New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has resigned after months of rumors.
Ardern, whose popularity has plummeted during the last six months, told us “she had nothing left in the tank.” In her resignation speech, she called on Labour Party ministers to consider which reform areas should be priorities and which should be scrapped as Labour moves to try to wipe some controversial policies off its plate.
Read more: Requiem for Jacinda Ardern’s Political Life
Read more: Money Makes the World Go Round But Water Feeds the People?
Sometimes you get an email and think " Wow! I never knew that! " Here is such a one.
When baseball greats Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig went on tour in baseball-crazy Japan in 1934, some fans wondered why a third-string catcher named Moe Berg was included. Although he played with five major-league teams from 1923 to 1939, he was a very mediocre ballplayer. But Moe was regarded as the brainiest ballplayer of all time.
In fact Casey Stengel once said: "That is the strangest man ever to play baseball."
When all the baseball stars went to Japan, Moe Berg went with them and many people wondered why he went with "the team."
It is over 250 years since Captain Cook's discovery of the east coast of Australia and it's worth asking ... what was Cook doing here?
He certainly wasn't looking for Australia (or New Holland as it was then known) as Europeans had known it existed since the 1500's.
Like many other Europeans before him, Cook was searching for the fabled land of Terra Australis.
Read more: Captain Cook - A brief history of the Inevitable Colonisation of Australia
Read more: Australia is Australia and we should defend her as we would defend our Mother.
The so-called Aboriginal "Voice" is a king-size scam by the Labor Fabian/Marxists.
There is no official publication of what powers the Referendum will give to the Aboriginals, other than Anthony Albanese saying that it will have no power to veto Parliament, and Linda Burney, the Minister for Indigenous Australians, saying it will only be an advisory group. However, in a speech given in 2022 at the Garma Festival, referred to at the end of this article, the Prime Minister gave three points which prove conclusively that a referendum will be entirely unnecessary, and no more than a political scam.
I wonder, when and if, people will know what they are voting for.
Really.
One’s personal character should be a life-long investment.
When a politician offers you something at other people’s expense, remember these words of the poet John Dryden: “Better to shun the bait than struggle in the snare.”
Dryden’s admonition would have saved us a lot of trouble if we had applied its insight consistently to our economic and political thinking. The failure to do so has produced one disaster after another. This, I believe, is a character issue. Just as Christmas is a core spiritual foundation of Christianity, so too should personal character be a core foundation of our lives—and one we should champion on more days than just December 25.
It is so tragic. What a terrible place that we inhabit.
We all want to turn the clock back to days when boys were boys and men were men.
Women were elegant and nurturing mothers. Children were respectful and the family unit was a given, not an oddity.
Yet we have so many elephants in the room these days. What a shame. Because the real elephant in the room is a change to our Australian Constitution.
I would not normally comment on matters published on other sites. However, the thrust of the article was a denigration of Australia’s supposed subservience to the United States starting with our involvement in WW2 and gradual acceptance of American culture following WW1.
If I have any comment to make I make it on the offending site but in this instance a comment posted on social media prompts me to break my own rules. I do not subscribe to it as a commentator. The reason being that I have run out of patience with having to conform to the regimes of user name, password, PIN number, one time PIN number and other requirements of identification I refuse to take on anymore.
The council man was adamant:
“The Law must have its way,
The shed you built is not approved
It must come down today.”
“No doubt the shed is safe and strong
And no one has complained,
But plans and rules must bind us all
Or anarchy will reign.”
Failure to secure the islands shows why St. Petersburg couldn’t gain a foothold in the New World
Almost everyone in Russia and the United States is familiar with the story of how Alaska was sold to the Americans for next to nothing. Considerably fewer people have heard about the Russian colony in California.
And only historians seem to know that mere chance prevented the future 50th state of the US from becoming a part of the Russian Empire 205 years ago.
When news broke that Australia had declared war on New Zealand, most assumed it was…
1 hits
Beneath the swaying trees and the green grass of Norfolk Island lies a brutal chapter…
268 hits
In a world that seems determined to teach us to hate our countries, I remember…
308 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble In a stunning turn of events, Peter “Cooker” Fookit - who…
353 hits
For nearly three decades, the Port Arthur Massacre has been remembered as Australia's darkest day…
468 hits
Who pays the Ferryman? In the old myths, no soul crossed the river Styx without…
285 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Special Correspondent for Ratty News Roderick Whiskers McNibble here, tail fluffed…
348 hits
Each war seems to produce its own under-appreciated heroes who, for reasons that have nothing…
393 hits
Just before dawn on August 7, 1915, the men of the 8th and 10th Australian…
380 hits
It is not often that a hero can also be a larrikin and vice versa.…
333 hits
On ANZAC Day we remember the fallen, the brave, the heroic. But behind every name…
363 hits
Magic happens everywhere and goodness, wonder and delight can be found alive and well throughout…
159 hits
How many people around the world have been warning about the danger we are in? …
172 hits
Two names. Two battles. One legend. At Chunuk Bair and Lone Pine, ANZAC soldiers faced…
496 hits
It has been truly said that Australia arrived in Gallipoli as six separate States and…
371 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Investigative Reporter Extraordinaire The Ratty News Foreign Desk | Special Report…
393 hits
There are men who live great adventures and there are men who write about them.…
407 hits
When life collapses and the weight of grief threatens to bury us, we have two…
405 hits
He was short, wiry, and came from the dusty outskirts of Clermont in rural Queensland.…
504 hits
As the sun rises on another ANZAC Day in less than two weeks, and an…
286 hits
Some memories shimmer in the mind like a heat haze, half mischief, half magic. This…
289 hits
For over five years now, this blog has grown into more than just a place…
286 hits
In a stunning turn of events, Roderick “Whiskers” McNibble - microphone-wielding rat and founding fur…
382 hits
How did it happen? How did a failed artist and fringe political agitator rise from…
333 hits
What happens when the battlefield goes silent....but the war doesn’t end? When soldiers come home,…
469 hits
John B. Calhoun’s “rat utopia” experiments of the 1960s, designed to be paradises with unlimited…
317 hits
Throughout history, religion has been hailed as a guiding light, a beacon of morality and…
370 hits
In a fast-changing Australia, where new cultures and identities weave fresh threads into our ever…
316 hits
When I was a young lass, I was a fencer. No, not the farming type…
333 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Ratty News Investigative Correspondent Heard Island, Antarctica - A once-quiet expanse of…
474 hits
In a world obsessed with competition, the most powerful alliances are often overlooked, those between…
329 hits
Fear has always been the most powerful weapon of control, whether wielded by governments against…
313 hits