As the sun rises on another ANZAC Day in less than two weeks, and an election looms on the horizon, we stand at a crossroads...not just political, but moral, cultural, and spiritual.
The time is at hand. Our country, our heritage, and the very soul of our nation hang in the balance. Who will we trust with our future? The polished men who lie, profit, and smile as they sign away sovereignty and burden our children with a debt they never incurred? Or will we remember the men who once stormed cliffs and trenches not for gain, but for us? For freedom? For Australia?
This ANZAC Day, as we lay wreaths and whisper “Lest we forget,” we must also look forward. We must remember that bravery is not just a thing of the past. It’s needed now.
Urgently.
And strangely, it may come wrapped not in medals or uniforms, but in something as humble as a teddy bear. Because perhaps, in this moment, what we need most is what we’ve long forgotten: the courage to care, the strength to feel, and the grit to say no... gently, defiantly, but clearly. Maybe this year, it’s Teddy’s turn to hit that electric fence and charge the bull. And maybe, just maybe, we follow.
A little girl, a teddy bear, and a bull behind an electric fence. She was meant to prove her bravery, to touch the fence, to confront the danger and earn her place in the gang. But as the current hummed and the bull watched, her bear trembled. And so, in a moment of pure love, she turned and ran - not to save herself, but to protect him. That day, she “failed” by the rules of others. But in truth, she passed the only test that mattered.
Read more: From Bugles to Bears: Keeping ANZAC Day Alive in the Hearts of Children
- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Shaydee Lane
- Hits: 867
User Rating: 5 / 5
Some memories shimmer in the mind like a heat haze, half mischief, half magic. This is one of those. A tale from childhood, when the world was big, the days were endless, and every fence was both a challenge and a dare…
When I was a little girl - maybe six or seven - my two older brothers and their friend Norman had a gang called The Silent 3.
Their clubhouse was a dusty old coal smithy at the back of our property, not far from the chook yard. It was a corrugated iron shed, long since abandoned and quietly rusting into the landscape. Perfect for a secret gang headquarters.
Inside, the floor was dirt, and it smelled of rust and mystery and was absolutely thrilling.
That smithy became the scene of a plot so bold it could’ve ended in heartbreak. Let me tell you what happened.
Read more: One little girl, one terrifying bull, and one very brave Teddy Bear.
- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Monty
- Hits: 775
User Rating: 5 / 5
For over five years now, this blog has grown into more than just a place to post ideas. It's become a home. A well-worn couch beside the fireplace, a front verandah with mismatched chairs, a local pub with a chalkboard menu and a few good jokes behind the bar. It’s a space where mates gather - to laugh, share stories, poke fun, and occasionally let off steam about the state of the world.
Our commenters are mostly older, wise, warm-hearted folk who’ve earned their silver hair ( or no hair, or red hair as the case may be ) and a right to enjoy their days in peace. Many of our regular commenters are older folk - the kind who’ve weathered storms, seen fads come and go, and still know how to laugh with a full heart. We’ve shared stories, laughter, even tears. We’ve farewelled cherished contributors who’ve passed on, and held the space for others navigating the twilight of life who are now unwell. Through it all, what has kept us going is not numbers or clicks - but camaraderie.
Read more: On Hospitality, Harmony, and Knowing When to Show a Guest the Door
- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Ratty News
- Hits: 970
User Rating: 5 / 5
In a stunning turn of events, Roderick “Whiskers” McNibble - microphone-wielding rat and founding fur of Ratty News - has launched a surprise campaign that’s gnawing through the foundations of Australian politics. With a platform built on truth, cheese equality, and regular pub nights, McNibble’s cheeky charm has captured the hearts (and voting pencils) of everyday Aussies who are fed up with political possums and bureaucratic bullshit artists.
As early polling is set to open and the pub sausage sizzles are set to fire up, one question dominates the nation: Can a rat really clean up Canberra?
Yet in the background, there is something much more puzzling.
In a bold cultural pivot that’s already got Canberra in a tizzy and the Department of Identity Affairs reaching for the aspirin, Ratty News can now confirm the birth of Australia’s freshest tribal nation: The Rainbow Freckled Folk of Dusty Gulch.
Read more: The Rodent Rebellion Begins: Whiskers McNibble Nips at the Nation’s Polls!
- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Happy Expat
- Hits: 1072
User Rating: 5 / 5
How did it happen?
How did a failed artist and fringe political agitator rise from the ashes of a defeated empire to plunge the world into its deadliest war?
The story of Adolf Hitler’s ascent, and the Nazi Party’s transformation from a gang of misfits into the brutal machinery of a totalitarian state, is not just a warning from history. It’s a masterclass in how democracy can be dismantled from within, how fear can be weaponised, and how a nation once seen as the pinnacle of European culture and science could be dragged into darkness.
This article doesn’t attempt to chart every twist and turn of that grim rise - volumes have done so. Instead, it hones in on the critical years leading up to World War II, viewed primarily through the German lens. It is a story of resentment and retribution, of international indifference, and of political ruthlessness on a scale the world had never seen.
What’s most terrifying is not just that it happened - but how easily it could happen again.
Read more: The Origins of World War II - The Slow Burn to Blitzkrieg: Germany’s Path to War
Page 25 of 251
-
Field Report Part Two:…
Knees Up, Feathers Down: Trevor the Wallaby and the Great Knee Caper of Dusty Gulch…
by Op-Ed Ratty News140 hits
-
Start with the Moon,…
Dusty Gulch Gazette Special Dispatch “The Art of the Iceworm Deal: From Venezuela to Orangeland”…
by Op-Ed Ratty News305 hits
-
The Petrodollar Strikes Back
Money Still Makes the World Go Around - And Boy, Has It Gotten Wilder When…
by Op-Ed Monty317 hits
-
From Floppy Disks to…
From Floppy Disks to the Cyber Monster: How the Internet Changed Us It all really…
by Op-Ed Monty348 hits
-
Kashmir Still on the…
It is one of the great temptations of modern geopolitics: to stare at the latest…
by Op-Ed Monty340 hits
-
Power Moves: Is America…
When America “Runs” a Country, the World Should Pay Attention As 2026 stumbles out of…
by Op-Ed Monty409 hits
-
When Truth Had to…
There are moments in history when telling the truth plainly becomes dangerous - not because…
by Op-Ed Monty304 hits
-
The Memories that Make…
As a child, we spent our Christmas holidays at a remote coastal sheep farm in…
by Op-Ed Shaydee Lane314 hits
-
Field Report Part One:…
From Dusty Gulch Part One of the Honklanistan Series By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble The lamingtons…
by Op-Ed Ratty News360 hits
-
The Price of Unity,…
When the bonds that hold us together are tested, the cost is often borne in…
by Op-Ed Monty373 hits
-
Dreamers, Witch Hunts, and…
In 1948, Preston Tucker dared to imagine a safer, smarter car - and paid dearly…
by Op-Ed Monty430 hits
-
The Future Is Not…
Leonard Cohen once said, “I’ve seen the future, brother: it is murder.” For a long…
by Op-Ed Monty423 hits
-
What I Thought I…
When I was a young girl, I wanted to be beautiful.Clever. Successful. Happy. As the years slip…
by Op-Ed Shaydee Lane396 hits
-
We rebuilt a city…
On Christmas Eve 1974, Cyclone Tracy devastated Darwin, Australia, destroying 70% of the city's homes…
by Op-Ed Shaydee Lane407 hits
-
Sonic Pineapples Save Dusty…
By Our Special Correspondent (and Occasional Hero), Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble (Filed from the front row,…
by Op-Ed Ratty News352 hits
-
Lest We Forget The…
Only minutes before midnight on Christmas Eve, 1953, the engine driver of the Wellington to…
by Op-Ed Bruce Rugby170 hits
-
Never Lived So Merrily:…
Samuel Pepys is probably one of the most famous diarists in history and his words…
by Op-Ed Monty471 hits
-
A Beer Carton, a…
A neighbour was telling me about her Christmas shopping expedition to Brisbane recently. She wanted…
by Op-Ed Shaydee Lane503 hits
-
Starlink vs NBN: Outback…
Starlink vs NBN: An Outback Reality Check (With Bonus Waiting Music) One Outback resident tests…
by Op-Ed PP471 hits
-
Australian Prime Minister Is…
Sadly, the beautiful country of Australia has become a bastion of progressivism. The country’s government…
by Op-Ed Guest Post214 hits
-
From Pedal Car to…
For as long as I can remember I have been fascinated by non animal means…
by Op-Ed Malcolm Kirke484 hits
-
Do We Still Love…
Do We Still Love our Nation to Fight For it? Reflections 81 years after the…
by Op-Ed Monty484 hits
-
Still No Sparkle: The…
Australia's Spirit at the Crossroads – Time to Shake Off the Mud At dawn, when…
by Op-Ed Monty449 hits
-
We are the Ball
Muddy, Battered, and Waiting for the Next Kick-Off After a rugby match, the ball always…
by Op-Ed Monty410 hits
-
Let the Paddock Decide
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Edition (Front Page) RUCTION AT THE GULCH OVAL: SETTLED THE…
by Op-Ed Ratty News603 hits
-
Bruce Ruxton - the…
Some men belong to history. Others belong to the national conscience. Bruce Ruxton was the latter.…
by Op-Ed Monty462 hits
-
Harold Holt - the…
The Prime Minister Who Disappeared There are many ways for a Prime Minister to leave…
by Op-Ed Monty532 hits
-
The Men We Chose…
From Whitlam to Bondi Beach, how moral evasion became cultural habit Australia has woken up…
by Op-Ed Shaydee Lane534 hits
-
Comfortably Numb: Ten Years…
At 9:41am on Monday, 15 December 2014, Man Haron Monis forced Tori Johnson, the manager…
by Op-Ed Monty631 hits
-
Lindsay Fox - The…
Recent news in Australia has sparked debate: a ban on social media for under-16s. The…
by Op-Ed Monty518 hits
-
The Duck, the Diva…
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Scandal Edition By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble – Foreign Correspondent, Rodent…
by Op-Ed Ratty News475 hits
-
Has the ‘Woke’ movement…
Back in 1904, H. G. Wells published a short story called “The Country of the…
by Op-Ed Monty481 hits
Who's online
We have 411242 guests and no members online
Online
We have 411243 guests and no members online
Hmmm....
-
Lest We Forget The…
Only minutes before midnight on Christmas Eve, 1953, the engine driver of the Wellington to…
by Op-Ed Bruce Rugby170 hits
-
Australian Prime Minister Is…
Sadly, the beautiful country of Australia has become a bastion of progressivism. The country’s government…
by Op-Ed Guest Post214 hits
-
The 4th of July…
Independence Day, also known as the Fourth of July, is one of the most significant…
by The PR Blog1088 hits
-
The Aussie Election -…
In a rare confluence, Canada, Britain, and Australia held elections within a week of one…
by Op-Ed Guest Post1144 hits
-
Operation Downstream: The Rise…
RATTY NEWS EXCLUSIVE Operation Downstream: The Rise of the Feathernet Underground By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble,…
by Op-Ed Ratty News1202 hits
-
The Easter Bunny and…
Magic happens everywhere and goodness, wonder and delight can be found alive and well throughout…
by Op-Ed Ellan Vannin1305 hits
-
Diego Garcia and the…
Tucked away in the remote heart of the Indian Ocean lies a tiny archipelago that…
by Op-Ed Monty1343 hits
-
Operation Wombat: Dutton’s Downfall…
Factional ferrets, backstabbing bandicoots, and the great Teal tango - how the Libs turned on…
by Op-Ed Ratty News1380 hits
-
The Australian Climate is…
The latest State of the Climate Report is out to scare everyone with plucked esoteric records based…
by Op-Ed Guest Post1823 hits
-
My Son Hunter -…
I want to share this with you because it has to be one of the…
by The PR Blog1823 hits
Australiana
- View all
- Australiana
- View all
- collection
- eddie
- feature
-
Thursday February 08
Shearing in Australia -…
In the 1880’s shearers wielded a lot of influence on our country. Despite us not…
5186 hits
-
Wednesday March 01
Ned Kelly's Mother -…
At the beginning of March, 2023, I join Monty in celebrating Irish month. There are…
6924 hits
-
Thursday December 29
Ned Kelly
One of the most famous and best known characters in Australian folk lore, Ned Kelly…
7444 hits
-
Saturday January 14
John Monash - the…
General Sir John Monash is one of the truly great Australians. He was an Australian…
6947 hits
-
Friday July 14
Eddie and Me -…
Nearly 30 years has flowed under the bridge since I last owned a dog. That…
6073 hits
-
Monday March 04
Against The Wind
These are episides from Against the Wind , a 1978 Australian television miniseries. It is a historical drama…
5383 hits
Help cover our monthly costs
Search
Collections
-
On Board the Wunderlust…
I think it’s safe to say that adventures of the more daring kind are often…
by Op-Ed Chaucer15717 hits
-
Orthon of the Azores…
Speckled about the steep slopes are clumps of small, fieldstone cottages. Their crumbling mortar and aging stones are victim…
by Op-Ed Chaucer2848 hits
-
Eddie and Me -…
Nearly 30 years has flowed under the bridge since I last owned a dog. That…
by Op-Ed Chaucer6073 hits
Latest Posts
- Field Report Part Two: Holy Knees and Melting Feathers - The Day Dusty Gulch Saw the Truth
- Start with the Moon, Settle for the Spare Room with a View
- The Petrodollar Strikes Back
- From Floppy Disks to the Cyber Monster: How the Internet Changed Us
- Kashmir Still on the Boil – Why the World Cannot Afford Distraction
- Power Moves: Is America Back in Charge?