Tuesday 12-05-2026 8:31pm

Spooner in today's Oz. The Australian federal budget is handed down in Canberra at 7:30 tonight.

Fizzer launches on the hope of
giving beer a bit of a shake-up

Gold Coast-based drinks maker Hard Fizz has seen immediate reward from shifting its strategy away from seltzers to vodka-based canned drinks, as consumers increasingly favour value and health. Australians are drinking less, but when they do they are prioritising lower price points and low-sugar options over traditional alcoholic beverages. Hard Fizz, with $4.5m in initial backing, led by big-name Aussie DJ Paul Fisher (who's stage name is DJ FISHER), was born out of the pandemic as an alcoholic seltzer company trying to catch the wave brought on by US imports such as White Claw. The ready-to-drink canned beverage market boomed after the pandemic, when drinkers got used to ready-made cocktails which didn't require mixology skills. As the category has matured, however, more people are turning to an old classic with a new spin: vodka RTDs."The main reason we pivoted to vodka is with seltzer you're more limited in flavour," Hard Fizz chief executive Wade Tiller told The Australian. "And the Aussie consumer wants it because it's better, low sugar, low calories and that's why beer is really under fire as a category." Hard Fizz pivoted hard after a deluge of seltzer options entered a waning market, launching its vodka RTDs in September. The company offers eight seltzer products and two vodka options.With the vodka sales already two times better than seltzer sales, Hard Fizz's vodka drinks will make up 55% of the company's volume in the financial year to date.


 SPORT:

Players need to walk the talk

The spectacularly cranky and furiously out-of-form Alex de Minaur, and Jannik Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff and all their mates should go on strike or shut up about their prizemoney grievances. [click to read more]

Will Swanton in the Oz this morning comments they either care enough to make placards and take proper action at the French Open or concede they don't really give a hoot before going about their regular business on the empire of dirt and terracotta clay at Roland Garros.

The French federation is baiting them and winning. After the players' consistent grizzling about receiving a lowly percentage of takings at the majors, the French Open has flipped the bird by giving them less, dropping their percentage of the gate from 15.5% to 14.9%.

I side with the players on all this ∼ they deserve their desired 22% of the kitty because it wouldn't be much of a French Open without them ∼ but their threats are sounding increasingly shallow.

They talk and talk but nobody walks. They're like your work colleagues forever whinging about their boss and pay and job. Mate, if you don't like it, quit! If you stay, stop complaining! Similarly, the players need to show they're fair dinkum or drop it.

The majors are banking on these athletes never skipping one of the tournaments that define their legacies. The message from the French Open is: You need us more than we need you. Unless the players get serious and take action, the fine print is right.

De Minaur was at pains during the Australian Open to explain that players are not demanding more money. They're seeking a higher percentage of spiralling profits. Because they're the ones generating windfall after windfall. If the majors make more dosh, so do the players. If the majors make less, so do the players. Seems impeccably reasonable to me. Are they responsible for 22% of a tournament’s success? Yes.

It’s lazy and easy to shout, the greedy bastards! The appeal and marketability of Sinner, Alcaraz, Sabalenka, Gauff and even de Minaur, before his season went belly-up, is undeniable. For example, this year’s final at Melbourne Park between Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic had 6.302 million TV viewers just in Australia. Ticket sales were through the roof. All thanks to the players.

Their request has merit. They get 22% of the takings at regular ATP and WTA events. It should be the same at the majors. But they need to strike or shoosh. Their words are becoming hollow. Perhaps they should consider the landmark Wimbledon of 1973, when 81 of the world’s best male players, including America’s defending champion Stan Smith and Australia’s John Newcombe and Ken Rosewall, boycotted the tournament in a watershed moment for the sport.

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 STOCKMARKET:

Rally about to end with a thud?

U.S. stocks closed slightly higher on Monday, with AI optimism fueling upward momentum even as the earnings-driven fervor of the recent rally eased in the home stretch of reporting season and as crude prices rose, stoking inflation worries as U.S.-Iran peace negotiations stalled, Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]

All three major U.S. stock indexes advanced and the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq eked out their latest in a series of all-time closing highs.

Semiconductors handily outshone other sectors, with the PHLX Semiconductor index jumping 2.6%, suggesting the AI wave is showing few signs of abating.

The semis and AI infrastructure trade has taken on a life entirely of its own, said Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Baird in Louisville, Kentucky. And there’s so much momentum and chasing to get in on some of these names that it seems almost somewhat divorced from any sort of like headline or announcement.

But some market watchers believe the rally is about to run out of momentum.

Investor Michael Burry warned on Monday that stocks are likely about to crash. In a post on his Substack, Burry, one of the biggest winners of the 2008 financial meltdown, said that the 2026 rally in tech stocks is about to end with a thud. The market has jumped the shark, he wrote.

First-quarter reporting period is nearing the finish line, with 440 of the companies in the S&P 500 having reported. Of those, 83% have topped earnings expectations, according to LSEG IBES.

As of Friday, analysts estimated first-quarter S&P 500 earnings growth, on aggregate, of 28.6% year-on-year. That’s nearly double the 14.4% first-quarter growth estimates as of April 1.

The strength of the rally largely is a function of earnings growth, which is superb, said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis.

Market watchers are looking ahead to next week, when the big-box retailers report, to get a sense of if there’s any change in consumer spending behavior following, you know, elevated prices at the gas pump.

But as earnings season nears the finish line, focus returns to macroeconomics and geopolitical developments.

President Donald Trump dismissed Iran’s response to a U.S. peace proposal, causing crude prices to spike and stoking concerns that a prolonged conflict will keep putting upward pressure on inflation, particularly at the gasoline pump, where consumers are feeling the pinch.

On that point, investors will pay close attention to economic indicators this week, particularly the Labor Department’s Consumer Price Index and the retail sales report from the Commerce Department, scanning the data for signs that the ongoing surge in energy prices is metastasizing into broader inflation or affecting consumer spending.

Producer prices and industrial output are also on this week’s economic calendar.

Later this week, President Trump is due to meet his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in Beijing for talks covering a broad range of issues, including the Iran war, trade, nuclear weapons, Taiwan, artificial intelligence and possible extension of a critical rare-earth minerals deal.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 95.31 points, or 0.19%, to 49,704.47, the S&P 500 gained 13.91 points, or 0.19%, to 7,412.84 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 27.05 points, or 0.10%, to 26,274.13.

Among the 11 major sectors of the S&P 500, energy stocks boasted the largest percentage gains, while communication services were the biggest laggards.

Companies slated to report this week include tech networking giant Cisco and semiconductor equipment maker Applied Materials, while heavyweights Nvidia and Walmart are due to report later in the month.

On Monday, Intel rose 3.6% after surging 14% on Friday on a report of a preliminary chip-making agreement with Apple, while peer Qualcomm jumped 8.4% to a record high.

Media major Fox Corp rose 7.6% after beating third-quarter revenue estimates.

Among other movers, some airline stocks slipped as rising oil prices threatened to squeeze margins. Southwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines , Alaska Air and United Airlines fell between 2.9% and 4.4%.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.08-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 567 new highs and 144 new lows on the NYSE.

On the Nasdaq, 2,129 stocks rose and 2,704 fell as declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.27-to-1 ratio.

The S&P 500 posted 39 new 52-week highs and 42 new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 157 new highs and 164 new lows.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 21.42 billion shares, compared with the 17.99 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.


 NEWS:

🚇 Observing
railways
antiquated
journeys

There is beautiful scenery on this very affordable 'first class' NSW Trainlink service. But there are glaring problems with the facilities, reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

Petra Rees in the Australian observes the odd collection of people at the Grand Concourse at Sydney’s Central Station around 6am on a weekday.

Travellers congregate in groups trying to find the luggage check-in office. Rough sleepers occupy every niche along the heritage brick walls.

A tall, elegant lady walks across the centre of the vast hall trailing an impressive train of toilet paper like a streamer from her head. Soon the cafe opens with pastries, beverages and assorted hot food.

But first I need to check in. The luggage office is tucked away beside a platform and a queue quickly forms as two staff weigh and tag bags for all over the state. Boarding the train is simple once you show your ticket and find the right carriage.

The seats in first-class carriage B are set two-by-two with a spacious aisle between. They are comfy and covered in the same cloth you might see in suburban trains with a busy blue pattern so as not to show the dirt.

The seats can recline but only a few centimetres and there is a standard plastic tray table attached to the seat in front and a pocket to store a book or iPad. There’s a generous open shelf above for a small bag or backpack and more shelves near the carriage door.

I am pleased that I am next to the window but hoping very much that the seat next to mine remains empty. That lasts until Parramatta. The train is fully booked and so every seat is allocated. My fear has been well-founded. In this quiet service, with no aircraft noise and no headphones, I have drawn a talker. Oh dear.

We have hours to go and all I can do is bury my head in my book and stare pointedly at the view. Unfortunately, she is undeterred and soon I have heard all about a goat that died after getting its head stuck in a sewer pipe.

This is a horrific revelation. There is no tech to talk about. There is no wifi.

There is no charging point. In some places along the route there is no phone service. I hear one staff member warning a fellow passenger to be sure to make their purchase at the buffet soon before the EFTPOS cuts out.

There are no screens to distract you from the here and now. We have travelled back in time.

Many passengers are prepared for the lack of technology and have brought their own diversions. Luckily I have a book, as do several others. A mother and daughter across the aisle are playing cards. A father with a small child reads a story.

Others are enjoying a conversation with new acquaintances and we can all listen in. Politics and family history are favourite topics. It’s not for the faint-hearted.

But the true entertainment is the view! At first we zip past suburban streets, red-brick flats and neglected backyards, enlivened by graffiti.

An hour into the journey we pass the sandstone cliffs of the Blue Mountains. On the left after Katoomba Station, the vast gulf of the Megalong Valley opens up.

Across the mountains the landscape changes to rolling green hills and creeks winding beside the tracks. Some sheep give way to Angus cattle. There are small farmhouses from time to time but mostly rocks and bush with the line cut through rugged grey granite.

In the distance, old viaducts from abandoned train lines appear and then fade out of view as the new track takes a different route. Occasional stands of poplars signal an old established home with rusting cars and water tanks.

We are deep in country NSW and it is beautiful.

OK, so my ticket says first class but that’s not reflected in the buffet food on offer.

The buffet car, car C, is just to the rear, and open for coffee (a bag in a paper cup), hot pies and sausage rolls, Devonshire teas, sandwiches, cheese and crackers, soft drinks and wine. A pie is $7, a middy of beer starts at $8.50, and scones with jam and cream are priced at $5.50.

Your purchases are secured in a cardboard tray to take back to your seat.

For those travelling on to Dubbo, the hot lunch options include beef bourguignon, butter chicken, Thai green curry and fish, each priced at $13.50. The spag bol is only $9.90.

The staff are pleasant and friendly but this is not like airline service. Announcements over the PA system are informative for those getting off and on the train. A staff member is ready at the door to help people with their luggage and to mind the gap.

A first-class ticket comes with 20kg checked baggage allowance. Others bring smaller bags inside and there seems to be plenty of storage available.

At the end of the journey a porter transfers the bags from the train to a trolley so you can collect your luggage before leaving the platform.

My return ticket to Orange cost $114, a bargain in this era of sky-high petrol and diesel prices.

This is a comfortable way to travel and it is very competitive with airline services, especially when you factor in the rising cost of fuel and air tickets.

But railways should be ready for the 21st century. There’s really no excuse for not having phone charging facilities.

Bring snacks, a book, a battery bank and noise-cancelling headphones if you want solitude to enjoy the passing landscape.

Ed: Petra … we experience your angst every time we travel to Newcastle or Sydney but have given up complaining.

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 LOCAL CHATTER:
EXCITEMENT in Murrurundi south this morning. It rained overnight but a look at the gauge revealed not even 1m was at the bottom.
♦♦♦♦
While on the subject of excitement and Murra South … a resident was disturbed the other night with scurrying and scraping outside the loungeroom window in the very early hours of the morning. On looking out he witness a very big stag with a tyre on his horns trying to get it off. When disturbed he cantered off down the road with the bit of rubber flapping about. This drought has desimated gardens as deer search for food and they are not too particular about its source!
♦♦♦♦
Scone Horse Festival continues today with the Godolphin Jack Johnston Memorial gala day at White Park 9-1:00 along with the Scone Arts and Craft exhibition at the Scone Arts & Craft Centre 10-4:00 and the Primary School Arts Prizes exhibition in the Upper Hunter Library 10-5:30. There is a Yarns Night on at 7:00 at Scone Sporties.
♦♦♦♦
Murrurundi Mens Shed held its annual yesterday with both the long-time president and vice president, Ray Shoobert along with president Terry Toneguzzi retiring although the other three officers, Peter Sawyer, Des Dugan and Stephen Davis were re-elected to the committee. Respects were paid to two long time members passing, namely Phil Dunn and Kevin Taylor. During last year' rein the shed launched a stall at the Murrurundi Markets, signs on the Wilson Memorial gate and took delivery of a laser paint stripper — a first in the Australian Mens Shed community.

 NEWS:

💬 Recruiters
facing
penalties

Organised crime gangs recruiting children through Airtasker style apps for shootings and firebombings face up to 15 years' jail under tough new NSW laws, the Daily Telegraph newspaper reports today.

Public shootings will also attract tougher penalties, and maximum penalties will be increased for shooting at homes, businesses and cars. Maximum penalties for firebombing businesses will also increase.

The new offences and tougher penalties come after a string of underworld attacks, including violence directed towards the infamous Alameddine clan.

Last month, multiple homes linked to the Alameddines in the city’s west were targeted in bold drive-by shootings.

Among the violence, Rafat Alameddine’s home was being shot at, police intercepted a planned hit on rapper Ali Younes, and Younes' bodyguard was kidnapped.

NSW Police believe the violence is being orchestrated on Airtasker-style apps where young would-be thugs are being offered cash for illicit jobs.

In a bid to crack down on the wave of violence, the Minns government will introduce legislation today increasing maximum sentences for anyone convicted of recruiting children for crimes.

Anyone hiring kids to steal cars or commit serious offences linked to organised crime will face up to 15 years in prison under a new aggravated offence.

Analysis of NSW Police's Taskforce Falcon last month showed that 19 youths aged under 18 had been arrested in the taskforce's gang crackdown.

That made up a startling 31 per cent of Falcon's arrests - with under-18s the most represented of any age cohort.

The "Airtasker" model has made it difficult for NSW Police to arrest and charge the bosses hiring thugs for crimes like intimidation, kidnaps and shootings.

Officers are catching many of the young people carrying out the illicit jobs.
Ed: And what are you doing about the kids????

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👛 Trust to help
fight war hero
witch hunt

A decorated war hero’s high-school mate has established a trust after overwhelming public support emerged for Ben Roberts-Smith, reports news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

A high-school mate of Ben Roberts-Smith has set up a trust so the overwhelming number of Australians coming forward with donations can be assured they are supporting the war hero financially without getting scammed.

Adam Veale, an accountant and long-time friend of Roberts-Smith, set up the The Ben Roberts-Smith VC MG Trust — the only legitimate platform for contributions with the family’s blessing.

Veale told news.com.au: there has been an overwhelming amount of support for Ben, with Australians from all walks of life reaching out and wanting to know how they can help.

“This trust is a simple and safe way for Australians to rally behind Ben as he undertakes his monumental battle, and ensure his family is supported.

“While the Trust wasn't established at the request of Ben or his family, it’s the formal and safe way to ensure support goes to where it’s most needed.

The bid to clear his name has already been a costly process. Now he’s up against the might of the government, in a trial that may drag on for years. This is about doing everything we can to help level the playing field.

Ben Roberts-Smith is on strict conditional bail while he awaits a potential trial on alleged war crimes.

The Victoria Cross recipient faces five charges of war crime murder over allegations he killed unarmed civilians during his service with the Australian SAS in Afghanistan.

Each charge carries a potential life sentence in prison. Roberts-Smith has not yet entered a plea but has always strenuously denied any wrongdoing.

The trust was established on April 25, 2026 in response to overwhelming offers and expressions of interest to support Ben and his family through what will be the fight of his life.

“The Trust was established by a group of close friends and associates of Ben — not by or at the request of Ben or his family, who are reluctant to ask for help. However, it was done with their knowledge and blessing, the trust site says.

“TThe BRS Trust has been established as a discretionary trust, with beneficiaries being Ben Roberts-Smith, and his family.

By centralising contributions through this verified channel, we protect supporters from scams and can ensure all funds reach their intended purpose in providing support to Ben and his family.

The Commonwealth spent in excess of $300 million taxpayers' money investigating these allegations, according to the trust site.

It is anticipated hundreds of millions will be spent by the Commonwealth to prosecute Ben.

This Trust will be used to alleviate the financial burden - ensuring Ben gets a fair go and his family is supported through the years ahead the site contends.

The Afghanistan Inquiry Legal Assistance Scheme exists to cover the reasonable costs of legal representation and defending charges brought by the Commonwealth, however the reality is that there are costs associated with defending the charges that are not covered under the Scheme".

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📣 Product
claims
a load
of crap

Supermarket foods claiming to be 'natural' or ’sustainable' mostly just using marketing terms, researchers find. Survey of 27,000 Australian supermarket items found some products boasting environmental benefits had significantly higher emissions than unlabelled counterparts The Guardian informs. [click to read the rest of the story].

Nearly four in 10 products carried some sort of sustainability claim, the study in Public Health Nutrition found.

The majority of claims were self-declared by the manufacturer, without independent verification, associate prof Alexandra Jones, the institute’s program lead for food governance, said.

Consumers are increasingly trying to make food choices that are good for the planet, and manufacturers know it. What we're finding is that the labels designed to guide those choices are largely unregulated and that creates real risks of greenwashing.

Out of 69 different environmental claims identified by the researchers, natural and vegan appeared most often. Some, like sustainable or natural, were so broad as to be almost meaningless, she said.

There’s no legal meaning of 'natural' but we know that people associate it with being better for you, or being better for the environment, she said. But many things are natural that are not good in a health context. Sugar is natural — that doesn't mean it’s good for you.

In a second study, George Institute researchers assessed whether products displaying climate-related claims actually had lower emissions, publishing their results in Cleaner and Responsible Consumption.

They found, in general terms, that products making such claims had lower carbon footprints, however in certain categories the opposite was true.

In meat and confectionery ∼ two high-emitting categories ∼ products boasting environmental benefits had significantly higher emissions than their unlabelled counterparts.

Lead author Mariel Keaney said this raised serious concerns for consumer trust.

When 'carbon friendly' labels appear on some of the highest-emitting products in a category, that label isn't just unhelpful, it’s also potentially misleading. Shoppers trying to reduce their environmental footprint deserve better than that.

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 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:

Brett Slater bought a one-way ticket to Perth when the last of his three children ∼ Tom, Marcus and Bethany ∼ moved out there

The Telegraph editor Chris Evans reports many Labour MPs hoped Sir Keir Starmer's reset speech would be the moment that salvaged his premiership. However, it left them more frustrated than ever, writes Tony Diver, our Political Editor, who was in the room as Starmer took to the stage. In today's edition: ♦ The scrapped warship that makes a mockery of the Royal Navy. ♦ 'My children left, so I did too': the little-known British migration trend. ♦ Benedict Cumberbatch in 'road rage' row with cyclist. ♦ Iran demands US release frozen assets in deal to end war. ♦ AI turns evil after reading too much sci-fi. ♦ Trump's 'would-be assassin' pleads not guilty. ♦ Navy uniform with 'buttons like nipples' given £200k revamp and ♦ US and French citizens flown from rat-virus cruise ship test positive.




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