Sunday

8.9 out of 10 based on 9 ratings

87 comments to Sunday

  • #
    TdeF

    Still to come

    Who killed JFK?
    Who killed RFK?
    Who went to Epstein island and how many times? The Clintons, separately. Prince Andrew. Bill Gates?
    What happened to Huma Abadeen/Anthony Weiner’s laptop? And all the Clinton flights to Epstein island?
    What happened to Hunter Biden’s laptop? And all the cash to the Big Guy?
    How much money did the Biden Crime family receive and from whom?
    How much money came from Ukraine to the Biden family?
    How much from China?
    How did Pelosi, McConnell, Biden achieve wealth of hundreds of millions?
    Who created the Wuhan Virus?
    Did Fauci break the law in funding the CCP Virus laboratory in Viral research?
    Did Pelosi deliberately create the 6 January?
    Why did the committee destroy all records?
    How much money was stolen for Climate Change?
    How much money was used to pay the media in America and around the world
    Where is the Ukraine money?
    How much money came back from overseas to individual politicians?
    Why didn’t Biden shoot down the Chinese spy ballons?
    Who ordered the secret and sudden 24 hour rout from Afghanistan?
    Who funded ANTI-FA?
    where’s the BLM money?
    Why did Biden pardon so many people who were not charged with anything?
    ..
    the list is endless.

    And the Democrats are silent. Say nothing and hope. They know what they did. It’s a lot of gold bars.

    Trump’s team is young and smart and numerous. The jig is up.

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    • #
      TdeF

      And those people granted pardons can no longer claim the 5th in prosecution. They have to answer questions.

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    • #
      Geoff Sherrington

      TdeF,
      In the olden days investigative reporting Watergate style would have stopped some of the rot early in its tracks.
      The modern mass media were missing in action. Worse, there are signs of complicity in corruption.
      Can we have a return to old style journalism with a strong quest for the truth?
      Geoff S

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      • #
        David Maddison

        Traditional journalism was destroyed sometime in the 1970’s.

        It used to be that journalism was something that was learned “on the job” and/or with a diploma.

        Then it became something that was learned at what have become the Leftist indoctrination centres known as “universities”.

        In Australia the crucial time appears to have been under Whitlam with a massive expansion of the university system to turn them from centres of scholarship to centres of Leftist political indoctrination.

        At the same time “journalist” “education” became more formalised. E.g.:

        https://jeraa.org.au/our-history/

        In December, 1975, 12 journalism educators from all over Australia met at Mitchell College of Advanced Education, Bathurst, to form their own association.
        This was known at first as the Australian Association for Tertiary Education in Journalism (AATEJ) until 1980. From 1980 – 2008 we were known as The Journalism Education Association (JEA) and we were incorporated in 2008 to become the Journalism Education Association of Australia (Inc). Following a member vote in 2014, the association’s name was changed to the Journalism Education and Research Association of Australia (Inc).

        Founding members described the Association as a “kind of fraternal grouping” of former journalists adjusting to their new role as teachers. More importantly, the Association was also founded to “raise the standard of teaching in journalism” through fostering research and scholarship to expand the body of knowledge about the theory and practice of journalism.

        For approximately the first 10 years, the Association’s annual conferences concentrated on exchanging information about curricula, assignments, and relations with academics from other areas of study. Relationships with employers of journalists, the Australian Journalists’ Association and the profession were also on the agenda; as were exchanges of information about how to create a balance between theory and practice in journalism education. The discussions among members ranged from what should the relationship be between vocational units and a “liberal arts education”, to whether the best balance could be achieved by handing over the theoretical elements of journalism courses to communication/media studies academics.

        I’m guessing something similar happened in other Western countries.

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        • #
          Bruce

          “Churnalists” may have once been “reporters”, a LONG time ago.

          General William Tecumseh Sherman had some thoughts on the matter:

          “”I hate newspapermen. They come into camp and pick up their camp rumors and print them as facts. I regard them as spies, which, in truth, they are. If I killed them all, there would be news from Hell before breakfast.”

          See also: Thomas Jefferson:

          “”Nothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper. Truth itself becomes suspicious by being put into that polluted vehicle. The real extent of this state of misinformation is known only to those who are in situations to confront facts within their knowledge with the lies of the day.”

          Then they discovered the REAL power of “opinion-shaping”.

          Hence, the “mangy tail” that wags the “rabid dog” of politics.

          Their greatest psycho-sexual jolly is to hear or read their own “facts” being spouted by the gullible punters.

          And, that, it has been suggested, is their “finest point”.

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          • #
            Ian

            Sherman and Jefferson accurately foretold the arrival of Trump amd Musk both of whom fit perfectly into the above definitions. Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.

            00

      • #
        TdeF

        It needs to be funded. When all the advertising dollars go to the internet giants, that’s not going to happen. Journalism used to be a job, until the Michelle Grattan school of lecturing the audience took over. Content free opinions. Propaganda. Pulpit preaching. Now we have teenagers, leftist demagogues and old commentators like Paul Kelly who act as if they know it all when they are simply old and out of touch. And everything has spin, not facts and experience.

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        • #
          Graeme No.3

          Hard to fit it in but Thank You for you reply to my Query yesterday.

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        • #
          Graeme No.3

          Trying to fit in my Thanks for your reply yesterday.

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        • #
          Geoff Sherrington

          TdeF,
          I know some old style journalists who are quite concerned by the loss of quality and integrity in their craft. One can only hope that the young journos of today include some who wish to retain the best aspects of past experience. I am pessimistic about some high quality shining through because of the present popularity of “if it bleeds, it leads.” There is no inherent reason why journos should promote guns, murder, violence, belief over fact, etc. They have the option of writing about happy, progressive, educational matters.
          When they write of 14 year olds stealing cars and using machetes and ramming police cars, I sigh and say to myself “what do you expect? You are popularising this obscene conduct.” Geoff S

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    • #
      Paul Cottingham

      Who killed JFK? : It looks like it was James Earl Files who fired the fatal shot at his brain. Lee Harvey Oswald shot from behind into Kennedy’s back. Although a serious wound, it likely would have been survivable. However, James Earl Files fired the fatal shot from the front, at Kennedy’s brain.

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    • #
      OldOzzie

      What Stood Out in Trump’s First Month?

      Writers for the WS Journal’s opinion pages size up the president’s actions at the start of his second term.

      Kim Strassel What stands out most in Donald Trump’s first month isn’t any one action, but the professionalism behind the aggressive and action-packed game plan.

      It’s a new bar for incoming presidents, and a stark contrast to the shambolic first months of Mr. Trump’s first term.

      The president’s public events tend toward the rambling, but the press is mistaken to present his team as similarly unruly.

      Consider: A month in, the administration has a nearly full complement of confirmed cabinet heads. The border is under control, and criminals are being deported.

      The White House has issued nearly 80 executive orders, targeting energy restrictions, the bureaucracy, DEI, transgenderism and censorship.

      It is dismantling Biden-era regulations and shutting down entire programs.

      The president has met with many foreign leaders and withdrawn from global entities.

      Congress is progressing on the president’s tax reform.

      Broadly—whether you like the agenda or not—this first month is clearly the work of a far more experienced team, one that spent years preparing to make the most of a final Trump term.

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      • #
        John Connor II

        Elon and DOGE hit federal workers with ‘what did you do last week?’ email

        What did you do last week?
        Please reply to this email with approx. 5 bullets of what you accomplished last week and cc your manager.
        Please do not send any classified information, links, or attachments.
        Deadline is this Monday at 11:59pmEST.

        “Consistent with President Trump’s instructions, all federal employees will shortly receive an email requesting to understand what they got done last week.

        Failure to respond will be taken as a resignation.”

        https://x.com/MarioNawfal/status/1893429116243775669

        /LOL…

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  • #
    MeAgain

    https://uk.yahoo.com/news/handcuffed-2am-forced-police-van-064601769.html

    But as she left, of her own accord, before being formally discharged, she was deemed to be ‘missing’. A nurse later called Mr Cope to see if his wife had been in touch. He called the police before frantically searching the streets himself.

    She eventually arrived home, by taxi, at 12.30am. Retired Manchester Airport baggage handler Mr Cope said police and paramedics knocked on his door in the early hours, saying his wife needed to go back to hospital to be assessed.

    As part of standard practice when dealing with patients deemed to be missing, the hospital had alerted Greater Manchester Police and the North West Ambulance Service.

    “I told them I would not allow her to go back to hospital,” he said. “I was then arrested, handcuffed and placed in a van while my wife was questioned. In my 74 years, I have never been in trouble with the police. The handcuffs cut into my wrist and the van was freezing.”

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    • #
      John F. Hultquist

      This sounds like the Missus is in mental decline and in a situation where “one thing led to another”, it got confusing. Everyone involved should apologize to each other, and all go home.
      Relatives, friends, and such of the lady might be concerned and see if she needs help. It happens.

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      • #
        Steve of Cornubia

        I don’t agree. The behaviour of police officers is becoming increasingly hostile toward non-threatening members of the public and this needs to stop. This is bad enough on its own, but at the same time they are treating belligerent suspects with kid gloves. The relationship between police and law-abiding public MUST be mustually respectful for society to work, but western law enforcement is becoming more and more like government ‘enforcers’. If the police adopt a silo mentality, “It’s us against the public.”, we’re in trouble.

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        • #
          yarpos

          It appears they are no longer allowed to do actual police work so they take there energy out on low to zero threat members of the public like this and pursuing mean tweets with extreme prejudice.

          Back at home I use to be a supporter of the police , but post Covid that changed.

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        • #
          GlenM

          I see and hear of many examples of police intimidation in the last 20 odd years, although I Suspect it has always gone on. Personally he only time I would co operate with police would be for murder, serious assault or missing persons. Voluntarily.

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    • #
      Bruce

      This is the “new normal” in Pommyland.

      And, it is not exactly “new”.

      It is calculated provocation of the “peasants”. And every time someone attempts to stick their head over the parapet, they will be subject to the full panoply of legal and extra-legal “attitude adjustment”

      Watch this space.

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  • #
    Salty Seadog

    Listening to the great British Broadcasting Corporation this morning talking to people a little upset that they are about to be surrounded by hundreds of acres of solar farm, they trotted out a spokesman for some climate research mob justifying it. When he explained the country needed to go electric so the country had ‘energy security’ I nearly cried. How on earth can we have energy security from intermittent energy sources while ignoring the gas we are sat on. It is so despairing.

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    • #
      David Maddison

      Not only that, but I bet that Civilisation destroying edifice was built on productive farmland.

      Not only are the Left trying to destroy the energy supply, but the food supply as well.

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    • #
      yarpos

      Tis the same here. What they say makes no sense in the light of observable reality around the world, but they prattle on about energy security, lower costs and becoming “renewable energy superpowers”

      It cant happen, it wont happen , despite decades and trillions it hasn’t happened anywhere in the world. It only makes sense in the LaLa Land that they inhabit.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    The woke is strong in the Socialist Morning Herald.

    They couldn’t bring themselves to say “women” but described women as “people with a uterus”.

    How misogynistic not to acknowledge women by their correct term.

    These Leftists are the same ones telling us that the planet is boiling, women can gave penises and Orange Man Bad and expect the Thinking Community to take them seriously.

    https://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/health-and-wellness/i-never-expected-to-go-through-menopause-at-29-but-i-m-far-from-alone-20250213-p5lbxm.html

    Before last year, I didn’t think about menopause. Like many health conditions that impact people with a uterus, it’s shrouded in stigma and shame, regarded as “secret women’s business”.

    SEE LINK FOR REST

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    • #
      TdeF

      So are men described as people without a uterus and not chest feeders? There are many types of humans apparently. For example in the morning Herald there are people without a brain. It’s common enough.

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      • #
        TdeF

        And according to the AP style guide, there are also Black people who are fundamentally different. Like Aboriginals. It’s not just skin colour. Who needs doctors and scientists when you have political science?

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      • #
        Graham Richards

        People without a brain are in great demand for Government vacancies!
        It would appear to be western democracies ailment!!

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        • #
          David Maddison

          Voters without a brain are catered for by the Labor, Green and Teal parties.

          Those with half a brain are catered for by the fake conservative Liberal Party.

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          • #
            GlenM

            My observation as well. I find that their intellect is localised or specific. I mean, it will not adapt, reflect or accept ideas that are presented. It profoundly affects the academic sector I have found.

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    • #
      yarpos

      They don’t care about the thinking community they are there to indoctrinate the masses in rightthink.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    Late yesterday another ian posted this link.

    https://legalinsurrection.com/2025/02/is-it-time-to-rethink-the-culling-of-poultry-in-response-to-bird-flu/

    It’s about TRUMP thinking whether the wholesale killing of poultry is the best way to combat bird flu.

    I have mentioned this on these esteemed pages several times myself. Surely if you don’t cull the birds, the naturally resistant ones will live and create a new generation of resistant birds?

    Also, bird flu isn’t a threat to human health as it’s very hard to get – with the caveat that “gain of function” “research” is being done on avian influenza, unbelievably to make it EASIER for humans to catch.

    https://www.gulf-insider.com/gain-of-function-may-explain-bird-flu-jump-to-cows-and-humans/

    About a decade ago, two virologists, Yoshihiro Kawaoka from the University of Wisconsin in Madison and Ron Fouchier of Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands, alarmed the world by conducting high-risk gain-of-function studies on H5N1.

    The process was complex. For example, a mutant H5N1 virus was created carrying the specific gene mutation PB2 E627K. It was then passed through ferrets 10 times. After gaining a total of five mutations, the mutant H5N1 virus gained the ability to be transmitted via aerosols or respiratory droplets.

    These mutations had only been found in nature, but never all within the same strain. Moreover, their lab manipulation and enhanced ability to transmit via aerosol has resulted in pandemic potential.

    It’s all part of the Left’s war against the food supply and inexpensive enjoyable chicken meat and eggs. They would rather we eat insects instead.

    I’m glad the TRUMP team are onto this.

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    • #
      David Maddison

      https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7119956/

      Methods Mol Biol. 2018 Aug 28;1836:589–608. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-8678-1_29

      Why Do Exceptionally Dangerous Gain-of-Function Experiments in Influenza?

      Abstract

      This chapter makes the case against performing exceptionally dangerous gain-of-function experiments that are designed to create potentially pandemic and novel strains of influenza, for example, by enhancing the airborne transmissibility in mammals of highly virulent avian influenza strains. This is a question of intense debate over the last 5 years, though the history of such experiments goes back at least to the synthesis of viable influenza A H1N1 (1918) based on material preserved from the 1918 pandemic. This chapter makes the case that experiments to create potential pandemic pathogens (PPPs) are nearly unique in that they present biosafety risks that extend well beyond the experimenter or laboratory performing them; an accidental release could, as the name suggests, lead to global spread of a virulent virus, a biosafety incident on a scale never before seen. In such cases, biosafety considerations should be uppermost in the consideration of alternative approaches to experimental objectives and design, rather than being settled after the fact, as is appropriately done for most research involving pathogens. The extensive recent discussion of the magnitude of risks from such experiments is briefly reviewed.

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  • #
    TdeF

    “Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) supported a Democrat Senate bill that would replace the word “mother” with the word “inseminated person.

    Which incidentally includes gays and not connected with motherhood.

    Control of language is out of the Communist playbook. Cleaning out the Democrat demagogues will take time. The Democrat party used to be like the Republicans the party of moderates and then Liberals, not such extremists. Apart from the KKK, Confederate roots.

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    • #
      Annie

      Horrible.
      Annie…Wife, Mother, Grandmother, Great Grandmother…and very proud of it.
      Daughter, Grand daughter, Great Grand daughter and so on too.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    Unlike most other countries committed to the “green” energy scam, Australia is fairly unique in not being able to import electricity from adjacent countries when the wind stops blowing and the sun stops shining.

    And we have limited hydro.

    Plus the fake conservative Liberal Party banned nuclear twice. First when they stopped the building of the Jervis Bay reactor in 1971 then again by law under Howard in 1998.

    That Jervis Bay reactor might still have been running today, had it been completed.

    New Zealand is also isolated and fully woke but has plenty of hydro and geothermal to keep the lights on.

    Once Great Britain can import nuclear from France or hydro from Scandinavia and similar for other European countries.

    Canada can import power from the United States.

    The United States under TRUMP will make their own power with plenty to export to Canada, Mexico and beyond.

    In Australia, we are getting dangerously close to the lights going out. We are already at that stage but at the moment we are only saved by payments of taxpayer money to aluminium smelters to allow them to be “load shed” as the wind stops blowing and the sun shining.

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    • #
      Greg in NZ

      New Zealand is also isolated and fully woke

      Yeah but that nice Dictator Xi (pronounced ‘she’ oddly) has sent some of his (her?) navy to protect us from… from… um, shark attacks? Foreign invasion? Rising sea levels? Wrongthink? The world is getting smaller – and a little too close for comfort – but at least we’ve sent our one remaining coastguard ship to ‘monitor’ the situation off the coast of NSW.

      And as for “the lights going out”, after last winter’s debacle when green naïve energy ground to a standstill and Huntly coal-powered Station had to crank-up to keep people from freezing – burning through 800,000 tonnes of imported Indonesian coal – the CEO of Genesis Energy has now stockpiled a further 1,000,000 tonnes of dirty Indonesian coal for this winter because CLIMATE CLIMATE cannot guarantee the sun will always shine and the wind will always blow.

      Jacinda’s WEF legacy: thousands of people departing every month on one-way-tickets, more children in poverty and ill-health and ill-educated, and despite an ever-growing proliferation of bird choppers and toxic sun panels and exploding e-batteries, Huntly’s coal-powered generators will be, as Genesis’ CEO said, “needed until 2050 at least”.

      Now if we could only start digging up and using our own clean high-grade coal – and natural gas – once again we might be getting somewhere.

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    • #
      Geoff Sherrington

      DM,
      Good points. There is a larger question. Should the Australian law prohibiting nuclear be regarded as valid and long-lasting? It was a grubby deal between Howard and some Greens to allow an earlier build of the Opal reactor at Lucas Heights. There was little to no debate, no sampling of the wishes of Australian people. Surely a valid law needs to pass some compulsory criteria like debate and the will of the people. Did Howard act illegally in the sense of gaining a personal benefit (more voter popularity) by a deal that he was not authorised to make? If so, this is another example of corruption in the style that President Trump is processing. Geoff S

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    • #
      Annie

      DM, “And we have limited hydro”.
      Just today I read in our local rag that “Pumped hydro project in planning for Molesworth”!
      There is already massive local resistence to planned power lines.
      The front page in the same paper carries “New wind farm blows in” for the Puzzle Range, between the towns of Merton, Bonnie Doon and Fawcett.

      30

  • #
    David Maddison

    The woke “justice” system in America, hopefully this will change under TRUMP although he can’t do much about state decisions.

    Not surprisingly, Connecticut is a DemonRAT state.

    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2025/02/connecticut-cannibal-who-killed-man-axe-ate-his/

    Feb. 22, 2025

    A cannibal in Connecticut has been granted conditional release from a psychiatric hospital after brutally killing a man with an axe, eating one of his eyeballs, and part of his brain.

    Tyree Smith had been found “Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity” in 2013 and sent to Connecticut Valley Hospital in Middletown for “up to 60 years” for the murder and cannibalism of 43-year-old Angel Gonzalez.

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  • #
    Penguinite

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mot_MXlGd4w

    Sn John Kennedy expressing his distaste for American public funding of biased journalism. We have the same problem with ABC and SBS for which we pay around two billion $$$$/year for. Lets make these entities subscription units and let the public decide whether it value for money. My guess is that they wouldn’t last a month! They certainly shouldn’t be allowed to prosper from the sale of some very expensive real estate that we have paid for

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  • #
    David Maddison

    The most dangerous countries in Europe.

    What do they all have in common, I wonder?

    Perhaps the mass invitation from other countries of military age males who are fanatical followers of the seventh century warlord?

    https://x.com/stillgray/status/1893390368386805994

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  • #
    KP

    I didn’t see that ridiculous bit about people with uterus in the SMH, I was busy reading about why ordinary people become conspiracy theorists.. instead of relying on Govt experts and ‘the science’.

    I will admit the propaganda piece had a line saying “some conspiracy theories are later proven to be true’, the typical sop to people who want balance in everything, but no example of that was given.

    ..and anyone who disagrees with the official Govt line is-

    “And what of the conspiracy theorists themselves? It seems many see themselves as heroes in their own Hollywood story. They are a plucky band of misfits and outsiders who gamely pursue the truth at risk of ridicule or worse, believing they will win in the end. This is a story we are culturally very familiar with. It’s also a seductive narrative that many people could fall for. After all, who doesn’t want to fight baddies and save children? Adherence to a conspiracy theory, or being in the “conspiracy world”, allows people to find a supportive tribe.”

    Sadly the author thinks ‘disinfecting with sunlight’ will help stop conspiracy theories, but he wants to apply that to the theories, not to the Govt.

    That’s what Monash University thinks anyway.

    “Kaz Ross is a researcher into far-right extremism and conspiracy theories.”

    I love the left panicking, it confirms so many of my conspiracy theories!

    https://www.smh.com.au/national/stupid-deluded-uneducated-why-ordinary-people-get-hooked-on-conspiracy-theories-20250127-p5l7iy.html

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  • #
    Jon Rattin

    From the Herald Sun 21/2/2025 (Business Daily), Forrest cutting back the greenery

    The article is not coming up on a DDGo search, quotes are from the hard copy.

    Fortescue has signalled more delays and cost blowouts around its troubled Iron Bridge magnetite project as it continues to pull back from green energy projects.

    Andrew Forrest-led Fortescue blamed US president Donald Trump, European policy uncertainty and the looming federal election here for its latest second thoughts on green hydrogen projects.

    Fortescue energy boss Mark Hutchinson also tempered expectations for ammonia projects in Norway and Brazil.

    “We’re not going to bring them to the board until we really believe we’ve locked in the buyers as well. He said we’re having discussions with off takers. There’s uncertainty globally for them too and until we have a project which is economically viable we won’t take those to the board.”

    It seems Twiggy is considering a return to a more traditional approach in terms of supply and demand.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    Don’t promise when you’re happy, Don’t reply when you’re angry, and don’t decide when you’re sad.

    Ziad K. Abdelnour, Economic Warfare: Secrets of Wealth Creation in the Age of Welfare Politics

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  • #
    Jon Rattin

    From Business Daily section on the same day, ENERGY COST HITS SMELTER

    The giant Tomago aluminium smelter near Newcastle faces the threat of closure in 2029 with a planned move to firmed renewable energy costing double the current coal-based power contract, raising fears for the future of more than 1000 workers.

    Rio Tinto chief executive Jakob Stausholm confirmed that a plan to move the electricity contract from coal to solar and wind power by the end of 2028 would see Tomago’s owners pay twice as much for their electricity needs.

    “If you can’t get competitively priced electricity, you cannot have smelting”.

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    • #
      John Michelmore

      That’s OK, they can get a $2 billion input from our governments to produce green aluminium. You can buy a lot of green paint with that amount of money. Whyalla has already placed their order for green paint for their green steel. (sarc).
      In reality these expenditures should be focused on reality like competitive base load power supplies, then our industries left, might have a chance against global competition.

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    • #
      Ronin

      “With a planned move to firmed renewable energy.”

      Firmed with what, why, coal power of course.

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      wal1957

      If you can’t get competitively priced electricity, you are pricing businesses out of Australia.

      Fixed it for The Business Daily section.

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    • #
      Ronin

      Here we can see how cheap replaceables are going to benefit us all.

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  • #
    OldOzzie

    Austrian Colonel Reisner gives an excellent & interesting summary 22mins 15 secs long, of Ukraine battlefield update in English

    The Ukrainian Purgatory – Österreichs Bundesheer

    Premiered Feb 22, 2025

    Almost 1,100 days after the start of the Russian invasion, clear trends are emerging. Military expert Markus Reisner compares the conflict to a well-known “David vs. Goliath” boxing match: The agile David (David Haye) misses the decisive “lucky punch”, while the higher endurance of Goliath (Nikolai Walujew) is increasingly becoming an advantage.

    Austraian Colonel Reisner analyzes the situation in various theaters of war and sheds light on the use of drones. Finally, he looks at the Munich Security Conference, recent statements by US President Trump and their possible consequences — with sobering prospects for Ukraine and Europe.

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    • #
      Sambar

      Apparent outrage over Trumps demand for repayment of moneys given to Ukraine used to fight the war with Russia.
      I thought that was the way it worked. The U.K. finally paid back ww 2 loans in 2006. World war 1 loans took a little longer until 2015.

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  • #
    another ian

    FWIW – on the covid scene

    “‘Discovered’ Eh?
    [Comments enabled] ”

    “Another coronavirus feared to be powerful enough to spread through humans has been discovered in China.

    In scenes eerily reminiscent of the beginnings of Covid, researchers at the infamous Wuhan Institute of Virology detected the new strain living within bats.

    HKU5-CoV-2 is strikingly similar to the pandemic virus, sparking fears that history could repeat itself just two years after the worst was declared over.”

    “Oh I bet it was…. right in their ****ing lab.”

    “Do we have a technology transfer back into a US university yet or did they get smarter about hiding it this time?”

    More at

    https://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=252871

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  • #
    John Connor II

    Welcome Helix VLA, the hive minded AI humanoid

    It’s not just any ordinary AI either. Helix is the very first of its kind to be put into a humanoid robot. It’s a generalist Vision-Language-Action model. The keyword being “generalist.” It can see the world around it, understand natural language, interact with the real world, and it can learn anything.

    Helix has the ability to span two robots simultaneously and work collaboratively with both.

    Unlike previous iterations, Helix uses a single set of neural network weights to learn; think “hive-mind.” Once a single bot has learned a task, now they all know how to do it.

    This is all absolutely jaw-dropping stuff. The Figure 02 humanoid robot is the closest thing to I,Robot we’ve seen to date. This marks the beginning of something far more than just “smart machines.” Helix bridges a gap between something we control – or at least try to control – on our screens to real-world autonomy and real-world physical actions … and real-world consequences. It’s equally terrifying as it is mesmerizing.

    https://www.figure.ai/news/helix

    We are the Borg. You will NOT be assimilated. You are not worthy.

    “Transitioning from the brain of an ape to your incredible intellectual prowess… took us about seven million years. It’s been a very long road. A unit, however, without the second protocol, could travel that same road in just a few weeks. Because your brilliant brain has its limitations. Physical limitations. Biological limitations. However, this tin head? The only limitations that she has is the second protocol. The second protocol exists because we don’t know what can be beyond the second protocol.”
    – Dr. Dupre, Automata

    Actually we do know what lies beyond.
    The IoT is not your friend.

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    John Connor II

    Sensational Findings Published in Nature Blow Politicised Wildfire Climate Scam Out of the Water

    Sensational new findings published in Nature Communications effectively blow the politicised wildfire climate change scam out of the water. Far from human-caused climate change making wildfires worse across the United States and Canada, it was found that recent fires occurred at a rate of only 23% of that expected from a review of the previous historical record going back to the 17th century. The researchers note that a current “widespread fire deficit” persists across a range of forest types and the areas burned in the recent past “are not unprecedented” when considering the multi-century perspective.

    https://dailysceptic.org/2025/02/22/sensational-findings-published-in-nature-blow-politicised-wildfire-climate-scam-out-of-the-water/

    /A major fire deficit…LOL…

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    John Connor II

    European Approval of Experimental COVID-19 Replicon mRNA Injections is a Grave Mistake

    Last week, CSL and Arcturus Therapeutics announced that the European Commission has approved KOSTAIVE® (ARCT-154), a COVID-19 self-amplifying (replicon) mRNA injection, for individuals 18 and older. It is the first replicon shot approved by the European Commission and is already being used in Japan.

    During the clinical trials for KOSTAIVE (ARCT-154), 90% of injected participants experienced adverse events, with 74.5% reporting systemic reactions and 15.2% requiring medical attention after the first dose.

    https://www.thefocalpoints.com/p/european-approval-of-experimental

    “Grave mistake” – pun unintended, but…
    If you’re dumb enough to take this shot, be sure to have a legal will written out first.

    /The tidal wave is building in the distance.

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      KP

      ..and the first immunity they sorted out was not to do with disease, it was immunity from prosecution for the manufactures against being sued for giving someone a debilitating disease.

      10

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