Virtually every manifestation of evil involves a desire to dominate and control.
To many people, the world seems to make less and less sense with each passing day. Values we once cherished and that bound civil society together face daily bombardment. Offensive things are routinely said and done today in ways intended to inflame and divide. Freedoms we took for granted—freedoms of thought, speech, press, religion—are under relentless assault as intrusive government and cancel culture gain ground.
“Orwellian” is no longer just an adjective derived from a work of fiction more than seven decades ago; it describes some new development in our lives every day. Words and thoughts, once neutral or perhaps disagreeable but not actionable, are treated now as if they are crimes. History itself is being rewritten to serve political agendas. Petty tyrannies are morphing into bigger tyrannies as governments play an ever more intrusive role in the lives of their citizens. There’s an awful lot of bad behavior going on—and perpetrators getting away with it, too. From lying to looting, it feels like an epidemic.
Read more: Evil Is Rising, but Despair Is Not an Option
I just heard that a relative is going to a Steam Punk get together this weekend and am I green with envy or what?
Redhead asked me what the hang Steampunk was. I tried to explain. Needless to say, I didn't convince her that it was worthy of my enormous excitement...... and no doubt it seems unusual for a woman of my vintage to be so jealous of a pair of young ones heading off to such a gathering but perhaps, in these times of despair, it actually makes sense to want to escape to a world of fantastical inventions and where the only thing that limits you is your imagination. Just think of the early days of Inspector Poirot meeting up with a wild west movie and a large dose of Dr Who to round it off.
It seems to me that it encompasses all of the good times when people did bold things, had fun, imagined greatness and then were free to follow through... without the constraints of being " offended " or " not allowed. " In short, it was when there was no red tape, green tape or black tape and if you dared, hell you could win. Or lose.
Read more: Steampunk: A Fusion of Past, Future, and Imagination
I was quite taken aback about a year ago when I read that Mr Albanese - Prime Minister of Australia - said he wanted the Aboriginal language to be taught in schools. If " The Voice " gets up, you can be sure it will happen.
But how about we teach English first?
What puzzled me is that there are more Indigenous languages in Australia than there are genders - which is saying something. In Australia, there are more than 250 Indigenous languages including around 800 dialects. So I guess it is going to be fun choosing which one they will teach in the school curriculum... and who is going to be the teacher?
Read more: Reading, writing and arithmetic - with a serve of English language on the side
Luckily, those journalists who’ve specialised in climate and net-zero nuttery have a global Big Brother to train them, “tackle disinformation” and supply daily titbits to print and inspire. More than 15,000 environment/climate reporters from 180 countries are subscribed to the Earth Journalism Network, run by a staff of about 30 (a dozen full-time plus project staff). It also boasts thousands of journos accessing EJN on social media.
EJN is funded by dozens of foundations – including woke billionaire entities such as the Hewletts and Packards and Rockefeller Brothers, along with official sugar-daddies like the European Commission, UN aid agencies and the US, UK and Swedish governments.
Read more: The Obliging Presstitutes of Climate ‘Journalism’
Sometimes, justice is neither done nor seen to be done. In fact, it is unjust and plain and simple, really unfair.
We are living in a world where nothing is fun, nothing is fair and nothing is as it seems.
Decades ago, I knew a teacher. A good man. He was married, two great kids and a lovely wife. He was dedicated to his craft and believed that it was his honour and his duty to educate his students to the best of his ability. If a student passed his classes, they KNEW it was because they deserved it. He didn't hand out participation prizes and he certainly did not reward laziness as some sort of free pass to graduation.
In short, he was a very fine teacher and educator of young minds.
This man was a highly respected member of the community. He was a volunteer firefighter and an active member of his local Church. He loved a beer down at his local and was a keen backyard cricketer and a fine teller of jokes.
But one day his life changed.
Read more: Pack your Bags Men... We are Living in an Unjust World
Some years ago, I took a tour of a small military museum in Toowoomba dedicated to the Battle at Milne Bay in Papua Guinea.
One of the Militia units that held the Japanese at Milne Bay was the 25th Battalion from Toowoomba and the Darling Downs, originally raised prior to the First World War. From Milne Bay, the 25th Battalion went on to fight in Bougainville, clearing the Japanese from one of their last strongholds north of Australia. . source
“Some of us may forget that, of all the Allies, it was the Australians who first broke the spell of invincibility of the Japanese Army.”
- Quote from Field Marshall Sir William Slim, Commander of WW2 Commonwealth forces in Burma (and later Governor General of Australia).
And that first fracture in the Japanese Land Forces strength came at Milne Bay in September 1942.
The coming Voice Referendum will be promoted with a stupendous campaign of government-sanctioned propaganda. ‘YES’ will be programmed as the only right and moral choice. Our taxpayer-dollars will fund this relentless assault against our democratic vote. It was never intended to be our choice, especially when the choice has already been chosen. Truth will be inverted, and facts fractured, as all media discourse will flush and saturate the bewildered public-mind with elaborate deception. Even if the freewill consensus of the Australian people is ultimately a ‘NO,’ it must be a ‘YES.’ Albanese must be successful; The Voice must succeed. Only an overwhelming awareness of the true hidden agenda will counter this eventuality. It is a war, after all, and they intend to wage it against a misinformed people. To the victor go the spoils (and our land), and woe be the vanquished. Australians must be victorious. We must be prepared to parry the Lie, and assemble vast legions beneath the banner of Truth.
Read more: SILENCING OUR VOICE: 10 Ways the Government Hopes to Manufacture a 'YES'
When I was a little girl of maybe 6 or 7 years, my two older brothers and their friend Norman had a gang called " The Silent 3 ". They had a clubhouse in the old coal smithy down the back of the property not far from the chook yard. It was an old corrugated iron shed that had been lying unused for years and was the perfect place for The Silent 3 to claim as their gang headquarters. Inside was a dirt floor and it housed the bones of many possums and other creatures who had gone in there to die.
In this smithy, a plan was hatched that could have seen my Teddy Bear die from grief. Let me tell you how it happened.
Read more: How I saved my Teddy Bear from Certain Death.....
I wanted to write about the day in the life of an older person.Someone who is not at the gym or jogging along some footpath listening to music. What is old?I am nearly 91 years old.And I still feel very much alive. How many young people today feel as alive as I do? Perhaps it is that they have not lived a life worth living?
Read more: Getting old - Kick up your Heels, Even if it is Only in your Mind
In the video below, Joe Rogan interviews cardiologist Dr. Aseem Malhotra about Big Pharma’s control over research. What many don’t realize is that researchers who do peer-review of drug company-sponsored trials do not get access to the raw data. All they get is the drug company’s analysis of that data, which leaves the door wide open for manipulation and obfuscation.
As noted by Malhotra, “It’s not scientific, it’s not ethical … and it’s not democratic.” Most doctors, unless they’re involved in the peer review process, are not even aware of this, which is why they rarely ever question published science. Yet data analyses by Stanford professor Dr. John Ionnidis show that “the greater the financial interest in a given field, the less likely the research findings are to be true,” Malhotra says.
No One Protects Patients Anymore
Australia, and our Australian democratic freedoms are in the sights of a cunning Global Predator.
Foreign vultures silently circle our Great Southern Land, casting ominous shadows upon the unwitting population below. In our collective unawares, they keenly await their calculated moment to swoop, and strip-tear the fat of our land. The Voice Referendum is why they circle; a ‘Yes’ vote will signal their frenzied descent with razor beak. These vultures operate behind the seemingly noble front of the United Nations, and are truly the Transnational Globalists that have strategised to exploit the “Australian Aboriginal” as a cover to carve-up and consume our Australian land. They are ravenous, and they are coming for our farms, and they are scheming for at least seventy-percent of all land by 2030.
Please donate to
Swiftcode METWAU4B
BSB 484799
Account
Reference PR |
Please email me so I can thank you.
patriot@joomla.vps101246.mylogin.co
Wednesday May 22
As a young girl, I was instilled with a deep understanding of the importance of…
102 hits
Wednesday May 22
Expectations of the role of the government have been rising steadily over the last decade. They rose…
69 hits
Monday May 20
There just might be 74 million reasons environmental charities ignore eagles and whales, and reject…
94 hits
Monday May 20
What is happening in the US is happening everywhere in the Western world. As the…
73 hits
Sunday May 19
The term anarcho-tyranny, on its face, is an oxymoron, a glaring contradiction. Indeed, it’s the…
99 hits
Saturday May 18
William Golding's "Lord of the Flies," first published in 1954, remains one of the most…
84 hits
Saturday May 18
What is it that makes us remember things from our past and, for some inexplicable…
58 hits
Saturday May 18
The 16/17th May marks this most famous raid of WW2, the destruction of the Ruhr…
84 hits
Saturday May 18
Today's article is about Deception. Lies. Experimentation. Life. Death. Family. Love. Hate and Betrayal. It…
105 hits
Thursday May 16
I remember the days before computers changed our lives. When I was a lad, I…
104 hits
Thursday May 16
As the war raged on the Eastern Front, the Soviet Union was in dire need…
113 hits
Tuesday May 14
I am proud to pay tribute to a testimony to the power of coal. If…
85 hits
Sunday May 12
Some time ago I watched "The Man who shot Liberty Valance " - it should…
115 hits
Saturday May 11
I dedicate this article to the women who fought, died and tragically were lost. Alongside…
69 hits
Friday May 10
The concept of Mother’s Day as we know it in Australia began in the United…
87 hits
Friday May 10
Some time ago, I watched a documentary about a man who, by being a spy,…
74 hits
Friday May 10
" The benefits of government can vary depending on the specific form of government and…
68 hits
Friday May 10
The World Health Organization (WHO) recently put up a defense of its violation of its…
82 hits
Friday May 10
Our WEF-captured Australian Government is attempting to use the device of "violent men" to impose…
124 hits
Friday May 10
Have our Governments become backseat drivers in our lives? Telling us what to do? To…
100 hits
Sunday May 05
On 7 May 2023, Charles Windsor was crowned King Charles III of England and its…
151 hits
Sunday May 05
The Battle of the Coral Sea is regarded by some as the action that saved…
255 hits
Saturday May 04
I remember when I arrived in Australia, all those decades ago, I had an accent…
286 hits
Friday May 03
In 1984, our family was adopted by a cat named Billy. He was a tiny…
335 hits
Thursday May 02
When I was a little girl, I wanted to be a Nurse. I…
231 hits
Wednesday May 01
No, I don’t believe for a split second that suddenly, college students all over America…
205 hits
Tuesday April 30
More than anyone else in history, Karl Marx exemplified trying to fix the world while…
259 hits
Sunday April 28
Each war seems to produce its own under-appreciated heroes who, for reasons that have nothing…
383 hits
Sunday April 28
Many years ago, a beloved mentor told me a story—a parable, if you will—about a…
298 hits
Saturday April 27
Remember the olden days when you made a phone call on what is called a…
301 hits
Saturday April 27
If all satellites suddenly stopped working, the consequences would be widespread and significant. Satellites play…
372 hits
Thursday April 25
A few nights ago, I watched a series on pay TV called " The Mill.…
324 hits
Wednesday April 24
I belong to the group known as Baby Boomers – the ones that were…
312 hits
Wednesday April 24
'So we marched into the sea and when we got out to about waist level…
330 hits
Wednesday April 24
"They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old; Age shall not weary…
296 hits
Tuesday April 23
My very first Dawn Service was at St Faith’s Church at Ohinemutu in Rotorua in…
220 hits
Tuesday April 23
The Last Post would be familiar to all Australians from an early age. It is…
296 hits
Monday April 22
Back a while ago, we published an incredibly interesting article about the life of one man…
344 hits
Sunday April 21
The young men who left for war over a century ago were full of hope…
306 hits
Saturday April 20
25 April is a very important day for Australians and New Zealanders. It is called…
296 hits
Friday April 19
A while ago, I watched a movie ( Australian ) called William Kelly's War. It was…
340 hits
Wednesday April 17
When our leaders and politicians sign us up to these global accords, declarations and agreements,…
311 hits
Wednesday April 17
It has been truly said that Australia arrived in Gallipoli as six separate States and…
311 hits
Tuesday April 16
Cats have been a part of ocean going ships since time immemorial being needed to…
394 hits
Sunday April 14
In 1942, my late Uncle was a metallurgist in Papua New Guinea. At the height…
384 hits
As a young girl, I was instilled with a deep understanding of the importance of…
102 hits
Expectations of the role of the government have been rising steadily over the last decade. They rose…
69 hits
There just might be 74 million reasons environmental charities ignore eagles and whales, and reject…
94 hits
What is happening in the US is happening everywhere in the Western world. As the…
73 hits
The term anarcho-tyranny, on its face, is an oxymoron, a glaring contradiction. Indeed, it’s the…
99 hits
William Golding's "Lord of the Flies," first published in 1954, remains one of the most…
84 hits
What is it that makes us remember things from our past and, for some inexplicable…
58 hits
The 16/17th May marks this most famous raid of WW2, the destruction of the Ruhr…
84 hits
Today's article is about Deception. Lies. Experimentation. Life. Death. Family. Love. Hate and Betrayal. It…
105 hits
I remember the days before computers changed our lives. When I was a lad, I…
104 hits
As the war raged on the Eastern Front, the Soviet Union was in dire need…
113 hits
I dedicate this article to the women who fought, died and tragically were lost. Alongside…
69 hits
The concept of Mother’s Day as we know it in Australia began in the United…
87 hits
" The benefits of government can vary depending on the specific form of government and…
68 hits
The World Health Organization (WHO) recently put up a defense of its violation of its…
82 hits
Our WEF-captured Australian Government is attempting to use the device of "violent men" to impose…
124 hits
Have our Governments become backseat drivers in our lives? Telling us what to do? To…
100 hits
On 7 May 2023, Charles Windsor was crowned King Charles III of England and its…
151 hits
The Battle of the Coral Sea is regarded by some as the action that saved…
255 hits
I remember when I arrived in Australia, all those decades ago, I had an accent…
286 hits
66 hits
No, I don’t believe for a split second that suddenly, college students all over America…
205 hits
More than anyone else in history, Karl Marx exemplified trying to fix the world while…
259 hits
Each war seems to produce its own under-appreciated heroes who, for reasons that have nothing…
383 hits
Many years ago, a beloved mentor told me a story—a parable, if you will—about a…
298 hits
If all satellites suddenly stopped working, the consequences would be widespread and significant. Satellites play…
372 hits