How the Exodus created a new kind of political order that forged the foundations of Western freedom

How the Exodus created a new kind of political order that forged the foundations of Western freedom. By Henry Ergas in The Australian.

The flight of the children of Israel from slavery in Egypt … [has] shaped the Western tradition itself and, through it, the democratic inheritance Australia received with British settlement.

That inheritance is now increasingly fragile. Understanding the ideas that underpin our liberty is therefore more crucial than ever. The Exodus narrative is, at its core, the story of how they entered our world.

If the ultimate power is God, then Earthly rulers must behave themselves and government is by the consent of the governed:

What happened at Sinai was not merely a religious revelation. It was the founding moment of a new kind of political order. When the children of Israel stood at the foot of the mountain, they did not receive a code imposed by a conqueror or a law decreed by a king. They entered into a covenant.

The Hebrew word — berit — describes a binding, bilateral, conditional commitment between God and the people, in which obligations run in both directions. God committed himself to Israel; Israel committed itself to God’s law. The community the covenant created rested not on conquest but consent.

Nothing like this existed in the ancient world. The great empires — Egypt, Assyria, Babylon — understood power as flowing downward from a god-king whose authority was absolute.

The Exodus inverted this logic entirely. The God of Israel had heard the cry of slaves and taken their side against the greatest empire on Earth.

Power was no longer self-justifying. Those who wielded it were answerable for its use.

The covenant at Sinai added something more far-reaching still: that even the highest authority was bound by commitments it had made. A ruler who broke the covenant — who governed in his own interest rather than his subjects’ — forfeited the claim to their obedience. …

English and European freedom broke the age-old pattern of a mass of slaves and serfs ruled over by a ruling class with an army and a clergy:

For centuries after the fall of Rome, the Exodus’s political implications lay dormant, confined to the small, harshly persecuted Jewish community. It took the Protestant Reformation to recover the Exodus narrative as a political text.

Calvin’s followers drew conclusions he never dared articulate. They fused the Exodus covenant with older constitutional traditions to argue that a ruler who violated his covenant obligations could be resisted and deposed.

The greatest English voice in this tradition was John Milton. Writing in 1644, he cast England itself as a new Israel — a covenanted people called to bring freedom to the world. If England was the “nation chosen before any other”, it was surely so that “out of her, as out of Sion, should be sounded forth the trumpet of reformation”.

The consequences for the British constitutional tradition were momentous. Magna Carta, sealed in 1215, had played almost no constitutional role for centuries. Then suddenly, between 1581 and 1616, it burst on to the scene, championed by often Puritan lawyers who saw no distinction between freedom of conscience and freedom from arbitrary power. …

Law was not the command of the sovereign; it was the accumulated wisdom of the community, binding even on kings because it preceded any act of regal will. And the common law was its embodiment and glory.

The Puritan settlers who crossed the Atlantic carried that covenantal vision with them. They saw themselves as a new Israel, their journey an Exodus, the ocean the Red Sea. John Winthrop, addressing his fellow passengers aboard the Arbella in 1630, invoked the Exodus in urging them to discard the corruptions they were leaving behind …

On Sinai’s foundations Britain forged the rule of law; the United States infused it with the spirit of democracy.

Contrast that with Islam, which took the other route:

Set against that tradition, the Exodus’s Islamic reception is striking. Moses is the most frequently mentioned prophet in the Koran, appearing 136 times, far more than Mohammed himself. Yet Exodus’s significance follows a logic diametrically opposed to its reception in Judaism and post-Reformation Christianity.

In Judaism, the Exodus is the founding event of a people; in Protestantism, it became the template for constitutional liberty. In Islam, by contrast, it serves primarily as a prefiguration of Mohammed’s superior prophethood, before which even Moses recedes.

The result is that the covenant has never possessed, in Islamic political thought, the explosive emancipatory power it acquired in the West. Instead, authority flows downward from God, not upward from a consenting community.

Brilliant 19th-century Islamic reformers — Jamal al-Din al-Afghani, Muhammad ‘Abduh, the Young Ottomans — and their liberal successors tried to derive a Koranic basis for constitutional government. Al-Afghani himself lamented that Muslim thought had fallen into taqlid — blind deference to inherited authority.

But they were working against the grain. Their tradition had no Reformation recovery of the Sinai covenant, no Puritan-common law alliance, no Mayflower Compact. Precarious and institutionally unrooted, the constitutionalism they promoted collapsed under the onslaught of secular authoritarianism on the one hand and Islamic fundamentalism on the other.

The example of Islam makes plain that what is at stake is not antiquarian curiosity. It is the survival of a distinctly Western political inheritance whose foundations we have largely forgotten –- and that is under assault.

The West and Islam are opposites. They cannot coexist in one political entity, despite what the multiculturalists claim. Fortunately we have a solution — different countries for different people, where everyone can do it in their own fashion, in peace. Unfortunately, the left in the West has invited Islam into our countries.

The ancient Greeks were right: the antonym for truth is forgetfulness. When it triumphs, truth dies. The truth being lost is this: the Exodus did not merely inspire institutions. It shaped a way of thinking about power — that authority is conditional, that it must answer to law and that citizens are not mere subjects but participants, with rights and duties, sharing a community of tradition and destiny.

Australia was self-sufficient in oil and petrol in 2000, but is 90% dependent today. Can we drill now?

Australia was self-sufficient in oil and petrol in 2000, but is 90% dependent today. Can we drill now? By Graham Lloyd in The Australian.

Since 2000 Australia’s liquid fuel equation has flipped. We have gone from being self-sufficient in oil and petrol, with eight refineries supplying 98 per cent of consumption, to having two refineries and a reliance on imports for roughly 90 per cent of our fuel needs.

Across the same two-decade period, the US has achieved the reverse …

Two Gulf wars and the ingenuity of a wildcat driller, George Mitchell, transformed the US from being dependent on the Middle East for crude oil to being the world’s biggest producer and an energy export superpower. The transformation is due to Mitchell’s discovery in 1997 of how to drill wells horizontally and liberate oil and gas held deep underground in rock formations. …

It can be argued that … Australia has performed its own feat of energy self-harm. Exploration for oil has been allowed to falter and production of liquid fuels has been sent offshore by a combination of economies of scale, lack of investment and strict environmental mandates from government.

In Australia, climate change has become the crisis that drives energy policy. But, as the war in Iran has shown, energy security is about a lot more than phasing out coal-fired power stations to make electricity.

Australia runs on diesel fuel. Fossil fuels produce the fertilisers we need to grow our food and export crops. Fossil fuels make plastics that are ubiquitous to construction and modern life. Diesel-powered cranes unload containers at the wharves and diesel-powered machinery mines the coal and iron ore we export and fuels the trucks that keep our supermarket shelves stocked. …

We must decide if we want to re-establish domestic energy security or remain dependent on extended import supply lines at a time of global upheaval and potential conflict.

Facing up to reality:

The failure of the last best chance to replace the dwindling oil reserves from Bass Strait can be traced to another crisis: BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. The Deepwater crisis gave environment groups the leverage they needed to campaign against BP’s ambitions to drill for oil in the deep waters off the Great Australian Bight. …

[BP’s] oil spill modelling showed a Deepwater Horizon-style spill in the bight could take more than six months to control, would be certain to hit land and would spread oil for thousands of kilometres. If a spill happened there was a “high probability” it would affect important marine species, including sperm whales and pygmy blue whales.

After BP pulled out, Norwegian energy giant Equinor was given permission to drill for oil in the Great Australian Bight but it also pulled out in February 2020, citing poor project economics. Equinor said the project did not stack up financially with other global energy projects. This is despite estimates that more than nine billion barrels of oil could be extracted from several fields, making it — despite the much deeper waters — the logical replacement for dwindling reserves in Bass Strait.

The discovery of oil in Bass Strait in the Gippsland Basin off Victoria in 1965 by Esso and BHP fundamentally changed the nation by delivering energy self-sufficiency. More than five billion barrels of oil have been produced from Bass Strait across five decades but production has been in steady decline since peaking in the 1980s.

Drill baby drill:

According to Geoscience Australia, the Northern Carnarvon Basin in Western Australia is Australia’s most prolific oil-producing region, accounting for nearly 70 per cent of the country’s remaining identified crude oil resources. …

There is renewed interest in Queensland’s Surat and Bowen basins, where the Taroom Trough has been identified as a “new oil frontier”, with major exploration and appraisal drilling under way. …

But, as in the US, shale oil could be our big untapped potential. The Beetaloo Basin is a massive, highly prospective shale gas field in the Northern Territory that is transitioning from exploration to commercial production, with first gas sales to the NT domestic market targeted for mid to late 2026. Several key wells in the Beetaloo Basin have confirmed the presence of liquid hydrocarbons with estimates of hundreds of millions of barrels.

The same is true for the Canning Basin in Western Australia.

The question is whether Australia still has the institutional and political wherewithal to drill baby drill.

I could tell a royal commission into the climate models where the problems are and how they overestimate warming due to carbon dioxide by a factor of about five. Vastly cheaper than wasting trillions on bad energy policy and polluting the environment with wind turbines, solar farms, and transmission lines.

Iran war tidbits

Iran war tidbits. A collection of interesting items the mainstream press mostly ignores.

By the way, the hypothesis that Trump is going slow and is using the situation as leverage to get the Europeans to improve their navies and yield to Trump over several naval issues (e.g. Greenland) seems to be on course so far.

Stephen Hou:

It turns out the whole Iran conflict is a loyalty test for the Europeans and everybody failed.

Commenter:

Europe did NOT fail the loyalty test.

They demonstrated conclusively that they are not at all loyal to the US. Or each other. Or their ancestors. Or their children.

Flat White in The Spectator.

What we are seeing is a frustrated superpower that has been carrying the weight of responsibility for global stability since the second world war. European nations, in particular, have used the money they should have assigned to defence to gold-plate their bureaucracy.

Not only did European nations waste their money and shirk their defence responsibilities, they opened the gates of the West to the third-world. As Trump has warned, nations such as the UK are at risk of becoming Islamic outposts with nuclear weapons.

Trump might be fighting a war (arguably an inevitable one), but the so-called ‘non-interventionalist’ champagne socialists of Europe have been diligently working toward the destruction of the Enlightenment. This has, in turn, put even more pressure on America to hold back China on its own.

Khalid Umar:

The riddle I’ll never be able to solve:

How did the UK, Italy, Spain, France, Germany, Canada and Australia collectively decide that confronting the world’s biggest state sponsor of terrorism, soon-to-be nuclear Ayatollah, sitting astride the global energy chokepoint, is simply “not their war”?

How did the memory, experience, philosophy and logic of a millennium of Western civilisation simply vanish?

Is TDS really that deadly a mental disease?

No it’s not a mental disease, but an economic strategy. Join the globalist team and plunder the West’s treasuries for good jobs and fraudulent funds. Trump threatens the whole big-government-NGO-fraud complex that enriches the TDS team.

Stephen Green at PJ Media:

Shipping and military expert John Konrad spent all day in D.C. on Tuesday talking to his military sources and concluded that “the Navy appears to be in no rush to reopen the strait,” even while Iran dictates whose oil tankers are allowed to pass.

“What is this administration trying to leverage?” Konrad wondered, and that nobody he talked to was willing to discuss the fate of Hormuz “until European politicians and media stop calling Americans war criminals and monsters.”

While Konrad admitted he has “no idea” when Hormuz will reopen, “but if the price is a modicum of cooperation and respect for everything America has done for decades to keep Europe safe, the strait could stay closed for months, or turned into a toll booth for years, because the majority of Americans…. and the vast majority of Trump administration officials I’ve talked with… seem fed up with their arrogance.” …

The harsh truth is that Hormuz is their priority, not ours, and yet they refuse to make any serious contribution to the war effort.

The U.S. is a net exporter of oil and liquified natural gas (LNG), and we buy hardly anything from the Gulf. Closing the Strait of Hormuz is an inconvenience for us (in the price of gas and diesel) and hardly a strategic necessity. In both military and economic terms, Hormuz is way down our target list. Complicating the decision matrix even further, re-opening Hormuz at this stage likely requires ground troops — so it’s simply smarter for us to continue the bombing campaign and see if we can’t wait out an increasingly split and brittle regime that might still collapse under pressure.

Europe, of course, doesn’t see things the way we do. Europe believes that their needs must be our priority, and that, furthermore, we’re required to do their job for them. …

Meanwhile, Europe’s contribution to the actual military effort is barely minuscule, and a handful of nations, including France (duh), Spain (fricken commies), and even Giorgia Meloni’s Italy, have closed their airbases to our military traffic headed to the Gulf. Apparently, “lead, follow, or get out of the way” isn’t a part of Europe’s lexicon.

So Trump’s message to Europe, more implied than explicit for once, is this: If you need the Strait of Hormuz opened, come and open it yourself. … Or at the very least, maybe stop closing your airbases to our military aircraft, you sniveling, presumptuous, Euro-weasels.

American Debunk:

When Trump tells the UK to “go to the Strait and just TAKE IT,” the surface read is that he’s venting at allies who didn’t show up.

But the deeper move is priming the the public (and world) with a new mental frame: the Strait of Hormuz is not Iranian sovereign territory anymore.

It’s available real estate. It’s takeable. Anyone with courage can have it.

That’s a massive Overton Window shift delivered, in a tweet, as an insult to the UK.

A year ago “America controls the Strait of Hormuz” sounded like some twisted fantasy. Today Trump is telling Britain to go grab it themselves like it’s a parking spot.

In a few weeks, Trump has normalized the concept of Western control over the Strait so thoroughly that full US seizure now looks like the modest option compared to what he’s suggesting allies do on their own. This is intentional. …

Whatever the eventual deal includes (US Navy permanent presence, joint patrols, Iranian withdrawal from mining infrastructure) the public will accept it because Trump already told them the Strait is there for the taking. Your subconscious mind has already been primed to accept it. …

Trump isn’t describing reality. He’s installing it.

Lee Smith in Tablet Magazine:

What does Iran have to do with China? Everything.

Tehran runs on Chinese oil money, tech, and cover. This isn’t just a regional clash. It’s part of a broader fight against a China-backed axis. …

Tariffs and other economic measures are simply instruments the White House is deploying in a larger war against the China axis. … Targeting Venezuelan drug cartels, shutting down fentanyl shipments, and supporting allies like Argentina’s President Javier Milei to stand firm against Chinese encroachment into Latin American are as much a part of the campaign as Trump’s China tariffs. Campaigns against China, Russia, Venezuela, Iran and its proxies have dominated the U.S. news cycle the last year because the Trump administration sees the China axis as the most dangerous threat to our national security. It’s all about China.

Zerohedge:

The Trump administration is “methodically building a portfolio of assets” from Venezuela to the Panama Canal to Iran’s oil flows and the Strait of Hormuz, a strategy aimed at reasserting American dominance, securing the empire for years to come, and tightening the screws on Beijing after last year’s rare earths stunt.

“Iran and Kharg Island are next. Iran is a Chinese vassal and so Kharg Island is basically a Chinese asset. Iran and Kharg Island will soon be a U.S. asset. The same with the SoH — it will soon be a U.S. asset,” [Zoltan Pozsar of Ex Uno Plures] noted.

Dr Samuel Furfari on European delusions about fossil fuels:

The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz reveals a truth that many European policymakers have ignored: Humanity remains structurally dependent on oil. This reality, first highlighted during the 1973 oil shortage and reinforced by the 1979 version – triggered by Iran – continues to be neglected, even openly dismissed, by certain political elites. …

As a former official in the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Energy for 36 years, I have witnessed relentless efforts to promote so-called alternatives to hydrocarbons and their disastrous results. Yet, in the face of the current crisis, the EU refuses to recognize its desperate need for fossil fuels.

In May 2023, Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, declared that the fossil-fuel-based growth model is “simply obsolete.” The partial blockade of the Strait of Hormuz starkly exposes the irony of that statement. …

Today, roughly 75% of the primary energy consumed in the European Union comes from fossil fuels, while the global share remains about 87%. It is illusory to believe that “renewable” electricity can meet basic needs.

Bonchie:

People who spent a decade promoting the Iraq War are now certain that a month-old conflict of total military domination has been lost because it’s not over yet.

The lefties have lost it again

Australia’s Bad Choice in Infantry Fighting Vehicles

Australia’s Bad Choice in Infantry Fighting Vehicles. By David Archibald.

Back in the 1960s, Australia bought some 800 of the M113 armoured personnel carrier for battlefield transport of our infantry. That was when we had a population of 12 million.

In 2004 a project was started to replace them with 1,100 infantry fighting vehicles that would have thicker armour and heavier armament. I attended a briefing on this acquisition 20 years ago, at which it was apparent that the Army was set upon having its own special vehicle instead of buying something that was already in production and already proven to work. Many years passed and the Redback infantry fighting vehicle from the Korean company Hanwha was eventually selected. Hanwha designed the Redback to meet the conditions of the Australian Army tender.

 

Hanwha Redback

 

Then in 2023 the incoming Labor Government used the excuse of a strategic review to delay production and cut the order to just 129. This works out to one infantry fighting vehicle for every 209,302 Australians. This is not enough. We need at least ten times that number, as per the original intent in 2004. …

The unit cost of a Redback is $29 million for 40 tonnes of vehicle. The best alternative would have been the CV90 made by BAE — with the same capability, 30 years of operating experience, and a unit cost of $15.6 million. The Koreans aren’t bothering to make the Redback themselves. They think it is too heavy and Hanwha’s alternative weighs 28 tonnes. The Redback is an orphan class which no other country will ever buy. Only 129 of them might ever be built. After that contract is completed, we will still need another thousand or more infantry fighting vehicles to have an army with some substance to it. We would be better off switching to the CV90 and giving the Redbacks that do get built to an Army Reserve unit.

 

CV90 of the Czech Army

 

Drones:

On average, it takes about six drones to achieve a kill on a Russian soldier and 15 on a Russian armoured vehicle. There is one video of a Russian soldier surviving 11 near-misses by Ukrainian first-person-viewer drones before the twelfth drone hits him. …

The anti-drone systems already exist –- active protection systems such us Trophy and remote weapons systems. Hanwha’s contract … for the supply of R400 remote weapons systems is $108 million for 129 weapons, for a per unit cost of $0.83 million. Adding Iron Fist would take the cost of protecting a vehicle up to $1.5 million. It is the price of entry to the battlefield these days. So protected, tanks still have a role in demolishing the enemy’s concrete structures even if they don’t get to meet many enemy tanks.

Artillery today needs to be able to run away fast after firing:

In another defence acquisition that has been overtaken by the evolution of the battlefield, Australia bought a handful of Korean K9 self-propelled howitzers. What the Ukraine War has shown is that wheeled howitzers are more survivable than tracked ones.

Ukraine has found that Russian counter-battery radar can detect the firing positions of artillery and have drones swarming on that location within three minutes of firing. Wheeled howitzers can move off far more rapidly than tracked ones.

More at the link.

Inside every “progressive” is a totalitarian screaming to get out

Inside every “progressive” is a totalitarian screaming to get out. By Batya Ungar-Sargon.

This is such a perfect example of how Trump broke the brains of so many on the Left. In the name of opposing “totalitarianism” and “defending democracy,” DeNiro thinks there should be a body of elites who bar people from running for office, including someone who went on to win the popular vote.

What’s sad is that DeNiro is obviously experiencing immense, totalizing pain, genuine psychic distress at the outcome of an election.

So much of their hatred of Trump is just an attempt to evade recognizing that democracy—their neighbors getting what they want when they vote in greater numbers—causes them searing psychic pain.

Freddie Hayward:

I recently managed to ferret my way into a green room where Robert De Niro was waiting to speak at an anti-Trump rally. I found a man confused, angry and bewildered at what America had become. He just could not understand who or what Donald Trump really was. He thinks someone like Trump should’ve just been banned from standing.

 

 

After all this time, that was his solution:

Commenters:

This chuckle head thought Biden was fully qualified. Only a midwit socialist could not see the contradiction. …

Ironically, the screening process was laid out by the Founding Fathers. It was “only rich, land owning, white men can vote”. Beyond the obvious racist and sexist nature, it did ensure that only educated, net-contributing people were the ones deciding who was going to lead the U.S.

Keep hearing “Trump’s not qualified to be POTUS”.  Really?? Seriously, given his experience as a ‘boss’ in his business he’s more “qualified” than Obama was, a “community organizer” whose projects failed & his very brief time in state gov & USSen was spent running/campaigning.

The left today has mostly abandoned principle and are just about taking as much as possible for themselves and their voters. It’s nearly all about the money now. Trump is trying to end their fraud, to end their privileged positions, so of course they hate him. The election of Trump to curb the excesses of our current ruling class demonstrates that democracy is working as intended.

Hard to argue with the algorithm

Hard to argue with the algorithm. By Bridget Phetasy.

I caught clips of Tucker Carlson interviewing Nick Fuentes, and the thing that struck me was the body language. Here was a man who had the biggest show on cable news, who once commanded an audience of 5 million adults, sitting across from a twenty-something New-Age shock-jock with the energy of a guy trying to impress his son’s friends. See how cool I am? See how I’m not afraid to go there? An astute culture commentator, Jon Gabriel, recently posted on X:

“Jon Stewart embracing Zohran, Tucker embracing Nick. Two aging hosts desperate to impress the young and scared of being left behind.”

You start reading the room instead of saying what’s true. You notice your audience is getting younger, more online, more radicalized — and instead of pushing back with the credibility you spent decades building, you chase them. Every take gets a little edgier. Every interview pushes a little further. You tell yourself you’re being brave, but really you’re just performing for an algorithm and a demographic that will forget your name the moment someone edgier comes along.

So much of what you’re seeing in the media right now is this dynamic playing out. The battle for market share. Massive legacy-turned-New-Media stars recognizing that their Fox News audience is aging and clinging to relevance. New Media stars getting older in the space, watching younger, ever more contrarian pundits and podcasters suck up all the energy and the eyeballs. The pick-me energy is palpable. So many interviews feel like, “See how based and cool I am?”…

Chasing the algorithm:

The algorithms and analytics have made hacks of us all. Some more than others. And you can see it if you’re paying attention — many of those with the biggest megaphones in Media are using them to parrot back whatever the coveted demographic already believes.

I don’t need polls or studies about the percentage of young people left and right who hold antisemitic views or how support for Israel is collapsing among younger generations, all I need is to watch the weathervanes nod along, soften their positions, chase the algorithm….

Wisdom:

My grandparents were Depression-era kids and survived World War II. Big deal, I thought at the time. They don’t know what I’m going through now. I was so certain their experience had nothing to teach me.

And they had the grace not to argue about it. They just waited. Because they knew something I didn’t: That wisdom isn’t persuasive to people who haven’t earned it yet, and that trying to make it persuasive is a fool’s errand.

I was a fool. Now I’d give anything for their wisdom and it’s too late.

The part the platform-chasers don’t understand: You cannot reason a twenty-three-year-old out of positions they were algorithmically radicalized into. You’re not going to win them over by learning their dumb slang and nodding along with their worst impulses. All you’re going to do is lose yourself.

Australia wakes up to brown coal bonanza — 1,000 years of energy, if only we didn’t believe faulty climate models

Australia wakes up to brown coal bonanza — 1,000 years of energy, if only we didn’t believe faulty climate models. By Joanne Nova.

Five weeks after it started, suddenly Australians are noticing the bonanza under our feet all along.

That most hated thing, the unthinkable brown coal, could save the day if we would only stop beating it down with blunt sticks and Voodoo dolls.

In 2016 Geoscience Australia estimated we have so much brown coal we could keep burning the deposits we already know about at the current rate for our whole lives, and our children’s lives, and their children’s lives too. We could keep going for 40 generations. …

 

https://www.ga.gov.au/aecr2025/coal

 

Brown coal is the cheapest fuel there is for reliable electricity, bar none, but even more importantly, it can be turned into liquid fuels, which Australia desperately needs for trucks, tractors, and mining gear. We need to be able to pour our energy into a tank at room temperature and pressure, and in five minutes flat.

It’s great to see National Party talking about the thousand-year supply, and also about a new method of turning coal to liquid fuel. Do the Liberals have enough gumption to even follow The Nats? …

Brown coal could fill an awesome gap in our national energy profile. Imagine we could make all the diesel, jet fuel and petrol we needed and we were not doing it because we were afraid of 0.0001% more beach-weather a century from now?

China is already converting 400 million tons of coal each year and we’re afraid to copy that because some teenage girls will cry?

We ignore brown coal only because our ruling class wants to believe the faulty climate models, having never done any due diligence on them. Stupid, stupid, stupid.

Aging in humans resembles chronic low-grade vitamin C deficiency

Aging in humans resembles chronic low-grade vitamin C deficiency. By David Archibald.

One of the predecessor animals of humans lost the ability to make vitamin C in the Eocene, 40 to 60 million years ago. The world was a lot warmer then and most land areas were covered with rain forest. There was plenty of vitamin C available all year round in the fruit of the flowering plants that had evolved not long before. …

Then Antarctica drifted over the South Pole, the Antarctic ice sheet appeared and the current ice age began. The world became colder and drier. There was no longer a year-round supply of vitamin C from fruit. The human range expanded to all the climatic zones. Most of humanity now lives with a chronic vitamin C deficiency.

The recommended daily allowance for vitamin C in Australia is 45 mg per day and we consume 110 mg per day on average. That is still less than 10% of what other omnivores use. Most of us are living our lives chronically vitamin C deficient. …

Vitamin C has a big role in slowing aging by better connective tissue integrity, lower frailty and slower immune senescence. Aging in humans resembles chronic low-grade vitamin C deficiency. …

Vitamin D regulates several hundred genes related to immune response to pathogens and cancer. There is a negative correlation between the vitamin D level in the blood and the incidence of sepsis, viral infections, cancer and most other diseases. The main role of vitamin D is bone turnover. Once the vitamin D level in the blood falls below 40 ng/ml, the thyroid gland starts producing parathyroid hormone which takes over that role, freeing some vitamin D for more immediately vital roles. The average Australian blood level is 25 ng/ml so most Australians live their lives with a chronic vitamin D deficiency. The incidence of most diseases would halve at 50 ng/ml. There is increasing benefit up to at least 80 ng/ml. Getting there will take supplementing at between 5,000 IU and 10,000 IU of vitamin D per day, depending on weight.

Much, much more at the link.

We already live in a post-scarcity society

We already live in a post-scarcity society. By Nic Carter, from the USA.

UBI [universal basic income] is already here.

  • Basic package: disability, medicaid, food stamps etc.
  • Bonus package: literally getting paid for staying at home and hanging out with your relatives.
  • Extra bonus: if you are willing to commit fraud, pretend your kids are autistic and get paid for that. get paid for watching your neighbor’s kid. pretend you are taking care of your grandma. fake hospice clinic. fake rehab clinic. fake therapy clinic.
  • Giga bonus: during a time of crisis take advantage of PPP or CARES and open a fake business and get paid for existing

People are shocked when they learn that defense is the FIFTH largest line item in the budget. ahead of defense: social security ($1.6T), interest on debt ($1.1T) medicare ($1T), medicaid + ACA ($1T), AND THEN defense ($0.9T)

Complain about defense all you like, but healthcare fraud is a way bigger factor. hundreds of billions per year.

This is only going to get worse, because the fraud is a structural part of the system — payouts to client groups in exchange for votes (normally D).

So few actual workers:

In the US, only 47% of the population actually works (fully 14% of the population is working age and does not work). Retirees are 18% and children 22%.

The system I described above subsidizes 50m non-working people absolute minimum, but really it’s far more because people that are paid to stay home and take care of their relatives are considered “workers”.

Of that 47% of “actual workers” maybe one third does real work, the rest are shuffling papers around or doing fake email jobs. so you have, rough math, 50 million actual workers supporting 300 million dependents. … Eventually you will have 10 million using AI tools to do all the work and 340 million dependents.

Fraud and politics:

The reason no one roots out the fraud is because it’s the system that keeps our extremely fragile polity intact. …

Of course, it’s a deeply unfair system, because you are allowed to commit fraud if you are a politically protected client group of the democrats.

DOGE was killed faster than any government program ever, because it attempted to root out the fraud. If you are honest and unwilling to commit fraud, you are a huge loser in this system.

  • Your neighbor will have their mortgage subsidized by some government program.
  • They will get favorable SBA loans due to DEI.
  • They will open a fake hospice or autism clinic.
  • They will get paid for taking care of their neighbor’s kid and vice versa.

The primary skill in the labor market is learning how to extract money from state and federal government programs, not gaining skills or making yourself employable. If you are just trying to work an ordinary wagie job you are a huge sucker. you are paying 40-50% effective all in taxes to everyone else who is a net taker.

The sad part is because AI is such a substantial productivity boost, it will actually keep this system going for a while longer, and maybe in perpetuity. AI boosts the 15% of the population that is actually productive so much that the remaining 85% can coast by.

No one in charge will change this because they can’t think of anything else. The political costs of a real UBI program are too great and we don’t have the money for it anyway. So, we will keep this covert fraud-based UBI program running indefinitely. Unfortunately, if you are an honest wagie, you lose.

Elon Musk:

Pretty accurate.

Grok:

The U.S. already has a de facto, fraud-enabled “covert UBI” that subsidizes non-work through welfare programs, especially healthcare and pandemic-era relief. This system is politically entrenched as clientelism (gibs-for-votes), distorts labor markets, punishes honest workers with high effective taxes, and will be sustained indefinitely by AI-driven productivity gains from a shrinking productive core.

Imagine how low tax rates would be if all the fraud was eliminated.

Hastie leads

Hastie leads. By Noah Yim in The Australian, quoting from a recent interview of Andrew Hastie:

“A lot of Australians feel like the system is rigged against them.

“They don’t feel like aspiration matters anymore. They don’t see reward for their effort. A lot of them have lost hope completely of ever owning their own home.

“I think as a dad of three kids aged 10, 8 and 4, do my wife and I need to start planning for them to get into a home rather than my own retirement?”

Mr Hastie told his own party that this kind of thinking, that could buck Liberal Party orthodoxy, was necessary for the party’s survival.

“(The Liberal Party) got smashed in 2022,” he said. “We got smashed in 2025.

“Our primary vote is being cannibalised from both the right and the left.

“So I think adopting a posture of humility and being open minded is important, not being reactive.” …

Many corporates have become globalist and woke (they had to, or else the bureaucrats would make life difficult for them):

“The Liberal Party is not the first line of defence for corporate Australia,” he told the ABC’s Insiders program.

“I think multinationals and big business in this country have lost their social licence”.

“They’ve made no effort to recover it.”

Andrew Hastie is a breath of fresh air in Federal politics. Principles! Ideas! Changing directions! We haven’t had that spirit in such abundance since perhaps Bob Hawke.

Perhaps the Liberal Party chose the wrong leader in Angus Taylor, who so far has shown little connection to middle and lower Australia or shown he understands the urgent need to cut way back on immigration.

Modern Leftist Thinking: All leftist causes converged on Antisemitism, and “Islamophobe” became the worst possible insult

Modern Leftist Thinking: All leftist causes converged on Antisemitism, and “Islamophobe” became the worst possible insult. By Nora Bussigny at The Free Press.

Nora went undercover to investigate feminist, LGBTQ+, and anti-racist activist circles in France.

I was curious: How would they respond to the mass murder and rape perpetrated by terrorists on October 7? What I found wasn’t just embarrassed silence, but genuine scenes of joy, expressed shamelessly to their tens of thousands of followers. “Finally, the colonized rebel against the colonizer!” “Finally, the oppressed fight back against the oppressor!”… “In the war between colonizers and the colonized, we must support (without hesitation) the side of the colonized. #FreePalestine.” …

The various lefty activist causes finally united and converged — on antisemitism!

A political and activist left that had spent years aspiring to a “convergence of struggles” was finally uniting. That convergence rested on a common enemy. A figure whose mutual hatred binds them together. That figure was the Jew — or rather, the “Zionist.”

I watched this shared hatred of the Jew bring together Islamist preachers, supporters of the Islamic Republic of Iran, feminist and LGBTQ+ militants, radical ecologists, and anti-police activists—all in the name of a fight “against Zionism, the United States, the West, and imperialism.”

Something extraordinary was happening. So, I went back in. For over a year, from January 2024 to March 2025, I participated undercover in dozens of demonstrations, discussion groups, and militant actions by anti-Israel collectives in France. I visited university campuses in my country, but also L’université Libre de Bruxelles and Columbia University in New York, to understand how legitimate empathy for Palestinian civilians is being instrumentalized by militants linked to terrorist organizations and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

What I observed is how a mutual hatred for the West, the United States, imperialism, and Israel have coalesced around a cause that has become the ultimate cause par excellence: Palestine — one for which its devout followers are prepared to do anything. …

What the lefties are thinking:

I began talking with people — more than 100 over the course of the year. I discovered a wide variety of backgrounds. Many of them, often students, did not always hold particularly radical views …

They had grown up learning about and seeing images of the hundreds of French people killed by Islamist terrorism. And yet, it became clear through my conversations with them that they now considered something to be worse than Islamist terrorism: being accused, as white people, of “Islamophobia.”

For the word Islamophobe is the accusation they use most often, and the one against which they defend themselves with the greatest panic and vehemence whenever suspicion falls on one of them. Shortly after an Islamist murdered history teacher Dominique Bernard on October 13, 2023, for example, a tribute was held in his honor at one of France’s most prestigious university’s, Sciences Po. Organized by students, the tribute — in the form of posters — honored the professor, as well as Samuel Paty, another history teacher murdered by an Islamist. “A student walked past us, lost her temper, and yelled at us, calling us Islamophobes and racists,” several students, still in shock, told me.

Their desire to avoid that accusation justified all concessions — including supporting “Palestinian resistance” at all costs. This is how terrorist acts become not things to condemn, but militant commitments to be cheered on in the name of “deconstructing one’s privileges.”

I participated in conversations in which activists — who proclaimed themselves deeply committed to believing all sexual violence victims — expressed doubt about the veracity of rapes committed by Hamas against Israeli women on October 7. Worse still, some female activists claimed that “Hamas responded in accordance with its culture.” Even those who believed the victims fiercely denied the antisemitic nature of the rapes: “This is not an antisemitic rape; it is patriarchal, because it is inherent to men to rape women,” explained one activist during a feminist demonstration. …

The slogan of the event I attended was: “Algeria has won, Palestine will win.” The community hall was packed to the brim: There were about a hundred people in attendance — families proud to represent the “diversity of the suburbs,” but also white students with keffiyehs tied around their necks. The students were diligently taking notes, and one of them proudly explained that he was studying “colonial history” in college. They told me their family history was finally making sense: They were not merely children of Algerian immigrants; they were becoming “children of Gaza.” …

Fanaticism:

Then, one activist’s monologue galvanized the room: “This is the very essence of resistance: You will kill 10 of our men for every one of yours we kill, but you will be the ones to tire first! You shoot down a leader and he falls as a martyr, and we will have 10 more candidates. Ten fighter martyrs will fall; a thousand more will rise. You can kill the head, but you will not sever the resistance from its soil. The Palestinians will resist to the end! And as long as the land of Palestine is occupied, the Palestinians will rise. With or without arms. With or without legs. With or without children. With or without parents. The land of Palestine belongs to those who fight for it — the Palestinians!”

The activists’ position was clear: Empathy for Palestinian civilians is not enough. One must provide unwavering support for the Palestinian cause, which means supporting the way Palestinians have chosen to express it — and thus supporting Sinwar and Hamas. As privileged white people, the argument went, we had no right to judge how an oppressed people chooses to defend itself; we can only support them in their “legitimate” struggle for justice.

This fanaticism animated the movement. And as I swiftly learned, everything was subordinated to it — including long-standing progressive principles.

During my year undercover, I participated in a series of feminist demonstrations. Over and over again, I watched as demonstrators banned and attacked feminist activists who wanted to speak out for Israeli women victimized by Hamas. On March 8, 2024, Jewish women were pelted with broken glass and had to be evacuated for their safety from the International Women’s Day march in Paris. A year later, on March 8, 2025, Samidoun and other groups, with the approval of feminist organizations, set up a human blockade in Paris to prevent Jewish feminists and Iranian women there to support them from joining the procession. …

Originally, I tried to reason with the activists, attempting to explain to them that these women were not “far right.” “Yes, but it’s the same thing—they’re Zionists,” I was told. To avoid being discovered, I had to shout these slogans alongside my comrades: “Zionists, fascists, you are the terrorists!” “No Zionists in our marches!”  …

All of this sounds — and is — baffling. But the justification is simple: Because feminism is part of the progressive omnicause, it must also be decolonial, so it must back the Palestinian resistance in its fight against Israeli colonization. Anyone who opposes Palestine is thus an enemy of the feminist cause. And so, every insult hurled at feminist activists is justified — so long as those feminists are “Zionists.” …

Palestine has become the rallying cry of the progressive left — in my country, and across the world. And the fanaticism of the movement has justified violence, rape apologia, and terrorist adulation — because, of course, “resistance is justified when people are occupied.”

Australia’s Fuel Supply In The Long Term

Australia’s Fuel Supply In The Long Term. By David Archibald.

To recap, back in the 1950s it was realised that our fossil fuel endowment would be exhausted one day and nuclear power would have to be commercialised to maintain civilisation at the level to which we have become accustomed. Shell Oil geologist King Hubbert worried about civilisation’s ‘margin of safety’ in getting the right nuclear technology sorted before fossil fuels ran out. There has no real progress in nuclear technology since Congress killed the breeder reactor project in 1983.

 

 

Peak oil was expected to happen in 2005. LNG receiving terminals were being built on the US Gulf Coast to import the natural gas that would be needed. Instead, the US shale oil boom started, the LNG receiving terminals were converted into export terminals and the civilisational party went on for another 20 years. The shale bounty was squandered. The oil price is rising again with the peak in US oil production, overprinted by localised shortages due to reliance on supply from the Middle East.

The short-term solution is to build coal liquefaction plants. But we know that our coal endowment will run out, and natural gas before that. Lack of alternatives will force us to the right solution in the end; our only choice is how much pain we endure in the interim. …

Liquid hydrocarbons are irreplaceable in terms of energy density and convenience of handling. We have lot s of coal. So, coal-to-liquids is the obvious future:

There are two choices in coal liquefaction processes: Bergius and Fischer-Tropsch, both invented in Germany in the 1910s.

In the Bergius process, hydrogen is forced into coal molecules at a temperature of 450˚C and a pressure of 170 kg/cm2 (165 atmospheres or 2,420 psi).

The Fischer-Tropsch process burns coal in pure oxygen to produce a synthesis gas that is catalysed to long chain hydrocarbons in an oil bath. Bergius is the better process. In WW2, German synthetic fuel production was dominantly via the Bergius process:

 

 

Cost per liter of a Bergius plant? About A$1.21 per liter (~US$135 per barrel).

The wholesale price is affordable. What about the capital cost per consumer? The drive-away price of a Toyota Corolla Hybrid is $37,000. Its fuel consumption rate is 25 kilometres per litre. If the vehicle does the normal 20,000 km per year, that is 800 litres to get there. The capital cost of a litre of annual production is $2.63. If we multiply that by the 800 litres of fuel consumption per annum, the Corolla’s share of the cost of the Bergius plant to supply it is $2,100. This is 5.7% of the drive-away price, less than the cost of a refrigerator or some TVs, and a fraction of the $8,000 you can pay for extra trim for the Corolla. Car buyers should be given the option of buying a perpetual fuel supply for their vehicles.

It is the same story with wheat-growing. Medium-rainfall country in the WA wheatbelt is currently selling for $7,500 per hectare. Each hectare is expected to produce 2.5 tonnes of wheat per hectare, using 15 litres of diesel per tonne in no-till cropping, equating to 38 litres per hectare.

At the moment, that diesel supply is on a hand-to-mouth basis. The farmer might get his crop in, but will there be diesel for sale come harvest? To reduce risk he could buy in the diesel for harvest at the time of planting and keep it in tanks on the farm. Better yet, he could guarantee supply in perpetuity by paying $2.63 per annual litre of production from a Bergius plant for an outlay of $100 per hectare, increasing his capital outlay by 1.3%. The cost of disruption is far, far greater than the outlay for fuel supply to the farm. The same is true for mining, trucking and all the other activities of productive people. And it applies to aircraft:

 

 

China has supplied 30% of Australia’s jet fuel consumption. It was stupid to get ourselves into that situation. We could be making all the jet fuel we need ourselves. … Everyone else on the planet is now aware of just how stupid Australia has been on this subject. This is a recent headline:

 

 

… Bergius plants are the near-term solution. Longer term it will always be nuclear, specifically lead-cooled or molten-salt cooled breeder reactors (sodium is too messy).