Friday

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133 comments to Friday

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    CO2 Lover

    A Patriotic Australia Day to you All

    A BBQ with Lamb chops should be in order – Sam would approve

    Just do not buy them from Woolies.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZtWVJikNnx4

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    • #
      Annie

      Happy Australia Day All! 🙂

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    • #
      John Connor II

      Australia Day and DM nowhere to be seen? 😉

      Fire up those barbies, get that non-Wokeworths meat on, and raise your middle finger defiantly to the WEF and Greta.
      Let the aroma fill the neighbourhood.

      Aussie, Aussie, Aussie. Oi, oi, oi!
      We own this country,
      It’s not a WEF toy!

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        MP

        It’s a crying shame this blog never put something Australian as the header, “Friday” is not good enough.
        Just the Australian flag or Eureka flag.

        Nothing is just taking a knee to these clowns.

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        • #
          John Connor II

          Maybe Jo’s a closet kiwi? 🤭
          Putting anything shamelessly Aussie like a flag in the header would, these days, be seen as racist and non-inclusive and no doubt she’d cop some flack.
          Maybe a pic of some lamb chops on a bbq, with Ernie Dingo cooking them? That’ll silence the whiners.😎
          We were once proud of our country and we will be again.
          It’s just a matter of time now.

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          • #
            CO2 Lover

            Would Kangaroo fillets be more appropriate? Not a product of colonialism which brough sheep to Australia.

            In 1797 the first merino sheep were landed in Australia. Unlike earlier breeds, this Spanish variety was much better suited to the Australian environment and was a formidable wool producer.

            The first Australian-produced fleece was sold in England in 1807 and by the late 19th century, wool had become Australia’s major export.

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        • #
          MP

          Flying through the flack is what she does.
          No such thing as a closet Kiwi, if their a Kiwi, they will sure as hell tell you.

          CO2, you want to eat dog food be my guest.

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    tonyb

    Happy Australia day but many don’t seems to like it

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13002703/Statue-Captain-Cook-sawed-Melbourne-four-words-sprayed-it.html

    Never mind, there will be constant pushback on voting the ‘wrong’ way in your recent referendum. We still get lots of aggro from Remain fanatics following Brexit.

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      Annie

      I don’t know about ‘many’ Tony. It’s more a shouty vandalistic minority trying to bully people into their negative way of ‘thinking’.

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    tonyb

    No doubt Greta will want to campaign about energy guzzling ski resorts. No doubt the Sheiks of Dubai will give here a sympathetic hearing as their resort is rated No 4.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-13001461/The-10-popular-ski-resorts-2023-according-social-media-views-Courchevel-France-No-1-DUBAI-ranking-fourth.html

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    CO2 Lover

    Does your local council support Australia Day or its it dominated by woke councillors like mine?

    My local council is running a “Truth Telling” ceremony starting at dawn where people who are more white than brown and who run around in bear skins relate past wrongs of colonial settlers and how this caused hurt and suffering to “First Nations People” that lingers to the day (sigh).

    The 2021 census had 2,410,833 Australians as having Irish ancestry compared to 812,000 who self-identified as being “Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islanders”.

    My Irish ancestors left Ireland during the Great Potato Famine of the 1850s.

    No mention is made of how the English had “stolen” Irish land or the fact that the reason why the Irish famine occured was because English landlords where exporting food to England while the Irish starved.

    But then the Irish have the wrong coloured skin!

    Of course most of the first settlers were convicts who had been forced to come to Australia as the only alternative to a death penality (which applied to stealing anything worth more than a shilling as a typical example) no mention is made of the hurt and suffering they endured being force to leave family and friends behind in the UK.

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      tonyb

      I am looking to start a group claim against the Romans, Anglo Saxons, Vikings and Normans who all invaded England and who looted our treasure and enslaved many of us. I am certain I will get a fair hearing and lots of compensation, or are those invasions somehow different to the one of Australia?

      Ireland is a bit problematic and you need to talk to the Norman descendants-not us- about that, who set it all off.. Similarly the Irish may have a case to answer as Dublin was the largest slave market in Europe in Viking times.

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      • #
        CO2 Lover

        But I also have Viking ancestors in Norway!

        Where does that leave me? Should I receive compensation for the hurt suffered by the Irish or pay compensation for the the rape and pillage of the Vikings?

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        • #
          Graeme No.3

          Norway has far more money than the UK.
          They got it selling lots of oil & gas and lots of hydro electricity; both at very profitable rates from those countries so stupid as to think they can “save the planet”.

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          tonyb

          Hmmm, tricky. I think you may need to get compensation and then pay it out again. If you would like to send me a consultation fee of $1000 I will look into it for you.

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          • #
            CO2 Lover

            I also have an English female ancestor sent to Australia as a convict for stealing linen worth a shilling to feed her family.

            You need to up the consultation fee to cover this one – this should be worth some compensation

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      Paul Cottingham

      I am English living in England of 87.5% Yorkshire and 12.5% Irish extraction. My Irish great great granddad left bantry bay in Ireland during the Great Potato Famine of the 1850s. He obeyed the law and joined the Royal Navy, so he was not transported to Australia. Although his daughter and my mothers grandma was known to have got into trouble for being drunk.

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      John Hultquist

      My grandmother left Ballinamore {BÊal an Átha Móir}, County Leitrim and sailed on a ship registered in Norway from Derry {Londonderry; Daire Calgaich}. That was in 1900.
      We accept no blame for all the troubles caused by the ancient leaders of Europe, England, Ireland, or anywhere else.
      However, it is fact that America is so much better for her passage across the Atlantic to Ellis Island. 🙂

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      Yarpos

      Our local council tried to discourage one of the local townships from having what has become its traditional Australia Day parade. The organizer told them to “get stuffed” Its on today with our local car club supporting with some old Australian cars and other vintage vehicles.

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      • #
        Annie

        Good to hear. We are carrying flags/banners in the parade.

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      • #
        Dennis

        Our council decided to not conduct citizenship ceremonies, Labor Mayor and climate freak.

        But the National Party Federal and State MPs have openly criticised the decision.

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  • #
    tonyb

    In the UK a company has been set up to provide dozens of rapid charging stations for electric vehicles. In five minutes it will provide enough juice to get the car 100 miles.

    I had always thought that rapid charging damaged the battery. Has battery technology changed, or will this likely result in more damage and more fires and insurance claims, as I am sure rapid charging will be very popular?

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      CO2 Lover

      Likely to have the same fate as a company set up in Australia to provide fast charging

      Australian EV charging company Tritium closed its doors on its local factory before Christmas, leaving the jobs of up to 400 workers uncertain. The troubled fast-charging firm announced the closure at the company’s annual general meeting that it would shut Murrarie, Brisbane factory on December 22.

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      • #
        John Hultquist

        Tritium stock chart is here:
        https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/DCFC/

        For the first few years the news of this company had been like a shooting-star. If the chart of its stock is an indication, it has plummeted since August of 2022.
        Joe Biden became a big fan — perhaps that was the problem.

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      • #
        tonyb

        Presumably Tritium failed for financial reasons as perhaps it was in the market too early and Australia is anyway a daft place to promote electric cars with your vast distances.

        The UK makes more sense for this service (if EV cars make any sort of sense anyway)

        But it doesn’t answer my question as to whether fast charging is a good, bad or neutral thing with modern batteries

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    • #
      Dennis

      Excellent situation for ageing people who need regular comfort stops.

      lol

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  • #
    CO2 Lover

    Australia Day Honours

    Now these are something that should be banned on Australia Day

    Dr Brett Sutton has been appointed to the Order of Australia (AO) ‘for distinguished service to the people of Victoria through public health administration and governance, and to medicine’

    .

    Dr Sutton was the side kick mini-me of Dr Evil (Dictator Dan) who did what he was told to do by the evil Dictator

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  • #

    1/21/24, Lichtenstein had a referendum about 3 points:

    mandatory photovoltaics NO 66,6%

    on the amendment of the Building Act (BAUG), the Energy Efficiency Act (EEG) and the Energy Performance Certificate Act (ENAG) (implementation of Buildings Directive II and MuKEn 2014) NO 65,2%

    on Electronic health dossier NO 53,9%

    Very clear results ! 😀
    Results referendum (German)

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  • #
    Reader

    Climate scientist Michael Mann’s defamation case reveals what critics say is unethical behavior

    https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/energy/climate-scientists-defamation-case-reveals-what-critics-say-plaintiffs

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    • #
      John Hultquist

      To avoid any confusion:
      Note that M. Mann was at Penn State (mascot: Nittany Lion; football) in State College, Pa., but a couple of years ago moved 150 miles SE to Univ. Pennsylvania (mascot: Fighting Quaker; breakfast cereal) in Philadelphia.
      Penn State University lies at the foot of Mount Nittany, a very low mountain that once was roaming territory for the, perhaps factious, big cat of that name. Philadelphia is supposed to be a more refined site – City of Brotherly Love. That is questionable:
      Philadelphia ultimately comes from a nickname given to an ancient Greek ruler of Egypt who gained notoriety for marrying his own full sister. The “brotherly love” in the name originally referred to literal incest.

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  • #
    Ian Hill

    Adelaide had 35mm of rain yesterday (from 9am), a bit more than the range-maximum 8mm forecast the previous day and the revised midday nowcast of 18mm!

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    • #
      Yarpos

      The BOM would say its a warm dry rain though.

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      • #
        another ian

        CO2 Lover

        Re “Tinks etc” – those botersnikes got sold on “dry water swimming”

        An aside on those books –

        Wiki says “The series is considered a classic of Australian children’s literature and has sold more than 500,000 copies worldwide.”

        Maybe no longer, as IIRC our copies were throwouts from the school library

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    • #
      Adellad

      It came from the tropical low (that RickWill tells us is named 03U) that begun life in December around southern Arnhem Land and slowly tracked SW, then S and now SE across the Kimberly, Pilbara, WA Goldfields and Eucla districts before moisture from it streaming across southern SA and into Victoria. As he wrote yesterday, it is an amazing phenomenon, forming as it did on dry land and maintaining its strength for weeks despite never venturing to the coast. It even gave us a spectacular dawn today in the Adelaide foothills. All my tanks are full too!

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        Graeme#4

        Cyclones that form off WA’s NW coast, when heading inland, often travel right down through Australia to the Bight in a weakened form. One in 1963 filled an ancient riverbed on the Nullarbor and took out the Trans line – I believe that they have now added large culverts on that section. Another picked up one of the railway’s water tank off its stand, last seen bowling merrily along the Plain.

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  • #
    MP

    The Townsville Cat 3 Cyclone that never was.
    The Tvlle Airport/common weather station had the highest wind strength recorded was 63kph http://www.bom.gov.au/places/qld/town-common/observations/townsville/
    The BOM had it on their cyclone tracker at Cat 3, after it turned into a low they rehashed all the three’s to two’s which is not supported by their own data http://www.bom.gov.au/products/IDQ65002.shtml?trk=public_post_comment-text

    Their own rules state a Cat 1 at 63 kph http://www.bom.gov.au/cyclone/tropical-cyclone-knowledge-centre/understanding/categories/ it was 63 for one hour.

    I found this live stream from someones back yard in Tvlle https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nS3cCTHi0YQ

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    • #
      el+gordo

      There is talk that this ex-tropical cyclone will become a rain depression and travel west across the country to the Indian Ocean where it may become a TC again.

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    • #
      Adellad

      Indeed; I checked BoM for Qld earlier and the highest wind gust I could see anywhere was at Mt Stuart (Defence) in Herbert & Lower Burdekin at 89kph. Hardly worth the hype, ditto the rainfalls, most of which didn’t reach Adelaide’s lofty 35mm yesterday!

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      • #
        Bushkid

        I think I saw that Lucinda had a gust up to 100km/h, and some in the 80s and 90s km/h, but sustained winds were barely Cat 1 most of the time at Townsville, or at stations north or south.

        Pages from the BOM observations downloaded for posterity.

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    • #
      Dennis

      Another case of “errors and omissions”.

      lol

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      • #
        Greg in NZ

        Is that it – all over before it began?

        Maybe the aroma of chops & steaks & snags and the hiss of cans opening scared that doomsday – oops! sorry, Australia Day – Category 11 storm into submission: inland farmers will enjoy some rain showers yes?

        Sydney Airport’s 1.5 hour ‘heatwave’ lost the plot too, as well as losing 15 degrees in under an hour:
        1.55pm 40C
        2.00pm 30C
        2.44pm 25C

        Climate Change killed Gobull Warming?

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        • #
          el+gordo

          Another fizzer, there will be less cyclones in a warmer world and they won’t be very severe.

          They are already forecasting a return of La Nina later this year, the continent will be awash. In my book this is a global cooling signal.

          ‘It was only last year that we came out of a 3-year La NiĂąa but there is a significant chance that the Pacific Ocean returns to a La NiĂąa state by spring this year, increasing the chances of wet weather across eastern Australia in spring and summer.’ (Weatherzone)

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    • #
      Gatone Rowine

      Reminds me of the cyclone Olwyn in WA in 2015. There was a lot of hype and excitement, police knocking on the doors and saying we were in the direct path and needed to get out (somewhat south of Geraldton). It was a dead calm with some overcast for two days, not a drop of rain. Olwyn resulted in a famous Geraldton meme with a photo of an upturned plastic pool chair (WA salvage pool set type), saying “Cyclone Olwyn – together we will rebuild!”

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  • #
    TedM

    Dr John Campbell takes another look at Vitamin D with Dr David Grimes a medical researcher and author. They introduce “calcifediol” the form of Vitamin D that the liver produces from “cholecalciferol”. The video is over an hour but well worth the listen. It gives the listener a better understanding of how to manage their own vitamin D supplementation, both before and during infection. “Calcifediol” is available from Chemist Warehouse at the moment. I wouldn’t be surprised if it our health authorities make it prescription only if/when they realise people are acquiring it to protect themselves from infection.

    Lots of warnings online about the side effects of “Calcifediol”. It’s probably as dangerous as ivermectin and rain water.

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    another ian

    For your “horror of the day”

    “Eat your vaccines like a good little boy…”

    “Merck outlines a process by which technicians identify “the virus” that could threaten pigs on a farm, then remove genes from that virus, and finally insert a particular “gene of interest” into a customized vaccine.

    An RNA vaccine, which deploys nanoparticles.”

    https://bayourenaissanceman.blogspot.com/2024/01/eat-your-vaccines-like-good-little-boy.html

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  • #
    Tides of Mudgee

    If I were to apply for a job as say a doctor and I presented my exemplary CV and consequently got the job and started practicing, only for it to be discovered some time down the track that I had lied in said CV, there is no question that I would not only be removed from that position, but charged and severely punished. Why does this not apply to politicians? Looking at you Albo. The front page of Thursday’s (25th) Daily Telegraph (paywall) was one of the most outstanding I’ve ever seen and shows that we still have a lot more freedom in Shtraya (as Albo calls us) than many other countries. ToM

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  • #
    MrGrimNasty

    So where’s all the people posting about freezing rivers in the UK and subzero temperature maps of Europe? Some said I was being cryptic when I said it would be a distant memory by the next week. Indeed it is now. All very mild.
    The Central England Temperature mean is already back above ‘normal’, Jan 2024 will end up another unexceptional month in the mean CET overall, on the mild side.

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    MrGrimNasty

    You wait for one London bus fire, then three come along at once.
    https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1859679/putney-london-electric-bus-fire

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    RickWill

    Mann’s testiomy yesterday in the Mann v Steyn court case gave me great concern about the depth of the swamp. And the way it protects its own.

    He has incurred NO legal costs for this case that is now in its 12th year. Someone is paying to protect this fraudulent academic.

    https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/unreported-story-society4/episodes/Ep–6–Manns-Money-e2eu4sk

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  • #
    MP

    Song for Australia Day, from Malcolm Roberts web page.

    OFFICIAL VIDEO – “Don’t Welcome Me (To My Own Country)” – The Emily James Trio.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iuG3z4cr18

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    Steve of Cornubia

    In Costco’s latest newsletter, there is a special on an “Eco Living” waste bin. It has a motion sensor to raise the lid for you, so must have a battery along with some electronics and a motor. In a WASTE BIN.

    Words fail me.

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  • #
    R.B.

    A notification from The Washington Post

    Our top picks from your favorite topics
    Not sure where to start reading? Start here with this special roundup, curated just for you.

    Trump’s increasing flubs risk blunting big polling edge on mental sharpness

    No bias there!

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    • #
      Kim

      They don’t seem to realise, still haven’t got it even after over 8 years, Trump is the Center Right’s Rottweiler.

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  • #
    nb

    Remember the traitors.

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  • #
    Dennis

    Lots of happy Aussies where I am, many boats flying our Flag and vehicles with window flags.

    At the waterfront locations even covered eating areas decorated.

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    • #
      Annie

      We had our parade of many flags, classic cars led by a wonderful float made by the Men’s Shed, emergency vehicles from the area and a riding group on their beautiful horses. Well done the Lions, who also had their catering van there. After some chats we left as we find socialising with loud music a bit difficult.
      Cool cloudy weather until lunchtime with some drizzle but the sun is showing up a bit now. Some neighbours are dropping in for a quick one later; a novelty for us these days as the habit died somewhat with the last few years nonsense.

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      Adellad

      None visible at the Gabba, disgraceful. Has the ground banned Oz regalia?

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      • #
        MP

        Actually they did, how did you miss that?

        I have not taken any notice of the cricket since the little sandpaper incident, that and under arm, taking the knee and now the banning of Aus day.

        Treat them with the same contempt they treat us, do not participate.

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    • #
      Steve of Cornubia

      If ABC TV is any guide, ‘Invasion Day’ has already replaced Australia Day.

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  • #
    Kim

    Kim’s Rant: Have just got back from a lovely Australia Day breakfast at Cowaramup provided by the Lions and listening to Australian folk music.

    To the wokies who hate on Australia: I am proud to live in Australia, proud and thankful to live in this lovely land, and proud to be Australian. If you don’t like it then GTFOOH! is all I can say.

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    Zigmaster

    One thing I’ve also wondered is how does all the transmission costs feed into the cost of electricity. Is it the case that above and beyond what taxpayers pay in their bill how much is paid for infrastructure, research, subsidies etc.I assume these don’t show up on the energy bill but are just represented by tax collections or borrowings. I would be interested to know how much additional taxpayers money has been wasted on an industry that should not exist.

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    • #
      Kim

      periodic cost = capital cost over capital lifetime / period
      – we pay one way or another 😁️

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    • #

      Zigmaster
      January 26, 2024 at 11:34 am ¡ Reply
      One thing I’ve also wondered is how does all the transmission costs feed into the cost of electricity

      Between the 3-5 cents that is actually costs to generate a kWh of electricity,….and the 30-40 cents we consumers pay our service providers for that kWh…….there is a lot of “margin” to pay for the transmission and distribution infrastructure costs.
      That is why the debate about how nuch cheaper Renewables are is all BS. Most of the retail cost is not in the generation end of the game. !

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    CO2 Lover

    Something to contemplate on “Invasion Day”

    If the English had not lost the USA War of Independence (1775-1782) and could no longer send convict to the USA then they may not have bothered to establish a settlement in Australia in 1788.

    So who else may have established a settlement in Australia?

    The second wave of European colonialism commenced with Britain’s involvement in Asia in support of the British East India Company; other countries such as France, Portugal and the Netherlands also had involvement in European expansion in Asia.

    The third wave (“New Imperialism”) consisted of the Scramble for Africa regulated by the terms of the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885. The conference effectively divided Africa among the European powers. Vast regions of Africa came under the sway of Britain, France, Germany, Portugal, Belgium, Italy and Spain.

    So what would have been the alternative “Invasion Day” and by whom and when?

    Fun Fact – How Sydney got its name

    Lord Sydney was an English politician who, as the British Home Secretary, was responsible for the plan to establish a penal settlement at Botany Bay.

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    • #
      CO2 Lover

      Why didn’t the Dutch establish a settlement in Australia?

      Captain Cook did not discover Australia in 1770.

      Lieutenant James Cook, captain of HMB Endeavour, claimed the eastern portion of the Australian continent for the British Crown in 1770, naming it New South Wales

      However, the first documented landing on Australia by a European was in 1606. The Dutch explorer Willem Janszoon landed on the western side of Cape York Peninsula and charted about 300 km of coastline.

      Twenty-nine other Dutch navigators explored the western and southern coasts in the 17th century, and dubbed the continent New Holland.

      Was it because the stone-age Australia natives produced nothing worth trading with Europeans such as spices, cotton cloth, tea, and opium of the East Indies?

      There was no demand in Europe for witchetty grubs!

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      • #
        KP

        “Was it because the stone-age Australia natives produced nothing worth trading ”

        Ah, but they lived the dream of Socialists, Teals and Greens everywhere! No plastics, no metals, no private ownership, no rich elites, the workers owned the means of production… a sustainable Green, back-to-nature, idyll…

        I’m amazed so few voters go to live with them in Arnhem Land

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      • #

        Well the French were within a few days of planting their flag if Cook had not bothered.
        .. and whilst there were undoubtedly othere nations trading ( ??) with coastal tribes, and it is documented that there were europeans living with aboriginal tribes on the West coast befor Cook floated in, the most likely next “colonising” nation would have been the Japanese in the 1940’s … but for some very brave actions by our military !

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        • #
          CO2 Lover

          but for some very brave actions by our military !

          And who was included in our military?

          Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians have fought for Australia in every war since Federation in 1901.

          • In 1944 nearly every Torres Strait Islander man was a member of the Torres Strait Light Infantry Battalion—in proportion to population, no community in Australia contributed more to Australia’s effort in World War II than the people of the Torres Strait Islands.
          • The first Japanese Prisoner of War in Australia was captured by Aboriginal people after his plane crashed on Melville Island, north of Darwin in February 1942.

          Despite rules against their enrolment, over 3000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men and women are known to have enlisted in World War II—a further 400 are known to have served in World War I.

          • There are up to 7,000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander veterans and war widows in the Australian community today.
          • More than 800 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians now serve with distinction in the Australian Defence Forces.

          The Aboriginal are dead lucky that it was the English who beat the Japanese to Australia.

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            The Aboriginal are dead lucky that it was the English who beat the Japanese to Australia.

            …and lucky that the English beat ALL the other nations to Australia

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      Steve of Cornubia

      There seems to be a push to create some sort of ‘First Nations Day’ to celebrate aboriginal culture. No details yet on what it might look like, so here’s my suggestion.

      First, men beat the heck out of their wives. Please note that actually killing her, even though the murder of women in proud Aboriginal communities is TWELVE TIMES that of Australia generally, is not officially encouraged.

      Once the beatings are accomplished, the men buy one of those huge casks of wine each and find a tree to sit under until they pass out.

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      • #
        another ian

        To the tune of Bloodwood’s “Yuendumu Flagon Wagon”?

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        CO2 Lover

        “First Nations People”

        “If you tell a BIG LIE often enough people willl tend to beleived it” Joseph Goebbels (Reich Minister for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda)

        At the time of European Settlement there were around 500 warring tribes each with their own language with no King or parliament.

        So they were never a “nation”

        They were not the first settlers – the Negritoes were the first followed by the Murrayians then the Aboriginals

        In other words – All complete bulllshit

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          Greg in NZ

          Our ‘indigenous’ Maori arrived here a thousand years ago, give or take, on boats… as did my Scottish & Irish ‘first nation’ people. At least my mob brought whisky and potatoes.

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    John Connor II

    Kaspersky picks up ‘product of the year’ for 2023

    https://www.av-comparatives.org/tests/summary-report-2023/

    I’ve used Kaspersky for many years and recommended it to all my clients.
    Best choice if you’re in the market for pc protection.

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    John Connor II

    Lithium price plunges on slowing Chinese demand for electric vehicles

    Lithium miners are cutting costs and scaling back plans to expand production after slowing demand in China for electric vehicles crushed the price of the battery metal.
    The price of lithium has tumbled more than 80 per cent in the past year to $13,200 per tonne, its lowest level since 2020, after excessive levels of supply hit the market, according to data group Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.
    The fallout has pushed miners — mainly in Australia, which produces 40 per cent of the world’s supplies — to constrain production as decelerating demand for electric vehicles leaves stockpiles of half-processed material through the supply chain.
    “We’re going through a period where too many new projects came online in too short a space of time,” said William Adams, head of commodity markets research at Fastmarkets, a price reporting agency. “We’ve just started to see the pullback.”
    While lithium has not fallen as low as its 2019-2020 slump, when it hit a trough of about $6,000 per tonne, the profitability of many producers is stretched at current levels.
    Goldman Sachs estimates a surplus of 200,000 tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent, or 17 per cent of global demand, this year, which will require “substantial supply cuts” to balance the market.

    https://archive.vn/RK4n9

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    another ian

    FWIW

    “The Delusions Of Davos And Dubai, Part One: Achieving Universal Energy Security”

    https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/delusions-davos-and-dubai-part-one-achieving-universal-energy-security

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    John Connor II

    British Government Confirms Commitment to WHO Pandemic Treaty

    The British government of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has expressed its “commitment” to the globalist project of crafting an international Pandemic Treaty by the World Health Organization.

    Buried in a “national statement” delivered at the World Health Organization’s Executive Board in Geneva this week, the British government thew its support behind a push by W.H.O. Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus for the world to agree to a Pandemic Treaty.

    “The UK underlines our commitment to agreement of a new Pandemic Accord and targeted amendments of the International Health Regulations, which together ensure our preparedness for future health threats with stronger prevention, and response, whilst respecting national sovereignty,” Downing Street said in a press release.

    This comes despite a petition signed by over 156,000 Britons calling for the government “to commit to not signing any international treaty on pandemic prevention and preparedness established by the W.H.O., unless this is approved through a public referendum.”

    https://www.visionnews.online/post/__who

    Bought and paid for pollies, destroying their own futures, but they’re too stupid and arrogant to see it.

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    another ian

    Another magic formula

    ““SCIENTISTS:” Redefining Earth’s Future: Scientists Advocate for Revolutionary Planetary Commons Framework. “The study, conducted by a collaborative team of 22 leading international researchers – including Professor Louis KotzĂŠ, Senior Professorial Fellow in Lincoln Law School, and Professor Duncan French, Head of College of Health & Science and Professor of International Law – over nearly two years, calls for a paradigm shift in global governance to effectively safeguard the Earth’s critical systems.”

    We law professors are the salt of the earth, nature’s noblemen, but we’re not scientists unless we do science, and telling other people how to live isn’t science, it’s something more like oppression.”

    https://instapundit.com/628660/#disqus_thread

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      KP

      Love the comment-

      “We law professors are the salt of the earth,”

      ‘I think it’s a mis-translation…I think it was meant to say that we should use lawyers to salt the earth.’

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    Maptram

    Where I live in regional Victoria, the BOM has forecast an overnight minimum of 10°C. Rather than the longer summers that often get mentioned, it seems more like an early autumn

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    Ireneusz Palmowski

    After the tropical storm made landfall, convection continues unabated.

    https://i.ibb.co/wNZJVPM/himawari9-wv-rgb-07-P-202401260600.gif

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    another ian

    Numbers to chew on-

    “The GDP Number Was Great… There Is Just One Huge Problem”

    https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/gdp-number-was-great-there-just-one-huge-problem

    Keep an eye on Canberra

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      KP

      ” it now takes $1.55 in budget deficit to generate $1 of growth… and it takes over $2.50 in new debt to generate $1 of GDP growth!”

      I’m sure Canberra’s marvelous GDP growth will be for exactly the same reason..

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    R.B.

    Interesting article at Epoch Times on C.S. Lewis’s That Hideous Strength.

    Just as our “progressive” mobs destroy and vandalize historical monuments, N.I.C.E. levels the ancient forest on the Bracton College grounds, replacing it with a sterile and sinister pile. The placid old town is swamped by vulgarian bullies slinging four-letter words. You’ll encounter their analogues today in any “progressive”-run city. (Lewis thinly disguises the words, but you know what they are.)

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    Ireneusz Palmowski

    Abstract
    Evidence is presented that the recent worldwide land warming has occurred largely in response to a worldwide warming of the oceans rather than as a direct response to increasing greenhouse gases (GHGs) over land. Atmospheric model simulations of the last half-century with prescribed observed ocean temperature changes, but without prescribed GHG changes, account for most of the land warming. The oceanic influence has occurred through hydrodynamic-radiative teleconnections, primarily by moistening and warming the air over land and increasing the downward longwave radiation at the surface. The oceans may themselves have warmed from a combination of natural and anthropogenic influences.

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-008-0448-9

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    another ian

    Another one

    “This Lancet paper on ‘dangers of undervaccination’ should never have been published”

    To get you started –

    “IF THERE were a group of whistleblowers within a government-funded organisation who wanted to subtly tell the world that there is no longer any credible evidence to support the ‘safe and effective’ narrative about the covid vaccines, they might do the following:

    Use their privileged access to extensive health data to show that all the previous publicly released ONS vaccination data were wrong;
    Concoct an obviously flawed study which conflates the genuinely unvaccinated with all those who are vaccinated but not ‘fully up to date and boosted’ into a category called ‘undervaccinated’ to ludicrously compare their outcomes with the ‘vaccinated’;
    Write the conclusions in such a way that the mainstream media will wrongly be able to claim that those vaccinated are less likely to be hospitalised or die from covid;
    Discredit the results by making clear that all the authors are part of a government-funded organisation with a vested interest in the vaccines;
    Further discredit the results by stating (in the ‘data sharing’ statement of the paper) that ‘The data that were used in this study are highly sensitive and are not available publicly’;
    Submit the paper to the most high-profile medical journal that has a known history of publishing bogus research that promotes the benefits of the vaccines.
    Of course, it’s also possible that a group who are part of such a government-funded organisation and who still desperately want to convince the world that the vaccines really are safe and effective might also do the above (because these people are not too bright but are very highly incentivised).

    Well, whatever the motive (good or bad), this is exactly what the HRD-UK (Health Data Research UK), authors of the paper just published in the Lancet have done.”

    https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/lancet-paper-on-dangers-of-undervaccination-shows-how-desperate-they-are-getting/

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    el+gordo

    Its rumoured that Xi Jinping has pancreatic cancer and may give up the top job.

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