It is said that ‘be nice to the people you pass on the way up, because you may live to pass them on the way down’. Yet even his fiercest rival, the more credible of the media pack are the first to admit than Daniel Michael Andrews, is a man who knows how the system of government is played and not only does he know but more importantly he is a master of the art.
Read more: The battle of Beauty and the Beast #2
I did my usual trip down to pick up Ms Redhead and go to our local IGA and grab everything that we didn't know we needed. You know that shopping trip: When you don't need anything but suddenly you find yourself with a trolley full of stuff that was on special and quite
That feeling when you just have to have it, no matter what. That naughty wicked slice of cake or ice cream in Redhead's case. Or mine, the anchovy paste or personal decadent slice of tomato. But what I have found over this year is not so much what I find irresistible, but more what our Governments have decided we cannot resist but they will resist on our behalf.
The former Prime Minister of Australia, Kevin Rudd, has been a busy boy lately. He has launched a petition calling for a royal commission into Rupert Murdoch's media empire ( which includes Sky News Australia ) after coming to the conclusion that News Corp was running a "protection racket" for the Coalition.
Now, we Aussies know that Sky is the home to Peta Credlin, Alan Jones, Rowan Dean, Mark Latham. Chris Kenny and Paul Murray. Not to mention one of my favourites, Gary Hardgraves. We also enjoy the insight of James Morrow, Rita Panahi and guests including the delightful Bronwyn Bishop ( who should have been our first Lady Prime Minister ) the magnificent Advance Australia representative Liz Storer and dear John Ruddick.
What a pack of bastards the left think these people are. Yet, to people like me, they are the link to sanity in my insane world that is Australia in the dystopian Mad Max World that is 2020.
Read more: Kevin and Theresa Rudd, Pink Batts and School Halls
The colloquial Aussie-ism directed at men who lack ticker, who are seen as weak, in leadership or intestinal fortitude, is one that I have never liked is that ‘he does not have the balls’. Yet this expression wraps that vision in a nutshell.
As one like millions of Australians and those who now call this great country home, I have watched as an epidemic, greater than any mutation of a ‘flu virus, be it natural or generated in a Chinese laboratory , remain impotent and frustrated. That epidemic is not the attack on the physical senses, but the neurological ...it is F E A R!
It' s been a big year from all around the globe this year with more nominations than ever before in history. In a field of standout contenders internationally, the Australian Finalists for 2020 have been announced. It has been a hard decision due to the sheer volume of incredibly sh!t people we had to choose from.
90 minutes of emotion against rational thought. Welcome to the Vice Presidential debate of 2020. And what a debate it was.
I sat watching the VP hopeful, Ms Kamala Harris grind her way through an hour and a half of deflection and sobs; nasal emotional pleas for justice and a fly buzzing around while a dog barked and a camel pissed itself.
Meanwhile, Vice President Mike Pence sat calmly like an indulgent yet powerful parent whilst the little kiddie choked back sobs with " heartfelt and intense emotion " and Daddy shook his head and said " No. "
Seriously, is this what we have come to? Reality TV where some disadvantaged brown woman croaks out pleas for social justice whilst a white Christian male sits back and endures her lies?
It is said that a civilisation can be judged by the way it treats its vulnerable. If this is the case, then we are a beyond help, unless we have a major reset in our values and moral compass.
Today I read with dismay and horror the story of an 83 year old woman with dementia who " fell " in an Australian hospital. Well, it must have been one hell of a " fall. "
Make no mistake. President Trump is the People's President. Across the world.
Just as Princess Diana, the People's Princess, gained the love and admiration of the people when she walked through the minefields of Laos all those years ago, President Trump has gained the love and admiration of people for his courage walking back to work after his brush with the Chinese Virus and leftist assasination attempts. He walked, as Princess Di did - with dignity, courage and incredible willpower and determination.
I often wondered how Princess Di , Lady Di, call her what you will - how she did that walk in Laos.
That takes guts.
And President Trump did a Lady Di and stood firm in the face of adversity and fear and he stared down the demons that many of us could not.
That is hero stuff.
I have just seen a video clip of five police arresting an expectant mother on a beach in Melbourne for not wearing a mask. .. failing to provide proof of who she is....... whatever their latest " reason " , the temperature was 30 degrees and people were on the beach, I noticed that others were not wearing a mask but they had to pick on another pregnant lady to be their victim. Old ladies with hip replacements, expectant mothers , the most vulnerable people the police of Victoria can find and they are using their powers to upset and victimise them. Worse still, she appeared to be bleeding and could have miscarried. Did they call an ambulance? No. They arrested her.
In a world that seems determined to teach us to hate our countries, I remember…
183 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble In a stunning turn of events, Peter “Cooker” Fookit - who…
322 hits
For nearly three decades, the Port Arthur Massacre has been remembered as Australia's darkest day…
427 hits
Who pays the Ferryman? In the old myths, no soul crossed the river Styx without…
275 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Special Correspondent for Ratty News Roderick Whiskers McNibble here, tail fluffed…
333 hits
Each war seems to produce its own under-appreciated heroes who, for reasons that have nothing…
380 hits
Just before dawn on August 7, 1915, the men of the 8th and 10th Australian…
372 hits
It is not often that a hero can also be a larrikin and vice versa.…
326 hits
On ANZAC Day we remember the fallen, the brave, the heroic. But behind every name…
355 hits
Magic happens everywhere and goodness, wonder and delight can be found alive and well throughout…
146 hits
How many people around the world have been warning about the danger we are in? …
159 hits
Two names. Two battles. One legend. At Chunuk Bair and Lone Pine, ANZAC soldiers faced…
481 hits
It has been truly said that Australia arrived in Gallipoli as six separate States and…
359 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Investigative Reporter Extraordinaire The Ratty News Foreign Desk | Special Report…
375 hits
There are men who live great adventures and there are men who write about them.…
396 hits
When life collapses and the weight of grief threatens to bury us, we have two…
394 hits
He was short, wiry, and came from the dusty outskirts of Clermont in rural Queensland.…
496 hits
As the sun rises on another ANZAC Day in less than two weeks, and an…
283 hits
Some memories shimmer in the mind like a heat haze, half mischief, half magic. This…
284 hits
For over five years now, this blog has grown into more than just a place…
281 hits
In a stunning turn of events, Roderick “Whiskers” McNibble - microphone-wielding rat and founding fur…
368 hits
How did it happen? How did a failed artist and fringe political agitator rise from…
323 hits
What happens when the battlefield goes silent....but the war doesn’t end? When soldiers come home,…
453 hits
John B. Calhoun’s “rat utopia” experiments of the 1960s, designed to be paradises with unlimited…
313 hits
Throughout history, religion has been hailed as a guiding light, a beacon of morality and…
363 hits
In a fast-changing Australia, where new cultures and identities weave fresh threads into our ever…
308 hits
When I was a young lass, I was a fencer. No, not the farming type…
327 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Ratty News Investigative Correspondent Heard Island, Antarctica - A once-quiet expanse of…
455 hits
In a world obsessed with competition, the most powerful alliances are often overlooked, those between…
323 hits
Fear has always been the most powerful weapon of control, whether wielded by governments against…
308 hits
On a chilly October night in 1938, millions of Americans huddled around their radios, unaware…
279 hits
The exact origins of April Fools’ Day remain unclear, but historians have traced it back…
346 hits