staged photographs promoting the starvation narrative. “There was ample evidence that the claims of starvation were overstated, and that hunger in Gaza was more to do with Hamas’s looting than Israeli actions,” says Mannix.

You would not know these facts if you only watched, read or listened to the ABC. Remember, the national broadcaster ran that absurdly implausible and completely erroneous claim that 14,000 babies would die within 48 hours in Gaza unless Israel supplied immediate aid (it later corrected this damaging nonsense). …

Supporting Islam:

“There is no doubt that the ABC’s biased, hate-filled news coverage over the last two years gave significant assistance to the dreadful cause of Islamic extremism, to its adherents, and to its unthinking local followers.”

Other people who have made submissions on these themes prefer to remain anonymous. One of them, a member of the Jewish community, eloquently expresses how the public status of the ABC and SBS gives them disproportionate authority –- so that “When they repeatedly frame Jewish communal concerns as political lobbying, Zionism as a morally suspect identity, Israeli self-defence as presumptively illegitimate, and antisemitism as self-inflicted or secondary to other forms of racism, those frames move from ­radical activist discourse into mainstream Australian society”. …

The response?

Against the weight of this evidence, the submission from ABC Alumni seems puny, intellectually constrained and self-serving. …

it does not explain why Russians are not pilloried on our streets for their army’s actions in Ukraine. Nor are Chinese Australians pilloried for People’s Liberation Army persecution of Uighurs and Buddhists.

The ABC coordinates the left and wokeness in this country. So the leftists all know that the place to be publicly is to be anti-Israeli and to call Gaza a genocide. Tax dollars well spent?? How long will the ABC last under a Hanson-supported government?

Multiple stabbings last night in Melbourne, this is everyday now

Multiple stabbings last night in Melbourne, this is everyday now. By Lozzy B.

My friend whose young son who has a knife pulled on him twice now just walking around our community just sent me this.

Multiple stabbings last night in Melbourne, this is everyday now.

Kidnappings, shootings, stabbings, fire bombings, r*pes & assaults by foreigners & foreign gangs.

3 young people have already been horrifically murdered by foreigners in my community alone.

Which political policy is responsible? Perhaps it should be changed?

Our ruling class spends huge sums of our money because of a feared rise in air temperature in Melbourne (i.e. climate change). I’ll bet the number of stabbings in Melbourne per day are rising MUCH, MUCH faster than the air temperature.

The builders of MAGA, fighting back against the corrupt aristocrats

The builders of MAGA, fighting back against the corrupt aristocrats. By Elizabeth Nickson from Absurdistan.

I am a Borderer down to my socks, which is the most populous of the four founding Anglo-Saxon races in Canada and the U.S. according to the magisterial Albions Seed. And by far, of all the northern clans, the most primitive, violent fighters for self-determination in the world.

Borderers are the reason that the American south is the place where everyone wants to live now. And Borderers are why the American cowboy west is still free and fighting. They founded both cultures; so desperate and degraded, one-third died on the voyage. Our clans, the most common Anglo names in both countries, were so ruined by the Crown, their lands overrun with one war after another, they became known as the fiercest fighters in Europe for several hundred years. They had no choice. Theirs were the first surnames not drawn from a profession, a lord, a village. They were known as The Names, and they had fought for their sliver of independence for five hundred years. As a result, never bet against a northern Brit, and I include the Irish in this. This splinter off the human race is more responsible for freedom, innovation, creativity and to-the-moon or bust energy than any other. They are the root of MAGA.

They — the Oligarchy of Europe — buried this culture, and imposed their own decadent, materialist, promiscuous, status-obsessed garbage culture, weakening us, hiding the fact that every advance in human civilization came from us, not them. We fought them for 1000 years while they consolidated power and stole everything not nailed down. Then we created the New World and they came after us wanting what we had built. … The innovations came from ordinary people, not the aristocrats.

 

 

For translation, it starts north of border country, where the Industrial Revolution took root to include the Scots, of course, and extends through northern Europe to Germany. Do you know who these people are? Engineers. Builders. Tinkerers in garages. They built our world. Where they are not, chaos reigns. When my Nicksons crawled out of their clannish, violent, elemental culture, they built….

US today:

We are looking at the restoration of that spirit. The redistricting decision by the Supreme Court ensures a conservative future, with as many as another 30 Republican seats, which means that party might finally stand up and fight for their voters instead of selling out to the highest bidder. Equally, people, creative, industrious, disciplined people are leaving the blue states’ crime and high taxes as soon as they can figure out how. Mamdani managed to see off $6 billion from Ken Griffin, the Citadel CEO, this week which signifies the bitter end for New York as a center of anything but crime and sewage. Every generation, it seems, has to learn the bitter fruits of Marxism. The further left you travel along the continuum, the more mentally ill you are. Far left? 59% with a mental illness. Which explains George Soros’s challenged circus children on the streets.

In Indiana, populists took seven seats from RINOs and the primaries are showing a MAGA surge, not a break. The cheating has not been fixed yet, but the supervision will be close and only the reckless will dare. And we will catch them. Ten thousand Americans are working to ‘true’ the vote. Daily.

Africa:

All across Africa, people are starting to say, we made a mistake when we got rid of whitey, as they watch their infrastructure, built by whitey, collapse, observe the once gleaming streets of Jo’burg and Narobi turn to garbage dumps. The Canadian doctor and nurse who bought my first house here built the entire hospital system of Zambia under Bush’s Millennium Project.

Builders:

As a ‘race’, we are wildly compassionate and giving. As well as being the strain of fighters and builders who built the governments of the west and ran them until the socialists began to weasel their way in. Before? Solvent. Real growth and human happiness. After? Bankruptcy and misery, except for the decadent, deeply repellent clients of the regime.

The decision to turn power over to the intellectual class (thank you Walter Lippman) was the biggest mistake of the past 100 years. Intellectuals cannot build a chicken coop. They cannot platte a neighborhood, they cannot devise a health system, they cannot turn out educated kids. Everything they touch turns to corruption and disarray.

Engineers are my people; all through my family, 75% of the kids are studying engineering. Engineers are relatively inarticulate. We let the intellectual class run over us, and tell us they knew better because they went to Oxbridge or Harvard and could talk pretty.

That’s over. Everywhere. The next 20 years is going to be a purge of every bit of that corruption. …

Rebuilding:

It is a marker of the ‘white’ race’s enormous compassion that we have let all these incompatible races into our countries, and allowed them to steal, rape, plunder and slice the heads off priests and toddlers from Vienna to Eugene, Oregon. Deportation and remigration are the primary issue in the U.S. midterms by 15 points. Across Europe and the U.K., remigration is primary. Scandinavia is even deporting Muslims with citizenship because they refuse to stop their primitive rites and customs.

It’s the great spitting out. Reclaiming western civilization is not coming from the universities, the intelligentsia, it’s coming from the kids. In exit polls, under 40’s are conservative, not liberal. …

It’s the culture.

We are Scots, Brits to the core, we are disciplined, and marinated in 20 generations of a fierce, fierce, often ecstatic northern Christianity, unlinked to any repressive Church system. Frontier faith was drawn from a dangerous world where just one mistake could kill everyone within reach. The frontier is where — contrary to Hollywood filth — virtue became an absolute necessity and I have the receipts on that. The natives who married into us were trained as we were. That culture, rigorous, even harsh and driven to accomplishment rather than vulgar “success” is not isolated to us. It is, or can be universal. If adopted, the individual, family, culture and country will soar.

Evil Queen Maxima of the Netherlands

Evil Queen Maxima of the Netherlands. By David Archibald.

In the English-speaking world, we are mostly familiar with the work of Dr Ralph Baric of the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill in progressing the depopulation agenda of the degenerate elite — his early years of trying to cause heart disease with a corona virus, inclusion of bits of the HIV genome in the early 2000s, the shift to Wuhan, supplying mice with humanised ACE2 receptors and so on.

Dr Baric — proud of his creation, covid — has been recorded on a zoom meeting gloating over how many people it will kill. …

It wasn’t a solo effort though. A big breakthrough in making a more transmissible virus, and thus allowing a lower case-fatality rate, was provided by a Dutch team led by one Ron Fouchier. His team of virologists at the Erasmus University Medical Centre in Rotterdam “under the veil of ‘scientific progress’ built viruses with the explicit aim to reduce the world’s population.” In 2010, Fouchier and his team worked on upgrading the SARS virus but could not achieve the crucial gain of function-breakthrough. In 2011, they switched to working on the most deadly avian influenza, H5N1, to make it airborne and thus transmissible from human to human. They achieved this by using genes from another avian virus, N7H7.

Fouchier’s work was also funded by the US National Institutes of Health. According to the Dutch newspaper report, in 2012,

Fouchier and his team scored another gain of function-victory with MERS.

The reporter goes on to say:

There is one important final point to be made here that maybe points toward the deeper origins of the depopulation-policy of the factory of death in Rotterdam. All the main players involved — Ab Osterhaus, Marion Koopman, Ron Fouchier — were decorated with the highest honours by our royal family.

Our Queen Maxima works closely together with Bill Gates on many fronts and her office in New York with the UN is financed by Gates. Her husband, our King Willem, participated in the Bilderberg meeting of 2025 together with Pfizer’s CEO Alfred Bourla to discuss depopulation. All the appearances are there that the factory of death in Rotterdam is protected and supported by very powerful forces.

 

Queen Maxima of the Netherlands

 

Six years into the pandemic, what news of Baric and Fouchier’s creation? The news is getting worse. A team at Baylor College of Medicine in Texas sampled wastewater at 40 sites across Texas for the presence of oncogenic viruses from 2022. These viruses may cause 20% of cancer incidence. The samples contained all the main oncogenic viruses known to date, including HPV, hepatitis B and C viruses, cancer-associated polyomaviruses, Epstein-Barr virus and the herpesvirus linked to Kaposi’s sarcoma. Here’s the important bit:

The researchers also observed a significant increase in the presence of several oncogenic viruses over the three years of monitoring. In particular, HPV, Epstein-Barr virus and some polyomaviruses showed marked rises after 2024.

If the incidence of these cancer-causing viruses is increasing, that means that immunity in the population is being suppressed by persistent covid infections. My advice is to get your lymphocyte panel done for CD4, CD8, NK cells etc. Because if there is a need for intervention, the sooner that starts, the better. It is better to suppress a virus than an incipient cancer.

How Islam is taking over Melbourne

How Islam is taking over Melbourne. By Jason Thomas in The Spectator.

Before entering a village in Afghanistan or any other uncertain, complex and ambiguous environment I have worked in across Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere, it was good to know two things, if nothing else. Those villages who liked you and those who hated you. Knowing where you stand is reassuring. It is never pleasant being in a village where you have no idea how the leaders of that village feel. They are probably the ones where the village leaders will make you tea in the day and slit your throats at night….

That’s where a good Human Terrain assessment helps. This was the framework used by Western forces in Afghanistan and Iraq to understand local power structures, nodes of influence and population dynamics.

When applied to Victoria, it exposes a state providing a permissive sanctuary for the global Islamist insurgency. And this has enabled the Islamist extremist networks to secure significant sway over key political, security and religious nodes across Melbourne and its suburbs.

For example:

The arrival of Isis brides and their families to Melbourne in early May underscores the problem. These women were not innocent bystanders but willing participants in a barbaric regime responsible for slavery, beheadings and unimaginable cruelty; the same mindset that committed the 7 October 2023 massacre in Israel. Met at the airport by committed Islamist supporters, their return reveals how deeply entrenched the network has become in parts of Victoria. And it was evident this Islamist leadership and their network have zero to fear in the state of Victoria. It’s why you can call Victoria a permissive environment.

Where Victoria is at:

In Victoria, Islamist groups have mastered modern irregular low-intensity conflict by increasingly dominating the human terrain. As Thomas X. Hammes explained in The Sling and the Stone, fourth-generation conflict leverages all available political, social, economic and military networks to convince decision-makers that continued resistance is too costly. Far better to cultivate networks within your enemy’s system.

 

This is precisely what we see playing out now. Political nodes have been effectively captured. Organisations such as the Muslim Vote celebrate their ability to decide outcomes in marginal seats and pressure governments into adopting positions aligned with Islamist priorities, while ministers actively conform to the Islamists’ position. Federal and Victorian authorities, in turn, direct taxpayer funds toward institutions and community bodies, often labelled ‘social cohesion’ and ‘multicultural’ projects while avoiding scrutiny of the ideologies being promoted.

Fear of being labelled Islamophobic has paralysed political resolve, turning feeble, acquiescence into standard practice. This is infiltration dressed up as diversity. In 2014 the UAE Foreign Minister, Abdullah bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, warned in future there would be far more Islamist radicals and terrorists coming from the West than from anywhere else.

Security institutions find themselves in an increasingly difficult position. Earlier operations exposed radicalisation networks in Melbourne, yet many of the same environments continue to operate with limited interference. …

The state is no longer shaping the human environment — the insurgents are shaping the state’s behaviour through persistent advocacy, education, street mobilisations and legal pressure.

The religious nodes lie at the centre of this sanctuary. A network of influential imams, Islamic associations and educational programmes exerts commanding authority over a rapidly expanding and geographically concentrated population. In too many cases, these institutions advance messages of Western hostility, historical grievance and solidarity with designated terrorist organisations.

This decentralised approach aligns with the strategy once outlined by al-Qaeda theorist Abu Musab al-Suri — spreading the ideology like a virus through everyday community structures. These religious and cultural centres function as the decisive terrain where loyalty to Australian values is contested and often eroded. No physical caliphate is required when one can be constructed suburb by suburb through influence and indoctrination.

Decades of lax immigration screening, generous refugee policies, chain migration and elevated birth rates have altered the demographic balance in key Victorian areas. The result is the emergence of parallel societies where sharia-influenced norms coexist uneasily with Australian law, antisemitism has been normalised, and there is no allegiance to the host nation. The open celebration of returning Isis associates demonstrates how confident these networks have grown.

Who could have foreseen this? Only warned by 1,400 years of Islamic history, current middle eastern leaders, and the Koran. But our political leaders were either blinded by the votes or paralyzed by fear of being called a racist.