The PM has made an absolute mess of it, bouncing from one headline to another like a clown on speed. You must give credit for the energy, pity it is expended on trivialities rather than tackling the big questions.

The government has changed tack in the face of the coming election, they cannot any longer claim to be the better fiscal managers of the economy, better husbanding our tax money in the face of the huge deficit, largess to corporations under job keeper who did not need or qualify for it, and the massive pork barrels rolled out over the past few years. $1.9 billion to government seats, while labour held seats received $530 million. The most recent report being a review of 19,000 grants in a ratio grossly favouring government seats published by the SMH. The one I live in, the marginal seat of Reid in Sydney, has received $14.8 million, so the member will be crowing about how effective she has been. To be fair, she does seem to have been a smart and engaged local member with an impressive academic and community engagement resume, as well as a solid foundation of common sense. The neighbouring seat of Grayndler, held by the opposition leader, in at least as needy a place as Reid, received $718,000. Will it be enough to save Reid for the Liberal party? Who knows, but amongst my peers it is the solid view that a vote for an effective and moderate local member is also a vote for an ineffective, narrow minded, spin driven and vindictive Prime Minister. If this is the state of governance in an area with publicly available information, heaven knows the mess that those areas, increasingly protected from public view, is in.

In March the Royal Commission into Aged care dropped onto the table, detailing a chronically under-governed industry making the privatised providers a fortune at the expense of the most vulnerable amongst us. It is a wrangle between the feds who regulate aged care, and the States who fund it, nobody carries responsibility. On top of the deaths that occurred in Victoria from Covid mismanagement, it is surprising that this has been wiped off public awareness. It is an ongoing disgrace. Perhaps it is the result of the monumental cock-up the feds made of the vaccine rollout in the early part of the year, and the wrangling the went on amongst the states that has wiped the Commission’s findings from public condemnation.

There was a gabfest in Glasgow, which seemed to be useful, apart from the lack of contribution made by Australia. Sadly, the PM made his ground-breaking presentation outlining ‘The Australian way’ to a packed house of a cleaner, sound recordist and journalist who copped the ‘dog watch’ and was probably asleep. Even the hecklers were too disinterested to show. I continue to find the contrast between the reliance on the science in relation to Corona, and the total dismissal of the science in relation to the reality of climate change, a complete mystery.

Then, just as we thought the worst was over, along comes Omicron, and once again, we are caught with our heads up our arses. My old dad used to say everyone made mistakes, but only a retard made the same one twice. The federal leadership must all be retards by that measure.

At the state level, there has been wholesale leadership change in NSW, and it has become very clear that premiers vowing to keep their states sovereign is a winning strategy. I conclude that the winning is only because of the total leadership vacuum coming from Canberra.

The Covid battle, seemingly being won towards the end of the year, has suddenly in December been put back on the agenda, this week blowing up with record cases being identified. The emergence of this new, hyper-spreadable omicron version may yet force punitive action to again stamp on human beings doing what they need to do for their own psychological well-being, congregate and communicate in person. As I write this on Christmas Eve, new Covid cases are comfortably over 5,000 a day, a level that a month ago would have induced panic amongst NSW politicians, but now seems rather ho-hum.

Rorts have become so common, they are almost ignored by the media and voters, apart probably from that modest percentage of voters who are deeply engaged and angered in the process. There have been plenty to pick from. Almost $300 million given to Australia’s largest companies who actually increased earnings during the lockdown seems just so wrong. Another 6.2 billion was forked out to businesses with more than 10 million in turnover that did not meet the 30% fall in turnover threshold in the first 6 months of the scheme. Meanwhile, small businesses are closing, and those in the arts, a foundation of our cultural life are left to their own devices. Despite the faults and rorts, the money pumped into the economy has been essential, and cushioned the Covid induced fall in activity that happened.

The ‘Merde massive’ perpetrated by the government unilaterally tearing up the submarine contract then lying about the circumstances leading up to, it leaves Australia looking like an unreliable partner. Not much antidote to our trade problems there, coming as they do on top of the idiotic rattling of our tiny sabre towards our biggest trading partner China. Let’s hope they are sufficiently gentlemanly to hold off until we have our new subs, about the time my granddaughter will be retiring.

What about the leadership wrangling in the junior government partner, the National party, giving us Barnaby back as deputy PM. Clearly, Barnaby and the usual PM can barely stand to be in the same room, not a recipe for good governance. Nobody seems to like the Nats, outside of the few seats they manage to hold, which I suspect will be subject to aggressive independent focus in the lead up to the next election. Speaking of which, many of the sensible moderates in the liberal party will be up against it, as they struggle to publicly support climate policies they must privately consider no better than wishful thinking by a few recalcitrant nig-nogs.

Amongst all this, the Liberal Government discovered belatedly that the culture in and around parliament house stank. In fact, it stinks so much that in any other workplace, executives would be fitted for striped suits and shipped off for an extended holiday at public expense. This has been very inconvenient in the early stages of an election runway for some time early in 2022. However, the PM is making the supreme effort to put it all behind him as he massages messages, and the truth. I wonder if the report, promised to be public, commissioned by the PM from his departmental secretary investigating the accusation of rape in the defence ministers office will ever see the light of day? I guess not.

More broadly, despite the covid induced trading environment, property prices in Sydney and Melbourne have gone mad. Lots of people taking advantage of the historically low interest rates, ignoring the consideration of what happens when interest rates go up. The reserve bank governor after reassuring us they will stay low for several more years has recently softened his language. This leads to a conclusion that we will see them creep upby the middle of next year, which could lead to a middle-class bloodbath. Please note, I am absolutely unqualified to make this prediction, but common sense does dictate an increase soon.

Meanwhile, Small Business struggles to generate revenue, pay wages, and keep the place going. A quick look around most shopping areas at the closed retail outlets, and industrial parks at the locked factory units will tell you how well that is going.

The war (or was it another ‘police action’?) in Afghanistan is over. Pity about those Afghans left there, particularly the reviled Hazaras who are paying a high price for our so called ‘principles’. Australia played its part in the deception of those in the region, and ourselves, right from the beginning of the mess when President Bush decided to punish Al Qaeda after 9/11 2001, and invaded Iraq. The excuse was the non-existent WMD, which had nothing to do with 9/11. We ended up 20 years later with an ignominious withdrawal from Afghanistan after massive expenditure of gold and more importantly, lives.

The Americans managed to get rid of their President in the November 2020 elections, with Biden taking over in January, but not before the US Capitol was subjected to scenes reminiscent of a coup in some South American backwater. The dangerous sniping from the sidelines by Trump continues unabated, but it appears to me that fewer beyond the rotten heart of the republican party are taking notice every day.

Division throughout the developed world has seen the rich get richer and the gap widening to all the rest over the last 12 months. Social media has played a role in this, and the backlash will lead to regulation of some type. In the US, Congress is starting to consider how they go about this. Problem is, very few of them have the foggiest idea, so the potential for stupidity is substantial. Europe has had a try, but the GDPR (General Data protection Regulation) regulations have not slowed down the rates of ‘anti-social’ material by much, largely because the main platforms are US owned. Australia’s pathetic attempt to fund journalism becoming law in February by forcing social platforms to pay for news content, has just helped News Corp to fatten its bottom line. Facebook demonstrated its contemptuous corporate power by shutting down in Australia for a day, reminding everyone that they were the biggest bully in the playground. This dog is best repealed, quickly, and replaced by some sensible measures drawn up with the public interest in mind.

Supply chains around the world have been ripped apart. If you can get a container delivered to Sydney or Melbourne it will cost you 4 to 5 times what it cost a year ago. Imported finished products and raw materials are in short supply, and prices have skyrocketed. There is a real possibility our trucks will stop progressively in the absence of AdBlue, an additive made from urea, an ingredient in fertiliser. Australia’s only producer Incitec Pivot is closing its Brisbane factory because they cannot get a reliable gas supply, ironic given Australia is the biggest supplier of LNG into the world market. China makes 83% of the world’s supply of urea, and needs it in the domestic industry, so no more exports, and the rest of us can get stuffed. This is an example of economic power being wielded by what is on some measures already the biggest in the world, and on target to be the biggest on all measures within a year or two. This assumes that the fragile Chinese financial system does not crash, that an economy controlled by a central power can defy the laws of economics as we currently understand them. Russia failed 40 years ago in a similar experiment, but I suspect the Chinese are smarter, and have learnt the lessons of history.

I have missed a lot; it has been a busy and eventful year despite the successive lockdowns. Let me know what the two or three things you felt were most important to you.

I have tried to think of good things that happened, thought I would leave them to the end. Well, here I am, at the end, and I cannot think of any. Must be some, help me here.

In any event, have a safe and merry Christmas, and come back in 2022 looking for some improvement personally, professionally, and in our communities.

Thanks for reading, commenting, and sharing this year, or even if this is the first dose, make it the first of many.

Merry Christmas, and have a great 2022, a low bar to be better than 2021

Allen.