No news is good News II

The supposition I had - shared by Lyn at Public Opinion - that even the diehard Milnes and Shanahans of News Limited might give up on their “Costello for Saviour” campaign in the absence of anything actually happening has been spectacularly shattered. Our Dennis - in perhaps the longest column he has ever written - piles speculation on top of speculation on top of speculation and - well, you get the picture. Labor is probably a oncer because this might happen if that happens and that might occur if this happens. Unbelievable.

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10 Responses to “No news is good News II”


  1. 1 john RyanNo Gravatar

    I often wonder what world Milne and Shamahan live in,its not the same one I do,given Shamahans prognostications before the last election and Milnes undying love for Costello I think they are both looking for jobs in his office.
    Apart from that Shamahans column has no comments section I wonder why

  2. 2 Lefty ENo Gravatar

    They just cant stop getting it all wrong, can they?

    Newsflash:
    1. Costello hasnt got the balls, or the brains for the big chair. He’s Hamlet - can’t even decide to leave with dignity. Its pathetic.
    2. No one currently on the Lib front bench has a hope of beating Rudd in 2010.
    3. We only read you for laughs.

  3. 3 Lefty ENo Gravatar

    Haha, I just read the piece.

    Shorter Shamaham: No one has a clue what Costello will do. That includes me. And also Costello.

    Well, f*ck, hold the front page!

  4. 4 janeNo Gravatar

    Poor old Denden, still using, I see. Shame really, he could have had a damn fine career as a journo if he hadn’t got hooked on crack Costello.

  5. 5 Ken LovellNo Gravatar

    Why people read ‘The Australian’ is a great mystery, surpassed only by the mystery of why they write about it :D

  6. 6 grace pettigrewNo Gravatar

    Looks suspciously to me like the OzBoys spend too much time reading critical blogs like this one, and feel they have to personally answer back each morning. Wounded vanity perhaps?

    In this case (Costello), its like watching a bunch of hyperactive little boys digging themselves a giant hole, shouting encouragement to each other as they get deeper and deeper and further and further away from the rest of us.

    The only question is, how long will it be before the sides fall in (or Rupert comes to town and sacks Mitchell and his gang for being so comprehensively out of touch with the voting public).

    Talk about being trapped inside your own narrative.

  7. 7 DavidNo Gravatar

    I tried reading Dennis’ piece, but I couldn’t finish it. Life’s too short to waste it on incoherent speculation.

  8. 8 onimodNo Gravatar

    I’m with Ken.
    I’d love to be able to read articles on Australian politics that were limited to facts only, or at least had a context longer than 5 minutes but shorter than 20 years.
    I’d love to see journalist uncovering what our politicians really though, instead of projecting their own thoughts on to them.
    Unfortunately all of this requires thinking an interacting, which is out of fashion apparently.

  9. 9 naskingNo Gravatar

    Agree w/ Ken…it’s all a big YAWN.

  10. 10 AmbigulousNo Gravatar

    Will he, won’t he? Should he, shouldn’t he? Is it a Labor trick? If so, it could backfire on them. But it might not. Then again. If only we knew. He doesn’t know either. But he’s talked to Lord Nelson. And Horatio took his telescope with him - now there’s a clue.

    A clue!! I haven’t got one.

    But I might get one. It could be a trick. Oh for the good old days. They were good, weren’t they?

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