This is why the Liberal Party will not get into power and also why we are so politically fragmented. The Brussels dictated climate change led politican won't give up what is costing us two arms and two legs climate change dogma. The Coalition says it could oppose the Albanese government's $10bln-a-year free-trade agreement with the EU, arguing it would lock future governments into Labor's "partisan climate agenda" by making Australia's emissions reduction pledges legally binding. Could COULD??? Why not WOULD? The position means the government could have to rely on the Greens ∼ which has opposed recent free-trade deals ∼ to ratify the agreement that took nearly eight years to conclude. Writing in The Australian, opposition foreign affairs spokesman Ted O'Brien says the "devil is in the detail" of the deal, which requires both parties to "effectively implement" the Paris Agreement and mitigate "the risk of carbon leakage". "This is the Albanese government's way of locking Australia into its climate agenda, including a 2035 emissions reduction target of 62 to 70% — a target Labor never took to the election and still cannot explain the cost of, or who will pay for it," he says. The Liberal frontbencher says ratifying the agreement as it is could force Australia to adopt tougher environmental policies and push up prices by ushering in European-style tariffs linked to nations' carbon emissions. The Nationals earlier flagged their opposition to the hard-won deal, raising the prospect of a potential internal clash with the Liberal Party, which traditionally supports free trade. But Mr O'Brien says Labor needs to renegotiate the agreement or the Coalition as a whole may not support it. "I want to see this deal get done, but not by trading away our sovereignty," he writes. May not support it!!!! Get some balls boys or you are going to stay in the wilderness for a long, long time.
One of the games greatest revivals
It was brutal, cost a lot of money to put on and didn't disappoint with sendoffs and last minute saving graces. NSW won the first trifecta NSW-Qld State of Origin NRL clash held in rain-drenched Sydney ’s Accor stadium last night.[click to read more]
Oz journalist Will Swanton reckons it was unbelievable. The greatest escape. Nathan Cleary was outplayed for most of the night. Quiet. Ineffective. Overshadowed. Then he inspired a controversial and breathtaking 22-20 State of Origin victory for NSW like he was waving a baton sealed by a breathless, last-ditch, miracle try by James Tedesco.
The Blues trailed 20-0 after 20 minutes before conjuring the biggest comeback in Origin history. Having ensured a grandstand finish with a perfect 40/20 kick and try, Cleary hoisted a Hail Mary of a bomb in the 79th minute before Tedesco, in his first Origin in two years, leapt, juggled the ball and scored. We hung in tight,
Tedesco said. We dug deep. Unreal. I told Nathan to put it up
I'm just so glad I came down with it.
The Maroons will be filthy. They played the final 23 minutes with a man down after fullback Kalyn Ponga was sent off for a shoulder charge and contact with the head of Blues winger Tolutau Koula.
Ponga was incredulous to receive his marching orders from referee Ashley Klein, pointing to the blood on his own face, claiming a mutual clash of noggins.
The Maroons led 20-6 when Ponga departed. Holding on for so long with 12 knackered men they made a mighty attempt.
Blues rookie Ethan Strange, having an absolute blinder, made it 20-12 with 18 minutes to go. Rain started bucketing down. The Blues butchered a try because Haumole Olakau'atu was cramping and couldn't catch the ball. Cleary’s final 10 minutes was the difference. A pleasure to play with these guys,
said the man-of-the-match.
Loaded: Maroons rookie halfback Sam Walker was sensational. Before Ponga’s match-changing send-off, it was Walker’s night. A relatively little bloke who proved tough, skilful and daring.
The Maroons played like the Maroons. Gallant. Desperate. Relentless. Captain Cam Munster played like Cam Munster. Walker introduced himself as a will-o-the-wisp playmaker with all the guile and wizardry of a modern-day Allan Langer.
Wonderful how he sprinted onto the park and laughed. Wonderful how he laid on the opening try with a deft, deadly, pinpoint kick that gifted Rob Toia the simplest of four-pointers in the ninth minute. Wonderful how he assumed the goalkicking duties and popped his first conversion over the black dot. Wonderful the sense he was having a ball every time he held it. Until Ponga was given an early shower and everything changed.
In front of 80,000 full-throated, mostly NSW-supporting spectators on a miserable, drizzly night in Sydney, Cleary’s up-and-down State of Origin career was up again. The Blues piled handling error upon handling error and misery upon misery, to trail 20-6 at halftime. Then came the revival. [click the intro to return other stories]
Market pauses its steady climb
Rising healthcare and consumer stocks boosted the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Wednesday to a record closing high, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were steady, as investors took a pause from the AI-led market rally while cautiously watching Middle East peace talks, Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]
Banking stocks were down as shares of JPMorgan Chase slid after CEO Jamie Dimon warned that expenses this year could be $1 billion higher than estimated.
The White House denied reports from Iran’s state TV that Tehran would restore Strait of Hormuz shipping within a month in exchange for a U.S. military pullback and the lifting of a naval blockade.
Still, indexes traded near record highs.
The Dow, which hit closing highs on Friday and Thursday, was lifted by a rotation into healthcare and consumer stocks such as Procter & Gamble.
However, a pullback in chip stocks weighed on the tech-heavy Nasdaq.
According to preliminary data, the S&P 500 gained 1.81 points, or 0.02%, to end at 7,520.93 points, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 18.55 points, or 0.08%, to 26,676.60. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 189.08 points, or 0.37%, to 50,650.76.
After such a large run-up in the markets, it’s not surprising to me that there is a little bit of a pause,
said Sean Clark, chief investment officer of Clark Capital Management Group.
There’s a lot of positives to look at right now. Even though the outperformers are really being driven by tech, AI and AI adjacent themes, I wouldn't discount the fact that the broad market is participating as well.
Among the sub-indexes, consumer discretionary was leading the gains.
Meanwhile, the S&P 500 energy index fell, tracking a decline of as much as 5% in oil prices. Tech shares dropped after reaching an all-time high on Tuesday.
Chip stocks were down after a strong rally. Intel fell and Marvell Technology fell, while Qualcomm fell sharply after sharp gains Tuesday.
Chip giant Nvidia weakened and the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index lost after hitting a record high on Tuesday.
Technology leadership remains difficult to ignore, with the sector continuing to push to new highs on both an absolute and relative basis compared to the broader market,
said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist, LPL Financial.
That said, increasingly stretched momentum conditions and elevated positioning raise questions around the near-term durability of the advance.
Zscaler tumbled after the cloud security firm projected fourth-quarter revenue below expectations.
Among other movers, GlobalFoundries fell after Bloomberg News reported that majority owner Mubadala Investment Company was seeking to raise $1.91 billion from an unregistered block sale of GFS shares.
Bath & Body Works jumped after reporting first-quarter sales and profit above expectations, while Abercrombie & Fitch advanced on posting a strong quarterly profit.
Goldman Sachs raised its 2026 year-end forecast for the S&P 500 to 8,000 from 7,600, citing continued strength in corporate earnings.
Markets will next look toward the personal consumption expenditures index data on Thursday. The Federal Reserve’s key inflation measure could provide fresh clues on the monetary policy path forward under new chair Kevin Warsh.
NEWS:
🎪
Pssss!
Blacked out
For their
eyes only
Correspondence between Anthony Albanese and Governor-General Sam Mostyn on honouring brave responders to the terrorist attack at Bondi has been redacted along with a trove of other correspondence because it might reveal opinions or advice during the deliberative process, reports The Australian today's website.
[click to read more]
On December 24, 2025, the Prime Minister wrote to Ms Mostyn seeking her agreement to create a Special Honours List for which nominations could be received to recognise acts of heroism in response to the horrific terrorist attack
at Bondi Beach 10 days earlier.
When considering how Australia may honour those who have responded so bravely to the horrific events at Bondi Beach, it is also prudent to consider all those who have played vital response roles to this tragic event,
he wrote, noting it was the government’s view
a special honour should be established.
Ms Mostyn responded the same day, agreeing with the request and noting a significant number of nominations have already been received seeking to recognise the extraordinary and heroic efforts of those who responded during the attack and in its immediate aftermath".
The letters have had paragraph-length redactions, denying Australians a right to know what was said, with the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet exercising section 47C of the FOI Act because it may disclose opinion, advice, recommendation, consultation (and) deliberation".
The Australian has obtained letters between Mr Albanese and governors-general David Hurley and Ms Mostyn over the past three years under Freedom of Information laws.
The search for correspondence between 2023 and 2026 identified 35 documents totalling 125 pages but all documents were released with redactions.
The department fought for three years to keep secret 350 pages of correspondence between prime ministers and governors-general between 2013 and 2023, claiming disclosure would damage relations with the royal family and other nations.
The Australian appealed against this decision and those letters were revealed in February this year.
General Hurley visited 29 countries over five years and wrote reports to Mr Albanese but the department refused to release these in full, claiming they could damage relations with the royal household and other nations if disclosed.
The reports include accounts of the former governor-general’s dinners, meetings and talks with monarchs and foreign leaders, from Greece, Britain and the UAE to France, Indonesia, Thailand and New Zealand, and to Samoa, Tonga, Kiribati, Tuvalu, Cook Islands and Vanuatu.
The correspondence released includes a letter Mr Albanese wrote to the King congratulating him on his coronation in April 2023.
The correspondence, while strictly formal in tone and substance, shows degrees of informality with Mr Albanese referring to both governors-general by their first names, signing letters to David
and Sam
, while Ms Mostyn refers to the Prime Minister as Anthony
.
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.
♦♦♦♦
Big weekend coming up. Sunday is National Tree Day and also the last market day for the next couple of months as winter starts to set in. It is also Big Morning Tea day in downtown Murrurundi.
NEWS:
👯
Destroyer
of womens
rights heckled
A tennis legend has sided with a festival heckler who branded former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard a destroyer of women’s rights
, the Daily Telegraph newspaper reports today.
Tennis legend Martina Navratilova has weighed into the controversial Tickle versus Giggle case, backing in the women’s rights protesters that heckled Julia Gillard at a prestigious UK writers festival event.
Yeah well, she deserves it …
Ms Navratilova posted on her X account on Tuesday.
The former prime minister was speaking about the importance of women being treated fairly and the challenges they face in politics to a packed crowd at the annual world-famous literary event, the Hay Festival at Hay-on-Wye in Wales on Sunday local time.
The panel discussion, which this masthead attended, took an embarrassing turn for Ms Gillard as it was wrapping up - she was heckled by a visibly annoyed attendee sitting several rows back from the stage.
Unlike many other panels at the popular literary festival no opportunity was given for the crowd to ask questions in the final minutes of the panel discussion.
This drew the ire of the female attendee who stood up on her chair and yelled out, What about Sall Grover
to Ms Gillard.
The female protester held up a giant banner that read, 'Julia Gillard, DESTROYER OF WOMEN’s RIGHTS'.
The words were written in black but the word 'destroyer' was written in bright pink.
Female-only app Giggle founder Ms Grover recently lost her court case against Roxanne Tickle who was born a biological male but identifies as a woman.
The court found that Ms Grover discriminated against Ms Tickle after twice removing her from the women’s only app.
Ms Gillard has come under criticism following the recent Federal Court ruling.
In 2013, under her government, the definition of woman
was removed from the Sex Discrimination Act, which has been blamed for the recent ruling.
The female protester was quickly met with many boos from the writers' festival attendees and another female attendee was heard yelling back at the woman, shut up, what a moron
.
The moderator of the event, the BBC’s Europe editor Katya Adler, quickly interjected and told the crowd, It’s not the time for this right now.
.
Ms Gillard looked surprised by the interaction but did not respond directly to the woman yelling from the crowd.
Ms Adler was met with a round of applause by the crowd and cheers as she attempted to shut down the protester; the panel members left the stage immediately after the incident.
The former Labor leader was taken out a back entrance behind the stage and away from the public following the outburst by the heckler.
Ms Grover told this masthead shortly after the incident that she is so grateful for the support from women on the other side of the world
.
The only silver lining in the fight against gender ideology is the amazing women we have been able to meet,
she said.
“Everyday women who are braver than any politician.
Julia Gillard should, at the very least, be embarrassed
[click the intro to return other stories]

🎤
Rapper
locks in
ANZ tour
The voice of some of the biggest R&B hits of the early noughties will head down under for her own headlining tour later this year, reports the news.com.au website today.
One of the biggest R&B singers of the early noughties will embark upon a headlining tour of Australia in November, it’s been announced this morning.
Ashanti ∼ (right) singer of huge hits like Foolish, Happy, Rock Wit U and of course the Ja Rule collaborations Always On Time and Mesmerize ∼ will start her Australian tour in Perth on November 9 before stops in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. [click to read more]
The singer, now 45, burst onto the scene in 2001 by singing the hook on Ja Rule’s massive hit single Always On Time, a US number one.
Her own self-titled debut album followed the next year, and instantly broke records, shifting more than half a million copies in its first week of release in the US - the biggest first-week sales for a debut female artist up to then.
Her second studio album also hit the top spot in the US, and a further three albums all went top 10.
While Ashanti hasn't released a new album since 2014, she’s got more than enough hits to fill a set, particularly given her status as one of the early noughties most successful rap collaborators: Between 2001 and 2003, as well as her own solo hits, she scored five top five singles singing the hooks for rappers like Ja Rule, Fat Joe and Fabolous.
Ashanti’s love of rappers extends to her personal life, too: She’s been in a relationship with noughties rap legend Nelly for many years, with the couple welcoming their first child together in 2024.
Ashanti’s Australian/NZ tour dates: ♫ Monday 9 November Riverside Theatre, Perth; ♫ Wednesday 11 November Margaret Court Arena, Melbourne; ♫ Friday 13 November TikTok Arena (ICC), Sydney; ♫ Saturday 14 November Fortitude Music Hall, Brisbane and; ♫ Monday 16 November Kiri Te Kanawa Theatre, Auckland.
[click the intro to return to front page]

The Lord Howe Island stag beetle is among the invertebrates that have begun to thrive after a rodent eradication program was successful. Photo: Ian Hutton
🐛
Native life
returns to
old NSW
island
Lord Howe Island got rid of its rats and mice ∼ now its 'wonderful' insect life is back. Invasive vermin decimated the island's native flora and fauna ∼ but its unique cockroaches and beetles are thriving once again, writes The Guardian website. [click to read the rest of the story].
In the summer months, Lord Howe Island’s unique stag beetle, with wing cases that appear forged from iridescent green metal, fly around the ancient tree tops looking for a mate.
That’s really something wonderful,
said Ian Hutton, a naturalist and nature guide on the World Heritage-listed island.
I would have struggled to have seen any of them 10 years ago.
Lord Howe Island, which lies 600km off Australia’s east coast, was formed by the 7-million-year-old remains of a volcano. Its craggy and beautiful 15 sq km are crammed with a treasure trove of unique plants and animals. And, in recent years, a lot more bugs.
The rise in the island’s invertebrates ∼ beetles, weevils, bush cockroaches and other bugs ∼ has come after a campaign seven years ago to rid the island of about 300,000 invasive rats and mice.
Now a study in the journal Biological Invasions has found the island’s bugs are bouncing back since the 2019 eradication program.
Across our sites we found a 60% increase in the total numbers of invertebrates,
said Maxim Adams, a researcher at the University of Sydney.
I think that’s pretty extraordinary but it’s something we had a feeling for. Walking around Lord Howe now
all of us are blown away by what we're seeing.
Mice arrived on the island in the mid-19th century and then, in 1918, a supply ship grounded on a rock.
Stowaway rats jumped ship and ate their way through the island’s native flora and fauna — helping push five bird species, two plants and at least 13 species of invertebrates to extinction.
Before the 2019 program was rolled out, scientists had the foresight to measure the numbers and types of bugs on the island. That has allowed Adams and colleagues to measure the change.
Using traps and also cockroach hotels
∼ layers of cardboard that mimic the bark the crawlies find hard to resist ∼ the university team and the NSW government collected more than 24,000 invertebrate specimens from 20 sites in and around the island’s subtropical forests.
Lord Howe has more than 1600 different known invertebrate species and about half are known nowhere else on Earth. For a scientist, it’s a world of discovery.
You turn over a rock and everything is different,
Adams said.
Because Lord Howe has no native mammals, the island’s food web is unusual. Bugs would often be eaten by small mammals but, now the invaders have gone, birds and reptiles are thriving.
[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
"Promises and pie-crust," Jonathan Swift wrote in 1738, "are made to be broken." Vladimir Lenin, who liked the line, treated it as a slogan. Anthony Albanese treats it as a principle, Henry Ergas points out in the The Australian today. [click to read more]
The Prime Minister’s defence for repudiating assurances he had insistently reiterated ∼ indeed, for the 50th time
∼ is that Australia faces a crisis of intergenerational equity. But as Jonathan Pincus and I demonstrated on these pages, the claim is analytically incoherent and empirically threadbare. Nor, even if there were such inequities, would that justify the abrupt abandonment of repeatedly affirmed undertakings.
Serious governments seek democratic consent for contentious measures they had previously assured voters they would not introduce. John Howard did so with the GST: having ruled it out, he reversed openly, took it to the 1998 election, and proceeded only on the mandate he won there.
Greatest tax take in commonwealth history
The reason the Albanese government has not followed suit is neither urgency nor necessity. It is fear: fear that despite the opposition’s parlous state, voters would punish a government that has spent freely, governed carelessly and is now poised to extract the greatest tax take in commonwealth history.
The budget’s own numbers make the reality plain. Even accepting Treasury’s assumptions, the budget measures will increase housing supply over the next decade by less than one-third of 1%, while housing demand is likely to rise more than 15 times as quickly. This is not serious economic reform. It is a revenue grab wrapped in the language of moral urgency.
Corroding public trust
The inevitable result of that gap between political rhetoric and political practice is to corrode public trust. Trust, after all, is not a natural disposition; it is a social achievement, slowly accumulated and quickly squandered.
The word itself reveals the point. The Old English treow
lies behind both truth
and trust
; since at least the 15th century, to trust
someone has meant to believe that when he says what he will do, he speaks truthfully. Governments can sustain trust only by being truthful and trustworthy — and the institutional form through which those virtues manifest themselves is the promise.
A promise is what binds words to conduct, declarations to action, and electoral consent to subsequent government. Governments owe fidelity to their promises not merely for their own political advantage; they owe it because a healthy democratic life depends upon citizens being able to assume and assess fidelity to public commitments.
Governments need to mean what they say
The credibility of promises is also more broadly crucial to the viability of a free society, whose very essence is that people must order their lives amid continual uncertainty. Promises, including the promise that laws will not be changed capriciously, are what give individuals, families and businesses stable ground on which to plan. As Hannah Arendt wisely observed, they build islands of predictability
in the ocean of uncertainty
— islands that matter most to those with the fewest resources to absorb sudden policy shocks.
A young couple relying on an investment property to finance homeownership, a retiree dependent on hard-earned savings, a small business weighing expansion: all rely on governments meaning what they say.
But promises can only fulfil that stabilising role because they belong to the grammar of commitment: to the forms of obligation whose value lies in their relative insulation from changing convenience. A promise abandoned the moment it becomes burdensome is worth no more than the loyalty that melts away at the first sign of difficulty.
The preservation of credible public commitments is especially vital in Australia, where suspicion of the political process long predates contemporary disenchantment. Distrust of politicians was, as John Hirst emphasised, constitutive of the colonial polity itself. The men who entered politics were not thought fit to be trusted - and despite outstanding exceptions, many weren't.
Pioneering scholars of mass behaviour
The endless Australian debate over the accountability of parliamentarians reflected that suspicion. Both the Burkean trustee ∼ who is guided only by the light of his own judgment ∼ and the instructed delegate had their advocates. But it was the latter conception, entrenched by the emerging Labor Party, that ultimately prevailed. Labor parliamentarians were to be mere instruments: controlled by the ALP’s extra-parliamentary wing, bound by a pledge to uphold the platform and required to submit to caucus discipline on pain of political excommunication.
The Australian mass party thus emerged, from the beginning, as an institutional response to distrust: a mechanism designed less to cultivate confidence in politicians than to contain the risks they posed once elected. And Australian voters learned to scrutinise the distance between promise and performance with an intensity rare in comparable democracies. When that gap widened too far, confidence collapsed.
It is against this background that the events of the past three years must be seen. The Albanese government’s record on the central tax promises of two successive elections ∼ stage three, superannuation, and now negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount ∼ does not just constitute a litany of broken commitments; it constitutes the accelerated dismantling of an already tarnished public asset.
The predictable effect is an even more accelerated crisis of political representation. The four-decade arc from 1975’s 4% third-party vote to 2025’s 34% highlights its seemingly inexorable progression.
Withdrawing faithfulness
Those voters who have spurned the major parties are not ideological partisans of any third force; they are observant citizens who, having grasped what the parties no longer deliver, exercise the only sanction the system leaves them. Unable to meaningfully demand or expect faithfulness to a program from parties whose programs have ceased to bind, they withdraw their own faithfulness from those parties altogether.
The alternatives may not be especially attractive nor particularly unifying — but negative coalitions, aimed at punishing a detested foe, form more easily than positive ones precisely because they require only shared aversion rather than common aspiration. In these conditions, anti-system parties flourish, their capacity to aggregate voters a symptom not of democratic renewal but of democratic exhaustion.
To make things worse, governments confronted by a perpetually seething electorate are naturally tempted to govern through stealth and administrative manoeuvre, further impairing the trust whose disappearance produced the crisis of representation in the first place. And when a real, rather than confected, emergency arrives, they discover they can no longer summon the loyalties and willingness to sacrifice on which the survival of free societies ultimately depends.
Public language becomes tactical
No society can govern itself for long on the assumption that public language is merely tactical. Governments that repeatedly break faith with the electorate may secure temporary advantages. But they do so by undermining the confidence that policies announced today will survive long enough to shape behaviour tomorrow. As that confidence erodes, both the effectiveness of public policy and force of democratic authority unravel.
That is the deeper significance of the Albanese government’s conduct. It is not merely bad policy. It is the depletion of a civic inheritance that free societies squander far more easily than they rebuild. Yes, promises can be cracked like pie crusts. But in the end, public trust cracks with them. Lenin, sheltered by brutal authoritarianism, never had to learn that lesson. With the fabric of our democracy rapidly fraying, it is high time Anthony Albanese did.

FEATURE:
Created by DiDa - http://www.faico.net/dida/
Ω
The budget is squeezing every Australian — but Barefoot Investor says the angriest critics have got it dead wrong. Here's the scathing reality check that will make you furious.
No
guilded
lillies
here!
Scott Pape in Daily Telegraph
A
fter reading this column, my editor said: I'm confident this piece will generate the greatest amount of hate mail you've ever received.
Let's see if they're right
Do you know what the easiest thing I could have done this week was? Exactly what every other financial commentator has done: Lean into the outrage about the budget.
Instead, I'm going the other way. And I'm probably going to piss a lot of you off. Starting with Brian, who wrote to me after what I can only imagine was a solid session on the La-Z-Boy with a few reds:
Labor's tax grab?
Scott, I am just so sick of these incompetent bastards. This budget is just another giant Labor tax grab. People in the top 10% of income earners pay more than half the taxes. Half! Now Albo wants to be a 47% silent partner in every small business in the country. Why would anyone bother? Young people saving for a deposit in index funds? Taxed.
Family trusts helping kids through university? Taxed. Small business owners who've spent decades building something? Taxed at rates that would make your eyes water.
New Zealand has no capital gains tax. Dubai has no capital gains tax. And our smartest young people are figuring that out real fast. You've got the platform, Scott. Let your followers know what’s really going on.
Bingo-bango, Brian! You've sure got a lot of very big feelings. Thankfully, I'm a father of four. I deal with big feelings before breakfast.
Let’s get into it.
Brian and I have a lot in common. I'm a high income earner and I pay a lot of tax. I come from a family of small business owners and I run one myself. And I bristle when I see politicians crowing about their economic credentials. The fact is, this is the highest-taxing Australian government since World War Two, and that spending is putting pressure on interest rates that every mortgage holder feels.
Yet what really worries me isn't the tax take. It’s that our outrage meter seems to be stuck at 11.
It feels like we're drifting towards America, where everything is viewed through a political lens and everyone is absolutely furious all the time.
Barefoot has given a scathing budget reality check.
And if we get angry enough we might just end up with Pauline as our PM, and the greatest economic insight she’s ever had was asking Why can't we just print more money?
(Seriously, look it up.)
Anyway, let’s deal with Brian’s three beefs. Plenty of young people have written to me in a panic about the changes to capital gains tax. Many were planning to use their share portfolio as a house deposit.
CGT not biggest problem
My view? The CGT change is not their biggest problem. Let’s say a young investor puts $50k into an Aussie index fund. Based on historical returns, it grows to around $72k over five years. Under the new CGT rules, they'd pay roughly $900 more tax when they sell. And depending on future returns and inflation, they might actually come out ahead.
The real problem is the share market dropping 40% and their $72,000 deposit becoming $43,000. Then it takes a decade to recover, while rents keep rising and they're still at their parents' place eating their Cheerios. That’s why my rule has never changed: do not save for a house deposit in the share market.
Business partner!
Brian’s 47 per cent silent partner
line was funny on social media the first 700 times. Now it’s just annoying. And it’s wrong. The small business CGT concession regime allows the vast majority of small business owners to halve or completely eliminate the capital gains tax they pay when they sell. It’s been there for years (though the thresholds need to be increased.)
The real risk is using the tax rate as a reason not to back yourself. Building something from nothing, employing people, serving your community. It’s a hard life. It’s also one of the most rewarding things a person can do. Don't let a meme talk you out of it.
The family trust
Okay, so this one stings. You see, my kids have been nothing but a spectacular financial loss since the day they arrived. I was counting down the days until they turned 18, when I could finally start distributing trust income to them and claw something back. And then the bloody government snapped that door shut just as my eldest was getting close to useful.
Yet it actually makes sense. The system lets wealthy families with good accountants pay less tax than nurses and tradies. That doesn't pass the pub test.
Finally, if you spend enough time on social media (or listen to Brian) you may start to think that Australia is the highest-taxed nation on earth. Actually, we're in the middle of the pack, but with a standard of living in the top handful of countries on the planet. The cops don't shake us down (mostly). Our kids go to decent public schools (mostly). And if one of them gets sick, you don't need a GoFundMe page.
We'll be fine. After all, we're the wealthiest people in the country. Living in one of the wealthiest countries in the world. At the richest time in human history. Life is good, Brian, especially when you log off. Tread Your Own Path!
Financially abusing my brother
Hi Scott: My brother just divorced his nasty wife. She had access to all his accounts, blew through a $180,000 inheritance, ran up $25,000 on his credit card, and towards the end wouldn't even let him touch his own debit card. He’s now living with me. He’s on a disability pension and can't work. I manage his accounts, have set-up his savings, and have tried to teach him the basics. He says it’s too hard. My sister accuses me of making it worse. Am I doing more harm than good?
Hello Caring Sister, your brother is lucky to have you.Your sister doesn't sound nice, but she does have a point. (How’s that for having it both ways?)
Now, before you throw me across the room, I know your intentions are completely different from his nasty ex-wife’s. You love your brother. She didn't. But, from where he’s standing, someone else is still controlling his money, his savings, and his decisions.
Now your bro doesn't need to become the next Warren Buffett. He just needs to learn to stand on his own two feet again, but that won't happen while you're transferring his surplus savings for him.
Think about how this plays out long term. Your brother grows increasingly dependent on you. You grow increasingly resentful
and neither of you need that.
My advice? Keep helping him with the basics. Set him up with one simple account, show him how to use his card, and then step back. Let him make small mistakes with small money. That’s how people learn. And then, when the settlement comes, he'll be ready to move out and start his new life. That’s good for him, and great for you.
No Show Albo
Scott: As a man who lost the family home because of my gambling addiction (a shame I live with every day), and as a father whose teenage son 'plays' fantasy football and gets emails and ads from sports gambling companies, I was bitterly disappointed that the government tried to bury their inaction on gambling ads. Did you get a reply from the Prime Minister?
Hi Daniel: I wasn't expecting a reply, and old Albo didn't disappoint!
He’s the most powerful man in Australian politics. He had the backing from both sides of politics, and the people — nearly three-quarters of parents (myself included) reported being bothered by their kids being exposed to gambling ads.
He had the ability to stand up and say: We've got a huge gambling problem on our hands, and the beginning of that problem is that sport is a gateway to gambling: today for three in four kids it’s a normal part of sport. That’s crap. I'm the Prime Minister of this country and I've had enough. No more bloody ads.
But he didn't.
The lobbyists won, the kids lost — the odds never change.
OVERSEAS:
People walk past a billboard with a picture of Iranian people, in Tehran, Iran. Photo: Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
Eric Schmitt, reporting from Washington writes in the The New York Times military officials said that the recent military strikes targeted missile sites near a major Iranian port that threatened U.S. ships and planes. American military forces conducted what U.S. Central Command said were "self-defense strikes" in southern Iran on Monday "to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces." The targets included missile launch sites and Iranian boats trying to place mines, Capt. Tim Hawkins, a Central Command spokesman, said in a statement. "U.S. Central Command continues to defend our forces while using restraint during the ongoing cease-fire," said Captain Hawkins, who declined to say which ships came under fire, where they were located or precisely where the other U.S. strikes took place. A senior U.S. military official said Iranian surface-to-air missiles threatened some of the dozens of American warplanes and nearly two dozen Navy warships ∼ including two aircraft carriers and their escort vessels ∼ that are in or around the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea enforcing a blockade against vessels trying to enter or leave Iranian ports. The official added that the U.S. strikes hit near Bandar Abbas, a major port and Iranian navy base. American and Iranian forces have had other skirmishes since a cease-fire took effect about six weeks ago. But the strikes on Monday came as Iranian negotiators arrived in Qatar for talks on ending the war and they threatened to upend a fragile potential agreement that President Trump has said could reopen the Strait of Hormuz and relieve the greatest energy disruption in modern times. That Iranian missile batteries were reportedly zeroing in on U.S. Navy ships came as no surprise, despite repeated assertions from Mr. Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and other military leaders that the 38-day American-Israeli military campaign had vastly degraded or destroyed much of Iran's combat power. U.S. intelligence agencies have told policymakers in confidential assessments from early this month that Iran has regained access to most of its missile sites, launchers and underground facilities. While the United States has sunk most of Iran's conventional navy, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps still retains hundreds of small speedboats that can be used to lay mines in the strait. Most alarming to some senior officials is evidence that Iran has restored operational access to 30 of the 33 missile sites it maintains along the Strait of Hormuz, which could threaten American warships and oil tankers transiting the narrow waterway. People briefed on the assessments said they show ∼ to varying degrees, depending on the level of damage incurred at the different sites ∼ that the Iranians can use mobile launchers that are inside the sites to move missiles to other locations. In some cases, Iran can launch missiles directly from launchpads that are part of the facilities.

Created by DiDa - http://www.faico.net/dida/
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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.
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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
Rising healthcare and consumer stocks boosted the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Wednesday to a record closing high, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were steady, as investors took a pause from the AI-led market rally while cautiously watching Middle East peace talks, Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]
Banking stocks were down as shares of JPMorgan Chase slid after CEO Jamie Dimon warned that expenses this year could be $1 billion higher than estimated.
The White House denied reports from Iran’s state TV that Tehran would restore Strait of Hormuz shipping within a month in exchange for a U.S. military pullback and the lifting of a naval blockade.
Still, indexes traded near record highs.
The Dow, which hit closing highs on Friday and Thursday, was lifted by a rotation into healthcare and consumer stocks such as Procter & Gamble.
However, a pullback in chip stocks weighed on the tech-heavy Nasdaq.
According to preliminary data, the S&P 500 gained 1.81 points, or 0.02%, to end at 7,520.93 points, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 18.55 points, or 0.08%, to 26,676.60. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 189.08 points, or 0.37%, to 50,650.76.
After such a large run-up in the markets, it’s not surprising to me that there is a little bit of a pause,
said Sean Clark, chief investment officer of Clark Capital Management Group.
There’s a lot of positives to look at right now. Even though the outperformers are really being driven by tech, AI and AI adjacent themes, I wouldn't discount the fact that the broad market is participating as well.
Among the sub-indexes, consumer discretionary was leading the gains.
Meanwhile, the S&P 500 energy index fell, tracking a decline of as much as 5% in oil prices. Tech shares dropped after reaching an all-time high on Tuesday.
Chip stocks were down after a strong rally. Intel fell and Marvell Technology fell, while Qualcomm fell sharply after sharp gains Tuesday.
Chip giant Nvidia weakened and the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index lost after hitting a record high on Tuesday.
Technology leadership remains difficult to ignore, with the sector continuing to push to new highs on both an absolute and relative basis compared to the broader market,
said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist, LPL Financial.
That said, increasingly stretched momentum conditions and elevated positioning raise questions around the near-term durability of the advance.
Zscaler tumbled after the cloud security firm projected fourth-quarter revenue below expectations.
Among other movers, GlobalFoundries fell after Bloomberg News reported that majority owner Mubadala Investment Company was seeking to raise $1.91 billion from an unregistered block sale of GFS shares.
Bath & Body Works jumped after reporting first-quarter sales and profit above expectations, while Abercrombie & Fitch advanced on posting a strong quarterly profit.
Goldman Sachs raised its 2026 year-end forecast for the S&P 500 to 8,000 from 7,600, citing continued strength in corporate earnings.
Markets will next look toward the personal consumption expenditures index data on Thursday. The Federal Reserve’s key inflation measure could provide fresh clues on the monetary policy path forward under new chair Kevin Warsh.
| 🎪 | Pssss! Blacked out For their eyes only |
Correspondence between Anthony Albanese and Governor-General Sam Mostyn on honouring brave responders to the terrorist attack at Bondi has been redacted along with a trove of other correspondence because it might reveal opinions or advice during the deliberative process, reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]
On December 24, 2025, the Prime Minister wrote to Ms Mostyn seeking her agreement to create a Special Honours List for which nominations could be received to recognise acts of heroism in response to the horrific terrorist attack
at Bondi Beach 10 days earlier.
When considering how Australia may honour those who have responded so bravely to the horrific events at Bondi Beach, it is also prudent to consider all those who have played vital response roles to this tragic event,
he wrote, noting it was the government’s view
a special honour should be established.
Ms Mostyn responded the same day, agreeing with the request and noting The letters have had paragraph-length redactions, denying Australians a right to know what was said, with the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet exercising section 47C of the FOI Act because it may disclose The Australian has obtained letters between Mr Albanese and governors-general David Hurley and Ms Mostyn over the past three years under Freedom of Information laws.
The search for correspondence between 2023 and 2026 identified 35 documents totalling 125 pages but all documents were released with redactions.
The department fought for three years to keep secret 350 pages of correspondence between prime ministers and governors-general between 2013 and 2023, claiming disclosure would damage relations with the royal family and other nations.
The Australian appealed against this decision and those letters were revealed in February this year.
General Hurley visited 29 countries over five years and wrote reports to Mr Albanese but the department refused to release these in full, claiming they could damage relations with the royal household and other nations if disclosed.
The reports include accounts of the former governor-general’s dinners, meetings and talks with monarchs and foreign leaders, from Greece, Britain and the UAE to France, Indonesia, Thailand and New Zealand, and to Samoa, Tonga, Kiribati, Tuvalu, Cook Islands and Vanuatu.
The correspondence released includes a letter Mr Albanese wrote to the King congratulating him on his coronation in April 2023.
The correspondence, while strictly formal in tone and substance, shows degrees of informality with Mr Albanese referring to both governors-general by their first names, signing letters to a significant number of nominations have already been received seeking to recognise the extraordinary and heroic efforts of those who responded during the attack and in its immediate aftermath".
opinion, advice, recommendation, consultation (and) deliberation".
David
and Sam
, while Ms Mostyn refers to the Prime Minister as Anthony
.
♦♦♦♦
Speed cameras to return to Murrurundi but the pedestrian crossing will remain the same. Thanks to Carlo Bertozzi for his persistance and website presence.
♦♦♦♦
Big weekend coming up. Sunday is National Tree Day and also the last market day for the next couple of months as winter starts to set in. It is also Big Morning Tea day in downtown Murrurundi.
| 👯 | Destroyer of womens rights heckled |
A tennis legend has sided with a festival heckler who branded former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard a destroyer of women’s rights
, the Daily Telegraph newspaper reports today.
Tennis legend Martina Navratilova has weighed into the controversial Tickle versus Giggle case, backing in the women’s rights protesters that heckled Julia Gillard at a prestigious UK writers festival event.
Yeah well, she deserves it …
Ms Navratilova posted on her X account on Tuesday.
The former prime minister was speaking about the importance of women being treated fairly and the challenges they face in politics to a packed crowd at the annual world-famous literary event, the Hay Festival at Hay-on-Wye in Wales on Sunday local time.
The panel discussion, which this masthead attended, took an embarrassing turn for Ms Gillard as it was wrapping up - she was heckled by a visibly annoyed attendee sitting several rows back from the stage.
Unlike many other panels at the popular literary festival no opportunity was given for the crowd to ask questions in the final minutes of the panel discussion.
This drew the ire of the female attendee who stood up on her chair and yelled out, What about Sall Grover
to Ms Gillard.
The female protester held up a giant banner that read, 'Julia Gillard, DESTROYER OF WOMEN’s RIGHTS'.
The words were written in black but the word 'destroyer' was written in bright pink.
Female-only app Giggle founder Ms Grover recently lost her court case against Roxanne Tickle who was born a biological male but identifies as a woman.
The court found that Ms Grover discriminated against Ms Tickle after twice removing her from the women’s only app.
Ms Gillard has come under criticism following the recent Federal Court ruling.
In 2013, under her government, the definition of woman
was removed from the Sex Discrimination Act, which has been blamed for the recent ruling.
The female protester was quickly met with many boos from the writers' festival attendees and another female attendee was heard yelling back at the woman, shut up, what a moron
.
The moderator of the event, the BBC’s Europe editor Katya Adler, quickly interjected and told the crowd, It’s not the time for this right now.
.
Ms Gillard looked surprised by the interaction but did not respond directly to the woman yelling from the crowd.
Ms Adler was met with a round of applause by the crowd and cheers as she attempted to shut down the protester; the panel members left the stage immediately after the incident.
The former Labor leader was taken out a back entrance behind the stage and away from the public following the outburst by the heckler.
Ms Grover told this masthead shortly after the incident that she is so grateful for the support from women on the other side of the world
.
The only silver lining in the fight against gender ideology is the amazing women we have been able to meet,
she said.
“Everyday women who are braver than any politician.
Julia Gillard should, at the very least, be embarrassed
[click the intro to return other stories]
| 🎤 | Rapper locks in ANZ tour |
The voice of some of the biggest R&B hits of the early noughties will head down under for her own headlining tour later this year, reports the news.com.au website today.
One of the biggest R&B singers of the early noughties will embark upon a headlining tour of Australia in November, it’s been announced this morning.
Ashanti ∼ (right) singer of huge hits like Foolish, Happy, Rock Wit U and of course the Ja Rule collaborations Always On Time and Mesmerize ∼ will start her Australian tour in Perth on November 9 before stops in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. [click to read more]
The singer, now 45, burst onto the scene in 2001 by singing the hook on Ja Rule’s massive hit single Always On Time, a US number one.
Her own self-titled debut album followed the next year, and instantly broke records, shifting more than half a million copies in its first week of release in the US - the biggest first-week sales for a debut female artist up to then.
Her second studio album also hit the top spot in the US, and a further three albums all went top 10.
While Ashanti hasn't released a new album since 2014, she’s got more than enough hits to fill a set, particularly given her status as one of the early noughties most successful rap collaborators: Between 2001 and 2003, as well as her own solo hits, she scored five top five singles singing the hooks for rappers like Ja Rule, Fat Joe and Fabolous.
Ashanti’s love of rappers extends to her personal life, too: She’s been in a relationship with noughties rap legend Nelly for many years, with the couple welcoming their first child together in 2024.
Ashanti’s Australian/NZ tour dates: ♫ Monday 9 November Riverside Theatre, Perth; ♫ Wednesday 11 November Margaret Court Arena, Melbourne; ♫ Friday 13 November TikTok Arena (ICC), Sydney; ♫ Saturday 14 November Fortitude Music Hall, Brisbane and; ♫ Monday 16 November Kiri Te Kanawa Theatre, Auckland.
[click the intro to return to front page]
| 🐛 | Native life returns to old NSW island |
Lord Howe Island got rid of its rats and mice ∼ now its 'wonderful' insect life is back. Invasive vermin decimated the island's native flora and fauna ∼ but its unique cockroaches and beetles are thriving once again, writes The Guardian website. [click to read the rest of the story].
In the summer months, Lord Howe Island’s unique stag beetle, with wing cases that appear forged from iridescent green metal, fly around the ancient tree tops looking for a mate.
That’s really something wonderful,
said Ian Hutton, a naturalist and nature guide on the World Heritage-listed island.
I would have struggled to have seen any of them 10 years ago.
Lord Howe Island, which lies 600km off Australia’s east coast, was formed by the 7-million-year-old remains of a volcano. Its craggy and beautiful 15 sq km are crammed with a treasure trove of unique plants and animals. And, in recent years, a lot more bugs.
The rise in the island’s invertebrates ∼ beetles, weevils, bush cockroaches and other bugs ∼ has come after a campaign seven years ago to rid the island of about 300,000 invasive rats and mice.
Now a study in the journal Biological Invasions has found the island’s bugs are bouncing back since the 2019 eradication program.
Across our sites we found a 60% increase in the total numbers of invertebrates,
said Maxim Adams, a researcher at the University of Sydney.
I think that’s pretty extraordinary but it’s something we had a feeling for. Walking around Lord Howe now
all of us are blown away by what we're seeing.
Mice arrived on the island in the mid-19th century and then, in 1918, a supply ship grounded on a rock.
Stowaway rats jumped ship and ate their way through the island’s native flora and fauna — helping push five bird species, two plants and at least 13 species of invertebrates to extinction.
Before the 2019 program was rolled out, scientists had the foresight to measure the numbers and types of bugs on the island. That has allowed Adams and colleagues to measure the change.
Using traps and also cockroach hotels
∼ layers of cardboard that mimic the bark the crawlies find hard to resist ∼ the university team and the NSW government collected more than 24,000 invertebrate specimens from 20 sites in and around the island’s subtropical forests.
Lord Howe has more than 1600 different known invertebrate species and about half are known nowhere else on Earth. For a scientist, it’s a world of discovery.
You turn over a rock and everything is different,
Adams said.
Because Lord Howe has no native mammals, the island’s food web is unusual. Bugs would often be eaten by small mammals but, now the invaders have gone, birds and reptiles are thriving. [click the intro to return to front page]

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.

"Promises and pie-crust," Jonathan Swift wrote in 1738, "are made to be broken." Vladimir Lenin, who liked the line, treated it as a slogan. Anthony Albanese treats it as a principle, Henry Ergas points out in the The Australian today. [click to read more]
The Prime Minister’s defence for repudiating assurances he had insistently reiterated ∼ indeed, for the 50th time
∼ is that Australia faces a crisis of intergenerational equity. But as Jonathan Pincus and I demonstrated on these pages, the claim is analytically incoherent and empirically threadbare. Nor, even if there were such inequities, would that justify the abrupt abandonment of repeatedly affirmed undertakings.
Serious governments seek democratic consent for contentious measures they had previously assured voters they would not introduce. John Howard did so with the GST: having ruled it out, he reversed openly, took it to the 1998 election, and proceeded only on the mandate he won there.
Greatest tax take in commonwealth history
The reason the Albanese government has not followed suit is neither urgency nor necessity. It is fear: fear that despite the opposition’s parlous state, voters would punish a government that has spent freely, governed carelessly and is now poised to extract the greatest tax take in commonwealth history.
The budget’s own numbers make the reality plain. Even accepting Treasury’s assumptions, the budget measures will increase housing supply over the next decade by less than one-third of 1%, while housing demand is likely to rise more than 15 times as quickly. This is not serious economic reform. It is a revenue grab wrapped in the language of moral urgency.
Corroding public trust
The inevitable result of that gap between political rhetoric and political practice is to corrode public trust. Trust, after all, is not a natural disposition; it is a social achievement, slowly accumulated and quickly squandered.
The word itself reveals the point. The Old English treow
lies behind both truth
and trust
; since at least the 15th century, to trust
someone has meant to believe that when he says what he will do, he speaks truthfully. Governments can sustain trust only by being truthful and trustworthy — and the institutional form through which those virtues manifest themselves is the promise.
A promise is what binds words to conduct, declarations to action, and electoral consent to subsequent government. Governments owe fidelity to their promises not merely for their own political advantage; they owe it because a healthy democratic life depends upon citizens being able to assume and assess fidelity to public commitments.
Governments need to mean what they say
The credibility of promises is also more broadly crucial to the viability of a free society, whose very essence is that people must order their lives amid continual uncertainty. Promises, including the promise that laws will not be changed capriciously, are what give individuals, families and businesses stable ground on which to plan. As Hannah Arendt wisely observed, they build islands of predictability
in the ocean of uncertainty
— islands that matter most to those with the fewest resources to absorb sudden policy shocks.
A young couple relying on an investment property to finance homeownership, a retiree dependent on hard-earned savings, a small business weighing expansion: all rely on governments meaning what they say.
But promises can only fulfil that stabilising role because they belong to the grammar of commitment: to the forms of obligation whose value lies in their relative insulation from changing convenience. A promise abandoned the moment it becomes burdensome is worth no more than the loyalty that melts away at the first sign of difficulty.
The preservation of credible public commitments is especially vital in Australia, where suspicion of the political process long predates contemporary disenchantment. Distrust of politicians was, as John Hirst emphasised, constitutive of the colonial polity itself. The men who entered politics were not thought fit to be trusted - and despite outstanding exceptions, many weren't.
Pioneering scholars of mass behaviour
The endless Australian debate over the accountability of parliamentarians reflected that suspicion. Both the Burkean trustee ∼ who is guided only by the light of his own judgment ∼ and the instructed delegate had their advocates. But it was the latter conception, entrenched by the emerging Labor Party, that ultimately prevailed. Labor parliamentarians were to be mere instruments: controlled by the ALP’s extra-parliamentary wing, bound by a pledge to uphold the platform and required to submit to caucus discipline on pain of political excommunication.
The Australian mass party thus emerged, from the beginning, as an institutional response to distrust: a mechanism designed less to cultivate confidence in politicians than to contain the risks they posed once elected. And Australian voters learned to scrutinise the distance between promise and performance with an intensity rare in comparable democracies. When that gap widened too far, confidence collapsed.
It is against this background that the events of the past three years must be seen. The Albanese government’s record on the central tax promises of two successive elections ∼ stage three, superannuation, and now negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount ∼ does not just constitute a litany of broken commitments; it constitutes the accelerated dismantling of an already tarnished public asset.
The predictable effect is an even more accelerated crisis of political representation. The four-decade arc from 1975’s 4% third-party vote to 2025’s 34% highlights its seemingly inexorable progression.
Withdrawing faithfulness
Those voters who have spurned the major parties are not ideological partisans of any third force; they are observant citizens who, having grasped what the parties no longer deliver, exercise the only sanction the system leaves them. Unable to meaningfully demand or expect faithfulness to a program from parties whose programs have ceased to bind, they withdraw their own faithfulness from those parties altogether.
The alternatives may not be especially attractive nor particularly unifying — but negative coalitions, aimed at punishing a detested foe, form more easily than positive ones precisely because they require only shared aversion rather than common aspiration. In these conditions, anti-system parties flourish, their capacity to aggregate voters a symptom not of democratic renewal but of democratic exhaustion.
To make things worse, governments confronted by a perpetually seething electorate are naturally tempted to govern through stealth and administrative manoeuvre, further impairing the trust whose disappearance produced the crisis of representation in the first place. And when a real, rather than confected, emergency arrives, they discover they can no longer summon the loyalties and willingness to sacrifice on which the survival of free societies ultimately depends.
Public language becomes tactical
No society can govern itself for long on the assumption that public language is merely tactical. Governments that repeatedly break faith with the electorate may secure temporary advantages. But they do so by undermining the confidence that policies announced today will survive long enough to shape behaviour tomorrow. As that confidence erodes, both the effectiveness of public policy and force of democratic authority unravel.
That is the deeper significance of the Albanese government’s conduct. It is not merely bad policy. It is the depletion of a civic inheritance that free societies squander far more easily than they rebuild. Yes, promises can be cracked like pie crusts. But in the end, public trust cracks with them. Lenin, sheltered by brutal authoritarianism, never had to learn that lesson. With the fabric of our democracy rapidly fraying, it is high time Anthony Albanese did.
No
guilded
lillies
here!
Scott Pape in Daily Telegraph
A
fter reading this column, my editor said: I'm confident this piece will generate the greatest amount of hate mail you've ever received.
Let's see if they're right
Do you know what the easiest thing I could have done this week was? Exactly what every other financial commentator has done: Lean into the outrage about the budget.
Instead, I'm going the other way. And I'm probably going to piss a lot of you off. Starting with Brian, who wrote to me after what I can only imagine was a solid session on the La-Z-Boy with a few reds:
Labor's tax grab? |
Scott, I am just so sick of these incompetent bastards. This budget is just another giant Labor tax grab. People in the top 10% of income earners pay more than half the taxes. Half! Now Albo wants to be a 47% silent partner in every small business in the country. Why would anyone bother? Young people saving for a deposit in index funds? Taxed.
Family trusts helping kids through university? Taxed. Small business owners who've spent decades building something? Taxed at rates that would make your eyes water.
New Zealand has no capital gains tax. Dubai has no capital gains tax. And our smartest young people are figuring that out real fast. You've got the platform, Scott. Let your followers know what’s really going on.
Bingo-bango, Brian! You've sure got a lot of very big feelings. Thankfully, I'm a father of four. I deal with big feelings before breakfast.
Let’s get into it.
Brian and I have a lot in common. I'm a high income earner and I pay a lot of tax. I come from a family of small business owners and I run one myself. And I bristle when I see politicians crowing about their economic credentials. The fact is, this is the highest-taxing Australian government since World War Two, and that spending is putting pressure on interest rates that every mortgage holder feels.
Yet what really worries me isn't the tax take. It’s that our outrage meter seems to be stuck at 11.
It feels like we're drifting towards America, where everything is viewed through a political lens and everyone is absolutely furious all the time.
Barefoot has given a scathing budget reality check.
And if we get angry enough we might just end up with Pauline as our PM, and the greatest economic insight she’s ever had was asking Why can't we just print more money?
(Seriously, look it up.)
Anyway, let’s deal with Brian’s three beefs. Plenty of young people have written to me in a panic about the changes to capital gains tax. Many were planning to use their share portfolio as a house deposit.
CGT not biggest problem |
My view? The CGT change is not their biggest problem. Let’s say a young investor puts $50k into an Aussie index fund. Based on historical returns, it grows to around $72k over five years. Under the new CGT rules, they'd pay roughly $900 more tax when they sell. And depending on future returns and inflation, they might actually come out ahead.
The real problem is the share market dropping 40% and their $72,000 deposit becoming $43,000. Then it takes a decade to recover, while rents keep rising and they're still at their parents' place eating their Cheerios. That’s why my rule has never changed: do not save for a house deposit in the share market.
Business partner! |
Brian’s 47 per cent silent partner
line was funny on social media the first 700 times. Now it’s just annoying. And it’s wrong. The small business CGT concession regime allows the vast majority of small business owners to halve or completely eliminate the capital gains tax they pay when they sell. It’s been there for years (though the thresholds need to be increased.)
The real risk is using the tax rate as a reason not to back yourself. Building something from nothing, employing people, serving your community. It’s a hard life. It’s also one of the most rewarding things a person can do. Don't let a meme talk you out of it.
The family trust |
Okay, so this one stings. You see, my kids have been nothing but a spectacular financial loss since the day they arrived. I was counting down the days until they turned 18, when I could finally start distributing trust income to them and claw something back. And then the bloody government snapped that door shut just as my eldest was getting close to useful.
Yet it actually makes sense. The system lets wealthy families with good accountants pay less tax than nurses and tradies. That doesn't pass the pub test.
Finally, if you spend enough time on social media (or listen to Brian) you may start to think that Australia is the highest-taxed nation on earth. Actually, we're in the middle of the pack, but with a standard of living in the top handful of countries on the planet. The cops don't shake us down (mostly). Our kids go to decent public schools (mostly). And if one of them gets sick, you don't need a GoFundMe page.
We'll be fine. After all, we're the wealthiest people in the country. Living in one of the wealthiest countries in the world. At the richest time in human history. Life is good, Brian, especially when you log off. Tread Your Own Path!
Financially abusing my brother |
Hi Scott: My brother just divorced his nasty wife. She had access to all his accounts, blew through a $180,000 inheritance, ran up $25,000 on his credit card, and towards the end wouldn't even let him touch his own debit card. He’s now living with me. He’s on a disability pension and can't work. I manage his accounts, have set-up his savings, and have tried to teach him the basics. He says it’s too hard. My sister accuses me of making it worse. Am I doing more harm than good?
Hello Caring Sister, your brother is lucky to have you.Your sister doesn't sound nice, but she does have a point. (How’s that for having it both ways?)
Now, before you throw me across the room, I know your intentions are completely different from his nasty ex-wife’s. You love your brother. She didn't. But, from where he’s standing, someone else is still controlling his money, his savings, and his decisions.
Now your bro doesn't need to become the next Warren Buffett. He just needs to learn to stand on his own two feet again, but that won't happen while you're transferring his surplus savings for him.
Think about how this plays out long term. Your brother grows increasingly dependent on you. You grow increasingly resentful and neither of you need that.
My advice? Keep helping him with the basics. Set him up with one simple account, show him how to use his card, and then step back. Let him make small mistakes with small money. That’s how people learn. And then, when the settlement comes, he'll be ready to move out and start his new life. That’s good for him, and great for you.
No Show Albo |
Scott: As a man who lost the family home because of my gambling addiction (a shame I live with every day), and as a father whose teenage son 'plays' fantasy football and gets emails and ads from sports gambling companies, I was bitterly disappointed that the government tried to bury their inaction on gambling ads. Did you get a reply from the Prime Minister?
Hi Daniel: I wasn't expecting a reply, and old Albo didn't disappoint!
He’s the most powerful man in Australian politics. He had the backing from both sides of politics, and the people — nearly three-quarters of parents (myself included) reported being bothered by their kids being exposed to gambling ads.
He had the ability to stand up and say: We've got a huge gambling problem on our hands, and the beginning of that problem is that sport is a gateway to gambling: today for three in four kids it’s a normal part of sport. That’s crap. I'm the Prime Minister of this country and I've had enough. No more bloody ads.
But he didn't.
The lobbyists won, the kids lost — the odds never change.
People walk past a billboard with a picture of Iranian people, in Tehran, Iran. Photo: Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
Eric Schmitt, reporting from Washington writes in the The New York Times military officials said that the recent military strikes targeted missile sites near a major Iranian port that threatened U.S. ships and planes. American military forces conducted what U.S. Central Command said were "self-defense strikes" in southern Iran on Monday "to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces." The targets included missile launch sites and Iranian boats trying to place mines, Capt. Tim Hawkins, a Central Command spokesman, said in a statement. "U.S. Central Command continues to defend our forces while using restraint during the ongoing cease-fire," said Captain Hawkins, who declined to say which ships came under fire, where they were located or precisely where the other U.S. strikes took place. A senior U.S. military official said Iranian surface-to-air missiles threatened some of the dozens of American warplanes and nearly two dozen Navy warships ∼ including two aircraft carriers and their escort vessels ∼ that are in or around the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea enforcing a blockade against vessels trying to enter or leave Iranian ports. The official added that the U.S. strikes hit near Bandar Abbas, a major port and Iranian navy base. American and Iranian forces have had other skirmishes since a cease-fire took effect about six weeks ago. But the strikes on Monday came as Iranian negotiators arrived in Qatar for talks on ending the war and they threatened to upend a fragile potential agreement that President Trump has said could reopen the Strait of Hormuz and relieve the greatest energy disruption in modern times. That Iranian missile batteries were reportedly zeroing in on U.S. Navy ships came as no surprise, despite repeated assertions from Mr. Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and other military leaders that the 38-day American-Israeli military campaign had vastly degraded or destroyed much of Iran's combat power. U.S. intelligence agencies have told policymakers in confidential assessments from early this month that Iran has regained access to most of its missile sites, launchers and underground facilities. While the United States has sunk most of Iran's conventional navy, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps still retains hundreds of small speedboats that can be used to lay mines in the strait. Most alarming to some senior officials is evidence that Iran has restored operational access to 30 of the 33 missile sites it maintains along the Strait of Hormuz, which could threaten American warships and oil tankers transiting the narrow waterway. People briefed on the assessments said they show ∼ to varying degrees, depending on the level of damage incurred at the different sites ∼ that the Iranians can use mobile launchers that are inside the sites to move missiles to other locations. In some cases, Iran can launch missiles directly from launchpads that are part of the facilities.
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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.
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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
