Sunday

8.4 out of 10 based on 17 ratings

67 comments to Sunday

  • #
    Double on Tundra

    I loved this story about the USAID investigation.

    There are no promises that it is correct and complete. But it is compelling.

    https://eko.substack.com/p/override?utm_campaign=post

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      Double on Tundra

      A couple of quotes to whet the appetite:

      “The beautiful thing about payment systems,” noted a transition official watching their screens, “is that they don’t lie. You can spin policy all day long, but money leaves a trail.”

      “The scale was breathtaking:

      EPA climate initiatives? Not just mapped—found unauthorized programs in 47 states. Education’s DEI maze? Not just exposed—revealed coordination across 1,200 programs. Intelligence community black budgets? Not just traced—uncovered patterns hidden for 30 years.”

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    • #

      It is the real deal. I read it the other day elsewhere and emailed it to loads of people. Others have checked it out and can confirm it is real. Top Stuff.

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      • #
        Roy

        I would like to believe it but it seems like fiction to me. Take the passage quoted below.

        “Springfield, Ohio, potholes that plagued residents for twelve years actually disappeared overnight. Rural Tennessee, where children can finally connect to high-speed internet their parents were promised decades ago. In Michigan, people truly drink clean water while bureaucrats’ memos about “studying the problem” gather dust.”

        Do you rally think that the US Federal Government has responsiblity for potholes in Ohio? Does it have more control of internet access in Tennessee than the State government does?

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        • #
          Roy

          I see I have had a few downticks. None of the people responsible bothered to reply to my doubts. I would like to ask those responsible to explain exactly why they think the report is genuine. Hoping that it is genuine is not a sensible reason.

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    • #
      another ian

      Can we borrow that and point it at our “government industries” please?

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      Hanrahan

      I haven’t read AI For Dummies yet, I’ll get around to it, but would this have been possible for Trump 45? I suspect that Musk is the only person who knew the savants by name, those who could code what must have been AI on the fly. What’s the hourly charge out rate for a genius? Musk is said to be doing this for free.

      It is unbelievable but not one TDS sufferer whose posts I’ve read has admitted that this is real, to them it’s one big lie.

      Edit: Is what I called AI actually neural networks?

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    • #
      Hanrahan

      There’s a saying I like: It’s OK to panic, just panic early.

      Is this a good time to get out of US collectables? Easy black money needs a home outside banking and there has obviously been billions sloshing around America. If that black money dries up there will be no new money flowing into the “collectables” Ponzi scheme. Without new money Ponzi schemes die.

      For the rest of us, if you read of art or mansions not meeting reserve you will know why.

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      • #
        Geoff Sherrington

        Hanrahan,
        I am an Aussie with a reasonably good collection of Australian stamps, 1913 to 1967 or so. They were supposed to help our retirement, but today I expect to sell them for about 20% of the price in the latest Brusden White catalogues.
        I’m trying to imagine if I had been a perp in the US who corruption was or will be uncovered. At a guess, I would be converting ill-gotten cash to stamps, because of the common “follow the money” syndrome. Do investigators stop looking at the money stage, or do they swim in the weeds?
        Interesting. Not helped by never doing practical corruption, only a theorist. Geoff S

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        • #
          Hanrahan

          Do the perps still have cash laying around they want to convert or have they converted some time ago? Chicken Sir, or would you prefer egg?

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  • #
    Greg in NZ

    Glad you’re still here Jo & mods, for a while the silence was deafening…

    Wasn’t sure if it was your troppo up north or the cool southerlies down south (only high-20s for you all week? can we send warm blankets?) or that soft power lot had been playing RegimeChange™️ again… on any Sunday 😎 it’s great to see you.

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  • #
    Annie

    It is deeply upsetting to see the appalling state those three male hostages are in. What state are all the remaining ones in?

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    • #
      Miasma

      Both sides have mistreated their prisoners. Some of the Palestinians have been hospitalized.

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      • #
        Annie

        Compared with what the Israelis suffered on Oct the 7th?

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        • #
          Miasma

          Compared with the 50,000 plus civilians killed ?, where would you stop ?

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          • #
            David Maddison

            There is no evidence that 50,000 civilians were killed. Israel targeted terrorists and told civilians to leave. Where terrorists used civilians as human shields in violation of international law, the onus is on the terrorists for that. And the figures for casualties come from the terrorists and are highly questionable and unverified with evidence of multiple counting and fabrication.

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          • #
            Hanrahan

            50,000 civilians dead but not one terrorist.

            As of February 9, 2025, a total of 407 IDF soldiers have been killed in Gaza since the beginning of the conflict with Hamas in October 2023.
            This includes 403 soldiers killed in combat and 4 from suicide incidents.

            🌐
            en.wikipedia.org
            Casualties of the Israel–Hamas war
            🌐

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      • #
        David Maddison

        I very much doubt terrorist prisoners were mistreated by Israel. They even previously did complex brain surgery for the imprisoned Gazan terrorist leader Yahya Al-Sinwar (now deceased), previously released in 2011 as one of 1027 terrorists released by Israel in return for the return of Gilad Shalit. I think the hospitalisation of the terrorists released by Israel is just more Pallywood theatre.

        There is absolutely no comparison between Gazan mistreatment of Israeli hostages and Israeli imprisonment of terrorists convicted and jailed by due legal process.

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      • #
        Leabrae

        How do you know?

        The only real question, which has received some discussion in recent weeks, is why Israel does not enforce the death penalty.

        At some point and as a single body, the Israeli public will conclude that the Bibas family are dead. If you are a Hamas terrorist the only moral rule (as we have it in Australia; we have no other) may very definitely be ‘don’t get caught’. Tolerance has its limits.

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      • #
        Lucky

        Annie posted about ‘hostages’.

        Miasma trying to divert, uses the word ‘prisoners’.
        Hamas prisoners were caught when committing a rampage and massacre.

        When Hamas took over Gaza, all Israelis were expelled, there are no Israeli prisoners in Gaza, they are as stated hostages who were abducted, some are young children.

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    • #
      David Maddison

      The first ones released seemed to have been specially “fattened up” for release but this current batch were released in the emaciated condition they were kept in.

      – One returned to find out his wife was murdered on Oct 7.
      – One found his wife and daughters had been murdered on Oct 7.

      The remaining hostages will be in similar condition or dead.

      And the world remains silent.

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      • #
        GlenM

        You would think that some form of cognitive dissonance would take place in the minds of some in the west who support Hamas. But no, the outrage of October 7 is put away in the back of their minds or conveniently deflected. War is both hell and a tragedy.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    TRUMP has declared sanctions against South Africa for the racism shown against white farmers who are routinely attacked and murdered, plus property confiscations.

    He is allowing them to go to America as refugees.

    Australia’s racist immigration policies won’t allow white South African farmers to come here as refugees, even though they’d soon be working hard and paying taxes. (See link.)

    Instead, Australia prefers to import some of the world’s most uneducated, violent and anti-Western people who will be or are lifelong welfare recipients and crime problems.

    America will greatly benefit from these South African farmers and they will be good workers, taxpayers and patriots.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8035673/Desperate-South-African-farmers-rushed-refugee-status-Australia-claims-rejected.html

    Desperate white South African farmers who rushed for protection visas in Australia have their claims rejected

    By ALISON BEVEGE FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA
    24 Feb 2020

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  • #
    Lestonio

    Since when has Labor put Australia’s interest before their own?

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  • #
    Greg in NZ

    Sunday satellite pic of Aus and surrounding seas swirling midday:

    https://www.fvalk.com/images/Day_image/HIM-0000.jpg

    Up top Japan is being blasted by more frigid Siberian winds, round and round it goes…

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  • #
    Graeme No.3

    It seems that a Judge has blocked the 40,000 Federal employees who volunteered to become redundant (with payout).
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AiCJqhYOoc

    Makes one wonder why they were so enthusiastic or did they foresee Unemployment coming without a bonus?

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    • #
      Yarpos

      There is always a % who want to go, were planning to go, or see retrenchment on the horizon. Twice during my stay with my last employer they made very generous offers to everyone over 55 to leave/retire voluntarily.

      It used to get a useful level of take up and created movement and opportunity in the organisation. Sadly couldnt be done in Oz because age discrimination law (which is a joke because its rife anyway)

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  • #
    another ian

    FWIW

    “USAID Funded Massive ‘News’ Platform, Extending ‘Censorship Industrial Complex’ To Billions Worldwide”

    By the map it looks like Oz got some along the way

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/usaid-funded-massive-global-state-propaganda-news-matrix-nearly-billion-people-reach

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    • #
      Steve of Cornubia

      The stench from USAID grows ever more rancid. It seems we’re finally getting to understand how the suffocating fog of leftist propaganda that has overwhelmed our institutions, media, courts, councils and even churches has happened. It was never a conspiracy per se, just plain old corruption on a grand scale. We just didn’t realise how far and wide the corruption stretched and how much of our lives was affected by it. I know I’ve been struggling to understand how extreme leftist views could (apparently) become the dominant political fashion – but now we know.

      But this isn’t just about politics, or even power. It’s greed, pure and simple. The system has been gamed, a matter that’s been clear to many of us for years, but we didn’t realise the sheer scale of it.

      So leftist policies don’t thrive because they have wide support, or even because they make sense. They persist and are maintained solely because they permit mind-boggling fraud, whether through racial division, mandated vaccination, wars or Net Zero.

      As usual folks, it’s just about the money. We knew this and yet somehow didn’t. Thank God for Trump and his movement.

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  • #
    David Maddison

    Copied from Wastebook:

    The city of Warsaw, Poland, employs eight mussels equipped with sensors attached to their shells using hot glue to monitor and automatically shut off the city’s water supply if the mussels detect a problem. When water quality deteriorates, the mussels close their shells, triggering the sensors and alerting the control system. If four out of the eight mussels close their shells, the system automatically cuts off the water supply. These mussels are used for three months before being released back into the wild, and over 50 water treatment plants across Poland utilize the same method.

    Adult clams and oysters can filter up to 50 gallons of water daily. However, if the water becomes too toxic, they close their shells and wait until conditions improve.

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    • #
      Broadie

      I volunteer to do the research on Sydney Rock Oysters.
      The key to research funding is the inclusion of a culinary delicacy.

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      • #
        yarpos

        My grandad used to take me rock fishing near Maroubra beach back when dicosaurs roamed the earth. Once he got me safely set up, he would clamber around the rocks finding and eating oysters. I like oysters but not sure how keen I would be to have them from waters in and around Sin City these days.

        00

  • #
    David Maddison

    It was always thought impossible to launch a spacecraft into the orbit around Mercury as am infeasibly large amount of fuel would be needed to slow it down.

    Then in 1985 an orbital mechanics expert (an orbital mechanic?) Chen-Wan Yen worked out that it would be possible to do so by first doing a series of fly-bys past earth, Venus and Mercury for braking.

    The Messenger spacecraft was launched in 2004 and entered orbit around Mercury in 2011 where it remained until 2015 when it ran out of propellant and the orbit decayed.

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    • #
      TdeF

      There is no energy lost in frictionless space. Venus is the key, turning huge momentum/Kinetic energy towards the sun and redirecting it along the orbit and then falling into the sun. Effectively stopping the fall at Venus. But the speed would still be very high, so perhaps approaching Mercury along the direction of travel, reducing the relative speed.

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  • #

    ‘It’s a lie. Pure and simple’: Kevin Rudd’s office bluntly rejects USAid claims circulating online.

    Kevin Rudd, Australia’s ambassador in Washington DC, has hit back at “fake” claims an institute he once led received money from USAid, the US foreign aid agency being targeted by Donald Trump.

    The office of Rudd, a former Australian prime minister, issued a statement seeking to dispel claims circulating online suggesting that Rudd and the Asia Society – where he has held various roles since 2015 – benefited financially from USAid.

    https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/it-s-a-lie-pure-and-simple-kevin-rudd-s-office-bluntly-rejects-usaid-claims-circulating-online/ar-AA1yDv4X?ocid=msedgntp&pc=HCTS&cvid=a6a747cb2c45442bd53c3cbebdf779b0&ei=12

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    • #
      another ian

      Definitely (IMO)

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    • #

      A very good read and spot on IMHO.

      20

    • #
      KP

      “The workforce was divided between essential and nonessential in order to survive the great emergency. The essential people were the ruling class plus the workers who serve them. Everyone else was deemed unessential to social functioning. ”

      “In the US, there was supposed to be a Covid commission but it never formed. Why? Because the critics far outweighed the apologists, and a public commission proved too risky. ”

      “The entire system of government – properly conceived of not as a democratically elected conduit of the peoples’ interest but instead a complicated and unelected network of unfathomable industrial racketeering with a ruling class at the controls – seems to be unraveling before our eyes.”

      A great essay! Anarchy might become more popular after this, people will finally realise what a complete fake democracy has been.

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    • #
      Gerry

      Trudeau will have no idea what Trump really thinks about anything. His thinking processes are so far removed from the thinking of Trump you could slide our solar system into the gap between.

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    • #
      Hanrahan

      Saying that the US wants to TAKE someone’s oil or minerals is simply lazy. US can afford to buy the minerals from Canada and Canada can’t afford not to sell them. Trump likes level playing fields and policing borders.

      30

  • #
    Hanrahan

    This is beyond my pay grade but it sure looks like hate speech legislation or maybe the AMA flexing it’s muscle. But certainly interesting.

    https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/based-gp.8436918/?post_id=77777601

    That HC post may not last so here’s a snippet:

    A GP who called Australia’s first Indigenous ophthalmologist “a fake Aboriginal”, comparing him to “a watered-down bottle of Grange”, has been struck off after what AHPRA calls a landmark case.

    The decision of the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal to strike off the GP for at least 12 months followed last year’s National Law changes that added the elimination of racism in healthcare as an underlying principle.

    “This means that culturally unsafe, racist practice cannot be ignored by regulatory decision-makers, including the independent tribunals who decide matters of professional misconduct,” AHPRA said in a statement on the case.

    20

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