Thursday 14-05-2026 4:57pm

Political disarray

We have just had a crap left-wing budget (wouldn't impress Keating though). What do we get from our Liberal leaders? The Trivago sand heads reckons migrants should not get benefits untill they become citizens! The price of everything is going up (don't believe that crap in the Aldi adverts about not having to check prices) and they talk about immigrant's rights? The Liberal Party is showing no signs of getting anywhere near the front line and disappearing further into the abyss. The press is freely predicting their demise but you don't really follow that uninformed lot along with predictions the Redhead will storm through the ranks. Wouldn't put money on it. The swing to the right in overseas politics is being predicted here but Albo's paternal politics sheltering under a bird's left wing still commands a lead. Barnaby knew which horse to jump on but then Barnaby has jumped too early before and is no great shakes hisself. My bet is Matt Canavan.


 SPORT:


 STOCKMARKET:

All's steady in the US Money ship

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq gained ground on Wednesday with a boost from artificial intelligence-related tech shares, which helped markets look past hotter-than-expected inflation data and the growing probability that the Federal Reserve will hold to its restrictive monetary policy for the foreseeable future, Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq reversed earlier declines to notch fresh record closing highs, as chip stocks rebounded from Tuesday’s decline.

Six of the Magnificent Seven group of AI-related megacaps gained between 1.4% and 3.9%.

In the face of continued hot inflation data, technology remains resilient, said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group in Omaha, Nebraska. And after some weakness yesterday, the chip stocks came soaring back today.

A report from the Labor Department showed producer prices jumped by 1.4% last month, the largest monthly increase in four years. While the surge was largely driven by crude supply disruption due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the report showed soaring oil prices are beginning to seep into other segments of the economy, and suggested that rising inflation is becoming pervasive.

Recent inflation data is dousing any remaining hopes for a near-term rate cut from the Federal Reserve. In fact, Boston Fed President Susan Collins said on Wednesday that a rate hike could be in the cards if inflation pressures fail to subside.

Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump’s nominee to succeed Fed Chair Jerome Powell, was confirmed by the Senate in a vote along party lines.

I would just be careful to not overlook the risk of a more prolonged period of inflation and elevated interest rates, said Jim Baird, chief investment officer at Plante Moran Financial Advisors in Southfield, Michigan. He added that the PPI report reinforces the inflation risk narrative and at least makes the case for a longer pause at the Fed.

Trump arrived in Beijing, along with an entourage that included Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang and Elon Musk, ahead of a two-day summit with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping. Topics on the agenda include urging Xi to open up to U.S. businesses and maintaining a fragile trade truce. Trump will also seek to bolster his approval rating, which has been battered by the Iran war and resulting surge in energy prices.

Nvidia and Tesla shares advanced 2.3% and 2.7%, respectively.

The meeting occurs amid China’s warnings regarding U.S. arms sales to Taiwan and criticism over proposed legislation that would make it harder for Chinese chipmakers to produce AI semiconductors.

President Trump took almost a small army with him to meet with the Chinese leaders and President Xi, Detrick said. With all the negative news about Iran, he wants to walk away from this meeting in China with potentially some significant deals.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 67.36 points, or 0.14%, to 49,693.20, the S&P 500 gained 43.29 points, or 0.58%, to 7,444.25 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 314.14 points, or 1.20%, to 26,402.34.

Among the 11 major sectors of the S&P 500, communication services and tech enjoyed the largest percentage gains, while utilities were the biggest laggards.

Morgan Stanley raised its annual target for the S&P 500 index to 8,000 from 7,800, saying U.S. stocks have enough room to rally as companies continue to post strong earnings.

Ford surged 13.2%, its biggest one-day percentage jump in six years, after Morgan Stanley called the automaker’s energy business and its partnership with Chinese battery giant CATL an underappreciated competitive advantage.

Nebius Group jumped 15.7% after the AI cloud firm reported a nearly eightfold rise in quarterly revenue.

EchoStar climbed 3.0% the day after the Federal Communications Commission’s approval of the $40 billion sale of wireless spectrum to SpaceX and AT&T.

Cryptocurrency firms Coinbase and Strategy slid 2.8% and 3.5%, respectively, dragged down by weakness in bitcoin and ethereum .

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.21-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 433 new highs and 175 new lows on the NYSE.

On the Nasdaq, 2,273 stocks rose and 2,450 fell as declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.08-to-1 ratio.

The S&P 500 posted 37 new 52-week highs and 46 new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 119 new highs and 191 new lows.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 19.03 billion shares, compared with the 18.12 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.


 NEWS:

🏢 The learning
class is not
impressed
with Jim

Labor’s tax grab in the name of fixing intergenerational inequity will punish the very generation they claim to be helping reports The Australian today's website.

Anthony Kolmac should be the young voter Jim Chalmers won over with a budget pitched at scaling back booming wealth held by older Australians. [click to read more]

Instead, he says younger people will be hit with higher rents while facing much more significant hits to their ability to generate enough wealth to enter the housing market.

The 20-year-old, who has built a $50,000 share portfolio to help fund his first home, said the overhaul of capital gains tax and negative gearing blindsided those trying to enter the property market. It will significantly hinder my ability to create wealth as it will ultimately delay the process (to save for a deposit) significantly, Mr Kolmac said. I will have to save even more money to be able to afford what I would have once been able to afford a lot earlier.

Mr Kolmac is one of more than 500,000 younger Australians who will be hit with higher tax burdens after Mr Chalmers rocked investment markets by scrapping the capital gains tax discount in favour of an indexation model. The changes include a minimum 30% CGT rate, which hurts people with lower marginal rates.

Younger Australians are investing in the sharemarket much earlier than their parents' generation, with a range of investing apps and platforms making it much easier to transact using as little as $500. Betashares Investment Trends ETF Report 2025 found 40% of the young cohort were investing to maximise capital growth, followed by 30% chasing a sustainable income stream.

For now, they can access the 50% CGT discount for assets held more than a year. But from July 1, 2027, that will change as gains are assessed under the new inflation indexation model.

Betashares founder and CEO Alex Vynokur criticised the CGT changes, warning they would hurt younger Australians trying to get ahead. More than 516,000 Australians aged 18 to 34 invested in the sharemarket through ETFs, —according to Betashares. Extending CGT changes to shares, ETFs and investment funds is a retrograde step that reveals an abandonment of ambition, stacking the deck against the very Australians working and saving hardest to get ahead, he said.

Millions have turned to investment markets precisely because property is out of reach … higher taxes on shares and investment funds will remove the pathway that everyday Australians rely on to build a deposit needed to enter the property market.

Accounting assistant Paulina Demetriou said the budget changes had made building wealth harder when her generation already faced higher costs in general. It’s going to be harder and that’s because we have less access to the resources needed to gain wealth, Ms Demetriou said.

We can't benefit as much from the shares that we have, which means that we have less wealth over time and it’s going to be harder to get a deposit on a house, she said. It means it limits our options for wealth building. For example, like now we might have to work extra jobs to try and build wealth quicker because our shares can't assist us. So I think it has prolonged (how long it will take) to gain wealth.

Mechanical engineering student Jude Cassar is just 18 but has invested a $1000 trial amount into Commonwealth Bank shares, hoping to hold the stock long-term to eventually secure a 10 to 20% home deposit. However, he said the CGT changes made him less confident to invest. You're going to make less, your expected value is less. So yeah, you're going to invest less, Mr Cassar said.

It will force young people into working more, which will entrap them more which is not good for being creative, living the life you want to live.

He added that the federal budget changes would keep his generation stuck in the system a lot more than they have ever been.

Law and economics student Bassel Beydoun said the tax reforms were clipping the wings of young investors. He said the changes were a Band-Aid fix that overlooked his generation’s financial reality. The 20-year-old who lives pay cheque to pay cheque said he had invested an $8000 lump sum into Helloworld Travel as a quick turnaround to fund a trip to Japan.

He said the government’s move unfairly punished those who invest on a short-term basis. Young people did not have the capital to hold shares during economic slumps or wait out long-term market cycles, he added.

With traditional wealth-building pathways in property and shares now hindered, he said his alternative options were bleak. I just have to start a business, hey? he said, adding his only other hope was to land a good job straight out of uni.

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 LOCAL CHATTER:
And we are sad to see the Quirindi Advocate has followed the closure of the Northern Daily Leader. The Leader and it's printing press, are owned by Antony Catalano and Alex Waislitz at Australian Community Media. That mob closed a lot of the country newspapers, including the Scone Advocate when covid hit. The Murrurundi Times print edition was morphed into the Quirindi Advocate which was the last of the area's independent newspapers. Now all you have left done by journalists is this tome.
♦♦♦♦
Don't get too excited. Five mills of rain in the last 24 hours and no more till Monday and Tuesday when we will get another five mills — the weather nutters contend. They didn't predict this last lot so . . . . .
♦♦♦♦
Ladbrooks Double Header — Golf day and Sportsmens Lunch at the Scone Golf Club 8:00 am and lunch at the RSL Club at 1:00. Also at the RSL is an Inglis Calcutta at 7:00pm. There is a Magic Millions Ladies Luncheon at The Cottage from 12:009 to 2:30pm. Scone Arts and Craft exhibition is open at the Scone Arts & Craft Centre 10-4:00 and the Primary School Arts Prizes exhibition in the Upper Hunter Library is running from 10-5:30pm.
♦♦♦♦
A reminder from Saturday at 3:00am until Tuesday at 3:00am there are no passenger trains on the Hunter Line. The ARTC is upgrading something or other. Gotta get a bus.
♦♦♦♦
And, bye-the-bye, don't rob a pub on Stockton Island. While the locals drank a guy ran around waving a gun and shouting demanding money from the till — nobody seemed too concerned. One bloke threw a barstool at him and hit him in the back, then stabbed him in the shoulder while a girl filmed it all and then a couple of guys left their beers, grabbed the robber, held him down and handed him over to the cops when they came … the embarrassment was too much … the robber was sobbing at the end. The firearm was later found to be a gas-operated gel ball air pistol. He got six years for his trouble. Judge Tim Gartelmann took into account Bourke's deprived upbringing, mental health diagnoses and the extra-curial punishment he received at the hands of the patrons when he ordered Bourke serve a non-parole period of three-and-a-half years. (Newcastle Herald)

 NEWS:

🗣 Bowen confident
plenty of fuel
other not so

As of May 9, Energy Minister Chris Bowen has said while the international uncertainty continues, Australia has 42 days of petrol, 35 days of diesel and 29 days of jet fuel, the Daily Telegraph newspaper reports today.

This is despite the nation’s cost of living crisis preceding the war by years and higher than desired inflation triggering interest rate hikes and lower economic growth.

The measures include a $7.5bn fuel and fertiliser security facility and $3.2bn to the Australian Fuel Security Reserve as well as increasing the nation’s reserve of diesel and jet fuel to 50 days.

The International Energy Agency requires member nations, which includes Australia, to hold the equivalent of 90 days of net imports.

The Coalition has vowed to increase minimum fuel reserves to 60 days if Angus Taylor wins the next election.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the package would secure more fuel, increase resilience and deliver lower prices.

The Strengthening Australia’s Fuel Resilience package will deliver more fuel for drivers and industry, more fertiliser for farmers and more fuel security for our economy, he said in his budget speech on Tuesday.

A further $10m will be spent on feasibility studies examining whether Australia’s domestic refining capacity can be increased while $55m will be spent over five years to manage the nation’s fuel security network.

The government has already secured an additional billion litres of fuel between March and June while fuel standards have been relaxed, which released 100m litres of petrol a month.

Temporary changes to the Minimum Stockholding Obligations have also released 757mn litres of additional fuel to the Australian market.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese stared down calls to raise or reform the PRRT ahead of this year’s budget, with LNG exports key to diplomatic efforts to shore up fuel security.

The federal government has also introduced a domestic gas reservation that stipulates gas exporters supply the equivalent of 20 per cent of exports to the domestic market.

The new measure aims to increase supply of gas domestically while decreasing prices and increasing energy security amid ongoing global volatility.

The scheme is due to launch from July 1 in 2027 with final consultation on legislation throughout June and July 2026.

The budget provides $35.5m over four years to ensure the ongoing supply of affordable gas, which will include establishing the reserve mechanism.

As of May 9, Energy Minister Chris Bowen has said while the international uncertainty continues, Australia has 42 days of petrol, 35 days of diesel and 29 days of jet fuel.

There are 55 ships on the water on their way to Australia with fuel and 4.5 billion litres contractually locked in to be delivered in the next four weeks.

According to Last Drop, a live tracking application developed by Freshwater Strategy, this is how much fuel Australia has left in real-time — 25 days of jet fuel, 31 days of diesel and 35 days of petrol.

[click the intro to return other stories]


💃 Megan the
breadwinner

Meghan Markle has reportedly become her family's breadwinner as she and Harry face mounting pressures to fund their $8 million-a-year lifestyle, reports news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

The Duchess of Sussex is focusing on growing her As Ever lifestyle range after recently parting ways with partner Netflix, those who know her say, while her husband Prince Harry is mainly focused on his philanthropic work, which is noble but doesn't bring in much cash.

Money is tight, said a source, as another told Page Six that Meghan and Harry need at least $8m a year for operating expenses in the billionaire enclave of Montecito, California.

As Page Six revealed, the couple spends about $4m of that on private security for the family, which includes children Prince Archie, 7, and Princess Lilibet, 4. They also have to make mortgage payments on their $20.6m mansion.

However, Meghan has a coterie of wealthy and powerful female friends, all of whom are on board to help her boost her finances.

Indeed, a video Meghan posted on Instagram Monday to promote As Ever, featuring the mum of two eating a strawberry and wistfully staring out of the window, while wearing a $86,000 diamond necklace, which was liked by Lauren Sánchez Bezos and Markle’s close pal, IT Cosmetics founder Jamie Kern Lima.

Page Six was told how Kern Lima flew Meghan to the G9 Ventures Summer Summit, hosted by investor Amy Griffin, in the Hamptons in July 2024, ahead of Meghan’s business launch.

Last month, Meghan, 44, joined AI-powered fashion discovery platform OneOff as both an investor and a featured participant, whose personal exclusive edits will be available to browse and buy.

She joins other investors and featured celebrities like Suki Waterhouse, Emma Chamberlain, Kate Hudson and Shay Mitchell on the platform.

This enables fans to shop her wardrobe, including outfits from her recent Australia tour. The move, which earns her a percentage from sales, drew criticism for potentially prioritising profits over her philanthropic work.

More than two dozen products from the Aussie tour sold out, according to Meghan sources, with OneOff co-founder and chief executive officer Emir Talu telling WWD, OneOff surpassed 1-plus million views of outfits on the site in the first three days since Meghan launched her page on the platform.

While in Australia, she also hosted a girls' weekend, where guests paid up to $4000 to attend the Her Best Life Retreat in Coogee, Sydney — despite only staying for two hours.

Netflix and Meghan severed their As Ever partnership in April after we revealed her tie-in show, With Love, Meghan was not returning for a third season. Meghan sources let it be known that she had been left to carry the whole thing by herself — much to the annoyance of Netflix staffers.

There have also been rumours that Meghan has been speaking to Hollywood bigwigs about starting to act again. Sources this week even said the former Suits star, who made a cameo appearance in the upcoming movie Close Personal Friends, was looking for a steady role on a TV show but this was roundly denied by Sussex insiders.

Page Six has reached out to reps for the Sussexes for comment.

Harry, 41, meanwhile, was not paid for a speaking engagement at Melbourne’s InterEdge Summit during the quasi-royal Australian visit.

But his passion projects are his Invictus Games project for wounded soldiers and his philanthropy work. Harry also joined Silicon Valley mental-health start-up, BetterUp, in 2021 as chief impact officer, earning a rumoured $1.3m annual salary.

He’s still listed on their website, and sources confirmed he still works there. However, in August 2024, the Daily Beast reported that, according to some staffers, Harry’s duties with the company were nebulous and one former employee told the outlet that the prince’s day-to-day responsibilities included zero things.

The report came amid tumultuous times for the company, which had laid off approximately 16% of its workforce after, according to two of the outlet’s sources, the company failed to meet last year’s revenue projections. Moreover, the company faced a revolt by the coaches who are contractors after modifying their pay.

Harry, meanwhile, hopes to bring his family back to the UK in July for a one-year countdown celebration for the 2027 Invictus Games in Birmingham, if the government signs off on providing their security while in his home country.

[click the intro to return to front page]





🍾 Maturity
returns to
the runways

Models welcome a new wave of maturity on Australian fashion week runways. Though other measures of runway diversity, such as size, are backsliding, older women have never been more visible, Alyx Gorman on the The Guardian website informs.

Famous faces not seen on Australian runways for over a decade have made a return to Australian fashion week. On Monday afternoon Australian supermodel Gemma Ward opened the show for Melbourne designer Toni Maticevski.

Ward was not the only model to signal a change in casting for the week to come. Though they have less name recognition, many of Maticevski’s other models were part of a new wave of maturity on Australian runways. [click HERE to see the pics and the rest of the story].


 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
While cities welcome visitors to Gadigal country", a little girl’s death reveals the devastating truth about life in remote Australia, Peta Credlin writes in the Daily Telegraph today. [click to read more]

It’s all very well welcoming people to Gadigal country in Sydney but how about we talk about the reality of life for so many Aboriginal people living outside our big cities.

Because it is the life lived in town camps ∼ best described as hellholes by Alice Springs local Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price ∼ that’s far more urgent today than who arrived 250 years ago.

We're not supposed to talk about Sharon Granites any more ∼ the sweet little five-year-old abducted last weekend ∼ because she’s dead. Her family want her described as Kumanjayi Little Baby for cultural reasons.

Modern day aboriginal culture

But it’s modern-day Aboriginal culture ∼ the unemployment, family dysfunction, and substance abuse that characterises remote Australia ∼ that’s led to her tragic, premature death.

The bed that this little girl was abducted from was a grotty mattress on a filthy floor, in a room full of empty Jim Beam bottles. Her father was in jail and there'd been a bit of a party before she disappeared. The DNA of two persons has been found on her underwear. Her accused killer was a frequent prison inmate too, not long released.

We talk a lot about reconciliation for the wrongs of the past. But what about rectifying the wrongs of the present? We argue incessantly about the failures of government to end Indigenous disadvantage but what about the failures of Aboriginal people too?

Town camps natorious

The town camps around Alice Springs have been notorious for years. Very few residents have real jobs, very few of the children go to school regularly, the police often feel powerless to enforce the law because they won't be supported by woke magistrates and weak governments and child protection officers feel they can't do what they otherwise would, for fear of creating another stolen generation.

Just because people happen to be Aboriginal doesn't mean that different standards apply.

The government says that this is not the time to talk about policy change. But if it’s not done now, everyone will move on until the next child dies.

Ask yourself this, would the outrage be different if this little girl and her alleged killer were from a nice suburb in the city? Where are the activists?


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
It took scarcely a moment, once Globalise the intifada began to be chanted on our streets and campuses, for its champions to insist the phrase meant nothing of the sort. Intifada, they patiently explained, simply meant struggle; the slogan was no more than a plea to internationalise the cause. According to the Palestine Action Group and its Islamist allies, who rallied in Sydney earlier this week, to claim otherwise is to misread the Arabic, Henry Ergas writes in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

The defence is not merely intellectually dishonest; it reveals why it is only words is among the most dangerous sentences people permit themselves to believe.

As an Arabic noun, intifada does indeed possess an old, generic sense: a shaking, a dusting off. That is hardly unusual: holocaust once meant nothing more than a burnt offering; pogrom, in Russian, mere devastation; nakba, in Arabic, a misfortune ranging from mishap to calamity.

Words such as these begin life as ordinary common nouns. But each was claimed by a particular event: from 1945, the Holocaust; from 1987, the intifada. After that, the generic sense survives only in the dictionaries. It does not survive in the public mind.

Linguists call the process prototype entrenchment. The mind, hearing a word, reaches for the most vivid, most repeated, most emotionally charged instance and treats that as what the word stands for. Once the historical event has acquired that role, the bare definition recorded in the dictionary can no longer be peeled away from the moral, emotional and political charge the word has come to convey. To hear "Globalise the Holocaust" in 2026 and think proliferate the supply of burnt offerings is to misunderstand spoken English.

Struggles in the abstract

Exactly the same is true with intifada. Its prototype, in the global imagination, is not struggle in the abstract: it is two uprisings whose iconography, indelibly embedded by the violence that broke out in September 2000, includes suicide bombings of buses, restaurants and a Passover Seder. That is what the word now carries, not at its margins but as its core. The defender of Globalise the intifada is in effect asking language itself to forget history. But human communication does not work that way.

The point is more general: a slogan is not a sentence, and the test of whether one has understood it is not whether one can render it in a dictionary gloss. It compresses an entire moral world - heroes, villains, demands, threats — into a phrase made for chanting, and succeeds by being two things at once: precise enough to be grasped, ambiguous enough to be denied.

Paul Grice, one of the 20th century’s most important linguistic philosophers, gave the manoeuvre its name: implicature, the part of communication that travels not by what one says but by what one obviously means. To remark I am not going to call him corrupt is to inform the room that he is corrupt.

The structure is double-jointed: tested under cross-examination, the speaker retreats to what was literally uttered and accuses the critic of putting words in his mouth. The implicature does the work; the deniability provides the shelter. Globalise the intifada provides a textbook case.

Internationalising the struggle

A public forum, called Why it’s right to say: globalise the intifada, at a park in the Sydney suburb of Redfern, after City of Sydney lord mayor Clover Moore announced council had revoked the organisers' booking of City of Sydney-owned venue.

Pressed in a courtroom, the chant is glossed away as internationalise the struggle. Chanted from a stage on a Saturday afternoon, it means burnt buses, bombed cafes, murdered children.

The audiences who hear it ∼ on both sides ∼ hear that second meaning with perfect clarity. A slogan that everyone really took to mean only internationalise the struggle would hardly stir emotions; what does the stirring is precisely the violent imagery the speaker can also deny.

The genuinely dangerous moment, however, is not the slogan in isolation; it comes once the slogan begins to repeat.

Victor Klemperer, the Jewish philologist who retained his sanity during the Third Reich by recording its language in his diary, observed that the regime’s most powerful instrument was its vocabulary, not its decrees: a handful of words, drilled into daily life, did more to remake ordinary Germans than any speech. Fanatisch, once unambiguously pejorative, became under repetition a term of praise.

Slaughter of millions of Jews

Aktion became the bureaucratic veil behind which mass shootings disappeared — to incite an aktion was to incite the slaughter of millions of Jews, without actually saying so. Those shifts required no argument, only iteration.

Repetition is, in short, normalisation: hear a phrase once and it can shock; hear it for the 200th time and it has become part of the air we breathe. The extreme becomes ambient; the ambient, obvious; the obvious, embarrassing to question. Thus, each repetition of Globalise the intifada wears the menace in rather than out. The cost of saying it falls while the cost of objecting rises. What was once unsayable becomes ever easier to say.

Repetition does its most lethal work, however, not on the solitary newspaper reader but on bodies in a crowd. Slogans are designed not to be murmured but to be chanted rhythmically in unison. Once a phrase enters a crowd, it ceases to function as communication and begins to function as synchronisation. Voices align, breath aligns, sometimes feet align. Individuals shed the small frictions of doubt and hesitation that, in private, would have given them pause.

Sociologists call this collective effervescence and anyone who has been in a stadium at the right moment has felt it. What was an idea in a single skull becomes a felt fact across thousands. Disagreement is not refuted; in the passion of the moment it simply ceases to be available.

Pioneering scholars of mass behaviour

This is what the pioneering scholars of mass behaviour ∼ Gustave Le Bon, Gabriel Tarde, Emile Durkheim, Sigmund Freud, Elias Canetti ∼ meant by a crowd having a kind of mind. Not a mind in the literal sense but something far more dangerous: a temporarily uniform attention, a uniform emotion and ∼ crucially ∼ a uniform sense of who is us and who is them. Slogans are the instrument that does the tuning: and they are, as Canetti observed in the rise of Nazi antisemitism, the tool that drills in the hatred.

Put these mechanisms together and the result is not innocent speech but the manufacture of an atmosphere. A word historically captured by a violent prototype, dressed up in a deniable paraphrase and chanted by bodies whose private hesitations have been switched off — that is the recipe by which a society talks itself into permission.

It tells one group who it is by telling it who its mortal enemy is. And it tells the other ∼ nowadays the Zios ∼ that they are no longer part of the moral community. It hardens the shouters against dialogue and compromise. And it thickens the air with the sense that violence, when it comes, will have been only the natural conclusion of what everyone already knew.

Slogans are innocent?

The historical record is unambiguous: where crowds are taught to chant a word that already names a massacre, the distance between word and violence, speech and act, never grows: it shortens.

The claim that slogans are innocent has always been a flattering one because it relieves us of the duty to attend to what is being said. It allows us to continue repeating comforting platitudes about freedom of expression. But words are not inert, and chanted words least of all.

Whatever else Globalise the intifada may mean in the dictionary, what it means in the street is what we must be willing to hear. Pretending otherwise is not tolerance. It is how societies learn, slowly and without noticing, to live with the unforgivable.



 FEATURE:

Created by DiDa - http://www.faico.net/dida/

What's the one thing that every pundit and certified member of the Fourth Estate knows? Why, it's that MAGA is finished.

MAGA
isn't
finished!

Roger Kimball in Spectator Australia.



H

ow many stories have we been treated to about 'the fracturing of MAGA?' NPR knows it, Politico intuited it, Salon bet on it and the New Republic salivated over it. 'Trump's MAGA Base Splits Dramatically,' that anti-Trump orifice recently crowed. 'New poll shows Donald Trump's support continues to drop.' Then of course there is the The New York Times, which has predicted and rejoiced in the death of MAGA again and again.

That is ∼ that was ∼ the narrative. What is the reality? Yesterday's primaries tell a very different ∼ in fact, contradictory ∼ story. MAGA's vitality was reaffirmed, as was President Trump's potency as a political imprimatur. Across the board, a majority of the candidates he endorsed trounced their Republican in name only (RINO) rivals

Not what we read

At least 26 MAGA Republicans won last night. Indiana, Michigan, Texas, North Carolina. Wherever there was a primary, MAGA triumphed. In Ohio, Vivek Ramaswamy took some 85 per cent of the vote, winning in every single county.

Those are the facts. What is their significance? I think Kurt Schlichter is correct.

He wrote: MAGA's vitality has been reaffirmed
Inevitably the RINOs will take the wrong lesson from tonight's brutal discipline. They will think that because they personally offended Trump, they got defeated. That's not it. Trump is not our leader. He is our avatar. You dummies screwed with the base and the base, not Donald Trump, made you pay.

Right on cue, the New York Times corroborated Schlichter's prediction. 'Rather than a contest between moderates and conservatives,' this fish wrap of record intoned, 'the primaries became a test of how much deference Republicans owe Mr. Trump and how much control the President holds over rank-and-file voters.'

I would say that this stunning victory is a wake-up call for RINOs, but it isn't. Their narcolepsy is terminal

Demos abandon country

The same can be said of the Democratic party, which, in abandoning their country, also abandoned their electoral prospects.

If you don't know the work of the woman who writes under the name 'LHGray', you should. She is as perceptive as she is amusing, though her diction is not for the faint of heart. 'The Democratic party, as it staggers toward the 2026 midterms,' she wrote in response to last night's political dégringolade, 'is not merely losing.'

It is structurally, psychologically, and philosophically finished … a once-formidable machine reduced to a necrotic loop of obsession, fantasy, and self-sabotage. And the republic is not mourning the loss. It is moving on without them. The Democrats built this cage. Now they will live inside it. Indiana? A bloodbath … RINOs who dared defy the redistricting will of the people got eviscerated.

Sufferings of the damned

All this is true. MAGA isn't finished. In the important work of eviscerating the Democratic party, it's just getting started. And let me add that painful process couldn't happen to a more deserving cohort.

Tertullian says that among the pleasures enjoyed by the blessed in paradise is the spectacle of the sufferings of the damned.

That celebration of Schadenfreude was later repudiated by the Church, but every red-blooded man and woman will recognise and smile at its psychological acuity.



 OVERSEAS:

Sam Sifton writes in The New York Times President Trump said yesterday that U.S. negotiations with Tehran were on "life support." Why? Among other things, Iran wants to maintain control of the Strait of Hormuz. A fifth of the world's oil supply flowed through that passage before the war, and now Iran has choked it off. Iranian attacks on passing vessels and a U.S. blockade of Iranian ports have trapped thousands of ships in the Persian Gulf, inducing a global economic crisis. The crisis looms over Trump's summit with China's president, Xi Jinping, later this week. Trump wants Xi to lean on Iran to reopen the strait. This keeps happening. Iran and Iraq stopped ships in the Persian Gulf during the war between those two countries in the 1980s. The conflict spread. Iranian forces intercepted ships bound for Iraq and its allies. It led to a small if deadly naval war that killed more than 400 civilian sailors and damaged 500 commercial vessels along with American warships. Iran's ability to control the strait is a recurring headache for U.S. military leaders. "If you ask me what keeps me awake at night, it's the Strait of Hormuz," one commander said in 2012. Fighting there, another said, "would be like a knife fight in a phone booth." Scholars have argued for centuries that no state can lay claim to the high seas, the ocean common. One jurist from the Dutch Golden Age came up with a term for it: mare liberum, or free sea. Which is fine out in the middle of an ocean. It gets a little more complicated closer to shore, and particularly with choke points like the Strait of Hormuz. For decades, the United States has argued that it has a right to freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran, in contrast, has said that it can regulate traffic there. By what right? Can a nation declare the waters off its coastline as its own? How far out do those waters extend? I picked up some light reading: "Legal Vortex in the Strait of Hormuz," a 2014 paper by James Kraska, a professor at the U.S. Naval War College. It could have been written much more recently — like, in February. We spoke yesterday. Kraska has seen this conflict coming for more than a decade. What's going on in the strait is fundamentally a legal dispute, he told me. The U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, a kind of international constitution for the oceans, governs passage there. Neither Washington nor Tehran has ratified it but it reflects "customary international law," which means it is still supposed to be binding, Kraska told me. In other words, Iran can claim that its territorial waters extend 12 nautical miles from its shoreline, which is permitted by the treaty but only if it recognizes the right of free navigation through those waters. (Free navigation, Kraska noted. Charging a toll, as Iran hopes to do, would break the law.) Kraska told me about a similar conflict between Britain and Albania in the late 1940s, over the channel between Greece and the island of Corfu. In an effort to control that strait, Albania fired on Royal Navy warships. Mines in the strait killed dozens of sailors. It didn't lead to war. The case became the first one adjudicated by the International Court of Justice. It ruled that Britain enjoyed the right to sail through and that Albania had a duty to keep the strait clear of mines. Albania, a less powerful nation than Iran, complied. The precedent may end there.




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