When I was young and even more foolish than today (some might say), and complained about old people, my mother would admonish me that I myself would be old someday. That seemed light-years away and highly improbable, as even fifty seemed an unattainable age in those halcyon days of youth, but alas, Mum was right as usual.
Read more: I may be old but I am still free of wrinkles
How I wish I had learned to type when I was young!
Most people today have acquired the skill through years of necessity as computers and mobile phones have become part of everyday lives.
As a schoolkid, all the " smart " kids learned languages and only the lesser mentally gifted headed off to learn typing, shorthand. bookkeeping or metalwork. What a crock that has turned out to be. As I have matured and wandered haphazardly through this thing called life, I have often regretted that I have had to acquire the skills that would have seen me a much more ably equipped adult.
When President Trump laid down the gauntlet in 2015 as he descended the escalator and announced that was running for President of the United States of America back in 2016, the enemy knew that they were in for a war where the winners would change the fabric of not only America, but the entire world.
Since then, America has been fighting for its independence and many battles have been won.... and lost.
But the war is not over and, whether or not it is Donald Trump who wins this war is almost irrelevant... he was the man who woke the sleeping giant of patriotism. Now that it is awake, I doubt that it will slumber again.
But what cannot be ignored is that THIS WAR MUST BE WON.
Read more: The power of Donald Trump and the war that must be won
Around the dinner table Ned describes the Stringybark Creek fight and his past life of persecution by police for things he did and things he did not do and the incarceration of his mother. He denies murdering the police stating it was a fair stand up fight with his enemies who were out to kill him first. All the time Joe Byrne is writing this down as a letter to be given to Superintendent Sadlier with a warning that he will continue his war against the police until his mother and her baby are released from prison.
I have been thinking a lot about bacteria this morning. You must be asking why I am suddenly talking about bacteria? Well, it was all because; last night I got food poisoning and I was as crook as a crook dog that is so crook that it made a crook dog look quite healthy and how I found out about a lady who discovered a bacteria that could eat plastic.
Suddenly, I am interested in plastic and how the environment can be saved because of bacteria and my bacterial food poisoning seems somewhat insignificant.
More importantly, my bout of the belly bug led me to a young woman who could do a great deal to save the planet. Her name is Morgan Vague and I want to share how I found out about someone who needs to be honoured for her work.
And it all started with bacteria.
Read more: Bacteria, lamb chops, plastic and neglected housework
When I was a lad in Western Australia, the fifth of November used to be an eagerly awaited event. That was Guy Fawkes Night, commemorating the apprehension in 1605 of conspirators who plotted to blow up the British Parliament, and were hanged and quartered.
It seems that the townies have lost the plot and it's time for the boys from the scrub in the outback towns to come in and sort this mess out.
It is a fiasco.
As a bushie, I think the people in the cities have taken control over a situation that they do not understand. Let's face it, if we keep this rubbish up, we won't have a country.
Read more: It's time for the boys from the bush to come to town and sort the buggers out
As we sit by, locked up like prisoners and subject to the petty egos of bureaucrats and politicians, are we any different to the penal colony that was established all those years ago?
Read more: Is Australia becoming a Penal Colony all over again?
Media release
Letter from Clive Palmer to Prof Skerritt TGA
Dear Prof Skerritt,
RE: MINERALOGY RADIO CAMPAIGN ON COIVID-19 VACCINES
Get the shot, get the shot! Wait. Never mind. Don’t get it. Vaccine “hesitancy” for young adults just turned into “just say no” because who needs to have a heart attack or a stroke at 25 or 15 years young, all to supposedly “prevent” catching a virus that barely even affects young adults or adolescents? If the chicken pox vaccine or the flu shot was causing blood clots and swollen hearts for kids, teens and young adults, would everyone still be rushing out to get it? The answer is no.
Following the tragedy at Gallipoli, the ANZAC withdrawal to Lemnos was quickly followed by a consolidation of the Allied forces in Egypt. Monash contended that the Gallipoli campaign “failed only in that it did not achieve its objective”.
He added that if the Turkish Army had not been engaged on Gallipoli it would have been a serious menace to the Allies. He further contended that it was, in fact, a strategic victory and as the builder of an AIF tradition that, alone, made it worthwhile. 20,000 Australians were engaged on Gallipoli but their deeds were an inspiration to the 300,000 who followed. Turkish casualties were 251,309 including 86,692 killed. Australia lost 8,709 killed, NZ 2,701, Britain 21,255 and France 10,000.
In an age of glowing screens and fleeting texts, something precious has quietly slipped away:…
60 hits
As young folk, didn't some of us feel like rebels without a cause? I am…
218 hits
As our countries are collapsing under the weight of wokeism, social and communist ideology, who…
327 hits
Crack Up or Crack Apart When the world gets grim, you’ve only got two choices:…
337 hits
Dusty Gulch Dispatch: The Croc Cavalry & the Great Duckening By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Special…
400 hits
The Warning of Gareth Jones: Who Owns Our Land, Our Water, Our Future? When we…
380 hits
"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice,…
380 hits
As a teacher seasoned by years of studying history and upholding the integrity of language,…
512 hits
“The stupidity of democracy. It will always remain as one of democracy’s best jokes that…
433 hits
It was 19 years ago on the 4th of September 2006 that Steve Irwin rolled…
531 hits
Why Even a My Little Pony Rifle Makes More Sense than Gun Bans We have…
506 hits
Dusty Gulch Dispatch: The Great Literary Rebellion By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Special Correspondent (still in…
506 hits
I was 12 years old when "The Prisoner " came out. Sometimes, I would sneak…
539 hits
Ordinary people following rules - without questioning right from wrong - can enable harm. History…
489 hits
On September 3rd, Australia marks National Flag Day - a day that should fill us…
596 hits
Australia was never built on timidity. It was carved out by men and women who…
683 hits
It is hard to believe that twenty-eight years have passed since the world lost Diana,…
630 hits
Few figures divide Australians as sharply as Ned Kelly. To some, he is a larrikin…
777 hits
Paddy’s Golden Mischief: A Rat’s-Eye View of Dusty Gulch By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble, Chief Correspondent…
541 hits
We are told it’s all under control. Markets are managed, energy transitions are planned, and…
565 hits
In the shadow of a shattered empire, the Weimar Republic rose in 1919, promising democracy,…
612 hits
“Some of us may forget that, of all the Allies, it was the Australians who…
731 hits
When 5 Ducks Take on Snakes, Dusty Gulch Prepares for Bloodshed By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble,…
611 hits
" Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it…
647 hits
In early 1951, New Zealand’s waterfronts weren’t just bustling ports - they had become battlegrounds.…
722 hits
Ratty News Special: “From Gondwana to Dusty Gulch: The Ostrich Problem” By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble,…
660 hits
During World War II, Australia was a vital cog in the Allied machine, sending troops…
760 hits
Of all the magnificent units and regiments of the Australian Army I doubt if…
697 hits
The Emu War is one of Australia’s strangest historical events. In late 1932, the government…
624 hits
For nearly a decade, I’ve poured my soul into this blog. Twelve hours a day,…
589 hits
The Battle of Long Tan took place on August 18, 1966, in the Phuoc Tuy…
661 hits
We live in a strange age where even computers can sound like they care. AI…
521 hits