Saturday 30-05-2026 2:19am

Johannes Leak cartoon in today's Oz

No more houses, just spreading the wealth

Treasury secretary Jenny Wilkinson says the proposed reforms outlined in Jim Chalmers' fifth budget will not increase the aggregate supply of housing and are instead designed to change the "distribution of ownership", defending tax hikes in the budget because the "revenue needs to be raised from somewhere". Ms Wilkinson's comments at the Australian Business Economists forum yesterday came just hours after the Treasurer released a statement arguing reforms to negative gearing and the capital gains tax would "support investment in new housing supply". Ms Wilkinson also declared business leaders were wrong to claim a higher capital gains tax would deter investment, in comments showcasing the growing divergence between the government and corporate Australia. She also revealed the top 1% of income earners would have each paid an extra $400,000 tax in their lifetime if Labor's proposed tax rules had been operating for the past 25 years. After Mr Chalmers on Thursday introduced a bill into parliament that would clamp down on negative gearing and the CGT discount, Anthony Albanese poured cold water on the prospect of broad concessions to small business for the new CGT regime. "What we're doing as part of tax reform is increasing the integrity of the system, so people shouldn't expect big changes," the Prime Minister told the ABC. While the government is consulting business on potential updates to existing CGT exemptions, senior sources have this week told The Australian the preference of both Mr Albanese and Mr Chalmers is to contain any concessions to tech-focused start-ups. Greg Brown and Matthew Cranston report in this morning's The Australian


 SPORT:

Yasmin Meakes with the Origin shield. Pic: Getty Images.

The mighty unstoppable

A hard win for the NRL blue ladies against those red devils and a couple of records to boot while down south in the AFL Hawthorn resoundingly beat St Kilda 125-67!.[click to read more]

Pamela Whaley in the Oz muses NSW already won the series but now they've made State of Origin history.

Amid calls for bigs changes to the calendar next year, the Blues became the first women’s team to cleansweep an Origin series and the first NSW team since 2000 to win 3-0 with a 12-4 victory over Queensland at Cbus Super Stadium last night.

It marks an incredible milestone for John Strange’s NSW side, who are now back-to-back series winners and looked unstoppable throughout all three games. [click to read more]

They won the series with a 14-10 win at Suncorp Stadium a fortnight ago but Queensland were desperate to avoid a history making whitewash last night.

With pride on the line in front of a home crowd, Queensland showed plenty of energy in defence and held out an early onslaught from the Blues who threw everything at the line.

Spirited NSW winger Jayme Fressard was denied by a brilliant tackle from Jasmine Peters, while Blues skipper Isabelle Kelly finally crossed in the 27th minute as the defence grew tired.

Shortly afterwards Peters scored for her first try of the series on Queensland’s first venture at the other end of the field.

Midway through the second half NSW pounced on a stack of possession, and a try to Fressard put the result to bed.

Kelly saved her best game of the series for last and was named player of the match for her efforts, while Blues second-rower Yasmin Meakes was awarded the Katrina Fanning Medal as player of the series.

It was a scrappy end to the series for both teams with a combined 22 errors for the night.

Completion rates were an issue across all three games and will continue to be a talking point for women’s Origin as long as the NRLW season starts after the series is over. [click the intro to return other stories]


 STOCKMARKET:

U.S. inflation increased at fastest pace in three years

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq posted record closing highs on Thursday after news reports said the U.S. and Iran had reached a draft agreement to extend their ceasefire for 60 days, while investors also digested key inflation data., Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]

The news was first reported by Axios, which said that negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program would be held during the truce period but that the plan still needed the approval of President Donald Trump.

Traders are on a hair trigger with the back-and-forth on deal news and have been leaning long to avoid getting trampled by a better-than-expected outcome. The harder part is that the inflationary forces may not abate as fast as markets want, said Jamie Cox, managing partner at Harris Financial Group.

Economic data showed U.S. inflation increased at its fastest pace in three years in April, driven by higher energy prices amid the Iran war.

Meanwhile, U.S. GDP for the first quarter was revised lower to a 1.6% annualized increase, with momentum expected to slow this quarter.

According to preliminary data, the S&P 500 gained 43.50 points, or 0.58%, to end at 7,563.71 points, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 239.79 points, or 0.91%, to 26,917.47. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 24.11 points, or 0.04%, to 50,666.29.

The S&P 500 healthcare index posted strong gains. Eli Lilly advanced after CVS Health said it would restore the drugmaker’s weight-loss injection, Zepbound, to its coverage and add its newly approved obesity pill Foundayo.

Tech shares also moved higher. Microsoft gained after news website the Information reported that the company would release a new coding model next week.

Marvell Technology rose after UBS raised its target price to $230 from $195.

The company’s shares have more than doubled so far this year.

Snowflake SNOW.N shares soared after the data analytics firm lifted its annual product revenue forecast and announced a five-year AI infrastructure deal worth $6 billion with Amazon Web Services.

Peers Datadog and MongoDB also climbed.

Renewed confidence in AI and earnings growth momentum have underscored the recent rally despite the Middle East tensions, which have increased inflationary expectations.

Markets continue to look through these risks because the global economy and corporate earnings remain relatively resilient, said Jitania Kandhari, deputy CIO, solutions and multi-assets, at Morgan Stanley Investment Management.

Geopolitical instability could ultimately accelerate spending in areas tied to AI, including cybersecurity, defense technology, energy infrastructure and supply-chain resiliency, reinforcing the long-term investment case.

While the S&P 500 is trading at roughly 21 to 22 times forward earnings versus a trailing 10-year average of 19.7 times, investors are less concerned because earnings expectations are rising faster than stock prices, Kandhari said.

Among other movers, climbed after the discount retailer lifted its full-year profit forecast, while Best Buy also rose after the electronics vendor forecast second-quarter sales above estimates.

Drone companies rose after the Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump administration was in talks to fund drone firms. Shares of Unusual Machines surged.


 NEWS:

🕵 The Bar
no bar to
criticism

In an extraordinary swipe, silk Allan Myers has hit back at claims by High Court judge Robert Beech-Jones that the conservative Samuel Griffith Society is trying to stack the courts with right-wing jurists, telling him to stay out of politics and stick to the job of deciding cases according to law, reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

Just do your job as a judge, the King’s Counsel told Justice Beech-Jones, in blunt comments to The Australian that reflect growing disquiet in legal circles at what appears to be a war within the High Court.

The comments by Mr Myers, president of the Samuel Griffith Society, follow a speech in which Justice Beech-Jones claimed Sir Samuel Griffith ∼ a founding father of federation and first chief justice of the High Court ∼ has been culturally appropriated … for ideological and political ends.

This assertion is false and no basis for it is made in the judge’s address, Mr Myers (right) said, pointing out that High Court judges and other distinguished Australians who had spoken at society events were giving their own views, not those of the society.

One of Australia’s most respected barristers and almost certainly the richest, Mr Myers has built a personal fortune in agribusiness and real estate holdings, making him one of the few figures in the legal world unafraid of directly criticising a High Court judge.

Mr Myers noted that Justice Beech-Jones had been invited to speak at the Samuel Griffith Society’s upcoming conference in August but had declined because he did not participate in political gatherings.

If that is the case, he should not himself venture in the field of 'political' debate, especially about matters relating to the High Court, including its decisions construing and applying the Constitution, Mr Myers said. If the judge is worried about being embroiled in political debate, then he need only confine himself strictly to the performance of his judicial functions: No speeches, no papers just do your job as a judge.

Justice Beech-Jones’s combative speech appears to have been directed at his more conservative High Court colleague judge Simon Steward, who has addressed the society’s annual conference three times.

The jousting has set tongues wagging in chambers around the country, with some speculating Justice Beech-Jones might be pitching his credentials to the Albanese government in anticipation of the pending retirement of Chief Justice Stephen Gageler in July 2028.

Some lawyers wondered whether, in mounting the broadside, Justice Beech-Jones was doing the bidding of Chief Justice Gageler, who sits at the more progressive end of the bench on implied rights such as the implied right to political freedom.

Mr Myers asked: Did (Justice Beech-Jones) discuss these views, indeed any part of his remarkable departure from accepted judicial behaviour, with the Chief Justice or other judges of the court before delivering his address?

The Australian asked Chief Justice Gageler a series of questions, including whether he had seen a copy of the speech before it was delivered and whether he shared Justice Beech-Jones’s views about the Samuel Griffith Society but received no response.

Mr Myers rejected Justice Beech-Jones’s claim that the papers presented at the society’s meetings were the papers of a pre-social media echo chamber, asking whether that included members of the Judge’s Court who had spoken at society events.

It was also wrong, Mr Myers said, of the judge to suggest that students who participated in the society’s affairs may be disadvantaged by doing so.

The power of the office of High Court judge must be used only for the purposes of performing the duties of that office, he said.

If it is used otherwise, the court is brought into disrepute and citizens are inhibited in expressing opinions or failing to do so for fear of judicial disapprobation.

Mr Myers said Justice Beech-Jones (left) was fretting about the Samuel Griffith Society telling university students that the High Court was not doing a good job of interpreting the Constitution, but such debates were necessary.

He says that judicial decisions can 'be criticised' but not in a 'tenor, tone and uniform direction' that he does not like. Too bad. If you do not like criticism, write more persuasive reasons for judgment..




 LOCAL CHATTER:
Jelle van den Berg and his Man Mountain exhibition (sample above) is on in God's Waiting Room (the church hall) this weekend alongside the museum. This is its last weekend.
♦♦♦♦
Speed cameras to return to Murrurundi but the pedestrian crossing will remain the same. Thanks to Carlo Bertozzi for his persistance and website presence.
♦♦♦♦
Tomorrow the Murrurundi Ladies Tackle team play Merriwa at Merriwa at 3pm and the boys will be playing Denman at 12:20, in Denman. Big Sunday coming up. It is National Tree Day and also the last market day for the next couple of months as winter starts to set in. The Big Morning Tea is on in downtown Murrurundi's CTC while over in the church (Anglican) there is a celebration thankksgiving service for the ministry of Rev Barbara Morgan and a blessing service for the St Paul's Memorial Meditation Grove at 10:00 (and lunch in the grove). There is also a memorial talk to commemorate Charlotte Drake-Brockman's artistic contribution to the region at Fran Wachtel's barn on Sunday at 2pm.

 NEWS:



🚴 E-bikers
terrify
walkers

A group of mums and their teenage daughters were forced to call the cops when a gang of brazen young e-bikers surrounded them and refused to move, reports the news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

A large group of teenage boys on e-bikes have surrounded and intimidated a crowd of women south of Sydney.

The pack was made up of around 20 teens, who surrounded a walking tour, made up of women, including mums with their teenage daughters, on Sunday afternoon.

The Wollongong tour was operated by She Shapes History, a walking tour that celebrates the historical contributions women have made to the region.

Lindsay Burlton had been leading the private, pre-booked tour through the area when they were circled and trapped by verbally confrontational teenage e-bike riders.

A couple of boys came over and asked to join the tour. When I said no, they persisted. One got off his bike and walked into the middle of the group, Ms Burlton told news.com.au.

When the group made attempts to move away or defuse the situation, they were pursued through the public space at the city’s well-known Flagstaff Point lighthouse.

When the women tried to move away, the group of boys followed. They twisted words, mocked them, surrounded them. Someone in the tour group eventually called the police, the guide said.

The frightening encounter lasted up to 15 minutes, leaving everyone shaken.

I was surprised that they then came into our space and continued to follow us when we tried to move away. It quickly escalated and the pack mentality of the group was disturbing and confronting, Ms Burlton recounted.

Police were called to handle the situation, but by the time they arrived, the group had already fled.

NSW Police told news.com.au: Wollongong Police District responded to reports of approximately 15-20 e-bike riders harassing another group of people walking on Marine Drive, Wollongong.

Police patrolled the area; however, both groups were unable to be located.

[click the intro to return to front page]





🛫 Barnaby and
Pauline just
folowing
the rules!

Parliamentary records show the One Nation MPs claimed travel expenses for fundraising events on exclusive cruise liner where mining billionaire owns an apartment writes The Guardian website. [click to read the rest of the story].

Pauline Hanson and Barnaby Joyce billed taxpayers more than $3000 to attend fundraising and donor events on board the luxury cruise ship MV The World, hosted by the mining billionaire Gina Rinehart.

Guardian Australia can reveal that in December last year Hanson and Joyce attended multiple private events on the world’s largest privately owned cruise ship, on which Australia’s richest person owns an exclusive multimillion-dollar apartment.

Both politicians claimed taxpayer-funded travel to attend the events.

Under rules for MPs, taxpayer-funded resources can only be claimed if the dominant purpose of the travel is for parliamentary business, which excludes fundraising events or soliciting donations.

The One Nation leader and her daughter, Lee Hanson, also hosted business leaders for a private lunch on board the luxury ship when it was in port in Hobart on January 2.

Rinehart is not believed to have been in attendance for the Hobart event and One Nation has refused to explain how Hanson and her daughter were able to gain access to the exclusive ship, which is restricted to its ultra-wealthy residents and their guests.

MV The World is described as the ultimate on-water luxury experience for its millionaire and billionaire owners, with the ship boasting the only full-sized tennis court at sea, a retractable marina, multiple high-end restaurants and a 15,000-bottle wine cellar. Residences are priced between $4m and $21.5m.

According to a report published in The Australian, Rinehart hosted Hanson and a group of former Liberal donors while the ship was docked in Brisbane on December 17 last year. The mining magnate used the occasion to auction off a Mar-a-Lago dinner with the US president, Donald Trump and bejewelled Trump handbags to raise $300,000 for One Nation.

While not reported at the time, Joyce also attended this event, and parliamentary expenses records show he claimed flights from Sydney to be in Brisbane on December 16, before travelling to Newcastle the next day.

The Guardian can reveal that Joyce and Hanson subsequently attended another private event on MV The World five days later with a group of donors while the ship was in Sydney. Both MPs claimed flights from the taxpayer to be in Sydney on that date.

Joyce claimed a flight from his home base of Tamworth to be in Sydney on December 21, with the three air fares for both events costing $1264. He also addressed the anti-immigration Put Australia First rally on the afternoon of December 21, which took place a week after the Bondi beach terror attack.

The former Nationals leader claimed $1500 in accommodation for one night in Brisbane and two nights in Sydney either side of the events, justifying the claims as for party political duties.

Hanson claimed about $720 for a return day trip air fare from Brisbane to Sydney on December 22, along with a privately chauffeured taxpayer-funded Comcar. Hanson’s office did not respond to questions about her reasons for being in Sydney on that day.

The guidelines for parliamentarians state that party political activities are allowed, but you must not claim work expenses or use public resources for the purpose of fundraising, soliciting donations or attending fundraising events and activities — unless related to charity.

Joyce confirmed to the Guardian that he had attended the fundraising events. He said they had been hosted by Rinehart but the events were of no personal benefit.

Yes, I go to fundraisers for One Nation, just like I went to fundraisers for the Liberal Party and obviously for the National Party. I go to heaps of fundraisers but I never get any money myself.

It is just part of the job. If anyone thinks there’s a great thrill in going to a fundraiser rather than going home, well, they're wrong.

He said the decision to bill the cost to taxpayers would have been made by his office, saying he was at arm’s length from it and they follow the rules. [click the intro to return to front page]




 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
Federal Court has ruled against a women-only app founder in a landmark transgender discrimination case, forcing her to pay compensation and sparking fears about women’s rights, writes Peta Credlin in the Sunday Telegraph today. [click to read more]

On Friday afternoon, as I sat down to work on this column, I honestly didn't know where to focus first.

Was the biggest issue the loss of integrity in our public life, after the Prime Minister ("my word is my bond") admitted saying 50 times he would not change any of the rules around investment properties but did it anyway?

Or was it the reality, confirmed in the budget papers, that under Labor’s record high immigration, Australia will hit 30 million people by 2030, despite nowhere near enough housing for those here now? Or was it the revelation that Labor has just brought in death duties by stealth?

Giggle v Tickle

As I debated all of this, the Federal Court handed down its decision in the long-running Giggle v Tickle case, where Sall Grover, a woman and founder of a women’s online networking app (called Giggle For Girls) was accused of discrimination against a transgender woman, the biologically male Roxanne Tickle, who sought to join the women-only app.

In a devastating blow for the rights of women and girls in this country, the court rejected scientific fact and declared that sex was more than biology (it isn't), and so Grover lost and now owes compensation to Tickle.

The fact that the taxpayer-funded Human Rights Commission was a part of this legal action to deny all women our biological rights is appalling. The fact that Grover now has to rely on donations from ordinary people to defend rights that should not need defending says everything about the state of woke policy and activist courts in Australia.

But what’s perhaps most galling of all is that we are only in this position of denying chromosomal reality because Julia Gillard, ironically the first female prime minister, stripped the word woman from the sex discrimination act. Before then, this case would never have got to court.

Anyone for any toilet

But what this latest decision does (and let’s hope it gets overturned when Sall Grover heads to the High Court), is that women’s sport, toilets, access to medical services, schools, clubs, domestic violence shelters, prisons ∼ the whole box and dice ∼ are open slather to any man who declares he is a woman.

Gender used to be what you called yourself, sex is what XY or XX made you. Not any more, thanks to this decision. And Gillard too, who changed the law just TWO DAYS before she was rolled by Kevin Rudd in June 2013 — how dare she lecture anyone on misogyny.

But on Friday afternoon, the bad news kept coming.

To add Labor insult to Labor injury, dropped out when they hoped no-one was watching was news from the Victorian government that not only was Daniel Andrews going to get a bronze statue in his honour but that it was already being made. You can't make this stuff up, can you?

In memory of stupidity

Given Victoria has a daily interest bill of $24 million, a $130,000 statue is a rounding-error but it’s the attempt to force Victorians to honour the man who locked them up for two years, ruined businesses, blew out debt, kowtowed to China, dialled up woke and made the once-proud state an international laughing stock that’s tipped people over the edge.

Am I the only one asking how the heck did we get here?

And, more to the point, how do we turn it around or, God forbid, is it even possible?

Never trust any leader again

If Albanese is allowed to get away with his massive budget lie, then we will never be able to trust any leader again. And if we can't ask questions before an election and base our decisions on what they tell us and hold them to it, then democracy is dead.

For all of Labor’s talk about intergenerational equity, the budget hits younger Australians the hardest. The PM says breaking his word on negative gearing is about them, but how can it be when they will never be able to use negatively gearing (as he has) to build up a nest egg but those doing it now can keep it up?

Buy a new-build property instead, Labor tells investors. But again, how’s that fair for young people given this is what they typically buy as a first home and, now, they're going to face even more competition as investors move in? Even Labor’s own budget papers admit that these changes will likely increase rents (as they did in the Keating era before he was forced to back down) and do little to increase the stock of available homes.

And then there’s the tax on aspiration (CGT changes) before they get you from the grave (the hit on trusts).

Liberal backbone

Thankfully, the Liberals have finally found a bit of policy backbone, and a bit of political mongrel.

Angus Taylor’s reply to Labor’s budget speech felt like the start of the Coalition getting its mojo back. He made the bold move to end bracket creep once and for all by indexing income tax thresholds, meaning low- and middle-income earners won't get punished for getting ahead. On migration, he went for the jugular and landed a bullseye if the hyperventilating from Labor MPs is any guide. The PM in particular was hysterical, declaring it was un-Australian to divide people between those who are migrant and those who are not.

That is not what Taylor did. He divided them between Australian citizen and non-citizen and said that, under the Coalition, only citizens would get access to the pension, the dole, the NDIS and other welfare.

Help for no commitment

Now what is unfair about that? Why should your taxes carry people who have made no formal commitment to this country? Right now, people can live here for decades, take the money and never pledge loyalty to Australia and its people. Taylor says not any more.

Add in the Treasurer’s announcement of a new Working Australians Tax Offset (a pollster-named handout if ever there was one) of $250 a year (or $4.80 a week) and rightly people are angry. In his budget speech, Jim Chalmers called his WATO meaningful but what’s meaningful about 68 cents a day when the cost of everything has skyrocketed? It’s not meaningful, it’s insulting.

(And I might add, it’s still not even the $275 Albanese promised off their power bills).

Albo's right for a change

Anthony Albanese said that this budget is full of Labor values and it is — the socialist values that attack the fair-go, break trust, and hit middle Australia even harder

For the Liberals, there could be no better ground than this to fight Labor.

If the Coalition holds its nerve and campaigns every day like its life depends on it (because, frankly, it does) then this budget could well be the beginning of the end for the Albanese government.

But only if they work, day and night, to take the fight up to Labor. Labor is the target, not each other and not One Nation.

THUMBS UP

Jacinta Nampijinpa Price: Her emotional, fighting speech in the Senate is a must-watch as she demanded culture takes a back seat to better protect Aboriginal children.

THUMBS DOWN

Military witch hunt: Another $43m in Labor’s budget to investigate soldiers on top of the $350m that the Brereton process has cost taxpayers already.


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth, released 20 years ago this week, was an extraordinary cultural phenomenon. Honoured by the Norwegian Nobel Committee as the work of "the great communicator", the film rapidly acquired immense authority, Henry Ergas reminds in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

Yet with so many of its dramatic predictions in tatters, the question is no longer whether the film was right or wrong. It is how a misleading narrative acquired such power that it helped make economic self-harm the West’s supreme moral virtue.

The great thinkers of the Enlightenment would have viewed the spectacle with disbelief. Reason’s march, wrote John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon in Cato’s Letters, was sure to expose the ravings of Oracles and Seers as idle and superstitious Fables.

And by daring to know, added Immanuel Kant, mankind would be released from its self-imposed tutelage to falsehoods, submitting every claim to remorseless examination.

Disappearance of human credulity

Transferring that emancipatory promise from philosophy to science, the 19th century displayed even greater confidence in the disappearance of human credulity. The unveiling of nature’s laws, said Auguste Comte, would inaugurate a religion of humanity that worshipped the scientific method. Freed from the false methods of metaphysics, the human mind would at last possess the key to the truth.

Yet the 19th century’s cult of science hardly banished the supernatural. It merely recast it in scientific form. Even as philosophers proclaimed rationality’s triumph, spiritualism swept the West, with mediums and seances presented as science’s latest frontier. The age that marvelled at electricity and the telegraph proved equally eager to drape mystery in the rhetoric of experiment, observation and empirical verification.

Nor were the period’s most eminent scientists immune to mystery’s lure. Among spiritualism’s ardent defenders were Alfred Russel Wallace, co-discoverer with Charles Darwin of natural selection, and distinguished physicist Oliver Lodge.

Its advocates also included such formidable leaders as William Gladstone, Alfred Deakin, Stanley Baldwin and Canada’s greatest 20th-century prime minister, William Mackenzie King, whose conversations with Franklin D. Roosevelt reportedly continued long after Roosevelt’s death.

Spiritualism’s delusions

But spiritualism’s delusions were comparatively benign, comforting millions of bereaved parents and widowers. It was Marxism that proved to be the most catastrophic product of the 19th century’s gifting of scientific authority to myth.

Marxism’s claims were vast. As Engels declared at Marx’s graveside in 1883, his friend had achieved for society what Darwin had achieved for nature — the discovery of history’s law of development, whose unfolding was as inevitable as a law of physics. But Marxism went even further, combining scientism with 19th-century Romanticism’s apocalyptic imagination.

Marx had said that capitalism would be shaken (erschüttert) by its mounting contradictions; when editing Das Kapital’s third volume, Friedrich Engels changed it to collapsed (zusammengebracht). Capitalism’s destruction was a scientific certainty, he claimed, for it was racing to ruin like a locomotive whose jammed safety valve the driver is too weak to open.

From this emerged Marxism’s moral absolutism. Apocalyptic visions had long envisaged a final struggle between the forces of God and the forces of Satan; Marxism translated that struggle into secular form.

Noxious bourgeois vermin

Those who opposed scientific socialism were worse than merely mistaken: by breaking the higher law of history, they became enemies not just of the proletariat but of humanity. The distance from that to Lenin’s demand for the extermination of noxious bourgeois vermin was alarmingly short.

It was that same moral and psychological absolutism that resurfaced, long after communism’s collapse, in the secular religion proclaimed by An Inconvenient Truth. But its apocalypticism, although also clad in scientific garb, does not belong to the 19th century’s rationalist certainties; it comes suffused with the Middle Ages' prophetic terrors.

Medieval apocalypticism was, for example, obsessed with dating the end times. Joachim of Fiore determined that the Antichrist would appear after 42 generations of 30 years, while Pope Innocent III’s Quia maior performed elaborate numerological exegeses upon the Beast’s number, 666.

Climate discourse’s own numerology mirrors that obsession: 12 years, eight years, 1.5 degrees, 350 parts per million, net zero by 2050. Each figure is freighted with the urgency of revelation and the authority of numerical precision — only to be quietly superseded when the appointed hour passes uneventfully.

Just renew the countdowns

Failed prophecies, Richard Landes showed, didn't destroy medieval apocalyptic movements; they intensified them as the deadline was recalibrated. So too with the ever-contracting windows to climate catastrophe, every expiration yielding not disillusionment but a new countdown, a new threshold and a new call for repentance.

In exactly the same way, medieval apocalypticism divided the world into the children of light and the children of darkness. Those who doubted the end-time’s imminence were Satan’s keepmates; those who questioned its numerological proofs were the bastard offspring of the Antichrist.

Climate discourse reproduces this structure. Sceptics are not people who need to be convinced; they are deniers — a term calculated to demonise them with the moral infamy of Holocaust denial. Rather than meriting a serious reply, they have to be mercilessly exposed as the malign agents of self-interest.

But the consequences of this Manichean outlook, with its demand for an embodiment of absolute evil, are graver yet. The apocalyptic movements of the 12th century drew an ever-tighter circle around the elect, expelling from the community of the saved heretics, schismatics and, above all, Jews — whose continued existence figured in the eschatological imagination as a fatal obstacle to the coming of the heavenly kingdom.

Climate activists' sense of fury

From this sprang an uncontrollable rage that all too readily transmuted into violence.

The climate activists share that sense of fury; what lends it still greater intensity is that fury is almost all they possess.

Medieval apocalypticism held out the promise of a Beautiful Ending: the millennium, the reign of the saints, the New Jerusalem. Marxism preserved that structure: the dictatorship of the proletariat would culminate in eternal abundance.

But in climate catastrophism, the utopian horizon has withered away. And because the positive vision is so threadbare, while the visions of devastation are so overwhelming, the movement’s emotional grammar is saturated with rage: rage at those who refuse to submit, rage at those who continue to doubt, rage at those who stand in the way.

Little wonder climate activists deride democracy. Instead of medieval apocalypticism’s Beautiful Ending, climate catastrophism offers only Dutiful Compliance — the insistence, echoing Marxism, that humanity can be saved solely through obedience to science’s supposedly inexorable laws, as interpreted by its infallible prophets.

The science is in; the messy trade-offs that are democracy’s way of managing complex and contentious issues are out — with raising them akin to apostasy.

These are, in other words, true fanatics, willing, in Voltaire’s words, to inundate the world with blood for the sake of unintelligible sophisms. That the Greens can be climate extremists one day and admirers of Hamas’s death cult the next is therefore hardly surprising.

Therein, 20 years later, lies the tragedy. Science hasn't killed apocalypticism or curbed its dangers; it has merely dressed the apocalyptic delusions in new robes. And the civilisation that believed it had escaped the ravings of Oracles and Seers has ended by canonising them anew — with Al Gore as their most enriched and exalted evangelist.



 FEATURE:


 OVERSEAS:

An albino buffalo in Bangladesh hit the headlines today when the country's government saved it from being sacrificed. What was so special about this particular animal … ????

The London Telegraph writes More than 600,000 16 to 24-year-olds are not in work or searching for a job, according to official data released today. The cost of this worklessness crisis? £125bln a year, nearly double the nation's entire defence budget. Emma Taggart reports. Elsewhere, Tony Diver reports that Cabinet ministers attempted to conceal their messages with Lord Mandelson from Parliament. This revelation comes just one week before the release of the Mandelson files. Chris Evans, editor writes Latest headlines: ♦ Inside the PoW camp holding Putin's brainwashed soldiers. ♦ Did the CIA poison Gordon Banks? ♦ Plus, the healthiest high-protein supermarket ready meals. ♦ Fewer men to get prostate cancer screening despite campaign. ♦ Police treated stab victim as a racist while he lay dying. ♦ Ousted BP chairman attacks board over expensing Wimbledon tickets. ♦ Don't rinse your feet, Bournemouth Water tells beachgoers. ♦ US: Iran's air base attack an 'egregious' ceasefire violation.




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  • The tik-toks have it

    At Milan Design Week, just following Watches and Wonders, Jaeger-LeCoultre staged The Perpetual Timekeeper, a sprawling two-floor exhibition dedicated not to wristwatches, but to Atmos clocks-the mysterious, glass-encased objects that have quietly occupied one of the most intriguing corners of the maison's history since 1928. ROBB Report.

  • Powerhouse art work

    British Indian artist, 57-year-old Bharti Kher, has been commissioned by Powerhouse Parramatta to create a large-scale public artwork for the forthcoming museum, which is slated to open later this year in Parramatta, Western Sydney. Titled Tree of Life, Kher's project is a seven-meter-tall, totem-like bronze sculpture of fourteen heads stacked atop one another, encapsulating themes of ancestral memory, interconnectedness, and community, reports artasiapacific.com



The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email