The post-Cold War world had long been crumbling, and after 2022, it’s finally gone
The year 2022 has come to an end. It has been a year which has significant consequences for the future of global geopolitics, and will be remembered as such in the history books.
Specifically, it marked the closing of three decades of American unipolarity, which had begun with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, and forced through a new multipolar world consisting of numerous competing great powers.
Read more: How the year 2022 ended the American unipolar era
Governments around the world are reporting excess deaths in 2021 and 2022. These excess deaths are astronomical compared to 2020, when an alleged pandemic was taking place. Between the United States, Canada, Australia, the UK, New Zealand, Australia, and most of Europe, there have been a staggering 1.8 million excess deaths since the launch of the “lifesaving” covid-19 vaccine. How can public health officials continue to call the covid-19 vaccines “lifesaving” when excess deaths continue to spike year after year?
The Adelaide River Stakes is the name given to the mass exodus of people prior to and following the Japanese air-raid in Darwin on 19th February, 1942. Thanks mainly to an ill-informed statement by a former Governor General, Paul Hasluck, that it is a story full of shame for our national persona, but it is a myth.
The truth is that with much closer examination it was anything but a shameful episode in our most serious year of peril. The propaganda disseminated by the government of the day was based on inadequate information, over-the-top censorship and a failure to take the population into its confidence.
Read more: The Adelaide River Stakes - Part 3 in our series on The Bombing of Darwin
As the sun sets on the Australia and culture of my youth, I salute the memories and legacies of over 200 years since the arrival of Captain Arthur Phillip, of a People who are fast disappearing into a sea of tik tok, facebook, twitter, and leftist ideologies.
Our language, our music, and our culture are being swallowed up and devoured by a zealous group of misguided, ill-educated and brainwashed ignoramuses who should have attended the Flysa Institute of Patriotic Studies.
We are on the verge of a global transformation. All we need is the right major crisis …
~ Author: David Rockefeller
It should have become obvious by this time that ‘crisis’ management political policy is the new war being waged against society as a whole, in order for the state and its masters to gain total control over every aspect of human life, regardless of the dire consequences to the rest of us.
I have been moved to write about one of the world's most iconic food staples - the Hamburger. It all started when I went down to see my daughter this morning at Redhead's place ( Mum for those of you who don't know that ) and we sat around chatting, yarning on and convened the knitting circle of " Memory Lane. "
And we started talking about a lady called Betty. But that comes later in my story. Bear with me. Betty and her burger are what has happened today. When money becomes more important than the people who started it.
In the midst of the most terrible time in our history, even worse than Whitlam or WW2, our country is crying out for a Moses to emerge and lead us out of the wilderness. I rate our present plight as worse than WW2 because at least in that era we were all pulling together for the sake of Australia.
This cannot be said today. Leading up to Federation we had such a man. Someone whose name is probably unfamiliar.
Yet, it was people like him who created the Australia that we knew and loved. A country that gave us pride and showed us that a strong back and a good work ethic could start a revolution.
Read more: When a strong back and a good work ethic could start a revolution.
Back in 2019, I read an article on ( shudder ) ABC I don’t normally go anywhere near that viper pit of leftist lunacy but I received an email from a friend who felt that I should read this particular article.
Well, as I said to him, it made my blood boil with anger.
What kind of country have we turned into?
When I went down to see my daughter this morning, a drop-dead gorgeous blonde on the lovely side of 50, we spoke about saxophones, sand dunes, and tiny teddies.
We spoke about how life has changed. How things just ain't what they used to be.
Yes, they were strange things to talk about but, bear with me, it will all make sense in the end.
Read more: A conversation about Saxaphones, Tiny Teddies and Sand Dunes
Back in 1904, HG Wells wrote a short story about a man who stumbled into a forgotten kingdom where everyone was blind. He thought that would give him incredible power because he possessed something that they did not. The ability to see.
He soon learned that his gift of sight was seen by the villagers as an affliction of the brain that must be caused by two things on his head that he called eyes. They pitied him and, instead of being a gift, the eyes were perceived as a curse, an illness and a disturbance of his brain.
It did not take long before the man realised that, when surrounded by the blindness of ignorance, knowledge itself was an enemy to be ousted and eradicated.
Read more: In the Land of the Blind the One Eyed Man is King - or is he?
From the beginning of the Covid panic, it felt that something was very wrong. Never had a pandemic, much less a seasonal pathogenic wave, been treated as a quasi-military emergency requiring the upending of all freedoms and rights.
What made it more bizarre was how alone those of us who objected felt until very recently when Elon Musk finally bought the platform Twitter, fired all the embedded federal agents, and has started to release the files.
When I was a lad in Western Australia, the 5th of November used to be…
157 hits
Phar Lap, the legendary Australian racehorse, and President Donald Trump, the American business magnate turned…
259 hits
Beneath the still waters of Lake Argyle lies the ghost of a homestead — Argyle…
258 hits
I’ve started and restarted this article, pondered how to avoid hurting anyone’s sensitivities, and in…
277 hits
Forecast: Confused With a Chance of Bureaucracy - Microbursts, bureaucratic panic, and a wallaby with titanium…
357 hits
Beersheba is a name that should resonate with every Australian with the same ease and…
522 hits
How have we come to this mess in the Middle East? The strange thing is…
344 hits
From Bushfires to Bare-Chested Heroes Our resident Redhead proves that admiration, humour, and a little…
361 hits
In the mid-19th century, a flickering flame of innovation sparked a revolution that would illuminate…
386 hits
From the Valley of Death at Balaclava to today’s policy corridors, the brave bear the…
408 hits
Imagine women, beaten, humiliated, raped repeatedly in Nazi-run brothels, stripped of their dignity, and sent…
778 hits
Prentis Penjani’s Grand Debut – The Duck Was Just the Warm-Up Act By Roderick (Whiskers)…
399 hits
By Roderick “Whiskers” McNibble, Senior Correspondent (and dance adjudicator) Crikey, mates and matesses - you’d…
469 hits
I have often pondered why mankind decided to go after the humble whale. After all,…
460 hits
Critical Minerals: The Deal That Could Turn Australia Into the World’s Quarry There’s a new…
625 hits
In 1775, the U.S. Marine Corps was established to safeguard American ships and interests. …
441 hits
We stopped teaching goodness. Now we’re living with the consequences. There was a time when…
430 hits
In an Australia grappling with division and a search for identity, it’s time to rediscover…
488 hits
Ratty News: Dusty Gulch Dispatch — “When the Ghosts Came Rolling In” Filed by: Roderick…
473 hits
Eighty-one years ago this week, in October 1944, a tall, thoughtful barrister from Victoria gathered…
702 hits
On the evening of October 12, 2002, the peaceful tourist destination of Bali, Indonesia, was…
450 hits
Queensland and much of northern Australia are overrun with cane toads - an invasion so…
460 hits
Some time ago, a young boy visiting Redhead’s house asked to use the “dunny.” The…
499 hits
Have you ever wondered how and why the Youth of today are holding rallies , their…
463 hits
Over the last few weeks I have noticed that people are losing their sense of…
499 hits
By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Ratty News Bureau Chief There’s panic, pandemonium, and political puffery in…
498 hits
Try herding cats sometime. You’ll crouch, whistle, wave treats, and for one delusional moment, think…
493 hits
From Network to today, the prophecy is clear: truth has been turned into a commodity,…
703 hits
I am personally horrified by what has happened since October 2023. This wasn’t just a…
540 hits
Much of Australia’s early slang comes from the convict culture of the late 18th and…
582 hits
In 1925, a small courtroom in Dayton, Tennessee, became the stage for a battle over…
679 hits