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Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

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H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Thursday, September 25, 2025

It Really Would Be Good If Optus Got Their Act Together!

We heard much too much about this last week!

Has Optus learnt anything from the ‘technical’ problems of the past two years?

By Supratim Adhikari

September 19, 2025 — 8.01pm

Any chance of Optus’ new boss, Stephen Rue, moving Australia’s second-biggest telco in the right direction has been fatally derailed.

A surprise press conference late on Friday afternoon hinted at trouble. A 5.30pm all-hands-on-deck chat with the press usually means little else – and that’s exactly what was in store.

A solemn-faced Rue delivered the news – a technical failure, 600 Triple Zero calls failing to connect, three people dead.

Rue’s tenure as chief executive is almost certainly headed for a swift end.

Optus showed its former chief executive, Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, the door after the telco endured a data breach that exposed sensitive details of 9.8 million customers in 2022, and a nationwide outage in 2023 that scuttled almost 2100 Triple Zero calls, under her watch that led to a $12 million fine. The stakes are much higher for Rue.

Related Article

Optus chief executive Stephen Rue

 

Updated

Telecommunications

Three people dead after Optus Triple Zero outage

One can only imagine what Rue’s paymaster in Singapore (Optus is owned by Singtel) would be thinking about the latest fiasco to plague their Australian outfit.

Rue was appointed chief executive by Singtel to clean up the joint after a horror 18 months or so at Optus, and to his credit he hit the ground running when he started in November. Management lines were streamlined, plans were in place to bring costs under control, and the mea culpas for problems inherited were dutifully delivered.

But on Friday, Rue was staring down a problem that at the very least raises serious questions about whether Optus has learnt anything from the “technical” problems of the past two years.

The outage in 2023 and the latest blunder, with its deadly consequences, all took place during network upgrades. These upgrades – where a telco such as Telstra, Optus or TPG, selectively shuts down systems to improve their network and then brings them back online – are routine.

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Optus

 

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Telecommunications

Optus’ year from hell raises questions for parent company Singtel

They happen regularly and mostly with minimal problems. Optus has now had two botched upgrades, with the latest one preventing Triple Zero calls in three states and territories that led to three deaths – two in South Australia and one in Western Australia.

Optus has promised a thorough, forensic investigation, which should reveal what exactly went wrong. A band of network engineers, possibly contractors, and project managers would have some serious questions to answer. And it still remains to be verified that the deaths were directly related to an inability to make Triple Zero calls.

But that will all be cold comfort to the families of the deceased, and do nothing for Optus’ reputation, already tarnished by its previous mistakes.

Apart from Rue, this technical error will also be a test for Optus’ new chairman, John Arthur, who replaced Paul O’Sullivan, in August. After a turbulent couple of years, Singtel was banking on Rue and Arthur to get down with the task of reasserting Optus as a credible alternative to Telstra.

It may be back to square one for Optus on that front.

Here is the link:

https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/has-optus-learnt-anything-from-the-technical-problems-of-the-past-two-years-20250919-p5mwj6.html

You have to wonder when they will get their act together!

David.

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

The HILDA Survey Really Tells Us A Lot About Ourselves – Fascinating Stuff!

This appeared last week!

Australia news

Explainer

The Hilda survey reveals key insights into Australians’ lives. Here are five things we learned

From incomes and retirement to stress levels, the decades-long study provides snapshot of how we live our lives

Patrick Commins Economics editor

Fri 19 Sep 2025 01.00 AEST

Every year, thousands of Australians answer a series of questions as part of the long-running Hilda survey.

This questionnaire – more expansively known as the household, income and labour dynamics in Australia survey – has been tracking the same households since 2001.

As families have expanded over the two decades, it has grown to include about 16,000 people a year in 9,000 households, offering a unique longitudinal study of Australian life in the 21st century.

Sign up: AU Breaking News email

The questions cover a broad range of topics, from health and wellbeing, to attitudes and values, to employment and income.

This week, the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, which manages the survey, released its annual statistical report.

Here are five things we learned.

Covid and household incomes

The report shows how a middle-income household earned more than $100,000 a year after tax for the first time in 2021, as the jobs market boomed and generous government Covid payments boosted household budgets.

But soaring prices and higher average tax rates sent median household disposable incomes backwards between 2021 and 2023 – although they remained higher than before the crisis.

The report also confirms how our real (or accounting for higher prices) incomes stagnated at about $95,000 through much of the 2010s – a period marked by low growth and low inflation after a decade of strong growth in household incomes in the 2000s.

More stressed

Despite incomes staying relatively high in 2023, there was plenty of evidence that many Australians were increasingly struggling to deal with the high cost of living, not least rising rents and the prices of other necessities.

One in eight people reported two or more indicators of financial stress in 2023 – the second-highest rate in nearly 20 years.

Stress indicators include not being able to pay utilities or mortgage or rent on time, skipping meals, being unable to heat the home, or having asked for financial help from friends, family or welfare organisations.

Hardest hit were single-parent households, where nearly one in three reported two or more financial indicators of stress in 2023, according to the Hilda survey.

That was the height of the cost of living pressures, so subsequent surveys will hopefully show less stressed households in 2024 and beyond.

We’re paying more for childcare

The average family is spending $171 a week on childcare, or nearly $100 more than two decades ago – and that’s after factoring in inflation.

Over a shorter timeframe, the picture looks more benign: we’re not spending more than a decade ago.

To better measure the financial burden of childcare, the Hilda survey shows families dedicated a median 6.3% of disposable household income to childcare in the latest figures, versus 4.5% in the early 2000s – a 40% increase.

What does it mean to be poor? The Australian government isn't sure – video

The report also shows that between 2005 and 2023, families increased their weekly use of paid care for the non-school age children by 7.7 hours, or about an extra day a week, from 18.5 hours to 26.2 hours.

Our reliance on grandparents for child-minding duties increased only slightly over the same period, from 10.5 hours a week, to 11.8 hours.

We want fewer children

Australia’s total fertility rate, or the average number of children a woman will have in her lifetime, dropped to a record low of 1.5 in 2023 – down from 2.02 in 2008.

(A fertility rate of 2.1 is generally quoted as the number required to keep a population stable through natural growth.)

And there’s little evidence in the Hilda survey that fertility is about to pick back up.

Women on average said they wanted 2.35 kids in 2005, but by 2023 that number had dropped to 2.09.

Over the same timeframe, men’s “desired” number of children dropped from 2.22, to 1.99 – the first time it has reached below 2.

Inga Lass, a senior research fellow at the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, said two children has remained the most popular number of children over the past 20 years (even if statistically we are having fewer on average).

“But we’ve seen an increase in the numbers of people who said they wanted one child, or none at all,” Lass said.

So why do we want fewer kids?

“Potential parents are growing more concerned about their financial security and the costs of raising a child, and that pragmatism is outweighing the emotional side of the decision,” Lass said.

We’re retiring older

In 2003, 70% of women and 49% of men aged 60-64 were retired.

But by 2023, these figures had dropped to 40% and 27%, respectively, the survey showed.

Kyle Peyton, a co-author of the statistical report, said the shifts likely reflected a mix of economic and policy decisions.

“Back in 2003, the age pension eligibility was 62.5 years of age for women and 65 for men. By 2023, that had been increased to 67. That shift alone means many older Australians have needed to stay in the workforce longer, especially those who can’t afford to retire before becoming eligible for the pension,” Peyton said.

“At the same time, improvements in health at older ages mean that more people are physically able to keep working later in life.”

E https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/the-911-attack-was-a-clash-of-civilisations-two-decades-on-and-the-reality-is-ours-is-losing/news-story/dc0eb611984be202af319fae183239cdxplore more on these topics

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/sep/19/the-unique-hilda-survey-reveals-key-insights-into-australians-lives-here-are-five-things-we-learned

This annual survey is a very useful tracker of a legion of social trends. Well worth careful study!

David.

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

It Is Hard To Believe This Is Anything Other Than Very Bad News!

 This appeared a little while ago…

Pentagon puts new restrictions on reporters in return for access

Antoine Gara

Sep 21, 2025 – 1.27pm

New York | The US Defence Department is demanding journalists pledge not to publish unauthorised information as a condition of their continued access to the Pentagon.

In a memo sent to news organisations on Friday (Saturday AEST), journalists were asked to agree that information related to the Pentagon “must be approved for public release by an appropriate authorising official before it is released, even if it is unclassified”, the memo said.

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Peter Hegseth: “The ‘press’ does not run the Pentagon – the people do. The press is no longer allowed to roam the halls of a secure facility. Wear a badge and follow the rules – or go home.” AP

Reporters refusing to sign the form will lose physical access to the headquarters of the department, which President Donald Trump is seeking to rename the Department of War.

The National Press Club said in a statement that independent reporting on the military was “essential to democracy”.

“It is what allows citizens to hold leaders accountable and ensures that decisions of war and peace are made in the light of day. This pledge undermines that principle, and the National Press Club calls on the Pentagon to rescind it immediately.”

The New York Times said in a statement that: “Asking independent journalists to submit to these kinds of restrictions is at stark odds with the constitutional protections of a free press in a democracy, and a continued attempt to throttle the public’s right to understand what their government is doing.”

The Pentagon is seen from Air Force One

The Pentagon. Reporters refusing to sign the form will lose physical access to the headquarters of the defence department.  AP

Jack Reed, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, described the Pentagon memo as “an ill-advised affront to free speech and freedom of the press”.

“This goes beyond attempting to suppress criticism – Mr Hegseth’s goal appears to be eliminating a critical check on government corruption, unlawful practices, and the misuse of taxpayer dollars.”

The Trump administration argues that the changes are meant to protect national security. “The guidelines in the memo provided to credentialled resident media at the Pentagon reaffirms the standards that are already in line with every other military base in the country,” said chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell.

“These are basic, commonsense guidelines to protect sensitive information as well as the protection of national security and the safety of all who work at the Pentagon.”

Defence secretary Pete Hegseth posted on X: “The ‘press’ does not run the Pentagon – the people do. The press is no longer allowed to roam the halls of a secure facility. Wear a badge and follow the rules – or go home.”

The new guidance follows a series of measures that take aim at the media and Trump’s critics, amid concerns about a wider crackdown on free speech and dissent in the US.

Trump on Tuesday filed a defamation lawsuit against The New York Times, seeking $US15 billion ($22.7 billion) in damages from the media organisation he accused of being a “mouthpiece” for the Democratic Party.

The suit, which was dismissed by a Federal court judge for being too long and lacking a plainly stated complaint, is the fourth big lawsuit Trump has filed against a major US news organisation since March 2024. The judge gave Trump 28 days to refile the latest suit.

Both ABC News and CBS News settled separate lawsuits by paying $US15 million to Trump’s future presidential library and another $US1 million to cover legal fees. In July, Trump sued The Wall Street Journal for $US10 billion after it published an article about a lewd birthday card he allegedly sent to Jeffrey Epstein. Trump has denied writing the card.

In April, Trump banned Associated Press reporters and photographers from the White House press pool and news conferences in the Oval Office after it refused to use “Gulf of America” instead of “Gulf of Mexico” in its reporting. In June, a DC Circuit Court of Appeals largely upheld the Trump administration’s ban on the AP after a Federal court had earlier struck down the ban.

The administration was also accused of applying pressure to have Jimmy Kimmel’s television show cancelled over the late night host’s comments about assassinated conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

Kimmel’s show was “indefinitely” suspended by ABC’s parent company Disney after Brendan Carr, chair of the Federal Communications Commission, called the comedian’s comments “the sickest conduct possible” and made what many interpreted as a threat.

“This is a very, very serious issue right now for Disney. We can do this the easy way or the hard way,” Carr said.

https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/pentagon-places-new-restrictions-on-reporters-in-return-for-access-20250921-p5mwpl

This seems way over the top to me. What do you think?

So much for “freedom of the press”

David.

Sunday, September 21, 2025

It Is Amazing To Think It Is Almost A Quarter Of A Century Since This Horror Happened.

This appeared a few days ago:

The 9/11 attack was a clash of civilisations, two decades on and the reality is ours is losing

Whereas older voters generally remain more pro-Israel than pro-Palestinian, younger cohorts have swung the other way. Perhaps that’s because to Gen Z, September 11 is a faint memory.

Niall Ferguson

On the day of the attack, Niall Ferguson was in Oxford, staring incredulously at the pixelated live video of the World Trade Centre twin towers first blazing.

On the day of the attack, Niall Ferguson was in Oxford, staring incredulously at the pixelated live video of the World Trade Centre twin towers first blazing.

12:00 AM September 20, 2025.

Last week’s azure September skies over New York brought back memories. Twenty-four years ago I was due to give a lecture at New York University. The date of the lecture was September 12. I never flew.

On the day of the attacks, I sat in my study at Jesus College, Oxford, staring incredulously at the pixelated live video of the World Trade Centre twin towers first blazing, then collapsing. Not long after, in April 2002, I accepted a chair at the Stern School of Business at New York University and resigned my Oxford professorship.

My motivation was partly the hereditary Scottish tendency to march towards the sound of gunfire. As a teenager in 1914, my grandfather John Ferguson had volunteered to fight the Germans. This seemed easier.

Regardless of the 9/11 attackers’ motives, I had a strong objection to terrorism as a political method – a result of growing up in Glasgow in the 1970s, when “the Troubles” in nearby Northern Ireland did more than merely resonate.

My first impulse after the attacks, in a piece for The New York Times, was to liken the sympathetic British reaction to 9/11 to the American reaction to the Blitz of 1940-41.

A man stands in the rubble, and calls out asking if anyone needs help, after the collapse of the first World Trade Center Tower. Picture: Doug Kanter / AFP

A man stands in the rubble, and calls out asking if anyone needs help, after the collapse of the first World Trade Center Tower. Picture: Doug Kanter / AFP

But I also warned Americans to “steel themselves for a long, inglorious kind of war that governments in Europe already know only too well”. In wars against terrorists, I wrote, “there are no quick victories. The foe does not line up his tanks for you to flatten, his ships for you to sink. His troops live among you.”

Yet this was not the Provisional IRA. Re-reading a transcript of Osama bin Laden’s first post-9/11 video, from November 3, 2001, I am reminded of how explicitly he declared a war of religion. “People were divided into two parts” after 9/11, he declared. “The first part supported these strikes against US tyranny, while the second denounced them.

“The vast majority of the sons of the Islamic world were happy about these strikes,” bin Laden went on, “because they believe that the strikes were in reaction to the huge criminality practised by Israel and the United States in Palestine and other Muslim countries.”

Al-Qaeda mastermind Osama bin Laden.

Al-Qaeda mastermind Osama bin Laden.

There were demonstrations of support for his action “from the farthest point in the eastern part of the Islamic world to the farthest point in the western part of the Islamic world”. This revealed the key reality: “This war is fundamentally religious. The people of the East are Muslims. They sympathised with Muslims against the people of the West, who are the crusaders.”

With the passage of 2½ decades, it is startling just how unambiguous bin Laden was about his religious motive. “Under no circumstances,” he declared, “should we forget this enmity between us and the infidels. For the enmity is based on creed … It is a question of faith, not a war against terrorism.” The goal of all Muslims should now be to “resist the most ferocious, serious and violent Crusade campaign against Islam ever since the message was revealed” to Mohammed.

Bin Laden saw the war he was waging as a counter-attack – “to take revenge for those innocent children in Palestine, Iraq, southern Sudan, Somalia, Kashmir and The Philippines”. The US president, George W. Bush, might be the latest “crusader”, who “carried the cross and raised its banner high”, but bin Laden traced his war back to the aftermath of World War I when “the whole Islamic world fell under the crusader banner … and Palestine was occupied by the British”. Now the tables had been turned. And he had turned them with just 19 men whose faith exalted martyrdom.

George W Bush standing next to retired firefighter Bob Beckwith, speaks to volunteers and firemen as he surveys the damage at the site of the World Trade Center in on September 14 2001. Picture: AFP

George W Bush standing next to retired firefighter Bob Beckwith, speaks to volunteers and firemen as he surveys the damage at the site of the World Trade Center in on September 14 2001. Picture: AFP

You can see why, at the time, many commentators saw 9/11 as vindicating Harvard political scientist Samuel Huntington, whose seminal essay on The Clash of Civilisations had been published in 1993, as well as Princeton scholar Bernard Lewis, who had long argued that Islam was chronically unable to modernise.

My wife, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, was born in Somalia and shared this view, not because she was a scholar of Islam but because she was a Muslim – and, indeed, a former member of the Muslim Brotherhood. In September 2001, she was working at a political think tank in the Netherlands, having sought asylum there in 1992 to escape war-torn Mogadishu and an arranged marriage.

Author Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Author Ayaan Hirsi Ali

In her memoir, Infidel, she recalls how, after hearing bin Laden’s video, she “picked up the (Koran) and the hadith and started looking through them, to check. I hated to do it, because I knew that I would find bin Laden’s quotations in there.” She shot to notoriety by telling the Dutch that the 9/11 attackers were simply following the Prophet Mohammed’s injunction to wage holy war.

Over the past 24 years I have valiantly tried to see 9/11 differently – not as a civilisational clash between Islam and “the West” but as something that fit better into my own secular frame of reference. Raised an atheist, trained as an economic historian, I felt obliged to look behind what I took to be the facade of religious zealotry.

A decade after the attacks, in a piece I wrote for The New York Times Magazine, I portrayed them as the product of four underlying historical trends. First, the spread of terrorism from the Middle East and Europe to the US. Second, the post-2000 economic downturn, combined with widening inequality between nations and a coming oil shock, possibly compounded by a Saudi revolution akin to the one that overthrew the shah in Iran in 1979. (I completely failed to foresee the shale oil revolution and bought into the “peak oil” myth.) Third, the transition of American global power from informal to formal imperialism. And last, the fragmentation of the multicultural polity. (“Rather than anticipating a clash between monolithic civilisations, we should expect a continued process of political disintegration as religious and ethnic conflicts challenge the integrity of existing multicultural nation-states.”)

Missing in this – and in much of my work that followed – was Islam.

In The War of the World (2006), I got a little closer to Huntington, portraying 1979 as a much bigger turning point than 2001 in terms of the demographic as well as political rise of Islam, a point I returned to in Civilization: The West and the Rest (2011). However, laboriously quantifying every war since Huntington’s essay had appeared, I argued that most conflicts since 1993 had, in reality, been within rather than between civilisations. In The Square and the Tower (2017), I applied network theory to the problem, showing how al-Qaeda itself was a network within a much larger network of Islamist organisations; and that its expansion in response to the invasion of Iraq ultimately necessitated a networked response (in the form of General Stan McChrystal’s Joint Special Operations Command). Most recently, in Doom (2021), I downgraded 9/11 to just another disaster, and not a very big one: “In terms of excess mortality, April 2020 in New York City was … three and a half times worse than September 2001, the month of the 9/11 terrorist attack.”

00:12 / 05:45

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‘Too dangerous’: Pro-Palestine mob hijacks Albanese’s office

On reflection, I see that I was overthinking the event. Or perhaps under-thinking it.

Huntington, Lewis and my wife were right.

In Huntington’s original formulation, “the fundamental source of conflict” in the world after the Cold War would be cultural; “the principal conflicts of global politics” would be “between nations and groups of different civilisations” – “Western, Confucian, Japanese, Islamic, Hindu, Slavic-Orthodox, Latin American, and possibly African”. In particular, Huntington predicted, the “centuries-old military interaction between the West and Islam” could become “more virulent”. He also foresaw a “Confucian-Islamic military connection” that would culminate in a conflict between “The West and the Rest”.

Among the younger generation of proto-woke Ivy League professors, Huntington was widely mocked for his “essentialism”. But consider, with Huntington’s argument in mind, all that has happened since September 2001.

Terrorism has largely been contained in the US and EU, though not globally. In that sense, we won the “war on terror”, which was successfully displaced from the US to the periphery. It was ultimately defeated in Iraq, though not in Afghanistan. Today, as a result, terrorism in the world looks very different from what I foresaw in 2001. According to the Global Terrorism Index 2025, published by the Institute for Economics & Peace, the top five countries most impacted by terrorism last year were: Burkina Faso, Pakistan, Syria, Mali and Niger. Globally, terrorism peaked in 2014-15. In countries such as Iraq, it has declined dramatically. (In 2007, terrorists claimed 6249 lives in Iraq. Last year, the total was just 59.)

In the US, it is widely asserted, white supremacists now pose a bigger terrorist threat than Islamists – although the attack in New Orleans on January 1, 2025, when Shamsud-Din Jabbar killed 14 people by driving a pick-up truck into a crowd on Bourbon Street, is a reminder that Islamic State has not entirely gone away. We now know who murdered Charlie Kirk, and a white supremacist he was not.

Still, the latest Global Terrorism Threat Assessment by the Centre for Strategic and International Studies makes clear just how wrong I was in 2001 to anticipate a sustained campaign of jihadist terrorism in the US. Say what you like about our national security agencies, they won that war.

Yet nonviolent radicalisation (what Islam calls dawa as opposed to violent jihad) has advanced significantly everywhere in the Western world, wherever there are Muslim communities. The critical point – as my wife explained in a book on the subject – is that Islamism as a deeply illiberal political ideology does not need to engage in acts of terrorism to spread.

I never cease to marvel at the ingenuity with which the Muslim Brotherhood and other proselytising organisations spread their networks, through mosques, Islamic centres, schools, colleges and local politics. Consider only the effectiveness of the Council of American-Islamic Relations, founded in 1994, which today boasts on its website of having “100+ active lawsuits” and “600,000+ Legislative Action Alerts”, whatever that means. It has almost 30 offices throughout the country.

Most people who encounter CAIR take it to be something like the Anti-Defamation League for Muslims – a civil rights organisation that just happens to be concerned about the rights of Muslims. But it is not that at all.

Ten countries have recognised the non-existent Palestinian state since October 7, including three European Union EU member states, Ireland, Slovenia, and Spain. Canada, France, Australia and the United Kingdom Britain are itching to join them. Picture: AFP

Ten countries have recognised the non-existent Palestinian state since October 7, including three European Union EU member states, Ireland, Slovenia, and Spain. Canada, France, Australia and the United Kingdom Britain are itching to join them. Picture: AFP

Rather, it is more like a front organisation for the Muslim Brotherhood of America. In a recent article, Ayaan has brilliantly described the many ingenious ways that CAIR exploits the institutions of our open society, most recently settling a lawsuit to avoid revealing its sources of funding.

Good luck following the money. In her words: “The North American Islamic Trust (NAIT) controls mosque properties and financial assets. The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) lends the Brotherhood a degree of religious legitimacy. The American Muslim Council (AMC) works the political front, cutting deals and building alliances. The Muslim American Society (MAS) runs operations on the ground, embedding itself firmly in local communities. In universities, the International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT) shapes the narrative. On campuses, the Muslim Students’ Association (MSA) targets the next wave of recruits. The Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) and Young Muslims (YM) focus on families and youth.”

Even the United Arab Emirates has proscribed CAIR as a terrorist organisation. Yet dozens of Democratic legislators are on the record on the CAIR website, praising its work as they doubtless also praise the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

A complementary effort is the way Qatar – the largest source of foreign donations to US universities since reporting began in 1986 – funnels money into academia. According to the Network Contagion Research Institute, as reported in The Free Press, nearly a third of Qatari donations to American colleges – more than $US2bn – were given between 2021 and 2024. As Mitchell G. Bard shows in Arab Funding of American Universities (2025), this money is one of the reasons college campuses have become such hotbeds of anti-Semitism in recent years.

It is not just that the West has been successfully penetrated by an antagonistic civilisation that fundamentally rejects the fundamental division between religion and politics – church and state – that lies at the heart of both Christianity and Judaism. The West is also being geopolitically outmanoeuvred by “the rest” in just the way Huntington foresaw.

Former Hamas leaders Ismail Haniya and Yahya Sinwar wave during a rally marking the 30th anniversary of the founding of the Islamist movement in 2017. Picture: AFP

Former Hamas leaders Ismail Haniya and Yahya Sinwar wave during a rally marking the 30th anniversary of the founding of the Islamist movement in 2017. Picture: AFP

Contrast the global order after 9/11 with the global order today. We have come a long way since NATO secretary-general George Robertson’s statement on September 11, 2001: “Our message to the people of the United States is … ‘We are with you’.”

In the past three years, Zbig Brzezinski’s worst-case scenario has come about. “Potentially, the most dangerous scenario,” he wrote in The Grand Chessboard (1997), “would be a grand coalition of China, Russia, and perhaps Iran, an ‘antihegemonic’ coalition united not by ideology but by complementary grievances”.

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, that grand coalition has come into being, with North Korea as a fourth member. The “axis of upheaval” (China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea) is now co-operating in military, economic and diplomatic ways.

Moreover, the Trump administration’s combative treatment of US allies (the EU, Japan, South Korea) and neutrals (Brazil, India and Switzerland), not least with respect to trade policy, is alienating not only the traditionally non-aligned but also key partners.

The upshot is that Israel is now virtually alone in fighting against the Islamists, so that even the US wants plausible deniability when, as earlier this month, the Israeli Air Force strikes the leadership of Hamas in the Qatari capital, Doha.

The point is that the clash of civilisation continues. Now ask yourself: Who’s winning?

The Hamas attack on Israel two years ago was essentially an Israeli 9/11 (worse in relative terms). But compare the global reactions.

UN Security Council Resolution 1373, adopted unanimously on September 28, 2001, called on all member states to freeze terrorist financing, pass anti-terrorism laws, prevent suspected terrorists from travelling across international borders, and screen asylum-seekers for possible terrorist ties. This was an unprecedented show of international unity.

By contrast, no Security Council resolution could be passed in the wake of October 7. UN General Assembly Resolution ES-10/21 – which called for an “immediate” and “sustained” humanitarian truce and “cessation of hostilities” in Gaza and condemned “all acts of violence aimed at Palestinian and Israeli civilians” – was introduced by Jordan on behalf of a group of Arab states. When it was adopted on October 27, 2023, 121 voted in favour, 44 abstained, 14 absented themselves and only 14 (including Israel and the US) voted against.

This video grab from footage released by the Israeli Hostage and Missing Families Forum campaign group shows what the group described as Israeli female soldiers being captured by Hamas during the October 7 attack on Israel

This video grab from footage released by the Israeli Hostage and Missing Families Forum campaign group shows what the group described as Israeli female soldiers being captured by Hamas during the October 7 attack on Israel

Ten countries have recognised the non-existent Palestinian state since October 7, including three EU member states, Ireland, Slovenia, and Spain. Canada, France, Australia and Britain are itching to join them.

In short, comparing the world today with that of 24 years ago, I am tempted to say bin Laden lost the war on terror but is winning the clash of civilisations. That’s not to say his particular brand of Salafist jihadism is winning; it can even be argued that it’s in decline. Bin Laden’s creed was always too uncompromising to form alliances of convenience. By contrast, the pro-Palestinian “global intifada” is much more omnivorous, and can easily absorb the old left (Marxism and pan-Arabism) and the new (anti-globalism and wokeism).

Demographically, Islam is certainly winning. According to Pew Research (June 2025), “The number of Muslims around the world grew 21 per cent between 2010 and 2020, from 1.7 billion to 2.0 billion.” That was twice as fast as the rest of the world’s population, increasing the Muslim share from 24 per cent to 26 per cent. Earlier research by Pew (from 2015) forecast that “if current trends continue, by 2050 the number of Muslims will nearly equal the number of Christians around the world”. In Europe, Pew estimated, Muslims would make up 10 per cent of the overall population, up from 5.9 per cent in 2010. In the US, Muslims would outnumber Jews. This does not seem implausible.

00:06 / 18:57

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John Howard slams Albanese’s move to recognise Palestine as ‘political expediency’

Former prime minister John Howard joined Sky News host Sharri Markson to discuss a range of issues, including...

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Already in Britain, Muhammad has overtaken Noah as the top name for baby boys in England and Wales, having been in the top 10 since 2016.

At the same time, Western civilisation today is so much more divided than it was 24 years ago. The public response to October 7 illuminated the divisions. Whereas older voters generally remain more pro-Israel than pro-Palestinian, younger cohorts have swung the other way. Perhaps that’s because to Gen Z, September 11 is a faint memory – as distant as the Cuban missile crisis and John F. Kennedy’s assassination were to my generation. But it’s also because the Islamists have done such a good job of co-opting the campus radicals, somehow overriding the cognitive dissonance in slogans such as “Queers for Palestine”, while tapping the anti-Semitism that still lurks on the far right.

According to Brookings, “young Republicans aged 18-49 have shifted from 35 per cent having an unfavourable view of Israel to 50 per cent unfavourable … Among Democrats, there has been an increase of 62 per cent to 71 per cent (with an unfavourable view of Israel) in the 18 to 49-year-old demographic … Only 9 per cent of those aged 18 to 34 approve of Israel’s military actions in Gaza.”

Supporters of Yemen's Houthi’s gather with pictures of Hamas' slain leader Yahya Sinwar during a rally last year. Picture: AFP

Supporters of Yemen's Houthi’s gather with pictures of Hamas' slain leader Yahya Sinwar during a rally last year. Picture: AFP

A recent poll in Britain by Campaign Against Anti-Semitism revealed a striking shift in attitudes towards Jews. Once again, the swing towards anti-Semitism is more pronounced among the young: “Forty-five per cent of the British public … believes that Israel treats the Palestinians like the Nazis treated the Jews … 60 per cent of young people believe this.

“Forty-nine per cent of 18-24-year-olds are uncomfortable spending time with people who openly support Israel.

“Only 31 per cent of young voters agree that Israel has a right to exist as a homeland for the Jewish people.

“Twenty-six per cent of the British public believes that Israel can get away with anything because its supporters control the media.

“Nineteen per cent of young people believe that the Hamas attack on Israel was justified.”

Such attitudes can be found in Britain on both the political left and the political right. A third of Labour voters say they are uncomfortable spending time with people who openly support Israel, as do 54 per cent of Green Party voters, 15 per cent of whom believe Hamas’s attack on Israel was justified. But almost one in four supporters of the rapidly growing Reform UK party, led by Nigel Farage, believe Jewish people “chase money more than other people do”.

During the Cold War, the West was often referred to as a “Judaeo-Christian” civilisation. That term is starting to seem like an anachronism. Two years ago, another bin Laden pronouncement – his Letter to America, originally published on the first anniversary of September 11 – enjoyed a sudden resurgence of interest, not least because its attacks on the power of American Jews seemed to strike a chord with young users of TikTok.

Palestinians celebrate their return after crossing the border fence with Israel on October 7, 2023. Picture: AFP

Palestinians celebrate their return after crossing the border fence with Israel on October 7, 2023. Picture: AFP

One popular video showed a young woman brushing her hair with the caption, “When you read Osama bin Laden’s letter to America and you realise you’ve been lied to your whole entire life.” At one point in November 2023, a TikTok search for #lettertoamerica found videos with 14.2 million views. In total, about 300 videos were posted under that hashtag.

Walking the streets of New York last week, I felt old. To my children, my students and my employees, September 11 is not a memory. It is not even a historical fact. It is something people argue about on social media.

As I write, Tucker Carlson has just told Piers Morgan that an “FBI document” indicated “an Israeli spy ring in the United States … knew 9/11 was coming”. The reality is, of course, that only the conspirators themselves knew that. They also knew, very clearly, why they were going to do it.

It has taken me all these years to understand that 9/11 really was a clash of civilisations. And it has taken me until now finally to face the reality that ours is losing.

Niall Ferguson is the Milbank Family senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and a senior faculty fellow of the Belfer Centre for Science and International Affairs at Harvard. He is the author of 16 books, including The Pity of War, The House of Rothschild, and Kissinger, 1923-1968: The Idealist. This essay originally was published in The Free Press.

Here is the link:

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/the-911-attack-was-a-clash-of-civilisations-two-decades-on-and-the-reality-is-ours-is-losing/news-story/dc0eb611984be202af319fae183239cd

Hard to believe so many years have passed and sadly not much seems to have changed for the better….

We seem to be rather slow learners as a group! I am not sure great progress has been made which is rather sad!

David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 809 - September 21. 2025

Here are the results of the recent poll.

Do You Believe The Government Is Over-Regulating Adult Usage Of The Internet?

Yes                                                                       15 (65%)

No                                                                          8 (35%)

I Have No Idea                                                      0 (0%)

Total No. Of Votes 23

A very clear vote with most seeing a bit too much regulation!

Any insights on the poll are welcome, as a comment, as usual!

Poor voter turnout – question must have been useless. 

0 of 23 who answered the poll admitted to not being sure about the answer to the question!

Again, many, many thanks to all those who voted! 

David.