Donald Trump.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
As a leader, who has signed more executive orders than anyone else in history?
Donald Trump.
The world is a ship. Who is the captain and commander, the pilot and the navigator?
Donald Trump.
The Leanyer Newsagent’s Joke Board this week

Our Poor Prime Minister looks a bit down, when his meeting with what major world leader was cancelled?

Donald Trump
The words “I will, I won’t, I will, I won’t” are haunting the mind of which outstanding world leader?
Donald Trump.
120 Outback Truckers delivering donated hay to drought stricken farmers




“Thanks for the milestone moment” says Poor Old Henry

Outback Truckers – house moving.



Who is wearing himself out because of the intensity of 24/7 thought and action directed toward resurrection of the world?

Who is ‘top of the pile’ when it comes to expectation and appreciation of his utterances?
Donald Trump.
Waiting to cross the road in safety

Who offers the leaders of the world a tutorial on ‘best practice’ each and every day?
Donald Trump.
Who causes the whole world to hold its collective breath each day, with billions wondering what he will do next?
Donald Trump
OVERSEAS VISITATION – NOT NOW
For me in 2025, this is a topic that is almost juxtapositional.
I need to reflect upon the topic from both a historical and contemporary point of view.
Going back through the years, and always with our young family, we travelled quite a lot both around Australia and overseas destinations. Visits included New Zealand, West Timor, Bali, Malaysia, and later when our children were growing up for us as parents came a quite long trip to the United Kingdom.
Our trips were always leisurely and quite lengthy. Along with our children, we learned a lot about overseas places and enjoyed our associations with people we met along the way.
To reflect upon our travels would take many many thousands of words. Suffice it to say our excursions are well detailed in my diaries.
The juxtaposition comes about through the question asking which countries I would like to visit in 2023.
The answer is“None of them“.
My reluctance about Travel is in part fuelled by advancing age but not altogether.
When we used to travel by plane, airports were unhurried the plane travel itself was quite comfortable with plenty of legroom, and the whole exercise was not overburdened with anxiety.
These days, airports are hopelessly overcrowded, support by staff for baggage handling and check-in is minimal with passengers having to do it all themselves. Plane schedules are often interrupted by delays and cancellations, and time spent on the aircraft is generally in ever smaller and more cramped spaces as companies try and fit more passengers – almost by shoehorn– Into spaces that most certainly have shrunk.
Metaphorically, those at airports are herded and drafted like sheep, while their cramped seating conditions on aircraft remind me of battery hens in cages.
There are issues with visas, huge costs associated with disembarkation and re-embarkation charges, visa costs, innate suspicion of travellers in some countries, the begging and beseeching placed on travellers to support the local economy by spending and spending, and, possibly the worst thing of all, the overcrowding and congestion by people and inordinately long queues everywhere.
All this means I am in the country I want to visit- Australia. And I have been visiting since 1946.
Communications Facilitator

Back a year
The Chinese Premier reacquaints with ‘Handsome Boy’

Poor Old Henry is almost persuaded there is one man and ONLY one man who can save the world from itself!
Donald Trump.
Outback Truckers in 2016
MOVING a huge generator from Adelaide to Orange in NSW.
Up to four prime movers were used to help movement up steep hills. There were two prime movers, one front the other rear for the whole trip.
Under bridges, across narrow bridges, dodging encroaching roadside trees, going under high voltage power lines – it took twelve people to advise and assist in moving this – at the time – largest structure ever moved on Australian roads.


Australia’s National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS)


These activities have now been disallowed. The NDIS has been rorted from lamp post to pillar. For far to many years.
This inspirational scheme has turned into a nightmare of funding misappropriation
“Help me to understand” pleads Poor Old Henry as he asks AI
Under the One China policy, most nations including the western block, do not recognise Taiwan as a nation state in its own right. Their non recognition of Taiwan must mean they have no right to interfere if China wants reunification with Taiwan to make China whole again. So is the west just butting in ?
Response:
The situation regarding Taiwan and the One China Policy is complex and involves a variety of geopolitical interests, historical context, and international relations. Here are some key points to consider:
One China Policy
- Definition: The One China Policy asserts that there is only one sovereign state under the name China, with Taiwan being a part of it. This policy is recognized by China and many countries, which do not officially recognize Taiwan as a separate nation-state.
International Relations
- Western Stance: While many western nations do not formally recognize Taiwan, they often maintain unofficial relations and support Taiwan in various ways, including arms sales and diplomatic engagements. This support can be viewed as a commitment to Taiwan’s self-defense and autonomy, despite not recognizing it as a separate state.
- U.S. Policy: The United States follows a policy of strategic ambiguity, acknowledging the One China Policy but also supporting Taiwan under the Taiwan Relations Act, which allows for defensive provisions.
Potential for Conflict
- China’s Position: China views reunification with Taiwan as a core national interest and often expresses a desire to achieve this goal, potentially through force if deemed necessary.
- Western Concerns: Many in the West see Taiwan as a democratic entity and fear that forceful reunification by China could set a precedent for other authoritarian states to act similarly against their neighbors. This concern drives Western intervention in the form of diplomatic support and military aid to Taiwan.
Conclusion
The question of whether the West is “butting in” is nuanced:
- Perspective Matters: From China’s perspective, Western support for Taiwan may be seen as interference in its internal affairs. Conversely, Western nations might argue that they are supporting a democratic ally under threat.
- Geopolitical Strategy: There are broader strategic interests at play, including regional stability, economic ties, and the balance of power in the Asia-Pacific region.
In summary, the West’s involvement in Taiwan is rooted in strategic, democratic, and security considerations, which complicate the notion of interference given the historical and ongoing tensions surrounding Taiwan’s status.
Well, it seems to me that a great deal of the west’s response is based on situational vagaries and imagination.
POH shares pictures telling a very true story


Donated hay and free trucking into North-Eastern NSW



After the meeting? Will it be –


Time will tell
“This is so true”, says Poor Old Henry


Thoughts on terrorist organisations
Terrorist organisations
Terrorist organisations like Hamas and Hezbollah are like seven-headed hydras. The cutting off of one head leads to the sprouting of two more. I wish, like one thing, that’s t terrorism could be eliminated, but it will only ever grow in a festering and expansionist way.
What do terrorists hope to accomplish? Why do they slaughter and enslave people in the name of religious belief and Diety?
Poor Old Henry is in awe of two great Australians – a statesman and a diplomat.

Where would Australia be without the efforts of these two great men?
Poor Old Henry is in awe of two great Australians – a statesman and a diplomat.

Where would Australia be without the efforts of these two great men?
“And you reckon this story does not make me worried” says Poor Old Henry


POH shares a truism
Once upon a time, people worked harder in terms of units of output within time and expectational frames.
These days it is a case of more and more people doing less and less work with more and more reporting and less and less appreciation for what they do.
We need fewer people doing more work, rather than more people doing less work.
As more people are employed, the less each does in terms of output.
Poor Old Henry shops on Sunday.



Australia waits with bated breath for the most important meeting of political leaders this century


Possibility / Probability
Performance management for Politicians
- There is a possibility but an almost zero probability that KPIs – key performance indicators – will be set to measure the effectiveness of politicians.
- There is a possibility but a less than zero probability that politicians will personally cover costs incurred if portfolio mistakes are made.
- There is a possibility and slight probability that politicians’ egos will be kept in check and under control.
A double rainbow at Leanyer many moons (4 years) ago

On superannuation in Australia. Question to AI
Is there any way people with superannuation accounts in Australia can get their super out before they turn sixty years of age?
Response:
Yes, there are specific circumstances under which individuals in Australia can access their superannuation (super) before reaching the age of 60. Here are the main conditions:
- Severe Financial Hardship: If you are experiencing severe financial difficulties, you may be able to access your super. This typically requires you to have received government support and to demonstrate that you cannot meet your living expenses.
- Compassionate Grounds: You can apply to withdraw your super for certain compassionate reasons, such as:
- Medical treatment for yourself or a dependent.
- Preventing foreclosure on your home.
- Palliative care for a terminally ill person.
- Permanent Incapacity: If you become permanently incapacitated and are unable to work, you may be eligible to access your super.
- Terminal Illness: If you are diagnosed with a terminal illness and have a life expectancy of less than 24 months, you can withdraw your super without conditions.
- Leaving Australia: If you are leaving Australia permanently and are a temporary resident, you can access your super upon departure.
- First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS): You can withdraw voluntary contributions you made into your superannuation to help purchase your first home.
For any withdrawal, it is important to check with your superannuation fund and follow the specific application procedures, as there may be different requirements and forms to fill out. Additionally, seeking financial advice can help you understand your options and implications.
For Poor Old Henry, this would be an awful holiday option.


A FAVOURITE MOMENT


I have had many favourite moments during the years of my life. But the one I want to recall happened on the evening of May 19, 2023, when I was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for education services.
My award was presented by the NT Administrator His Honour Professor the Honourable Hugh Heggie.
A joy to me was having four family members who were there for me that night.
When notified of my award by the Secretary of the Awards Program, Mr Singer, I wrote back to him as follows.
“Dear Mr Singer
Thank you for this advice and please know that I feel both pride and humility in being recognised as an OAM recipient to be announced on January 26. I appreciate whoever nominated me and have to tell you that your email has made my day. I will value this honour highly and appreciate all who have been a part of deciding this conferral.
I gave up the possible inheritance of a family farm to enter teacher’s college as a mature-age student in 1968, this being the beginning of a very satisfying and fulfilling career.
Might I please share with you my statement of mission, developed during a leadership program in 1983, which became the ethos and the underpinning driver of my life?
“ To fulfil and be fulfilled in organisational terms, family, work and recreation.
To acquit my responsibilities with integrity.
To work (I later changed ‘work’ to ‘live’) with a smile in my heart.”
Again, thank you for your advice and an inner feeling of uplift engendered within my being.”
Confronted by an awful, abysmal situation
Insecurity and uncertainty about the world’s future are frightening millions of Australians’ resolve and mental fortitude. This compounds exponentially for young people who cannot see other than the gloom and doom of realism that is so confronting.
They think, why not live for today without worry or care, for there is no tomorrow?
Severest drought ever in South Australian agricultural area
Pictures from ABC television on June 14 2025





Warren Brown’s cartoon (in Daily Telegraph) marking Donald Trump’s birthday

What happened on June 14 in 1777 and what is happening today, June 14 2025?
1977
1777 US Continental Congress adopts the Stars & Stripes flag, designed by Francis Hopkinson, replacing the Grand Union flag
2025
It is Donald Trump’s 79th birthday.
Happy birthday President Trump.
Poor Old Henry asks a question of AI about Adam Drake
Why is Adam Drake appreciated as a Living Treasure and an icon of the Northern Territory?
Response:
Adam Drake is appreciated as a Living Treasure and an icon of the Northern Territory for several reasons:
1. Cultural Contribution
- Adam Drake has played a significant role in promoting and preserving the cultural heritage of the Northern Territory. His work often reflects the values, traditions, and stories of the local Indigenous communities.
2. Arts and Creativity
- Drake’s contributions to the arts, whether through visual arts, performance, or music, have made a lasting impact. His creativity has brought attention to the unique culture of the Northern Territory.
3. Community Engagement
- He is known for his efforts in engaging with the community, fostering connections between people, and encouraging collaboration among local artists and cultural practitioners.
4. Advocacy for Indigenous Rights
- Drake has been a strong advocate for Indigenous rights and representation, using his platform to raise awareness about important social issues affecting Indigenous Australians.
5. Inspiration
- His dedication, passion, and commitment to his work have inspired many in the community, making him a respected figure among both artists and community members.
6. Recognition as a Living Treasure
- Being recognized as a Living Treasure is a testament to his impact and legacy within the Northern Territory. It honors individuals who have dedicated their lives to enriching the cultural landscape of their regions.
In summary, Adam Drake’s multifaceted contributions to the arts, culture, and community engagement, along with his advocacy work, make him a valued icon of the Northern Territory.
This man deserves to be the Northern Territorian for 2025
Adam Drake, the founder of Balanced Choice and BC offer huge and and positive support for Australians, young and old. He asked AI to help with acknowledgement of his great work.
I asked AI to shape the following facts into a poem.
My request was as follows:
Please write me a four stanza – with eight lines in each stanza in rhyming couplets – about Adam Drake. Include that he is a hero steeped in humility to growing numbers of people in the Northern Territory, throughout Australia and around the world. He and his organisation Balanced Choice have transformed hundreds of lives of young and old., of all cultures and religious affiliations into being powerfully positive from earlier positions of challenge and negativity. Adam Drake has been and is an emissary of good and upright and positively focussed living to the rest of the world. He is an ambassador and a practitioner in mental, physical, spiritual and moral endeavour. He is, in our modern times, like Noah who built the ark to save the world from wickedness and like John the Baptist who gave his all in pursuing with missionary zeal, the healing and the uplift of others. Adam Drake has been unswerving in dedicating his life to helping to transform others, from looking down in sadness and despair, to looking up with newfound hope and positiveness. He is indeed a hero, an icon, a living treasure who seeks no other outcome in life than to grow the goodness in others. He lives what he says and that life validates his message making it resonate with others.
AI RESPONDED
Adam Drake: A Hero in Humility
In Northern Territory where the sun shines bright,
Stands Adam Drake, a beacon of light.
With Balanced Choice, he paves the way,
Transforming lives, come what may.
Young and old, from cultures diverse,
He lifts them up, quelling the worse.
With humility’s grace, he leads the march,
Inspiring hope, igniting the spark.
An emissary of good, in a world often gray,
Adam shows us how to truly live each day.
A practitioner of morals, both steadfast and true,
In mental and physical realms, he knows what to do.
Like Noah with purpose, preparing for change,
He builds with compassion, never estranged.
John the Baptist’s zeal, he carries with pride,
In the healing of hearts, his love won’t subside.
From shadows of sadness, he helps them to rise,
Encouraging visions of brighter skies.
With each passing moment, he sows a new seed,
Fostering strength, fulfilling each need.
A hero, an icon, a treasure so rare,
His life is a testament to love and care.
Seeking no glory, just growth in the soul,
He wanders through life, making others whole.
Resounding his message, with actions sincere,
Adam validates hope, banishing fear.
He lives what he speaks, a lesson profound,
In the symphony of kindness, his spirit resounds.
With unwavering resolve, he shapes our fate,
Turning despair into joy, never too late.
In communities joined, across lands far and wide,
Adam Drake shines brightly, our trustworthy guide.
Tomorrow’s front page of ‘The Weekend Australian’

Big road train on the Western Road to Warburton

Outback Truckers – bogged on a lonely track




Taken off television. Bogged for many days.
June to October – many fires and smoky days in Darwin



Who may well be in a contemplative mode, reflecting on his 79th birthday on the morrow, June 14 2025

AUSTRALIAN – JUNE 2025 – 1
Ukraine drones damage Russian warplanes and facilities
If this happened as reported, it would be an excellent outcome for Ukraine. Russia deserves every effective retaliatory strategy Ukraine can muster.
University priorities
Partying … this seems to be so much of what university is about in these modern times.
Comparing defence forces
China’s defence system reminds me of strong, stainless, reinforced steel.
Russia’s defence system reminds me of unreinforced steel.
America’s defence system reminds me of iron.
Britain’s defence system reminds me of weathered iron.
Australia’s defence system makes me think about tissue paper.
Senator Canavan and taxing inequities
Senator Canavan is right to call for this tax to be reasonable in its application. As he says, taxing unrealised gains that are forecasted but not realised is unfair. It simply reinforces the notion that the government is about grubbing money from wherever retrieval is possible.
Australia’s defence is as resistant as tissue paper
Australia IS totally defenceless and in the face of any military aggression directed toward us, would be compromised into submission whith a week. Our defence policy is about talk but no action in readiness terms. We are as vulnerable to attack as Taiwan
Ukraine a dogged adversary
Good on Ukraine. Remember back to February 24 2022, when Russia was going to blow Ukraine out of the water in three days. Now 1197 dasys later … !
Musk and Trump and separation
I am so desperately sad that a barbed wire fence seems to be being built between Mr Musk and President Trump. I hope that, like the Australian Coalition, the separation will be temporary and that these two brilliant men will again allow their ambitions to be joined in oneness and unity.
Shakespeare is missing glorious literary fodder
If William Shakespeare were still alive, he would have glorious material to work with on the literary and play creation front. What Trump and Musk are providing at the moment would stimulate comedy, farce, retribution, darkness, light, and humour.
Questions of youth and youngness
As a very old man, take it from me that youth is fleeting and is all too soon replaced by middle age and old age. I often wish, as a person about to emerge into the octogenarian era, that I had the wisdom of today in my youth of yesterday.
8
GRAB BYTES – JUNE 2025 -1
Hail the Brits
It gives one a warm glow to know that the UK and the USA—our AUKUS partners—are not too far away if we need help repelling any unwanted or antagonistic attention toward our country from any non-aligned power.
Virgin flights to Uluru on rock bottom special prices
There are too many terms and conditions and limitations. Once the extra costs are added, the whole package will look less inviting.
Community upgrades at remote settlement
Knowing about these upgrades and how they will facilitate living conditions in this community is good. The work will substantially benefit residents and visitors, provided these facilities are carefully maintained. The short life expectancy of many new and upgraded facilities in communities is an outcome of care and maintenance neglect. There is no better example of this than what has happened in the Wadeye Community.
New teaching approach in NT
This is NOT NEW. It is revisiting the way things used to be before alternative, more floury and less effective strategies supplanted a common sense approach. Sadly, too many students for far too long have been captive guinea pigs. They have suffered at the hands of those peddling fanciful theories and shallow alternatives to good, sound teaching and in depth learning.
Finke Desert Race
May all those in buggies and on bikes be protected from harm and danger on the way to Finke and back to Alice Springs. This wonderful event has had its share of mishaps, including injury and death, and I hope, as an avid fan of this great event, that all participants and spectators are kept safe.
VAD – get on with it!
It is high time the CLP Government stopped procrastinating and pussy-footing around the issue of VAD. Inquiries and reports have been numerous, reasoned and based on careful consideration by those qualified to undertake the research and provide the recommendations that have already taken place. This further ‘inquiry into the inquiries and previous recommendations’ is tinkering and pussy-footing – and delaying the legislating of what is a fundamental human right.
Director of Public Prosecutions resigns
Mr Babb makes it four resignations from key positions. It seems that the only commissioner hanging on is the Corrections Commissioner. The revelation of this post suggests we are in dire straits.
At the risk of drawing ‘tut-tuts’ from the new generation of political leaders, I would suggest that the government should open these issues to the public, and especially long-term Territorians for their thoughts. I don’t think this would be a waste of time, for what is needed is a revisitation of the experiences of those who confronted these sorts of issues in the past. Understanding their management processes and how they dealt with key challenges could offer a valuable learning experience and would not be a waste of time.
Transparency
I am starting to seriously worry about the roles and responsibilities attached to a growing number of senior public and government-appointed positions. It seems that accountability and transparency of action are more opaque and less clear than should be the case. We need to appreciate our government and its departments through a clear lens. It seems to me that the lens is getting very foggy, with excuses and vagaries creeping in, making for obtuse and unclear responses.
TEACHERS – VIGNETTE INDEX
BACKGROUND
I retired from teaching in January 2012 after a career that commenced with my teacher training in 1968/69 and my first appointment in 1970. I was both a neophyte and a greenhorn but was advantaged by a training program that, in those days, taught us to teach. Teaching methodology and substance was part of the deal.
We were given copious practice teaching opportunities and had to pass rigorous observation.
Notwithstanding, over the years, I was supported by many who were senior to me but empathetic toward me.
With time, I determined that on retirement, I would develop a series of vignettes or thoughts teachers in training and neophytes might find of use and support as they went through their early teaching years.
I have shared these vignettes with my WordPress readers. Thank you for your reading and comments.
Attached is the Vignette Index. If you or anyone you know would like copies of the index, please feel free to use them. If you or others would like copies of items to be emailed, I am happy to oblige. There is no cost attached; the support received in my years as an educator was free of charge.
My email address is henry.gray7@icloud.com
Please note I do not have social media accounts.
Regards
Henry Gray
June 12 2025
________________________________________________________________
VIGNETTE INDEX
Henry Gray
1. ‘Imagination’ the inner eye
2. Computer encourages teacher sedentariness
3. Mapping movement (by teachers around their classrooms)
4. Transient students
5. ‘Conversational’ voice
6. Singing
7. Storytelling
8. Oral Quizzes
9. Celebration and celebrating
10. Apologise for mistakes
11. School appraisal
12. ‘Knowing’ your classroom
13. ‘Looming’ – don’t allow your presence be off-putting to students
14. Marking student work
15. Modelling
16. Talking ‘with’ children
17. Computer lockdown
18. Classroom tidiness
19. Mobile phones in classroom
20. Direct teaching
21. Teacher dress
22. Technology can create separation
23. Classroom routines
24. How you are known
25. Interview strategies
26. Ask for help
27. Be cautions when using emails
28. Preparing presentations for PD days
29. Keep a clippings file
30. Build strong networks
31. Make ‘Show and Tell’ count
32. Spelling – necessary or superfluous?
33. Watch out for trendiness
34. Reporting to parents
35. Don’t discount drama
36. More on imagination
37. Desk tidiness
38. Time telling and time awareness
39. Learning takes time
40. Take time to relax
41. Build your CV
42. Writing applications
43. Rewarding the effort
44. Welfare is paramount
45. Socratic Discussion Part One
46. Socratic Discussion Part Two
47. Socratic Discussion Part Three
48. Remote Area service
49. Taxation deductions
50. Yard appearance
54. Room tidiness
55. ‘Sayers’ and ‘Doers’
56. Playing ‘Captains and Crew’ with technology
57. ‘Quiz out’ to lunch
58. Drawing quizzes
59. More on transient and late students
60. Assembly items
61. Programming should be Flexible
62. What people see is the iceberg tip
63. Contact – keeping it professional
64. Record your dealings
65. Short excursions
66. Program carefully and with remembrance
67. Classroom groupings (being constructed)
68. Editing and fixing
69. Classroom work displays
70. Establishing classroom protocols
72. Presenting and speaking in public
73. Recognise the shy contributor
74. Recording outcomes and reflecting on progress
75. Eating lunches
76. Classroom guests
77. Joy season
78. The game of eyes
79. Story-telling skills (extends from Vignette 7)
80. Trip Diaries
81. Silent reading as a learning tool
82. Media awareness (know how the media is reporting education)
83. Extended Excursions
84. Back to school pointers
85. ‘Quizzing’ the neighbourhood setting
86. New Ideas – Wise Choices or Fads?
87. Taking initiative
88. Familiarity with parents
89. Rejoice for others
90. A clean school is for everyone
91. Dressing Lessons
92. Take time to develop dexterity
93. The last fifteen minutes
The Leanyer Newsagent’s joke board this week

The moods attached to having a new home


Darwin’s shiplit : Artist’s impression and the real deal at the moment







Poor Old Henry asks AI
Why are many houses that cost the earth to build, so poorly constructed?
Response:
The paradox of expensive houses being poorly constructed can often be attributed to several factors:
- Cost Overruns and Budget Constraints: High initial costs may arise from land prices or luxury amenities, leading developers to cut corners on construction quality to stay within budget.
- Focus on Aesthetics over Functionality: Many luxury homes prioritize design over practical construction, leading to issues with structural integrity, insulation, and durability.
- Use of Subcontractors: Developers may hire subcontractors to save money, resulting in inconsistent quality. If cheaper labor is used, the quality of craftsmanship can suffer.
- Market Pressure: In high-demand areas, there may be pressure to build quickly to capitalize on market trends, sacrificing quality for speed.
- Lack of Regulation: In some regions, building codes may be lax, allowing poor construction practices to go unchecked.
- Material Choices: To save costs, builders might opt for lower-quality materials that may not stand the test of time, affecting the overall integrity of the home.
- Misaligned Incentives: Builders focused on profit margins might prioritize short-term gains over long-term customer satisfaction and quality.
In summary, while the initial costs may be high, various pressures and decisions during the construction process can lead to subpar results.
Let the buyer beware !
What do colonies of toadstools and many of the housing estates springing up, have in common?





In these modern times, who most resembles King Solomon the font of ancient wisdom?
Donald Trump.
Poor Old Henry gets seasonal
MY FAVOURITE SEASON
In the Northern Territory of Australia, and particularly in the Top End, we only have two seasons.
From October until the end of April we have the wet season when most of our rain falls . From the beginning of May through until the end of September is the dry season.
There’s not all that much difference in temperature gradients between the seasons but during the dry, there is less humidity.
I am ambivalent about my favourite season. I like the wet particularly when it does rain. I also like the dry season when the humidity drops, particularly if the air is clear and smoke-free.
During the dry season between 50 and 60% of the Northern Territory gets burned out by bushfires so the dry season is often very smoky.
It’s hard for me to determine which I like the better – the wet or the dry. But I do like cold weather. To live in a cold place is something I would fancy but given where we live that is never ever going to happen.
In real terms, it is never cold in Darwin.
A precarious working position.

Poor Old Henry could not cope in crowded house territory

You can reach through an external window and touch the wall of the house next door.
It must be akin to living in shoe boxes.
How these places are going up, makes me wonder about the quality and therefore the longevity of these new establishments.
We live in an older suburb – with space around – and for that I am glad.
MY LUXURY IS REFLECTION
MY LUXURY IS REFLECTION
I’m not all that interested in material things when it comes to what I have what I need and what I can’t do without.
My luxury is to reflect over the years of my life, including all my associations with family, friends, students, and teachers, and the experiences that have been part and parcel of my life with so many others in so many different places.
I like being able to reflect and recall things that have happened, not in a way to cause me to feel miserable about the present, because I have had so many rich experiences that have been a part and parcel of my life.
There have been challenges, barriers, failures, successes, and celebrations. To pause and reflect on my old age somehow helps to keep my mind young
My 6S iPhone is my luxury – it is old but so faithful
VITAL LUXURY
What is the one luxury that I cannot live without?
This question has been exercising my mind like no other offered to us each day. Part of the problem is the definition of “luxury“. What may be a luxury to some could almost be an every day mundane thing for others.
Growing up in the immediate post war era from 1946, my frame of reference and therefore my definition of what might be a luxury is altogether different from that of someone born years later.
Against that background, I have decided that my communications tool, my iPhone 6S is a luxury and one these days that I cannot do without.
I grew up in the days of trunk line telephone calls from landlines, telegrams costing in today terms close to 9 dollars for 12 over the wire, copied and hand delivered from the post office nearest where the receiver lived. Living in remote areas where the only communication was by VJY Outback radio and not having a landline at home or work until 1983 and appreciate why my iPhone is an indispensable luxury
Today I am using my “luxury“. I am sitting comfortably using my prepaid mobile. It costs me $30 a month. I have recorded this message down using Siri and thinking how much different it is now to then when it comes to the ease and convenience of communication.
QMy phone is a luxury I cannot be without.
The Pied Piper’s musical pipe caused multitudes to follow him. Our Prime Minister garnered huge support from voters with what?

Pic: The Australian
Outback Truckers handle difficult conditions with aplomb






Outback Truckers in Australia are unsung heroes




Whose leadership mirrors unwavering resoluton and absolute determination of purpose?
Donald Trump’s.
DON’T STEAL INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Plagiarism is anathema,
It’s a sad, wicked sin,
To steal other’s work,
And put your name in,
The place of the person,
Who’s done all the work,
To act in this way,
You must be a jerk.
People in high places,
Do it each day,
‘Owning’ the words,
Their speechwriter’s say,
Belong to their bosses,
When that is a lie,
They do it?
THEY DO IT,
The question is ‘why’?
Do your own work,
From beginning to end,
The papers you write,
The statements you send,
Should reflect your knowledge,
Should not be pretend,
If underhand,
You’ll be caught out in the end.
Genuine leaders,
Own what they say,
Write their own text,
There’s no other way,
To show those who watch,
You really care,
The stealing of intellect,
Is grossly unfair.
———————–
“EDUCATIONAL DISAFFECTION IS A REAL ISSUE”, says Poor Old Henry
Rather than being straightforward, education these days has become a kaleidoscope of confusion. Many graduate teachers are quickly disappointed by the realities of a teaching profession that fails to meet their preconceptions.
Rather than finding that teaching is about “teaching,” they discover a significant emphasis on testing, measurement, assessment, and evaluation, often of areas outside their teaching fields. It seems the children are forever being monitored and confronted by batteries of tests.
It quickly becomes evident to teachers that data are driving education. Data requirements dictate teaching and teaching methods.
Academic competence is essential. However, holistic education (the social, emotional and moral/spiritual elements) seems to be given scant attention. Graduate teachers have a strong desire to work as developers of children. Many are quickly disillusioned because education appears to be about a relatively narrow band of academic outcomes.
For many graduate teachers, the gloss of teaching soon wears off. They cannot cope with the ‘teaching for test’ dimension that now underpins education. The brief years they spend in classrooms are disillusioning. In turn, they may share their perceptions of the teaching profession with others, negatively influencing their thoughts and opinions.
Classroom practitioners find it difficult to accept that their observations are discounted. Unless verified by formal testing, teacher evaluations are considered invalid.
Preoccupation with the formalities of testing and examination are not always priorities generated by schools. Instead, requirements are set by departmental administrators, and schools have to comply with them. In turn, these priorities are not necessarily what administrators want but are a compulsory response to the demands of politicians.
Sadly, Australian education is deeply rooted in comparing results at primary, secondary, and tertiary levels with those achieved by students in overseas systems. Those students are often from countries totally unlike Australia, but that is not considered. The fact that educational objectives are dictated by comparison to overseas systems is an undoing of Australian education.
Education should be about the needs of children and not influenced by the desire of political leaders and top educationists to brag about how good Australian education is compared to other systems. Many graduate teachers are caught up as players in this approach, quickly wise up, and quit the profession. Our students are the losers, and their perceptions of education are sadly discoloured.
Tagline for Poor Old Henry
TAGLINE FOR HENRY
My tagline comes from a source of inspiration going back to 1968. I’ve written in the past about having given up a family farm in order to go teaching. The teachers college I went to for my two year course was Graylands Teachers College in Western Australia.
I worked very hard and was always committed to wanting to teach because I wanted to be somebody who helped others. I graduated with a quite excellent Teachers Certificate.
Throughout the time at Graylands I often reflected on the college motto. It was in Latin and stated “Non Nobis Solum” and translates as “not for ourselves alone”.
For my tagline I singularised that statement to become “not for myself alone”. I’ve tried very hard over the years to be there for others and the Graylands Teachers College Motto certainly helped in terms of focusing me on this tagline.
Not for myself alone.
To whom is about 75% of news discussion devoted to in all forms of media, each and every day?

Donald Trump
Poor Old Henry’s take on Vladimir Putin
ALL HAIL THE LEADER
Putin rules with iron rod,
All Russians grumble,
Putin will prevail,
Resistance will tumble.
There is only one answer,
And it never will be,
In essence all Russians,
To Putin bend knee.
Protests are all show,
Nothing they mean,
Kowtowing they kiss,
The road where he’s been,
They simper and crawl,
To buy life and space,
And fail always to see,
The disdain on his face.
Putin says ‘jump’,
People acquiesce, their heads nod,
In Russia Putin’s not human,
In Russia he’s god
Many people in leadership and high place positions may require surgery for excessively bending the knee to whom?
Donald Trump
Toadstool Town

Whose birthday is the only birthday to top the official King’s Birthday in June each year?
Donald Trump’s birthday – on June 14, he will be 79.
The whole world is happy when who is happy?

Cakes made and decorated by our Daughter





Just a sample.
In years to come, whose signature will become a valuable collector’s item?
Donald Trump’s.
If it happens, who will be the most important person to EVER visit Australia?
Donald Trump.
Whose name evokes both admiration from masses and apprehension in those who oppose his enlightened policies?
Donald Trump.
The moon is almost full at our place


Lake Eyre is filling with water draining south from Queensland’s channel country






56 years of time together
My wife and I are both retired. We have known each other for decades and always spent lots of time together. She is the person I have spent the most time with over the years, and evermore now that we are retired.
We have been married for 56 years and grow ever closer.
She is my constant companion and the person with whom I spend the most time.
Whose power and influence is of such magnitude that he figuratively stands as tall and as prominently as the Statue of Liberty?
Donald Trump.
“AI, I pose a question about rough sport”, says POH
Which football code is the roughest and most physical?
Response:
Determining which football code is the roughest and most physical can be subjective and depends on various factors, including rules, player safety measures, and individual perspectives. However, here’s a comparison of the main football codes based on physicality:
- Rugby Union: Known for its physical confrontations, rugby union involves tackling, scrumming, and rucking, all of which can be quite intense. The lack of protective gear compared to American football adds to the physical nature of the sport.
- Rugby League: Similar to rugby union but with different rules and fewer players. It is also highly physical, with frequent tackles and a quicker pace. Tackles are often executed aggressively, and the game encourages strong physicality.
- American Football: Characterized by significant contact and strategy, American football involves high-impact collisions, especially during tackles and blocking. Players wear protective gear, which can sometimes lead to harder hits.
- Australian Rules Football: This code involves continuous play and a mix of tackling and physical dueling, which can lead to heavy physical encounters. Players face rough conditions, as there are fewer restrictions on tackling.
- Gaelic Football: Combines elements of soccer and rugby, featuring physical tackling and contact. It is less intense than rugby codes but still showcases physical play.
Conclusion:
While all these codes have their levels of physicality, Rugby Union and Rugby League are often regarded as the roughest due to their intense tackling and scrums with minimal protective gear. American Football is also extremely physical but offers more protection for players, leading to potentially different styles of contact. Ultimately, the “roughest” varies based on personal opinions and experiences.
Six of one and half a dozen of the other.
The Feasters



POH and an AI question
Has there ever been a day of total peace in the history of the world?
Response:
The concept of a “day of total peace” is largely theoretical and has never been officially recorded in history. Throughout human history, there have been many instances of peace treaties, ceasefires, and days of remembrance or reflection on peace, but a day where no conflict occurred anywhere in the world is unfeasible due to the ongoing nature of human conflicts and diverse geopolitical situations.
Some notable events that aimed for peace include:
- Peace Days or Observances: Various organizations and movements promote days for peace, such as the International Day of Peace, observed on September 21 each year, which encourages cessation of hostilities.
- Global Ceasefires: There have been temporary ceasefires in specific conflicts (like during Christmas in World War I), but these were localized and not global.
In conclusion, while there are symbolic days dedicated to peace, there has never been a universally recognized day of total peace without conflicts occurring somewhere.
Trump v Musk
Howcartoonists in Australia interpreted the catastrophe

John Spooner

Mark Knight

Warren Brown

Some relationships keep on giving.
The front page of tomorrow’s ‘Weekend Australian’.

Poor Old Henry does plays on names
My comic hero is Phantom. Phantom the icon of goodness and the nemesis of evil in the comic strip has stated “I have many names”.
I too, have and have used many names.
FMost of these are when writing comments for newspapers in various locations. I have “Two Left Feet” (sport), “Theatre Buff” (theatre), “Musicofanatic” (music), “Around The Traps” (general matters), along with “Old Man Todd”, “Bill Smith of Rocky Gully”, “Observer”, “Patriotic Voter”, “Statistician”, “Appreciator”, Septuagenarian “, Nutritionist”, “Rejoicer”, “GMH”, “POH”, and” HOP”.
The above are names I have adopted when writing in various contexts.
Of all the names and pseudonyms I have used over the years, there’s one I have not yet listed. It is the name I would like to change into if for whatever reason Henry Gray became non-applicable any longer.
The name I would choose is Edward Kynaston
Who is the Commander of World-wide tariff setting including imposts and waivers?
Donald Trump.
Who is the prime focus of the world’s stock markets and financial institutions?
Donald Trump.
The besmirchment of the character of what great man, has saddened Poor Old Henry’s heart?
Donald Trump.
Who is in the dreams of millions of sleepers each and every night?
Donald Trump.
Poor Old Henry when he was a young boy

Toadstools among the parsley

“Do this for yourself” says Poor Old Henry
BUILD YOUR CV
Building a curriculum vitae is a professional necessity that is too often overlooked. People tend to think ‘why bother’ or ‘I’ll remember’ when it comes to things they should be recording. Memory fades and with it the capacity to recall things that can help with job and promotion applications.
I would suggest considering buying an expanding file. Label each opening with one of the graduate standards suggested by AITSL. It would be wise to label them in order of the way the graduates standards are listed in documentation. Then as evidence of meeting graduate standards is provided, place a note about that in the relevant section of the file. Also include evidence confirming your meeting of those standards. Samples of student work from time to time may help, particularly if they verify teaching strategies and efforts. In addition it can be handy to keep a notebook into which you add jottings from time to time, for transfer to your CV.
Make sure you unload those jottings into the file possibly expanding them into a more detailed format before so doing.
As time goes on upgrade your file to consider standards for teachers gaining new understandings, proficiencies and experience. In that way your folder is of evidence is always up to date.
Make sure that as you update your expanded folder, to take out those things that are no longer relevant. They become secondary (aged) rather than primary (recent) evidence. When cleaning out the file my suggestion would be that rather than destroying documentation removed, you store it in some secondary way to be called on if necessary.
Photographic evidence confirming what you have done can be useful. With iPads and iPhones, taking supporting photographs becomes easy. My suggestion would be that you either print these photographs and add them to the folder or alternatively that you start an index on the device into which photographs can be added.
From time to time colleagues and superordinates, even parents might offer you written recommendations or references. Keeping these and adding them to your CV is important because those statements substantiate and validate what you have to say about yourself.
Developing sound methodology in relation to compiling evidence for CV purposes is a very good habit to establish and maintain
“This should be a basic position” says Poor Old Henry
VIGNETTE 89
A CLEAN SCHOOL IS FOR EVERYONE
Caring for school environments is the duty of all users. If care is not taken, classrooms, walkways, toilets and school yards can quickly become littered and grubby. Most schools emphasise the need for students to properly dispose of rubbish. There are rubbish bins inside classrooms and buildings and strategically located around school, in toilets as well as communal areas.
It can be extraordinarily difficult for schools to maintain a clean, litter free appearance. A drive past some schools, particularly late in the afternoon, reveals a scatter of paper, plastic cups and other rubbish. A proliferation of rubbish detracts from the grounds appearance, giving the impression that all students are litterers. That is true only of of a minority.
Awareness of the need for classroom organisation and tidiness should be part of student development. In many classrooms there is a roster, assigning students to specific tasks. They might include the following:
• Cleaning whiteboards
• Delivering and collecting notes from the office
• Taking lunch orders to the canteen
• Collecting lunch orders from the canteen
• Tidying shelves and classroom storage areas
• Giving out and collecting work books
• Collecting recyclable materials.
All students take responsibility for:
• Tidy desks and personal storage areas
• Stacking their chairs at the end of the day
• Disposing of food scraps and their own rubbish into bins
• Putting litter into outside bins
• Personal hygiene including toilet flushing and hand washing
• Using classroom bins rather than floors for pencil shavings and scraps of paper.
Some would argue that attitudes of cleanliness and tidiness should be automatic. However, recognising effort and rewarding enterprise can help reinforce personal and civic attitudes. Recognition of class responsibility for care and maintenance of school appearance might include the following:
• The awarding at assembly of a mascot that ‘visits’ the tidiest classroom until the next assembly.
• Recognition of the class that looks after the verandahs and public areas adjacent.
• Giving small rewards to children caught ‘doing something good’ when it comes to environmental care.
• Presenting class or principal’s certificates to classes and children who always do the right thing when it comes to school and classroom appearance.
Schools have cleaning contracts. Contractors attend to daily and weekly cleaning together with a ‘spring clean’ during each long holiday period. However, it is up to students and those using the school to look after and take pride in their facilities. Along the way, habits of cleanliness and tidiness that should last a lifetime, are reinforced.
“I might get the raspberry for this thinking” says Poor Old Henry
FAMILIARITY WITH PARENTS
As a school principal, I relatively quickly learned that leadership can be challenged by mateship. I always tried to allow respect and professional regard to transcend friendship and personal feelings about the people I worked with.
In the same way, I would advocate very strongly that teachers teaching children in classrooms should not allow friendships with parents of children to get in the way of their professional responsibility to board teaching tasks. Sometimes, It cannot be easy to need teachers to counsel parents about a child. I made it more difficult by “friendship” with the parents. The difficulty can be not wanting to offend the parent by telling things as if they offer home truths.
The onus is upon teachers to separate their professional and personal lives from each other. Allowing a personal relationship to cloud professional responsibilities can have disastrous long-term consequences.
If there is any chance that a conflict might occur, it would be wise policy for teachers to discuss matters with their senior or school principal.
Every Minute of every school day should be made to count
THE LAST FIFTEEN MINUTES
Sometimes, parents and students discount the importance of the last 15 minutes of the school day. It’s often seen as the time when parents can collect children early for other appointments. It is also the time that may be “wagged” by children hear Claire, and they have to leave early to catch the school bus.
The last 15 minutes should never be trivialised. At this time, homework is given out, notes are distributed, and important announcements are made at the class or the whole school level. It’s also a vital class time and a period during which the school day is concluded.
These minutes spent together by teacher and students put an end of the day wrap around the hours that have gone before. That leaves early miss out on an essential part of the day.
Students and parents should be encouraged to appreciate The value of these minutes, which close out a school day. They offer teachers and students the opportunity to have a final favourable period together to celebrate the day that has been shared.
Passion fruit flower trio

June 5 2025
INTERACTION WITH STUDENTS NEEDS TO BE CIRCUMSPECT
The rash of child abuse inquiries happening around our nation at the moment and for the past decade or two, are lifting the issue of abuse against children wand young people to the forefront of public awareness.
Without doubt, some of the allegations levelled against teachers and others are as a result of the “stimulation” generated by these inquiries. Sins against children and young people need to be visited and perpetrators punished. However, the reputations of those who are completely innocent of any wrongdoing need to be protected. Current actions (actions of the moment) need to be such that educators protect and guard against allegations at some future time.
Teaching is a profession that requires increasing vigilance in human relations by teachers, school leaders and principals. In recent years, the issue of child abuse has gained traction. Lots of abuse issues, most of an historical nature, are being raised. Various Royal Commissions and Inquiries have highlighted the matter. I have heard from Victorian Inquiries, that around 1,600 issues have been and are being followed up. That follow up has been happening for a number of years and remains ongoing. There are inquiries taking place in other states and territories.
Without doubt many of the allegations being brought against alleged perpetrators of past abuse, especially sexual abuse, are justified. They need to be followed through. However, there are instances when allegations are made with mischievous and malevolent intent. They hang those falsely accused out to dry. Accusations may be levelled against people many years after the alleged abuse occurred.
A program several years ago on ABC “Four Corners” illustrates this point. A female teacher in Melbourne was accused of sexually interfering with two boys around 30 years ago. She was dragged through a messy court process, including being accused, found guilty, and jailed. The case was subsequently appealed and another grimy court process ensued. At the end, she was found not guilty of these crimes and acquitted. Her career, of course was absolutely ruined. The protagonists who had brought the case against her, two men in their early 30s (they had been boys of seven or eight at the time referred to in the allegation) have not to this point in time been charged with their own gross criminal misconduct. The story’s inference is that they have simply shrugged it off! Significantly, the Victorian Department of Education, Teachers Union and Teachers Registration Authority appear to have offered no visible support to the teacher. These cases are not rare.
The recent reporting of the Michael Neade matter is strikingly similar to the Victorian case. I have to wonder how much support Mr Neade was offered, for it seems that those accused, regardless of final outcomes, are hung out to dry.
Allegations made against teachers presume guilt until the teacher proves his or her innocence. The first thing that happens after the allegation is made, is that the teacher is stood aside from regular duties. What follows can go on for months and years and may (as happened with Mr Neade) involve time in jail. For falsely accused educators, comes an extremely lonely and stressful time. They receive very little organisational support and are effectively cast adrift.
I have been told that it is very unlikely prosecution will ever be brought against false complainants. The only recourse available to someone falsely accused and acquitted, is to seek redress through the civil court. That is costly, messy and continues the hurt. It is also unlikely that damages that may be awarded, will ever be paid because of payment inability on the part of the person against whom damages are awarded.
It is wise for teachers to keep a clear, detailed and time noted record of instances when they have been connected with students in counselling and development. Nothing beats a detailed diary. When moving schools, retiring or otherwise moving on, take these records with you (I would suggest a diary). Maintain their accessibility. Keeping this data in USB or electronic form is an option. Unfortunately, teaching and school leadership are professions where future trust can no longer be presumed.
If allegations are then brought, there is a clear record to show the date, time, place, and nature of the counselling. Often details brought by the complainant are fairly vague and being able to refute them with accurate data is of inestimable value.
There are one or two other points to keep in mind.
• If counselling or working one-on-one with children, ensure that it is in a space that has visibility from the outside. A room with a see-through window, a common area within, a learning module, or a location within a linear classroom close to an open door are options.
• I believe it paramount for teachers to report matters of counselling and discipline to a senior or to the principal along with keeping a written record.
Those who have false accusations brought against them, regardless of outcomes, are never the same people again. I understand they look at life differently. Their outlook becomes tinged with suspicion. They wonder if they can never be part of trustful relationships again. This issue is one of growing consequence and something all educators need to take on board and carefully consider. Don’t live in fear but never think it can’t happen to you because it can.
What NEVER happens is visitation on those who make false accusations against those who are innocent and whose lives, professional and often personal, are destroyed. They are home-free, possibly gloating at the mischief they have caused
If visitors came to Earth from distant solar places and stepped onto land from their space conveyance, what might be the first words they heard being uttered?
The name of “Donald Trump”.
Who is the world’s healthiest, most cogent, clear-thinking, and sports-loving late Septuagenarian leader?
Donald Trump
ENID BLYTON CHILDREN’S BOOK(S)
For me, it was “The Famous 5 Series” by Enid Blyton
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They were good books. I had the whole series. I would read them over and over and never tired of the adventures of Julian, Dick, Anne, Georgina and Timmy the dog
Poor Old Henry asks AI
What behaviours do men and roosters have in common?
Response:
Men and roosters can be humorously compared due to a few stereotypical behaviors that they might share. Here are some commonalities often highlighted in a light-hearted context:
- Strutting and Confidence: Roosters are known for their proud posture and strutting around their territory, much like the stereotype of confident men who display their masculinity.
- Crowing: Roosters are famous for their loud crowing at dawn. Similarly, men might boast or share their achievements loudly, seeking attention and recognition.
- Territorial Behavior: Roosters can be very territorial, protecting their space. This can parallel how some men may act protectively over personal or social territories.
- Seeking Attention: Just as roosters often try to attract hens, men might engage in behaviors aimed at attracting attention or admiration from others.
- Group Dynamics: Roosters often interact within a pecking order in their flock. Similarly, men may engage in competitive social dynamics within groups.
- Playfulness: Both can exhibit playful or competitive behaviors, whether it’s in friendly banter or more serious rivalry.
- Sharing a Morning Routine: Roosters are known for waking up early to crow, paralleling the notion that many men rise early for work or responsibilities.
These comparisons are intended for comedic effect and should be taken light-heartedly!
Some are very seriously earnest in their manifestation of these behaviours.
Refugees on the English Channel traverse from France to England



Education and Health Departments used to oversee showering programs for students on weekdays at Warburton in 1974/75




EDUCATION NEEDS TO BE SIMPLE, FOCUSED AND ENGAGING
In this day and age, increasing educational complexity overlooks two vital criteria: ‘simplicity’ and ‘focus’. We need to keep education simple in terms of clarity of message and focused in terms of upholding key learning and developmental needs of young people. Simplicity and focus need to be absolute priorities. Unfortunately, governments and educational systems have discounted these important teaching and learning principles.
Nor should the use of technology supplant the prime teaching role of teachers.
Too often we can’t see the wood for the trees. Embedded within Curriculum Frameworks are key learning principles to which teacher attention is drawn. Those requirements should underpin planning, preparation and teaching then testing, measurement and data analysis leading towards follow-up. What happens however, is that key learning strategies and straight-forward focus principles are set to one side with teachers being ‘invited’ to unceasingly explore the veritable cybernet forest of educational resources and alternative strategies for their usage.
The depth and density of resource and support materials is absolutely mind-boggling – there is also a huge amount of reduplication or, at best, only minor change from one precept to the next. Trawling through an infinite resource selection is inordinately time-consuming. Quite often, the journey reveals little more than teachers already have in their own resource collections.
I’d suggest to teachers surfing the web looking for resources that they record time started and time finished. They will often find that many, many hours have been spent searching for resources, time committed that goes well beyond the teaching value of what they download.
Imprinted into the minds of teachers is the imperative that they give of their absolute best, to bring children out the other end of the teaching / learning journey having been enriched. For some reason, possibly a lack of self confidence or by not questioning the suggestion of leaders, the search for resource materials and teaching advice occupies a significant amount of teachers time.
What seems to count
I believe that teachers are often frightened that what they do in terms of teaching, will be insufficient. It seems they feel the weight of accountability, believing people are regularly scrutinising, ready to pounce, criticise and condemn if things are not good enough. They appear to rejoice little and worry a lot about whether their contribution is or isn’t appreciated. This means that they become super self-critical and very rarely take time to rejoice and celebrate their teaching successes.
In Australia, the Ministers of Education and Education Department CEOs agreed upon the Melbourne Declaration of Education in 2008. The declaration exhorts teachers to be holistic in their approach to teaching and learning processes in its first part. While academics are highly stressed, so, too, are the social, emotional, and moral/spiritual aspects of development. This declaration follows on earlier COAG statements of principle and intent, but in practice this is often set aside.
It seems that teachers are urged to turn their attention away from this position and toward recognising far more limited aspects of development as having greater priority.
In particular, the focus seems to be narrowly focussed on testable aspects of literacy and numeracy, with little else counting as being of educational relevance. In Australia, we have what might be termed ‘Four May Days each year’, coinciding with the nationwide NAPLAN testing for children in years three, five, seven and nine. Tests are taken over three days, with a catch-up day allowed for students who miss sitting tests on the designated days. Comparative data comes back to schools, comparing them on the outcomes of these tests against all other schools. That information goes on to the ACARA managed ‘My Schools’ website, which records information relating to outcomes for children in all Australian Schools for public digestion.
From there, media picks up on schools that are well below average, to well above average across the spectrum of tests and years. They then produce colourful tables showing schools from deep pink (well below average) to deep green (well above average). Some newspapers delight in or have delighted in talking about “Seas of Red,” allowing readers to draw a personal metaphor about what often seems to be the more occasional “Oasis of Green.”
The focus most certainly remains firmly fixed on the importance of teaching, strategies, and data collection in preparing for the annual NAPLAN program. Data is upheld as the number one Australian educational priority.
The Australian government emphasises and owns this testing regime, insisting that the program is an absolute universal system priority. It has cost hundreds of millions of educational dollars since its inception in 2008.
This paper is not a forum where further discussion of NAP testing should occur. Rather, I am seeking to show that macro-determined programs coming from the Australian Government can and do have the effect of distracting us from a focus that aligns with holistic development and the preparation of children for the whole of life. ‘If literacy and numeracy challenges are satisfied, then the educational job is done’, seems to be an underpinning paradigm.
It is a pity that in this day and age ‘learning in the hands of students is often dismissive of this type and level of engagement. I wondered how appreciative those in high Australian Government places might be of a program like this – or whether indeed they would see it as being relevant!
Classroom Priorities and Teacher Focus
‘Learning in the hands of students’ is just that! It’s about putting into the hands of children technologically developed gizmos that enable them to communicate ‘by finger’, engaging in everything from games and internet study to the transmission and receipt of messages . . . and so on. The onus and emphasis is more and more on technology and less and less on skills that used to be considered important.
What doesn’t happen in modern learning contexts is considering the need for children and students to be listeners, speakers, readers, and writers. Primary communication skills are often muted.
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The sending of texts, e-mails and, more recently, Facebook engagement, Twitter entry and other device-supported communication has replaced old-fashioned listening and speaking.
Increasingly, reading and writing are also being committed to the technological domain. We have entered the world of e-books, tablet reading, and keyboard or Siri writing. In some American states and European countries handwriting texts are no longer prescribed, with tablets being the new way forward.
I am personally saddened by the way children’s education seems to be distancing itself from primary communication skills. The ability of people (young and old) to look each other in the eye, speak up with confidence and to listen without interruption is nearing extinction. If young people are to develop skills and confidence in communication, we will need a return to the era in which these communication skills were considered paramount. There needs to be a rebirth of primary skills in these areas.
I am not suggesting that there is no place for technology in the classroom. What has to be avoided is the situation where technological takeover depersonalises both communication and teaching-learning contexts. These days, with the help of a smartboard,learning originates online, is generated through the computer via the Smartboard, and then reaches students. Teachers meantime busy themselves in rubric recording of data that offers comment on the perceptions of what children are learning. This is hardly about teaching and learning in a primary context of engagement. It takes from, rather than from adding to enriching the education of children. It is about secondary engagement (through technological tools and measurement), diminishing prime focus on direct teacher and pupil teaching and learning contexts.
Concluding thought
In our age of modern education, it is concerning that tools that can support teaching and learning are taking over. Resources in cyberspace surely should be no more than that—resources—to be drawn on carefully and possibly scarcely. We can overdo it on the research and downloads, particularly when so much of what’s out there is essentially reduplicative of what has gone before. The tools we use for data access and to facilitate teaching can be enriching but, again, should not replace that idiom of relationship contact that develops between children and teachers during prime learning time.
Self-study should not focus on downloading material to be incorporated into texts and assignments through cutting and pasting. If this becomes the major way of constructing essays and papers, research can be diminished, and understanding lost.
Surely education should be reminiscent of and carefully reflective about development and preparation of young people for the whole of life. Part of this is the need for them to be in command of support devices, with teachers ensuring the ‘human side’ of education does not succumb to technological trappings.
‘Keeping it simple’ and ‘keeping it focused’ has served us well in the past; Governments and education systems should not discard these precepts in the 21st century.
When you get one of these, they seem to breed. What are they?

Australian defence preparedness from John Spooner’s perspective

Whose countenances are spoiled when they look like two grumpy old men?

Source: The Australian 4.6.25
Who attracts 1,000,000 posts and hundreds of thousands of print articles and stimulates more than 50,000,000 social media responses and conversations daily?
Donald Trump
Consider the positives – Aboriginal Education has had its successes
Groote Eylandt back then
I don’t doubt the truth of sad situational stories about Northern Territory education, published in ‘The Weekend Australian’ and ‘Australian’ weekday editions since September 23. All have been revealing of present situations.
That was in 2023
However, I want to correct the perception that nothing good or positive has ever been part of the Aboriginal Education framework in the NT.
Chronic non-attendance has been identified as a critical deficiency.
I was the principal of Numbulwar School from September 1976 until December 1978. I was then principal of Angurugu School for four years, 1979 – 1982. During my years of leadership in those schools, attendance was not an issue: As principal, I made sure that students not only attended regularly but were also as fully supported as possible through programs offered. This was achieved through solid ties maintained with parents and councils in both communities.
Programs included instruction in the vernacular and English languages, achieved through Indigenous Assistants and Non-Indigenous teachers co-teaching primary classes.
Our secondary program prepared students for work through work experience, vocational training and trainee link programs. These programs were undertaken in partnership with the mining company GEMCO, various government instrumentalities and the local community government council.
The present situation, as reported, greatly disappoints me. However, good things happened in past times, and those educational successes deserve to be noted.
A
Three key books for Poor Old Henry
The three books that I nominate are not a trilogy in the sense of being linked one after the other. However, they are a trilogy in the sense of importance to me for the awareness that they create and for the understanding that I need to have.The first of these, “ The One Minute Manager”, is one of a series by Kenneth Blanchard and Spencer Johnson. This was one of the earliest books that I bought, and then every other one in the series. It was from these authors that I learnt the importance of prioritisation, of using time wisely, of being effective and efficient without dillydallying and dawdling while at the same time considering the people with whom I worked, including my student cohorts, over the years.
This book helped me immensely in formulating my leadership priorities. It also taught me about perspective and life balance.
The second book is “Arnhem Land People and Places“ by Keith Cole. This is a significant text and pictorial work that shows how, back over time, there was plenty of business, industry, and progress being made by Indigenous Australians throughout the whole of Arnhemland.
Its research pre-dates 1974, when the Whitlam Government determined that self-management and self-determination were important for Aborigines because nothing much was going on anywhere in their lives that might lead to self-betterment. As Cole points out, there was so much happening before this intervention. Aborigines were participating in creating meaningful futures, which lends a lie to the superficial ‘Whitlam Discovery’ purporting that nothing was happening.
This is an eye-opening book I would recommend to anyone who wants an understanding of history and Aboriginal development in a significant part of Australia – as it happened. From personal experience (I became a teacher in remote communities in Western Australia and the Northern Territory in 1970), I can affirm what Cole has written and illustrated. It was the way it was, and the way it was, was good.
Aboriginal people were being taught and given the skills that time would have enabled them to take full responsibility for the enterprises in which they were working. The Whitlam changes demanded that Indigenous people take immediate responsibility as enterprise bosses. That led to the crash of many enterprises leadership cannot be conferred on people not yet ready to be leaders.
Professor White’s quite recent Quarterly Essay is thought-provoking and should wake within us, a sense of the parlous reality of the modern world in which we exist. After reading his essay, I realised that the world is indeed on a knife edge when future peace and security are considered.
The text of “Sleepwalk to War” is very readable and Hugh White’s message is very important. What he has written cannot be ignored. It is about our future.
Who is the world leader most likely able to part the waters of the Red Sea?

Source: The Australian
Poor Old Henry muses on the capability of Australia’s Defence system
China’s defence system reminds me of strong, stainless, reinforced steel.
Russia’s defence system reminds me of unreinforced steel.
America’s defence system reminds me of iron.
Britain’s defence system reminds me of weathered iron.
Australia’s defence system makes me think about tissue paper.
Poor Old Henry has a genuine fear about the future of Darwin
With each passing day, I feel more and more that war in our region is just over the horizon. The lead editorial in “The Australian” (Xi puts regional peace in Xi dire straits over Taiwan” 8/8/22) points toward a catastrophic situation happening within the next 18 months. “It is almost certain … that the Xi communist dictatorship has advanced its timeline for reunification from perhaps later this decade to maybe as little as 18 months.”
I can sense that within a very short period of time after the conflict starts between China and Taiwan, America will come in on the side of Taiwan. That maybe just with weapons support, but more probably with air and sea engagement on behalf of Taiwan. Australia will dutifully move with America, and could well attract retaliation. First it will be by economic embargo and then physical response in the form of missile, rocket and drone retaliation. For Darwin and Cairns, it could be a case of revisitation to the second world war takeout of these cities of the north, during those months in 1942 by Japan.
I may be accused of pessimistic imagination, but my concerns are real. It is not hard to imagine our northern cities and towns, thousands of kilometres closer to China than our southern counterparts, being decimated as China pressures the Australian government to demur from the threat of even more drastic action by the Land of the Panda.
Regardless of pros and cons, there is a certain irony about what is likely to transpire in nearing future: Taiwan, under the ‘One China Policy’ is not recognised by either America or Australia, nor for that matter by very many countries and governments. In the broadest sense, if China takes physical action against Taiwan, under the terms of the policy of recognition, the action would be tantamount to civil war.
Those close to the heart of action within the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) refer to Taiwan as the “Treasure Island of our Motherland”. It will not be long before they CCP goes all out for what’s they define as reunification through a process which, more and more likely, will engulf Australia.
As Australians, we will certainly be involved in any response to Western action from China. As Northern Territorians, we will be more vulnerable to retaliation than our southern counterparts. We have every reason to be concerned about the unfolding future ahead.
This is a fear I cannot overcome.
Uunseasonal rain rejuvenates the common
By now it is usually dry and quite unappealing.
It has been given a green facelift following unseasonal rain on May 28.



A magnificent mahogany shades a vulnerable house




Who is the leader deemed by many to be trying to delete the middle class through taxation and other policies
Anthony Albanese
One beautiful African Mahogany tree on Lee Point Road in Darwin

GRAB BYTES – MAY 2025
Take heed, please government
I am becoming very worried about aspects of CLP governance. Along with that is bewilderment as to why some actions are being taken and needs ignored. The Waterfront issue on salaries and employment has been dismissed. A key appointment to an essential position has been confirmed at the behest of the Attorney General, who has appointed a person who did not even apply for the position. The revelation about animal cruelty is confirmed in the background of the person declared the most powerful in the NT News 2024, losing the most prominent persons influencing the NT.
The government must avoid these glitches and shortcomings. Ministry officials would do well to recall what happened to the Giles Government and, more recently, the Fyles/Lawler government.
Promises must be met, and transparency—which is becoming lost—must be reinstated. Otherwise, the Finnochario government may well be a one-term wonder.
ANALYSIS: Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro says she is “buoyed” by a six per cent swing towards the CLP at the federal election, but a deeper look at what the voters in Darwin and Palmerston said with their ballots should cause the Country Liberal Party and its elected members grave concerns for their political futures.
While some would argue a federal election result should not be used to criticise the Territory Chief Minister, the party itself made it a referendum on Lia in Darwin and Palmerston, and the results were damning.
Saturday’s federal election was held less than nine months after the CLP formed government through surprising gains in the Darwin northern suburbs. It appears that this result would not be replicated today if a Territory election were called.
We don’t need hordes of people
We already have far too many people living in Darwin. We need more people to crowd in, about as much as the sea needs water. Our suburbs are becoming run-down and gritty. Increasing numbers of houses are very poorly maintained, and yards are overgrown and unkempt.
Trees are planted in public spaces and along roadways and are never maintained. Council lets verges and footpaths go to rack and ruin. The council never acknowledges the efforts of those who preserve verges at the resident! ‘s expense.
And people in high places want to continue bringing in masses of people.
DO THOSE DECISION-MAKERS AND CONSULTANTS KNOW WHAT LIVING IN DARWIN AND PALMERSTON IS LIKE?
I mean in places other than housing enclaves and the newer suburbs—which, in the case of Lyons and Muirhead, are already starting to look drab. Johbsin and Zuccoli’s appearances are hardly awe-inspiring, either!
Give it a break! We need care, maintenance, appreciation and pride in what we already have rather than wanting to jam-pack this place with more people.
Maternity in a hotel
This is such an odd incentive or unusual compensation. There is only one sensible way forward: the permanent re-opening of the DPH maternity ward. While the RDH facilities might be adequate, the noise and racket, the whole atmosphere in and around the hospital, are so disconcerting. The RDH is very much like a factory, processing people rather than products. In overall terms, our health facility in the NT is going from bad to worse.
Where are the Councillors
COD Councillors! Who and where are they? What do they do? How do they represent ratepayers and voters? How do you find them? Do they ever come visit, hold constituent meetings, make any form of contact?
If they do it must be by Facebook and social media because for them, newsletters, physical contact, and any traditional visibility no longer exists.
NT – Going forwards or backwards?
There are so many press releases and so much confirmation from government and private sources about the forward-looking NT that is going places. These are largely visionary or aspirational statements. In truth and in real terms, the NT is losing much from what used to be on offer. The impending closure of the DPH maternity ward is just the latest. It often seems that the only growth industry in the NT is crime.
Euthanasia – gwt on with it!
It is high time the NT Government got on with introducing and passing VAD. Many people have endured much suffering since the callous removal of the Perron Law on VAD in the 1990s. The NT was the first, and now we are the last in Australia to have this enlightened and humanist right. An extensive inquiry has been held, and results have been released. For the government to contemplate an ‘inquiry of the inquiry’ is just dithering and messing with a vital need.
Where to is becoming blurry
Sadly, I have to agree with David’s comment; that there seem to be obligations and accountabilities about process and procedure to which departmental heads have to adhere, but which can be merrily skipped by government ministers.
Along with that, irregularities that should be investigated – like the Warerfront jobs and salaries fiasco – are waived away.
The AG is one of the ministers who is discounting process, seemingly preferring personal choice but she is not alone on this operational preference.
I am genuinely worried that the Finnochario Government is starting to slip off the tracks.
Domestic Violence
issues that could be addressed and if they were, it might help with curtailing this scourge. However, these controllable elements are not going to be tackled and for that reason, things will only worsen in terms of the degree of incidents and the severity of affliction meted out by perpetrators.
Leave Wadeye
Would it be wrong to suggest that all support staff at Wadeye should be withdrawn permanently and the community left to its own devices – with the proviso that Darwin and Larrakeyah land would be off limits because members of the community have a habit of bringing their disputes to the city and carrying on their vendettas here?
Coomalee Council sacked
Goodness gracious me. Is there ANY local government jurisdiction that has NOT been sacked over time by the NT Government? The mind boggles at the mass and volume of sackings of local government authorities that have happened over the years. Now it is Coomalee’s turn; their first time?
POH ASKS AI
How many countries would Vladimir Putin like to lasso and return to the USSR Fold.
Response:
Vladimir Putin has expressed a desire to restore what he views as Russia’s sphere of influence, particularly over former Soviet states. However, he has not specified an exact number of countries he would like to incorporate. His actions and rhetoric suggest a focus on countries like Ukraine, Belarus, and the Baltic states, which he sees as historically part of Russia or the USSR.
It’s essential to note that the geopolitical landscape is complex, and any ambitions regarding territorial claims are often influenced by a variety of strategic, political, and economic factors. The idea of “returning” countries to the Soviet fold is contentious and viewed with concern by many in the international community.
Some people have boundless expansionary appetites.
What is wrong with Australia – 10
TAXING REGIMES
The blessing our country offers palls more than a little because of taxation regimes. Pay as you earn (PAYE) people contribute, in proportionate terms, a lot more than their due. Those who make up corporate Australia and the very wealthy know all the tricks for legitimately minimising their tax liabilities. Their tax accountants serve them well. Opportunities for tax deduction are not flagged in a public context. One has to ‘find out’ about concessions, therefore being disadvantaged
What is wrong with Australia – 9
SELLING RESOURCES
We counter the blessings Australia could offer by selling our natural resources with an almost wanton abandon. Natural gas is an example. Selling virtually all our gas by long-term contract negotiation onto the overseas futures market means we are destitute in terms of our own domestic needs. While future sales are necessary to secure the capital investment in establishing extraction and refining facilities, we have hardly been smart by going the ‘sell all’ route.
AFL Football in Alice Springs – 2
One game a year at top level – and it gets great support.






Poor Old Henry shares TV (Fox) coverage of AFL game in Alice Springs







Melbourne v St Kilda. It was a home game for Melbourne but they sunk to a loss, largely because of inaccurate kicking at goal. In the second half of the game, Melbourne kicked one goal and twelve points. They kicked themselves out of the game.
Poor Old Henry on NT Vision and Actuality
There is a growing disparity between the vision held for the Northern Territory and the reality with which we are all confronted. The gap between the two is widening, but those who are visionary do not seem to understand or comprehend. For them, growth and ‘getting bigger’ are paramount, with little thought being given to maintaining what we have.
Some sad realities are in stark contrast to the vision.
- Media coverage has declined, with the loss of Channel 9 being the most recent shrinking media coverage.
- The notion of public transport as a safe travelling option has evaporated.
- Health services are being compromised and dismantled. The Darwin Private Hospital maternity ward is the most recent health loss.
- Local Government seems to be consumed by structural rather than functional issues.
- Hundreds of cases presented around our Territory are choked by our courts daily.
- Negatives—crime, living costs, and declining security for people and property—are rising.
- The growth and expansion of correctional facilities cannot keep pace with demand.
- Childcare and aged care are areas where supply – of facilities and staff- is not keeping up with what is needed.
Regarding both growth but also the need for stabilisation and sufficiency, I wonder ‘where to from here’.
POH Asked AI to compare Presidents Trump and Putin
Question:
Who is the smarter intellectually, Vladimir Putin or Donald Trump?
Response:
Determining who is intellectually smarter between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump is subjective and depends on various metrics of intelligence, including emotional intelligence, strategic thinking, education, and experience.
- Vladimir Putin: He has a background in law and economics and served as a KGB officer, which may suggest a strong grasp of political maneuvering and international relations. He is known for his strategic planning and long-term vision regarding Russia’s position in the world.
- Donald Trump: He is a successful businessman and television personality with a focus on branding, negotiation, and media strategy. His leadership style is often described as unconventional, with a focus on populism and direct communication.
Ultimately, comparisons of intelligence between individuals can be misleading, as they may excel in different areas that do not translate directly into a standard measure of “smartness.”
Lake Eyre has only been filled with water 4 times in 170 years. The last time was 1974
Here it comes again – it is starting to fill.





Raining at Uluru – Infrequent but spectacular


Who, on his own, has turned the world’s stock markets into a seething melting pot of unpredictability?
Donald Trump.
Salute for a world leader who seems, in terms of influence, seems to stand ten feet tall

31 May and June 1 2025
Possibility / Probability
Toward decency and a positive world
- There is a possibility and at least a 75% probability that if political leaders had to be on the frontline fighting line in war and conflict situations, conflicts would diminish and peace would prevail.
- There is a possibility and a very strong probability that if manners, behaviour, consideration of others and empathy were restored, there would be a sharp downturn in personal unhappiness and rampant mental illness.
- There is a possibility and a watertight probability that a return to explicit teaching in schools would enhance educational outcomes.
DOORS
The door to my life opened in 1946,
I was born.
Since then,
Schooling doors,
Birthday doors.
Marriage door,
Parenthood doors,
University doors,
Teaching doors,
Leadership doors,
Lecturing doors,
Media and public relations doors,
Teaching doors.
School leadership doors,
Journalistic doors.
Publishing doors,
Retirement doors.
Then
Old age does,
Reflective doors,
Grandparent doors,
Ten septuagenarian doors.
Still to come
Octogenarian door/ doors,
Unknown door/doors.
Then,
The last door,
The FINAL door.
The EXIT DOOR!
When it shuts,
Behind me,
I am,
But a memory.
Who stands Front and Centre in pictorial depictions of world leaders?

Source: The Weekend Australian May 31&June 1 2025
Who should be added to the pantheon of the world’s influencers as possibly the greatest influencer of all time?
Donald Trump.
Upon whom does the whole world wait for revelation of the next piece of the economic jigsaw?
Donald Trump.
Extremes of weather in Australia – 2
DEEP DROUGHT IN WESTERN AND CENTRAL VICTORIA









Pictures source: Sky News
Extremes of weather in Australia – 1
FLOODS IN EASTERN NSW





May 28 2025 – A wet day in the middle of the dry season








This supplement in the NT News was produced by students.




Poor Old Henry captures the rising crescent over Leanyer



Why is the month of June held to be the most important month of the year from an ever growing number of people.
Because it is the month in which Donald Trump was born.
How it was – 1
Pulling Steve Grahame’s road train from a bog on the ‘road’ en route to Kalumburu in WA during the wet season in 2012
(Source: Outback Truckers Season 1)




Cigarette and tobacco prices in Darwin – latest update



Dr Rudd’s representation brings blessing

Photo Source ‘The Australian’
Dr Rudd is possibly the most successful and influential ambassador Australia has ever had in any country of the world, past or present. Australia is blessed to have a man of such incredible calibre representing us to the most important and influencing leader in the world – Donald Trump.
POH is disgusted by the CLP Government and its kicking VAD into a corner – 2
My letter to the NT News published recently.
The Editor
NT News
Printers Place
DARWIN NT 0800
Dear Editor
It is high time the NT Government got on with introducing and passing Voluntary Assisted Dying legislation.
Many people have suffered much since the callous removal of the Perron Law on VAD in the late 1990s. The NT was the first, and now we are the last in Australia to have this enlightened and humanist right.
An extensive inquiry has been held, and the results have been released. The government is now asking the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee (LCAC), chaired by Member for Fong Lim Dr Tanzil Rahman, to undertake an inquiry into the ‘Voluntary Assisted Dyingf in the NT—final report 2024’. That report was based on exhaustive consultation and carefully crafted recommendations.
For the government to contemplate an ‘inquiry of the inquiry’ is just dithering and messing with a vital need. Just enact the appropriate legislation to legitimise an entitlement that has been delayed for far too long.
Sincerely
Henry Gray
LEANYER
23 May 2025
PO Box 44
KARAMA NT 0813
Phone 0407 637 782
POH is disgusted by the CLP Government and its kicking VAD into a corner
I share this letter sent to me from “Go Gently”.
Dear Henry,
When Go Gentle was created in 2016, our first objective was to make voluntary assisted dying (VAD) a legally available choice for all Australians.
Thanks to your support, when the ACT law comes into effect in November, we will have achieved that objective — except for the Northern Territory.
It is wrong — and tragic — that in 2025 NT residents are denied the same end-of-life choices as other Australians. It is unacceptable that they are treated like second class citizens by their own government, which says the suffering of Territorians ‘is not a priority’.
That’s why this end of financial year we are seeking to raise $100k to put pressure on NT politicians every day until they make VAD legal.
Henry, your support is crucial. Please will you make an end-of-financial-year gift to help us reach this goal?
Ironically, the NT was the first place in Australia — and the world — to pass an assisted dying law, in 1995, only to have it overturned by Federal Parliament two years later.
Kevin Andrews, a Howard government backbencher, led what journalist Michael Gordon described as a ‘subterranean catholic conspiracy’ to override the will of the NT’s democratically elected parliament.
Not only did they shut down the NT law, they took away the right of that parliament to even discuss it.
Again thanks to your pressure, our Federal Parliament returned to the Territories the right to debate, and pass, a VAD law in 2022. The coup was undone.
But while the ACT acted quickly, the NT Government has dragged its feet. It has ignored the findings of an independent expert panel which, after 14 months of consultation, finally recommended the NT pass its own VAD law.
New Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro has said VAD is ‘not a priority’ for her government, despite support from 70-80% of Territorians.
This month, an independent MP tried to force the Chief Minister’s hand by moving a motion to implement the expert panel’s findings and draft a VAD law.
But instead of getting on with it, on the very same day the Government announced a new inquiry, replacing the panel’s independent experts with — you guessed it — politicians.
No wonder former NT Chief Minister, and architect of the NT’s original law, Marshall Perron called it “another tactic to delay implementation, for at least 2 years, possibly more”.
And no wonder The Australian Christian Lobby gloated about the delay calling it a win that could lead to the expert panel’s support for VAD being overturne
I don’t like people feeling so miffed and cross

Who is on the short list for the title of Family Man of the Year, year after year after year?

ho is the lighthouse offering support, help, advice and guidance to people all around the world during these perilous times in which we live?

Which caring and empathetic, humane and considerate world leader sets an illuminating and positive example to each and every other government head in the world?

What is wrong with Australia – 7
THE DISMANTLING OF THE ‘WE’ GENERATION
When growing up, I was taught by my parents that my life was ‘not for myself alone’. I should be there to support and help others and be aware of social obligations. I needed to consider the ‘we’ when interacting with others. Sadly, this wise historical approach has largely gone by the board in our modern times. Advertising and attitude ingrained into young and old is that life is about ‘I’. ‘I’ am all important, and nothing else matters. This attitude, if practised, tears at the heart of our social fabric, reducing it to tatters.
What is wrong with Australia – 6
TAX AVARICIOUSNESS
The taxation systems under which we labour are no blessing. I hate how small and medium-income earners are robbed by a system that allows lots of ‘outs’ for those who earn a whole lot more than the small-wage earner. It is grossly unfair for the taxation systems to be so convoluted and unstraightforward. Those who want to do things honestly are often left ignorant of legitimate deductions because the knowledge they need to effect those deductions is shrouded and unclear. On the other hand, magnates, huge companies, and CEOs who earn hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars can find their way around the system through the astuteness of tax accountants. Tax rules running to thousands of pages impact those who earn far less – and who, through lack of knowledge and understanding, pay far more than the rich.
This is Melbourne, but these sorts of incidents are happening all over Australia


A scenario about a very hungry Energy Minister


Who wants to be a tree lopper?

Faces are so interesting


POH shares an unusual Darwin sky

Who is the only world leader who can outpoint Donald Trump on matters of common interest?
Vladimir Putin.
Which world leader is always balanced and unflappable in the face of political and economic challenges?
Donald Trump.
WA and NT forecast for a massive area of unseasonal rain

M
First fruits firming on POH’s passionfruit vine


The Leanyer Newsagent’s joke board this week

“I am blown away by the staunch resolution etched into the face of our Prime Minister”, says Poor Old Henry

King of the Birdbath

Go away.
Find your own birdbath.”
Sludge, outback trucker, and his fuel delivery road train ‘Phantom’ in WA’s grain growing belt.



Whose words and actions are on the minds of countless millions as they wake each morning?
Donald Trump.
“It is this sort of attitude that leads to domestic violence”, says Poor Old Henry

We can learn a lot from Phantom

Who, when he is cross, makes the world tremble?
Donald Trump.
THE WAY IT WAS
A LITTLE OLD MAN, A LITTLE OLD WOMAN And THEIR PACKAGING SERVICE
Once upon a time, the daughter of a little old man and a little old woman, summoned their help. She had commissioned the printing of hoardings displaying the prices of goods to be sold in their cafe. The boards had finally been printed and were ready for dispatch to a distant point of the NT. They would be sent by weekly barge service.
The daughter was reassured that everything would be done by the printer to ensure the boards were delivered to their far distant destination in good order. They were important for advertising purposes and cost several hundred dollars to produce.
Notwithstanding reassurances offered, the daughter had a premonition that all might not be right. So she asked her parents to visit the printer, arranging to receive the boards if this was necessary.
Upon arriving at the printers, the little old man discovered the boards to be ‘bare’. They were not wrapped. The little old man thought that intervention might be wise. Dispatching the three bare boards without wrapping seemed an unwise option – but not one seemingly apparent to the most prominent printers in Darwin.
The little old man and woman took the boards home in their car. The boards were SO BIG that it took some imagination to manoeuvre them into the vehicle. Once home, the couriers cleared their table and took the boards upstairs to rest on its timber surface. They were ever so glad their table was large.
The two looked at the boards and felt a little daunted. How to prepare these fragile statements for a journey of hundreds of kilometres across rough seas on a shipping barge. (Shipping was the only option because the boards exceeded maximum size for posting).
Nothing ventured, nothing gained. They set about the task.
Bubble wrap was the first order of the day. Metres and metres and square metres of plastic bubbles enveloped the boards and were held in place by unbelievable metres of tape.
Whew! After all that, they needed a long spell and an overnight rest.
Next day, it was up and at it again. The barge to Gove was accepting freight the next day, in readiness for sailing the day after.
But first, a trip to Bunnings to buy plywood timber, that needed trimming to almost the exact size of the menu boards. Trimmed, then home to Leanyer to await their usage.
The table was laid with a cloth (a chair cover), in readiness for the reception of the plywood protection.
What followed was hard work. It took some doing for the daughters parents, no longer as supple and dexterous as ‘once upon a time’, to enclose the boards into their protective casing. But it was done. And done to a ‘T’. The package (to date) was gigantic but neat, secured by metres of tape.
Surely this handiwork was worth admiring.
But there was more to be done. That package (with the boards expertly anchored by tape to the backing ply) was still someway from being a complete work.
There was a need for brown paper. Lots of brown paper. The package was wrapped and taped with one paper skin, then wrapped and taped with a second paper sheath.
Now, the package was really secure. It looked as if it would withstand its journey to Gove.
Looking at the package, the little old man and the little old woman spoke with each other.
“Label time”.
Not being given to neat writing, the little old man deferred to his wife’s more professional calligraphic skills. And shortly thereafter, the package was clearly addressed and readied to go.
Job done. Into the car and out to the barge for ‘tomorrow’s shipping’.
The last news is the best news. The boards have arrived and been fastened into place on a wall of the Peninsular Bakery and Cafe.
Yes, Yes, YES!
The boards are up and are selling their message.
There was no swimming pool at Warburton
But there was this water tank and on hot days, it got plenty of use.


Warburton Community from the air in 1974


Warburton School in 1974



Warburton Store and fuel depot 1974


Stone made building at Warburton Ranges (WA) in 1970.

WHY 31
- Why is Donald Trump always forgiven for any indiscretion or misjudgements?
- Why during election campaigns, are politicans and parties allowed to smear opponents, including the publication of outright lies?
- Why do electors often fall for promises and outcomes that offer short term benefits but long term pain because of increasing indebtedness of their governments?
ROADS NOW PATCHWORK QUILTS
The road is patched.
They fixed it fast,
But how long will.
The patching last?
Fixing the road,
I am amazed,
The patching done
In but four days.
Job is done,
Hip, hip horray,
Thanks for the tip off,
Henry Gray.
The patch looks good,
But sad to say,
Not for long,
Will it be that way.
Putting ‘good’
On a base that’s bad,
Just helps to make,
This old man sad.
The patching’s good,
Safe and secure,
But of longevity …
I am unsure.
Soaked with water,
Surface cracked and crazed,
Patch won’t hold,
For many days.
Soon those crazed cracks
Will open wide,
Incessant rain,
They can’t abide.
The rot won’t stop,
Or breakdown pause
Surface subsides,
From weight of cars.
Soon t’will be potholes,
Or maybe ten,
The fix-up then,
Will start again.
Breakdown, repair,
Holes come in batches,
Till the roads,
Are nothing but patches.
Our roads once good,
Scoured by road hogs,
These vital links,
Have gone to the dogs.
PRESIDENT PUTIN, I WOULD LIKE A CONVERSATION WITH YOUR ALTER EGO
If I could talk with someone for just one day, I would like to be Vladimir Putin’s alter ego. I would persuade in the following areas.
(Alter egos are persuadable but of course Mr Putin is intractable.)
Following conversation the Alter Ego would speak as follows.
“Within the day I would try to right the wrongs committed against Ukraine. I would withdraw all my troops, and initiate peace and reparation talks with President Zelenski.
I will put in place plans to reconstruct those areas of Ukraine my troops have laid desolate and waste.
I would withdraw from all occupied territories associated with Ukraine including the Crimean Peninsular.
I would expedite reconstruction by designating engineers, construction firms, and at least 25,000 personnel to go in and start rebuilding all that had been wrecked.
I would require my defence forces to locate them to remove all minds that had been laid.
I would employ Russian earthmoving companies to make good the terrain devastated by trenches and upheaval.
I would authorise a payment equivalent to 10,000 American dollars to each Ukrainian displaced by the unjust war I created.
I would support Ukraine in joining NATO. I would also withdraw Russia from membership of the Security Council because we have sold that institution short.
Together with my generals and other key decision-makers supporting my commands, I would petition that we appear before the International Court of Justice, pre-empting that appearance by pleading guilty to heinous crimes.
My final act would be to dissolve the Russian Government, stepping down as leader and asking the United Nations to instigate procedures to turn Russia’s autocratic power into an elected democracy.
On that day I would try to make good all that has been so wrong in the way I have acted in the past.”
Back to real life.
1186 days into this war ‘
How I wish!!
Poor Old Henry says, “sometimes a little reality, that strips away the veneer, exposes real truths
Bluff and bluster, bullying and threats. I’m sorry, President Trump, but Vladimir Putin essentially says, ‘Jump.’
Your reaction suggests a response of, ‘How high?’
Putin is a puppet master, and other world leaders look and gaze and are his puppets.
Have you heard
The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection unless you are an archer fish.
Cockatoos at breakfast


Poor Old Henry laments the self-destruction of liberal governments in Australia
It seems that the Coalition – especially the Liberal arm – will keep on dividing and splintering. ‘Implosion’ is an area of expertise that has dominated the Liberal ranks at the State, Territory and National levels for eons of time.
For me, one of the standout examples was the demise of the Giles CLP Government in. the NT after Giles and others conspired to punt Terry Mills, the Chief Minister, after he led the party to victory in 2012 following 12 years in the political wilderness.
Mills was axed while he was in Japan doing business for the government. Under Giles leadership takeover, the government leased the Darwin Port to a Chinese-based company, Landbridge, for 99 years, adding to alarming decisions by selling TIO.
Now, after eight more years of Labor in the NT—with the CLP reduced to two seats in the Assembly in the 2016 election before beginning to recover – we have the CLP Government back. Whether it is a long-term or one-term government is in its hands to decide.
That principle of internal division applies to Australia-wide Liberal politics. Will this ever change? Is the now Liberal – National divide in Canberra, aiming to cement the Labor Party into everlasting Federal government?
Where to from here?
HENRY THE BOWER BIRD
Do you have any collections?
Metaphorically speaking, when it comes to collecting and collections, I am a bit like a bower bird. I hang onto things for a long, long time and create frustration in others when I won’t tidy up, throw out, or give away items that I have collected.
Among the collectables I have kept are the following:
All my annual diaries from 1970 onward – there is a gap here in there but they’re mostly intact.
Copies of letters that I sent to people over the years as we were working in rural and remote parts of Western Australia and the Northern Territory. They are a good record.
The various trip diaries I compiled when we were travelling overseas and interstate.
Albums of coins, especially those appropriately cast for commemerative reasons.
Chronicles of teaching and administrative materials that I acquired over the years, in order to assist others and also to stimulate writing on educational subjects, something I do in retirement.
Collections of slides and photographs of places that we have seen, worked in, and lived in, over the years. (These need to be converted).
In terms of collection I have given a great deal of material to the Northern Territory Archives, because as I get older it becomes of less used to me and if it’s not given a way where it may be useful for research purposes in years to come, it may well finish up at the rubbish tip when our house is cleared out.
Copies of articles I have contributed to publications over many years. Included is the volume of 300 columns I wrote for the Northern Territory News in a weekly column “ Gray Matters” for nearly 6 years after my retirement. (I have never written for remuneration .)
I also have a great deal of material that is saved online, including photographs, written materials and so on.
I really use LinkedIn as a source where by written material is retained in a collectible manner.
I blog and have over 4000 pieces of written and .saved material.
Collectibles ultimately translate into a trove of quite wealthy information.
Whose every word is as valued and treasured as a $100 note?
Donazld Trump’s word.
Poor Old Henry on a major, MAJOR concern in the Northern Territory
It is high time the NT Government got on with introducing and passing Voluntary Assisted Dying (VAD) legislation.
Many people have suffered much since the callous removal of the Perron Law on VAD in the late 1990s. The NT was the first, and now we are the last in Australia to have this enlightened and humanist right.
An extensive inquiry has been held, and the results have been released. The government is now asking the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee (LCAC), chaired by Member for Fong Lim Dr Tanzil Rahman, to undertake an inquiry into the ‘Voluntary Assisted Dyingf in the NT—final report 2024’. That report was based on exhaustive consultation and carefully crafted recommendations.
For the government to contemplate an ‘inquiry of the inquiry’ is just dithering and messing with a vital need. Just enact the appropriate legislation to legitimise an entitlement that has been delayed for far too long.
Why is the government hanging back?
My slide box of memories from Warburton
Now all I have to do is somehow upgrade them to a more permanent way of preservation.



Warburton Range school in remote WA in 1970



Who leads with consummate decisiveness while other leaders skitter around like frogs on lilly pads?
Donald Trump.
Who has brought an age of enlightenment and positive reasoning into our world of the 2020’s?
Donald Trump.
Whose words and reassurances about the future still anxieties and apprehensions about the future in hundreds of millions of hearts around the world?
The words uttered by Donald Trump
KEEPING A DIARY WELL WORTH THE EFFORT

Never ever underestimate the value of keeping a diary. You never know when you will be thankful you did!
In a previous entry I wrote of the value of record keeping. Many professionals keep brief records because of the time it takes to compile these documents. Over the years I have put hundreds and hundreds of hours into diary keeping and extended records including case notes. My diaries are personal documents. Copies of all other records were always kept. When I retired, these records came with me.
Records can help if one becomes involved with writing. As a regular contributor to newspaper columns and in writing for online and print publications my records have been an invaluable assist.
In recent years, it has become commonplace for past students to begin litigation against former teachers and principals. These actions can be about any number of issues, ranging from teaching ineptitude resulting in fail grades through to allegations of physical, emotional and sexual abuse. Without the advantage of records, recall is at best vague and hazy. With the assistance of records, searches can be made to assist in refuting false and malicious allegations.
I strongly urge educators to establish the diary habit and practice record keeping. You never know when this habit will reward you for the effort.
PLEASE REINFORCE (AND PRACTICE) GOOD MANNERS
CORRECTING FOR POLITENESS SAKE
These days, manners are not practised by habit. Many children (and adults) are poorly mannered. It seems that a big percentage have never been taught the rudiments of good manners at home. Child care programs may try but their prime focus is on minding, not on teaching.
All too frequently children overlook ‘excuse me’, ‘please’, ‘thank you’. ‘i beg your pardon’ and so on. Although it gets monotonous, correcting students who overlook these essences of politeness and good manners is important. Commenting in a praising context to children who do remember to use these words and expressions can offer positive reinforcement.
One of the most frequent oversights occurs when children butt into conversations being held by teachers with another student or students. That impetuosity certainly needs correction. Children need to appreciate the need to wait their turn when dealing with teachers.
Manners can be broached through appropriately constructed lessons. To involve students in situational role play where manners need to be practised can help. Periodic classroom discussions about manners and politeness might be useful.
The subject could be broached through a Socratic Discussion session.
Strategies to reinforce the need for good manners including reinforcement through daily classroom interaction should be part of teaching and learning strategy.
Whose words fall like gentle flakes of nourishment upon eagerly waiting people all around the world?
Donald Trump’s words.
LEGACY ON ‘LEAVING
What is the legacy you want to leave behind?
LEGACY ON LEAVING
I enjoy life, but I am a realist. As a 77-year-old man I know that I am on the downhill stretch, heading towards the sunset of life. At one stage as a younger person I used to be frightened about passing over, but that is no longer the case.
Life has four phases in terms of the mortal stage.
You get born.
You grow up.
You become old.
You go dead.
I am well aware of the phase of life I now occupy.
The overarching legacy of life that I want to be leaving behind, relate to the first aspect of my mission statement which reads “to fulfil and be fulfilled in organisational mode, family, work, recreation“. If my legacy is an affirmation of positive fulfilment of this position, I will be well satisfied. Those three elements (a tripod if you like) have been my focus and concentration for a very long time. I want to depart this mortal coil leaving behind memories and indeed a legacy so show that this checked it has been fulfilled.
I want people to remember Henry Gray as a person who was a man of integrity.
Finally, I want to be remembered as a person who “ worked with a smile in his heart“. I want to be remembered as somebody who enjoyed what he did and with that enjoyment lifted others up, helping them along pathways of life.
Leaving behind a lot of money and assets doesn’t worry me particularly, but I will die satisfied knowing that there is a reasonable asset base that can be drawn upon by our children and their children.
In short, when I go, I want to be remembered as a person who left the world or the areas of his involvement enhanced and enriched by his presence.
Poor Old Henry is over the moon.




What is a farce
- Talk about peace in Ukraine with the ‘Controller General Putin’ having no intention to do anything other than playing with words and Ukranian lives.
- Talk about what is happening in the Middle East mixed with peace and a return to some sense of normal life being a long time away from being realised.
“It is not fair on Luke” says Poor Old Henry

The seat covers all of Darwin and most of Palmerston. Mr Gosling has won the seat for a record of four consecutive terms. He is a returned member of the Australian Defence Force.
It seems that PM Anthony Albanese more or less promised Mr Gosling that if he won Solomon and Labor won the election, Mr Gosling would be elevated to Assistant Minister level in his government.
That did not eventuate, and Mr Gosling who has been a stalwart representative for his electorate for over a decade, has every right to be disappointed.
Gabba ground at Sunset in Brisbane on May 19

Who is THE MAN on top of the world?

Possibility / Probability
Forecasting
- There is a possibility and some probability that Australia’s Prime Minister will be elevated within his hitch with the title of honorary bishop.
- There is a possibility and some probability that Australia will be left without any submarines in its maritime fleet because of their age and inoperability.
- There is a possibility and some probability that Australia’s vulnerability will be overcome by a military adversary before 2030.
BONES INTACT
Have you ever broken a bone?
Spinal curvature
Fortunately, to this stage of my life, I have managed to avoid any bone breaks. I have had a litany of medical issues over the years, but have managed to avoid broken bones.
I had what might well have been a near miss when I was about 10. My Dad was a wheat farmer and has just transitioned from bagged wheat to bulk harvesting.
He was moving out on the whole Dodge truck with a full week been on the back, the truck towing the auger that was used for ordering the wheat from the header into the bulk bin. I was in the bin which is full of wheat with my back to the cab of the truck, looking out over the auger.
Unbeknownst to me dad drove under a tree that had a hanging branch. It’s cleared the truck, but as the truck moved forward it caught me from behind. It came in contact with the back of my neck, tip me up and I fell out of the bin, more or less headfirst down onto the back of the tray of the truck and from there bounced into the hopper of the auger.
I was knocked out cold and did not come to for some distance.
But I got out of that was a terribly terribly stiff neck and a very sore back but fortunately nothing was broken. That may have been the cause of headaches I suffered for many years and I do have a curved spine in the upper regions of my back – which may or may not have been caused by the fall.
But broken bones – not to date
POH shares two telling cartoons engaging Australia’s Prime Minister and America’s President.


There is a message in every cartoon.
The Leanyer Newsagent’s joke board this week

Sunlight distorted by smoke-filled sky in Darwin – May 18


BALANCE IS A NECESSITY
How do you balance work and home life?
A QUESTION OF BALANCE
Balancing home life and work life was always very important to me. I write in the past tense because I’ve been retired for 12 years. However, even in retirement, my postwork activities mustn’t take on a disproportionate significance.
In 1984, I developed a mission statement and this was during a leadership program. The top criteria reads as follows:
“To fulfil and be fulfilled in terms of family, work, and recreation.“ It was important to me to have a balance and I never would work – or tried not to – over and above the importance and significance of my family. This has certainly helped because as a family of five, we are very close together. Neither did I neglect work but it needed to be kept in its place. I am reminded of the fact as has always been that “nobody on their deathbed ever regretted not having spent more time at work.“ I got that from somewhere and it always stuck in my mind.
As a leader, I tried hard to convince staff that Balance in work-life terms was very very important. So to come I was recreation getting away from work and relaxing.
I always tried hard not to take Work home and was advantaged in that way because I never lived more than 3 km from my place of work. If it was necessary to go to work early or late then it was at my workplace that I operated. Taking Work home was something I avoided.
Balance in life is ever so important and priorities need to be carefully established. Once they have been set, they need to be maintained.
Getting the balance right was, is, and will continue to be important.
What might be the most unique pet in the world for which the World’s most celebrated leader could wish? – 2

What might be the most unique pet in the world for which the World’s most celebrated leader could wish? – 1

A take of “on the balcony and on the dance floor”.

Four birds on a wire

Poor Old Henry salutes a man who is possibly the Greatest Political Leader of All Time
The resurrection of Donald Trump as American President has brought a new age of accountability and responsibility to the world. His decisive decision-making and the powerfully positive influence of his contributions are enlightened and far-sighted.
He is, without a doubt, the world’s most influential and respected political leader in 2025.
Poor Old Henry is very nervous about the future motivations of the Chinese Communist Party and asked AI
Will China eventually control East and South Asia and the Pacific region?
Response:
The question of whether China will eventually control East and South Asia and the Pacific region is complex and involves various geopolitical, economic, and social factors. Here are some points to consider:
1. Economic Influence
- Belt and Road Initiative (BRI): China has been investing heavily in infrastructure projects across Asia and beyond, strengthening economic ties with many countries.
- Trade Relationships: China is a major trading partner for many countries in these regions, which increases its influence.
2. Military Presence
- Expansion of Military Capabilities: China has been modernizing its military and increasing its presence in the South China Sea and other strategic areas, which has raised concerns among neighboring countries and the United States.
- Regional Security Alliances: Countries like India, Japan, and Australia are strengthening their security collaborations to counterbalance China’s military rise.
3. Diplomatic Efforts
- Soft Power: China is using cultural diplomacy and public engagement to improve its image and relations in the region.
- Participation in Regional Organizations: China is an active member of regional organizations such as ASEAN, which allows it to exert influence over regional policies.
4. Challenges and Resistance
- Nationalism: Countries in East and South Asia have strong national identities and may resist any attempts at control or dominance by China.
- Alliances Against Expansion: The United States and its allies are likely to continue supporting countermeasures against China’s influence.
5. Internal Challenges in China
- Economic issues, demographic changes, and potential political unrest could impact China’s ability to project power beyond its borders.
Conclusion
While China is poised to be a dominant force in East and South Asia and the Pacific region, the notion of “control” is subjective and will depend on numerous variables, including regional responses, international dynamics, and internal factors within China itself. Predicting such outcomes involves considerable uncertainty.
I continue to be very worried about the future of the world and the connivance of leaders whose thirst for power and domination is unquenchable.
Cliffhangong football at the MCG today






Source : Fox TV
SACRIFICES PALE INTO INSIGNIFICANCE
What sacrifices have you made in life?
SACRIFICING STUDY FOR WORK
As a teacher who became a principal, I desired to complete doctoral studies during my career.
I’ve done or completed several degrees at postgraduate and masters level and was Deadset keen to undertake a doctorate.
I was also a school principal and in that context became aware of the fact that a good number of my colleagues were taking time off work to complete study programs.
Thinking the matter through, I decided it would be far better for me from the viewpoint of my job and my work with children, staff and community not to leave and undertake study because it just seemed unfair to those with whom I was working.
So, I didn’t pursue doctoral studies and am not particularly sorry about that. What I had was a full-time professional life and what I did was to spend my time as a principal in my schools. I also worked around the school teaching children and getting to know them.
How happy I am in retirement to reflect upon my career. Part of that is to be glad that I took the course of action I did and prioritised my work over study.
As a corollary, I also sacrificed 106 weeks of accumulated sick leave when I retired. Some of my colleagues and others, approaching the end of their working lives, used to take time off for medical reasons and for basically cutting out The sick leave that was owed to them.
To my way of thinking that was not right and I was quite happy to sacrifice my 106 weeks of sick leave to stay the course in my school and work with students and community and of course staff.
Last evening, I was invested with an Order of Australia Medal for my services to Education. I felt ever so proud and humble in receiving that award and feel ever so blessed to have prioritised as I did – even though that meant the sacrifices I have described. Those sacrifices were nothing compared to the joy and satisfaction I got from my work.
Note: This came from 2023.
What is it?



KEY LEARNING : BANK HISTORY
Historical awareness should be banked, not binned by incoming leaders.
Too often leaders fail to recognise the history of their organisations. Very rarely is that history taken into account when appointments are made and new leaders front the organisation.
A very few may take consider the history that has gone toward shaping the institutions to which they are appointed as leaders. However, I’d posit that leaders who consider what has gone before to develop organisations to their present positions, are in the minority. Most want to start all over again, meaning “in the beginning” always seems to apply.
This begs the question: “ Are leaders people who enhance, develop and enrich organisations or is the prime function of organisations to facilitate its leaders by building their personal curriculum vitae’s”.
Many leaders come into organisations and immediately said about “sweeping them clean“ with a new broom. It is a case of out with the old and in with the new. Only in that way it seems, can leaders make a mark on their organisation that will be attributed to them alone. That is testament to a selfish and narrowly focussed disposition.
I believe that leaders need to take account of organisational history, acknowledge what has gone before and build toward the future. Pulling everything down and endeavouring to start all over is unwise.
The challenges that confront school principals

Had he been President of the USA in 1939, who would have, through tact and diplomacy, prevented the Second World War from happening?
Donals Trump.
What is wrong with Australia – 8
‘AGE AND ERA’ CHANGE
Our country is hindered by moving from the ‘age of responsibility’ to the ‘age of entitlement’.
Hands are held out for government largesse. Young and old people say, ‘Give me, give me’.
No longer is the country a place where people accept responsibility for their destiny and forge a path to the future based on effort and enterprise. We expect to be ‘kept’ and care not to contribute through work and effort to the development of this place.
Decreasing numbers of people show initiative, enterprise and resourcefulness. Increasing numbers are parasitic, living off benefits derived from the public purse.
What is wrong with Australia – 7
THE DISMANTLING OF THE ‘WE’ GENERATION ‘
When growing up, I was taught by my parents that my life was ‘not for myself alone’.
I should be there to support and help others and be aware of social obligations. I needed to consider the ‘we’ when interacting with others.
Sadly, this wise historical approach has largely gone by the board in our modern times. Advertising and attitude ingrained into young and old is that life is about ‘I’. ‘I’ am all important, and nothing else matters. This attitude, if practised, tears at the heart of our social fabric, reducing it to tatters
Which renowned and adored world figure now has a new grandchild – number 11 (eleven)?
Donald Trump.
Who recently thrilled Australia’s Prime Minister by calling him on the telephone?
Donald Trump.
The FIRST passion fruit beginning to emerge on our vine for 2025

They can grow big.
Very, very old man wears very, very old singlet.


DON’T STRANGLE LEADERS
Are you a leader or a follower?
TYPE ‘B’s’ STRANGLE TYPE ‘A’s’
I identify as a leader, undoubtedly a leader and a person with a Type A personality. As a leader, I have tried very hard to generate motivate with others to also look at being Type A persons.
Bear in mind I am now retired so my responses are now reflective rather than actual.
As a leader I can attest to the fact that there are followers – and there are followers! The latter is Type B personalities. Many are laid-back and easy-going and “she’ll be right mate” persons to the point of eternally frustrating and strangling Type A people like myself. You don’t know what to do with them you don’t know how to urge them forward and you think of them as being like unto stubborn mules.
I like being a leader and I like people who with me forge progressively onward and upward. But the ones that drag their feet, dig in their heels, and won’t budge for quids. These are people who are frustrating to the point of making me want to scream at them to get good and do the right thing.
It’s not always easy to be a leader.
Traffic accidents seem to be almost at epidemic levels in the NT




Henry thanks bloggers for another milestone.

Poor Old Henry is devastated at this destruction
Defacement and desecration of Captain Cook’s memorial in Melbourne.
Melbourne City Council will not restore but will dump this memorial, probably in a tip.





Moonset and sunrise in Leanyer this morning


Which world leader has a vast multitude of followers from all over the world, who become almost intoxicated with joy when they see, read about, or hear him?
Donald Trump.
Who is the man sought out by nearly all other world leaders, for praise and to be patted on the head?
Donald Trump
FAVOURITE FRUITS – from 5 to 1

5. Naval oranges
4 Mandarines
3 Granny Smith apples
2 Pink Lady apples
1 Cherries.Cherries the best, the fruit that wows
Poor Old Henry wonders where to for Senator Jacinta Price
Indigenous Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price says ‘lots’ of Australians want her to be prime minister.
Speaking on Sky News after abandoning her bid to become deputy leader of the Liberal Party which saw Sussan Ley win the leadership ballot on Tuesday morning, Senator Price said she had broad support for the country’s top job.
Asked if she would consider moving from the Senate to the lower house so she could eventually run as Prime Minister, the NT Senator was not shy in her ambition, noting: “Well, there is that”.
“I know there’s a lot of Australians who’d love to see that,” she said.
It mirrors comments made by Nationals leader David Littleproud earlier on Tuesday, who said Senator Price’s career ambitions extended beyond the Coalition’s junior partner.
“The reality is that her ambitions exceed what the National Party can provide,” he told ABC’s AM.
“You can’t be the prime minister [by being in] the National Party, I accept that.”
I am sure advice from a very, very old man would not be welcomed, so I will say nothing.
But one thing:
Public opinion including approval and disapproval has a habit of waxing and waning. It is never constant.
The Leanyer Newsagent’s joke board this week

‘THE AUSTRALIAN’ MAY 2025 – 1
COMMENTS POSTED
Coalition to pick up seats!
Winning 10 seats from Labor. In their dreams! The more likely scenario is how many seats they will LOSE to Labor!!
The Liberal side of politics in Australia is cactus
Nothing is going for the coalition—especially for the Liberal wing—than ongoing discord, fractious spilling and venting, and a continuation of the implosion that has been a hallmark of this sad cohort for a long time. What an absolute shambles this side of politics has become.
Noel Pearson comes out with verbal firing
Sorry, Mr Pearson, but I disagree with your thoughts and exposition on this issue. I would have voted ‘yes’ to the voice had it not been for creating a management body to go with it. Our government should be a government for all, and the politicisation Mr Pearson and other prominent Aboriginal leaders have attached to this one group – of which they are members- to make them separate and special to the rest of us is wrong. Had the voice gotten up, there would have been truth in the Animal Farm (George Orwell) statement that “Everyone is equal, but some are more equal than others”.
Drefus and Husic both gone from the front bench
Ex-Minister Husic, who did a good job in his portfolio, has every reason to skip the Caucus meeting and stay away. Not only has this man been a good and representative politician, but in his past generosity, he stood down from ministerial appointment to allow Kristina Keneally his spot. So the factions—and, in my opinion, Anthony Albanese—have given him the shove.
It is interesting that the only Jew in the previous cabinet – Mark Dreyfus – and ex-Ministwer Husic – the only practising Muslim on the front bench – have both been given the heave-ho.
Metaphorically, who has ordered a tonne of olive branches to travel with him on his mission to still all worldwide conflicts?
Donald Trump.
What does PM Anthony Albanese think of the NT’s fiscal management?

NT treasurer Bill Yan delivers the 2025/26 budget yesterday

Photo: NT News
Who is the best, most logical reasoning and cogent, articulate conveyor of thoughts in the world.
Donald Trump.
MAKE THAT CALL
What’s one small improvement you can make in your life?
A SMALL IMPROVEMENT NEEDED
I get frightened of making telephone calls. Putting off calls that need to be made, causes matters needing attention to pile up.
Reluctance to make calls is a weakness of character I need to overcome. This will help me to achieve more, more efficiently.
This is a change I need to make
This is what happens

Number plate message

“Education is about more and more expenditure for ever worsening outcomes” says POH

Poor Old Henry says, “What! Not again!”
After being elected Prime Minister in 2022, Anthony Albanse set a frenetic pace in round the world journeys.


Now he has been re-elected he is off again.
Wednesday May 14 to Indonesia.
Friday May 6 to Vatican City.
Then ……. ?
But you can bet your bottom dollar, there will be plenty of tripping.
The Government cabinet after the Labor Party’s romp to victory on May 3



To his left is Penny Wong, Labor leader in the Senate.
Growing everlasting flowers then harvesting them for seed in Western Australia




Visitors are welcome to visit and to frisk, gambol and frolic among the matured flowers before they are harvested.
Again and again and again – is there no end to this carnage?

Poor Old Henry is gobsmacked at the HUGE Labour election win

GRAB BYTES – MAY 2025
Take heed please government
I am becoming very worried about aspects of CLP governance. Along with that is bewilderment as to why some actions are being taken and needs ignored. The Waterfront issue on salaries and employment has been dismissed. A key appointment to an essential position has been confirmed at the behest of the Attorney General who has appointed a person who did not even apply for the position. And now the revelation about animal cruelty is confirmed in the background of the person who was declared the most powerful person in the NT News 2024 lost of the most prominent Persons influencing the NT.
The government must avoid these glitches and shortcomings. Those on the ministry would do well to recall what happened to the Giles Government and more recently the Fyles/Lawler government.
Promises must be met and transparency – which is becoming lost – reinstated. If not, the Finnochario government may well be a one-term wonder.
ANALYSIS: Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro says she is “buoyed” by a six per cent swing towards the CLP at the federal election, but a deeper look at what the voters in Darwin and Palmerston said with their ballots should cause the Country Liberal Party and its elected members grave concerns for their political futures.
While some would argue a federal election result should not be used to criticise the Territory Chief Minister, the party itself made it a referendum on Lia in Darwin and Palmerston and the results were damning.
Saturday’s federal election was held less than nine months after the CLP formed government through surprising gains in the Darwin northern suburbs, a result that it appears would not be replicated today if a Territory election were called.
We don’t need hordes of people
We already have far too many people living in Darwin. We need more people to come and crowd in, about as much as the sea needs water. Our suburbs are becoming run down and gritty. Increasing numbers of houses are very poorly maintained and yards are overgrown and unkempt.
Trees are planted in public spaces and along roadways and are never maintained. Council lets verges and footpaths go to rack and ruin. The council never acknowledges the efforts of those who maintain verges at the resident! ‘s expense.
And people in high places want to continue bringing in masses of people.
DO THOSE DECISION-MAKERS AND CONSULTANTS KNOW WHAT LIVING IN DARWIN AND PALMERSTON IS LIKE?
I mean in places other than housing enclaves and the newer suburbs – which in the case of Lyons and Muirhead are already starting to look drab in places. The appearances of Johbsin and Zuccoli are hardly awe-inspiring either!
Give it a break! We need care and maintenance, appreciation and pride in what we already have, rather than wanting evermore people jam-packing into this place.
Ah yes … but !!
I am glad we came to the Northern Territory in 1975. The NT has been a great home. Our times spent at Numbulwar, Angurugu, Nhulunbuy and since 1987, Darwin have offered a different but unique lifestyle and career chances that would have been possible elsewhere in Australia.
In turn, I feel we have reciprocated through our contributions to the Territory.
That said, I cannot but despair at the direction in which our Territory seems – to a now-old Territorian – to be heading in the critical areas of life and living.
Construction is happening at a frenetic pace, new homes are sprouting up everywhere and the place is spreading out and growing skywards.
I worry that maintenance, especially of our roads and general environmental appearance, seems to have very low priority. The scatter of rubbish and graffiti plastered over structures everywhere does not help.
When people commit offences, special consideration should not be given to penalties based on race and background. It should be a case of ‘one law for all.
My thoughts
What is wrong with Australia – 6
TAX AVARICIOUSNESS
The taxation systems under which we labour are no blessing. I hate how small and medium-income earners are robbed by a system that allows lots of ‘outs’ for those who earn a whole lot more than the small-wage earner.
It is grossly unfair for the taxation systems to be so convoluted and unstraightforward.
Those who want to do things honestly are often left ignorant of legitimate deductions because the knowledge they need to effect those deductions is shrouded and unclear.
On the other hand, magnates, huge companies, and CEOs who earn hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars can find their way around the system through the astuteness of tax accountants.
Tax rules running to thousands of pages impact those who earn far less – and who, through lack of knowledge and understanding, pay far more than the rich.
What is wrong with Australia – 5
THE EXAMPLE OF POLITICIANS
The example set by politicians within our parliaments is often a little short of disgraceful. A shrug of the shoulders justifies question times, the abhorrent exhibition of manners and lack of courteousness. Those involved seem to regard this period of parliamentary time as one when ‘anything goes’. Sadly, this period draws most people into public galleries, including schoolchildren. It is a small wonder that teachers and parents are challenged by children’s verbal and listening behaviour when they see this sad display of manners and courtesy so publicly manifest.
Politicians’ behaviour is a significant detractor from the image Australia seeks to portray. Their behaviour devalues and sells short our country, its states, and territories.
What is wrong with Australia – 4
WE HAVE BECOME BALKANIZED
The personal touch and familiarity that used to exist between people have largely evaporated. We have become remote, focused on work, and withdrawn. Verbal exchange has largely been replaced by emailing and other more impersonal forms of dialogue.
There are distinct threats to personal safety, meaning that guard dogs, fences, security systems, locked gates, and blacked-out fences have reinforced this Balkanisation to the extent of conferring a fortress mentality upon us all. We care less about others and share less. The sweetness of the Australian personality has soured.
With The Passing of Time
Written when I retired in January 2012
And revisiting this piece of writing thirteen years after it was written, he still wonders.
Once upon a time, a Northern Territory principal reflected on what was (2012), what has been (1970) and what had happened between times. A little voice in his head told him to think as much as possible about “balance”, “pros” and “cons”, “challenge”, and “celebration”. Determined to move toward even-handedness, he began to reflect on the four decades of his educational experience.
He thought about the waves of systemic leadership that had rolled over the system. There was the New Guinea expatriate influence followed at intervals by domination from other States, Territories and arrivals from overseas destinations. More recently (2009), Queensland educators succeeded Western Australian educators as system leaders. The Northern Territory was undoubtedly influenced by educators from elsewhere.
He thought about Jim Eedle, the Northern Territory’s first Secretary for Education after the NT Government took responsibility for education. Eedle said (Katherine, March 1979) that “schools are for children” and “structure should support function.” He thought about the structure that had now assumed skyscraper proportions with the children somewhat in shadow.
He thought about the fact that many children were children who seemed to lack the first-hand care and nurture a parent should offer. It seemed that with the passing of years, this was less forthcoming. Schools were increasingly asked (indeed required) to take on primary matters of children’s upbringing. He wondered and was sad that ‘loco parentis’ was now a mainstream function.
He worried that with the passing of years, a preponderance of weighty issues had grown into school curriculum requirements. Lots have been added, and little dropped. He wondered how teachers could cope and was concerned the children would be overburdened and staff become disillusioned. The educational pathway seemed increasingly cluttered and overgrown.
He was concerned that written reports were no longer short, concise, explicit and individualised. Instead, they were long on hyperbole, being stereotyped, jargon-riddled statements. They had become increasingly wordy but, essentially, said less and less. Notwithstanding the enormous amount of teacher effort devoted to their preparation, he felt they said it meant little to parents.
He worried that, over time, children had become more self-centred. “I” and “my” were pronouns and possessives underpinning their belief and value systems. He yearned for those times past when it seemed children were well-mannered and cared for others. “Yes, please”, “thank you”, “excuse me”, and “may I” were fast disappearing epithets. That, he felt, underpinned a loss of character.
He wondered where safety and security for children had gone. In the 1970s and 1980s, children could play outdoors in a safe, secure environment. Come 2012, parents no longer felt the children were safe. Threats against young people were handled from cyberspace to the street. There was a feeling that children needed to be wrapped and cosseted – but not by parents. As primary caregivers, they were too busy at work to offer personal nurture.’ Minding’ at Outside School Hours Care centres was the in thing.
He wondered whether, in an enlightened age, children feel ‘used’ when their schooling futures were discussed in a way that likened them to pawns on a chessboard. He wondered whether children appreciated being ‘objects’ for limited academic testing (Four May Days each year). Did they feel that overall and holistic educational needs were considered necessary by Federal Politicians setting State and Territory educational agendas?
He wondered about modern communications. Were the children of the 1970s not better speakers and listeners because face-to-face communication was alive and practised? ‘Facebook’, ‘Twitter’, texting and the new ICT tools of the twenty-first century reduced the need to gain and have confidence in speech and speaking (including listening). He was concerned that literacy skills were going out the door. What would happen to thinking?
He wondered about the wisdom of straying too far from the scriptural adage, “Spare the rod and spoil the child”. While responses to poor behaviour ought not to be barbaric, was not accommodation in 2012 of what was unacceptable in 1970 simply encouraging children and young people to push the envelope? Were not the elders abrogating their upbringing responsibilities and being ostrich-like?
He was sad that keys, security, guard dogs, deadlocks and latches, CCTV cameras, high fences, barbed wire, crim safe mesh, sensor security systems and floodlights had become the installation order. It seemed that in 1970, nights were for sleeping. Forty years later, nocturnal malevolence seemed to prevail. He wondered where peaceful nighttime hours had gone.
He wondered about gender equality. In the 1970s, children deferred to adults on public transport when entering doors and joining queues. Similarly, men deferred to ladies, the young to the old.
No more! He wondered why it was that in 2012, chivalry was dead!
He was concerned about ‘pace’. In the 1970s, things moved more slowly. There seemed to be less to do, yet crucial tasks were completed. There was a simple serenity about the way things were done. Time off work WAS time off work.
He pondered tranquillity. The separation of priorities had enhanced his inner peace. Family, work and recreation had occupied degrees of importance in that order. Come 2012, the imperative of ‘work, work and work until you drop’ had pushed family and recreational pursuits onto the back burner. Was that not poor prioritisation?
Did the ‘new way’ promote happiness and inner peace?
He wondered about the years ahead. As a young educator in 1970, he had looked to the future with confidence and rosy anticipation. Come 2012, and looking back, he wondered why system realities had sullied his vision.
And in 2025 the separation of what was and what is in terms of priorities and values seems more lopsided than ever.
Revised 17 April 2024
Revised again May 2025
Darwin in 2025 – some aspects of interest visitors might consider.
- Cyclone Tracy memorial at East Point.
- Bundilla beach monument to Tracy.
- The old boatyard on Ludmilla Creek.
- The upgrades at Buffalo Creek including its popularity.
- Lake Alexandra.
- East Point Military Museum with some new displays.
- The old museum has changing features, including Cyclone Tracy.
- Barefoot Bowls Club.
- Changes and developments around the Darwin High Schools.
- All the artwork and murals on the CBD buildings.
- Changes and upgrades arounbd the Nightcliff foreshore.
- Dripstone Cliffs and down. to the Rapid Creek bridge.
- Naked Beach Road.
- Tiger Brennan Drive and Berrimah Road overpass.
- Continuing development in the business precinct toward port.
- Your tanks Brett. Still trhere but still empty.
- The ship lift facility is under construction.
- The Waterfront Precinct in Darwin – mushroom development.
- Darwin Convention Centre.
- Artificial lake adjacent to concention centre.
- Changes at Stokes Hill Wharf – with a lot of cruise ships coming in at Fort Hill Wharf at the moment.
- Flying Doctor display on the wharf.
- The New Larrakeyah facility is being built on LHS, on the way to the wharf—where Indo-Pacific Marine used to be.
- Darwin Harbour cruises.
- Cullen Bay has some quite significant changes.
- The new CDU campus in Darwin.
- The new Aboriginal Arts/Culture centre being built on Smith Street.
- The changed streetscapes in the CBD.
- The Cavanagh Street arch.
- The huge growth at Coolalinga.
- The revamped Berry Springs Nature Park.
- All the schools in Darwin now just about fenced in like never before.
- Tour of Parfliament House.
- Botanic Gardens with some changes.
- The Esplanade more or less the same as always.
- Doctor’s Gully and rock climbing place.
- If you like high-rise skylines and streetscapes, new high-rise buildings are going up everywhere.
- Continuing changes are going on at the Marrara Sporting Complex.
- Changes and upgrades at the Darwin Hospital.
- Developments at the CDU Casuarina Campus including student accomodaftion on the north side.
- Changes at Casuarina Shopping Centre.
Two more ‘takes’ on Mr Palethorp from “Dad’s Army


Sunset and Moonrise at Leanyer NT on Mother’s Day


Poor Old Henry looks at this map with growing apprehension

HOW FAR AWAY IS ARMAGEDDON
Another salute to the rising gibbous

Poor Old Henry was aghast! This is a story of absolute stupidity
- We had a perfectly good “as new” Queen mattress which is only a few years old.
- The one drawback for us was the mattress being ultra heavy and, therefore, hard to make when changing sheets. It took an inordinate amount of heaving and lifting for me to be able to put a clean fitted sheet omn the mattress.
- Added to the dilemma was that the mattress was somehow ‘odd’ regarding compatibility with sheets. In the end, the bottom sheep gave out.
- We decided to replace this mattress with a new one, with equal comfort but better by far regarding weight and the ease with which sheets could be fitted.
- The mattress we were replacing was offered to the Salvation Army. Not interested.
- The mattress was then offered to the Red Cross. The manager with whom I spoke enlightened me. No matter what the condition of the mattress, government regulations prevented it from being accepted as a donation and then resold to someone needing a mattress.
- I was told this regulation was in place to avoid the transfer of bacteria, viruses, and other nasty things that might be embedded in the mattress. The fact that the mattress was covered with a thick, absorbent protector did not matter.
- We had to pay an additional $124.00 for this mattress to be taken by the deliverer of the new mattress, to the Shoal Bay dump to be dumped as rubbish.
- So, thanks to government regulations, a perfectly good mattress in almost 100% new condition – as the attached photos show – had to be tossed out.
- Now, THAT is progressive government health policy for us all to consider.
.







Note how carefully the plastic cover from the new mattress was used to protect the old mattress on its exit journey.
Who is the ONLY PERSON in the world who can cause India and Pakistan, along with Russia and Ukraine, to cease hostilities and live alongside each other in peace, mutual trust and ongoing harmony?
Donald Trump
What is wrong with Australia – 4
4. WE HAVE BECOME BALKANIZED
The personal touch and familiarity that used to exist between people have largely evaporated. We have become remote, focused on work, and withdrawn. Verbal exchange has largely been replaced by emailing and other more impersonal forms of dialogue.
There are distinct threats to personal safety, meaning that guard dogs, fences, security systems, locked gates, and blacked-out fences have reinforced this Balkanisation to the extent of conferring a fortress mentality upon us all. We care less about others and share less. The sweetness of the Australian personality has soured.
What is wrong with Australia -3
3. THE SILENT MAJORITY ‘WIMP OUT’
Too often, our agenda is set by a vigorous and raucous minority who make sufficient noise to convince authorities that they speak for far more people than is the case. The majority are ‘middle of the road’ people who are not given to responding—instead, they remain silent and apathetic. So, interest groups influence agendas in an unfortunate manner because authorities react to their suggestions to alleviate their vociferousness.
Allowing these myriad splinter groups to influence our country unduly is a factor ripping away at the blessings this country should offer.
Whose name is one of the very first to be recognised, understood and articulated by any child more than 18 months old?
Donald Trump.
Whose name is inscribed by young people who idolise him, onto desk tops, walls, doors, pavements and every other conceivable surface ?
Donald Trump’s name.
Possibility / Probability
The adventures of Donald Trump
- There is a possibility and strong probability that President Trump will bestow The Presidential Medal of Freedom on Pope Leo XIV.

- There is a possibility and indeed a probability that Donald Trump might move toward Vatican City becoming the 52nd American State.

- There is a possibility but almost no probability that Donald Trump will step away from his ambition to buy Greenland from the Government of Denmark.
Who has done more than ANY other man to turn his country into one of prosperity for its idolising population?
Donald Trump.
Three cheers to the moon rising toward its fullness.

Poor Old Henry believes that the NT and Darwin are so crime ridden that things are like a hulk riddled with woodworm.


There are two contenders but there can only be one leader: Two perspectives on leadership challenges


“It breaks me up to see what is normally a happy, smiling, warm, embracing face, look so grim”, says Poor Old Henry

Why so sad,
It must be smomething,
Really Bad,
Hope it fixes,
So we will see,
Your smiling face,
Reassuring me.
The last live performance
Live performances in Darwin are daily events.
An upside of these daily performances is that they are usually free. You don’t have to pay to attend as spectators. It is important to keep out of the way of the actors and give them plenty of room to move.
Anyone coming to Darwin at any time of the year will have the opportunity to see these live performances for themselves.
There are morning and afternoon and evening and night and late night sessions. It’s any time in the day or night and you won’t have to wait for too long to see a performance.
Viewing opportunities are 24 seven.
“Topics about what I want to write but don’t seem to get the time – and that is frustrasting“ says Poor Old Henry
Contemporary Topics
- Tyre scouring of road
- Tree maintenance
- The town with no papers
- Katherine and its paper prevail.
- The city with 4 and 8 parking meters.
- The Yarkob Roads of Darwin
- Workplace humour is dead in the water.
- Living on borrowed time.
- Humour, mirth and camaraderie have gone from the workplace.
- Ukraine is under command from USA ‘headquarters’.
- Security cameras and spy devices.
- Historical and comparative topics – a history about which very few have any idea
- Telecommunications
- Postal changes
- Study methods then and now
- Toilets then and now
- Phone contact then and now.
- Newspaper writing. Getting the stories and transmitting them for publication.
Comments from Poor Old Henry in ‘The Australian’ April 2025 – 3
Advantage Albanese
It is the visuals that count for so much. How a person looks reflects the laconic, often reflexive nature of past Australia and the laid-back image of this country in past decades—all this adds significantly to or detracts from the visual appeal of key candidates to voters. For Anthony Albanese, that is a significant advantage in the prime ministership race.
Albanese and his own seat
This story about preference trading and its implications, including untrue statements and a bland, almost laconic ‘ response by the Prime Minister, is beyond my endurance. There are politics and morality, and this situation about his own seat and preference management disgusts me to the depths of my soul.
Peta Credlin the accurate presenter
Peta Credlin hits the nail right on the head with her take on what is happening on the political front—in this and past columns. How I wish she was the Coalition’s campaign manager for her innate ability to weed out rubbish, fallacious defences, and counter-claims. She brings a totally thorough and researched approach to her columns and her programs on Sky. As she points out with confirming evidence, this country is in one hell of a mess.
America under Trump
America, under Trump’s management, is getting worse. Trump’s influence on the world has quickly transitioned from what might have been positive to a litany of growing negatives. I am dismayed and disgusted at his stance on the Russian/Ukraine conflict.
Curtains for the coalition
Too little, too late on the detail, Mr. Dutton. You held back on key policy areas for too long, and sadly, it’s still a week from May 3. The election might as well be called now, for it is done and dusted for the coalition.
For the want of campign mamnagement …
Sadly, I believe that the election is over, bar the shouting. Labor will romp it in, and I feel from watching and listening, with a majority government. If only Peta Credlin had been the Coalition campaign manager, the outcome would have been entirely different.
Welcome to country over and over and over again.
It seems like we can never have too much of a welcome to the country. I went to a function in the NT late last year with my Granddaughter, who was short-listed for a short story award. We sat and endured a 15 – 20-minute welcome to the country offered by a person who said this was the fourth welcome to the country she had done for the day and said she loved doing welcomes to countries. I do not imagine they were offered without pecuniary emolument. That night, everyone who stood up during the program had an acknowledgement/welcome to the country. I left feeling thoroughly saturated by this propensity.
Welcome to country
I know and understand what welcome to country is all about – and along with that, the compulsory acknowledgements that fall from the lips of every presenter at conferences, meetings, sports venues and the rest. It means that people like me have to be in a permanently supplicatory position regarding those First into the Nation. Well, sorry, that does not cut it with me.
Comments from Poor Old Henry in ‘The Australian’ April 2025 – 2
The outfall of Australia’s booming population
Australia is becoming top-heavy with people and very much under the pump regarding organisations and infrastructure needed to support these vast numbers. Population pressures are contributing to a lack of housing, a lack of employment opportunities and a lack of satisfaction with life. People’s pressure contributes to parents having no time to bring their children up in a proper family context, making far too many children feel detached from the vital family aspect that was so much a part of life in the past times. At one end of the age spectrum, there are growing numbers of essentially unloved – and unwanted – children beyond the brief bubble of parenthood bliss. On the other hand, there are increasing numbers of aged persons for whom life has become a day-by-day challenge. Many of these, I believe – as a 79-year-old man myself and seeing what is going on in the aged care domain – cannot wait until blessedly relieved of life by their passing.
Disgusting organisational neglect of needy Aboriginal children
This story confirms to me that many organisations, both indigenous and non-indigenous, are contributing in a significant way to the continuing disasters confronting First Nations people. Sadly, children are too often on the receiving end of these misguided and misdirected efforts.
The end of the line for the coalition
I am a keen political follower and have been voting in elections since 1967. Sadly, I believe this election is over, except for the timeline requirements. Labour has run and won it, with the most seats in the House of Representatives. There have been far too many coalition failures, and the party/ies are far from united. This has not been the case for the Albanese Labor campaign, where unification was a strong element.
“United they stand – divided they fall”.
Trump is cooking Ukraine
Donald Trump is looking to bail out on all these issues. He has got this all so wrong and is very frightened of Vladimir Putin. Puting negotiates by saying ‘jump’, and Trump says ‘how high’. Putin’s tactics make Trump look like a vassal, not a negotiator with genuine concerns for Ukraine’s future.
The goodness of Clive Palmer
I am sad that Mr Palmer could not have everything swing his way when creating and promoting his TOP party. Given all he has contributed to Australia socially and economically, he deserved better fortune to come his way. He is stout, honest and resolute in his beliefs, unshakable in his support for our country and willing to spend a massive amount of money to demonstrate his commitment and loyalty to this country. Thousands of people can thank him for how he has enhanced their prosperity through sharing his wealth.
God help us all if Labor wins on May 3
If Labor wins government—and the party is a shoo-in at this campaign stage and with early voting starting today—we in Australia will be facing three terrible years of social regression and economic decline. At the age of 79, I can say that this country has never been in a worse and more fragile situation than right now.
Gout Gout and the Stawell Gift
Gout Gout, without a doubt, is the fastest runner in the world. The Stawell Gift is a contrived race and for a man with the ethics and principles of Gout Gout, but a mere blip and temporary aberration to what will be an auspicious career.
Mr Palmer the good one
I am sad that Mr Palmer could not have everything swing his way when creating and promoting his TOP party. Given all he has contributed to Australia socially and economically, he deserved better fortune to come his way. He is stout, honest and resolute in his beliefs, unshakable in his support for our country and willing to spend a massive amount of money to demonstrate his commitment and loyalty to this country. Thousands of people can thank him for how he has enhanced their prosperity through sharing his wealth. Not approved
Three more years of Albanese – please NO!
They called John Howard ‘The Hollow Man”. Not so! He was one of our very best Prime Ministers. I think of Anthony Albanese as ‘The Shallow Man’ – all talk, prevarication and very little substance. I am fearful of him and his government getting another three years. If that happens, Australia will be beyond economic and social
Labor preferences the Greens
How I wish every Labor incumbent who has agreed to and endorsed the Greens candidate as their second preference would lose their seat in the upcoming election. If the new government is based on these two parties, it will be one of discord and mayhem.
Comments from Poor Old Henry in ‘The Australian’ April 2025 – 1
Albo the Wonderful
Anthony Albanese is a man treasured and revered by China and a PM who is the best leader we have had for at least 30 years. President Xi and I have one thing in common: We are both awestruck by the quality of his leadership.
Medicare vision not a reality from Albanese
Of course, it won’t happen. This whole thrust is based on propaganda and mirage. It will vanish like a passing whirlwind immediately after the election.
Russia and China to carve up Australia
Futuristically, the division of Australia among the powerbrokers could be easy—WA, SA, NT, and Tasmania for Russia, Qld, NSW, and Vic to China. China has a claim on Victoria because of past Premier Daniel Andrews (AC) going the Belt and Road Initiative years ago. In the years to come, the alternative of Russia and China fighting over Australia’s spoils is untenable.
The Coalition is for the high jump
Sadly, the Coalition’s hopes of winning the Federal Election have vaporised. I feel that Labor will gain seats, the minor parties will increase their representation and influence, and Labor will gain seats and secure an absolute majority in the new parliament. The divisions and splits within coalition structures at the state level are their undoing.
Teals – no way!
I hope ALL the Teals lose their seats in the upcoming election. The Teals splinter the parliament and in no way contribute in a positive and unifying manner.
WA development is being upended by negotiating impediments
This is another step in a farcical, fiasco-like situation stifling progress in WA and Australia. I would love to be in charge of these issues for half a day and reckon I could sort the situation reasonably and fairly without begging, pleading, promises, or supplication.
America persuades preservation of Iran’s military might
In terms of the future of the world, I wish that Israel had gone ahead and taken Iran down from the pinnacle of the nuclear power it is fast approaching. This is another example of America wanting to preserve whatever the shaky status quo might offer. Iran will continue to grow and go from strength to strength in military terms. Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis and the rest of these horrible terror groups are an extension of Iran. For America to approve of Israel continuing to amputate tentacles while leaving the head whole was and is short-sighted. The world will never move on while Iran is allowed to flourish.
ANOTHER mass American shooting
More and more, America is a screwed-up and desperate country. If I were to win a trip to the USA, I would give it away, for the alternative would be to place my life in the hands of unpredictable fate.
Jeremy Powell and Donald Trump’s interaction
At least Mr Powell has his head screwed on and contains a rational and predictable focus on issues. If he is ousted, America will continue to sink into its self-made messy malaise of uncertainty and the suspicion of the country now so apparent in the eyes of the world.
The government has its head in the sand over Russia
The Albanese Government is playing dumb on Russia’s plans because it does not want the Australian electorate spooked until the election is over. The government knows that Australian Defence is well underdone and that we would be demolished if any antagonistic country turned on us. Our defence system is in a terrible state.
Whose actions and words are excluded from any negative response because of his exalted status and the almost reverential worldwide regard in which he is held?
Donald Trump.
Poor Old Henry laments.
This is typical Darwin 2025!



Feel like smashing windows for the fun of it! Why not!! You can do that with impunity and there will be little if any consequence for you!
And why not? Enjoy a destructive life!
Go on, express yourself!!
This – lifted from LinkedIn – deserves consideration for its wisdom




Pigeons love potato chips


POH ASKS AI
“ Do betting agencies take bets on who the next Pope will be?
Response:
Yes, some betting agencies do take bets on who the next Pope will be, although the legality and popularity of such bets can vary by location. Here are a few insights:
- Gambling Trends: Betting on papal succession has gained popularity, especially with online gambling platforms offering odds for potential candidates. Fast Company
- Bookmakers’ Odds: As the papal conclave approaches, bookmakers often release odds on various candidates for the papacy, allowing punters to place bets. LBC
- Tradition: This form of gambling has been a tradition that goes back quite some time, particularly around significant events such as the death of a Pope. Fox 56 News
- Legal Aspects: However, the legality of betting on papal elections can be complicated and is often not legal in many jurisdictions, despite the existence of online betting options. 10News
If you’re interested in more details on the current odds or specific betting agencies, feel free to ask!
I have never placed a bet on anything in my life.
The occasional lottery ticket but none for the past four years.
Looking up to Donald Trump: Poor Old Henry asks AI
Is there any group who regard Donald Trump as a god?
Response:
Yes, some groups and individuals have been known to express extreme admiration for Donald Trump, at times likening him to a messianic or divine figure. This is particularly evident among certain segments of his supporter base, including some evangelical Christians and members of far-right political groups. They often view him as a leader chosen to fulfill a specific purpose, portraying him in a light that elevates him above regular political figures.
These views can manifest in various ways, such as through fervent rallies, social media posts, and public declarations of devotion, sometimes using religious or fantastical language to describe their support. However, these beliefs are not representative of the majority of his supporters and are often caricatured in media coverage.
I have wondered.
Now I know.
Poor Old Henry’s one day job
A ONE-DAY JOB – MAKE PARENTS ACCOUNTABLE
I am taking into account where I live, the huge and unrelenting spike in crime in the Northern Territory, and the fact that most crime or much of it anyway is caused by young people from 16 years and downward who steal vehicles, ram raid, use knives, and act in an aberrant and delinquent way.
Taking into account the fact that governments and authorities are happy to excuse this behaviour – or appear to be happy because consequences are trivialised and the outcomes of crimes magnified to victims, influence what I would like to do for one day.
For one day I would like to be the Director of Family Priorities. During this day I would require that all parents of all children under the age of 17 accept responsibility for what their offspring are up to, including responsibility for fixing damage and destruction that that behaviour is wreaking on the community.
Part of my role would be to require parents to take responsibility for the upset being caused in the community by their children and to the point where accountability sees them being punished for the neglect of their children.
An element would be the banning for a lifetime of the rights of people who have these neglected children, to purchase or consume alcohol because that changes their priorities away from the children and toward the social upheaval that their offspring are causing.
Far too many parents are happy to prioritise alcohol over expenditure on food and accessories of life for their children. So the third change would be the loading of their support benefits onto a basics card. It could only be used to purchase the necessities of life.
What a job for the day.
84,000 attended this game last Saturday night.


Beautiful clouds in the first week of the dry season


So much like cotton wool.
The Leanyer Newsagents joke board this week

Which world leader reflects care and empathy toward others in all he does?
Donald Trump.

“My futuristic ditty confirmed by Australia’s election outcome”, says Poor Old Henry
A LEADER MOST ADMIRED
A leader most admired,
That is our own AA,
He leads Australia brilliantly,
Each and every day,
When things are looking really grim,
And uncertainties seem to loom,
His smile and reassurance,
Will dissipate the gloom.
Like the Israelites of old,
Who wandered for 40 years,
Our PM is like Moses,
And expunges all our fears.
AA is our guiding light,
Who shows us a better way,
With reassuring confidence,
He highlights every day,
With futuristic promises,
Of what will come to hand
When after years of hard knocks,
He transforms ‘down under’,
Makes this ‘the promised land’.
It has been said, “the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world”. Who is the only person alive, who could challenge this assertion?
Donald Trump.
Who is the only person in the world who could draw a bigger crowd than Lady Gaga with 2,000,000 attending her Rio performance?
Donald Trump.
From whom do political and religious leaders alike, value prized recognition and appreciation?
Donald Trump.
Who is the 2025 “Controller – General of Earth”?
Donald Trump.
Sometimes great leaders fall … Then rise to great heights.

Phone calls from which leader are the most precious, appreciated and treasured above all others?
Those from Donald Trump.
Poor Old Henry shows what happened to the Coalition (Blues) on May 3 election day.



Poor Old Henry’s Prediction.
Labor crucified the coalition in a thumping election win.
I am 79.
I will need to live past 100 if I am again to see the coalition governing Australia.
P
“The statistics show it all: Labor romps to victory in Australia’s May 3 2025 Federal Election”. POH





For all the credits, praise and adoration he receives, which great world leader was wrong to mock the Catholic Church
Donald Trump.

. (Source : NT News May 5 2025)
How to create motoring mayhem
- Take one truck with dog and trailer.
- The trailer is loaded with pieces of small, sharp edged metal pieces about 2 or 3 centimetres in length.
- It is peak hour time and the highway near Gosford is thick with traffic.
- The rear door of the trailer shakes open,
- The metal pieces start leaking from the trailer onto the highway.
- Unaware mororista following the truck keep driving – until their tyres are severely punctured or shredded.
- Chaos on the highway ensued with tyre damage to hundreds of vehicles.
- Tyre shops will have a bonanza.
- The rogue truck will in large part evoke a headache for insurers.


Looking out from our front yard

The polling place – Darwin Bridge Club – in Leanyer on May 3 2025





These pictures (source: The Australian and Sky News) tell it all





Coalition blown out of the water
May 3, 2025
Decimation
Of a coalition
That specislises in members
Tearing each other apart
Self immolation
Destroys
And it has!
Those Liberals
Sold out for a mediocre agenda
Seen by the vastakority
Of voters
As a reason to assign this cohort
To what may become
The historical rubbish bin
Of mediocracy
And irrelevance.
Sometimes
There is a point of no return,
Of no coming back!
Has the end been reached?
Poor Old Henry says “this is the way I feel”
SO MUCH of the support in every budget is offered to those who contribute so little to the Australian economy. And so much government largesse goes to organisations like the NDIS, childcare, Aboriginal support organisations and so on, where much of it is consumed by mismanagement and, in some cases, embezzlement, false and inflated claims and fraud. I am always amazed at two significant areas my tax statement advises of my contribution – welfare and interest on Australia’s national debt. Those who are self-sufficient and who abhor/avoid debt cannot be enamoured by these areas of ‘contribution’.
I predict that in times to come – and before 2050 – Australia will have a Muslim Prime Minister and that there will be suburbs and areas in which Sharia Law is enforced. That will happen because state and territory governments will be increasingly made up of those of the Muslim faith who have been voted into office. And that has a starting point
Asks POH
About how much does the manufacture of a coreflute cost?
Response:
The cost of manufacturing coreflute signs in Australia can vary widely based on several factors, including size, design complexity, quantity, and the printing company. However, here are some general estimates:
- Small Signs (e.g., 600mm x 900mm): Approximately AUD 20 to AUD 50 per sign, depending on factors like color and design.
- Medium Signs (e.g., 900mm x 1200mm): Typically range from AUD 40 to AUD 100.
- Large Signs (e.g., 1200mm x 2400mm): These can cost between AUD 80 and AUD 200 or more.
- Bulk Orders: Ordering in larger quantities (e.g., 50 or 100 signs) usually results in lower per-unit costs due to economies of scale.
Additional costs to consider may include design fees if professional graphic design services are used, shipping, and installation if necessary. It’s advisable for candidates or parties to obtain quotes from several manufacturers for the best pricing.
Wow!
They are not cheap.
Who manufactures the coreflutes asks POH
Response:
In Australia, coreflute signs, commonly used during elections, are typically manufactured by specialized sign-making companies and printers. Some of the key manufacturers include:
- Local Sign Makers: Many local businesses specialize in printing and creating custom signage, including electoral coreflutes, to cater to individual candidates or parties.
- National Signage Companies: Larger companies operate nationwide and offer a range of signage solutions, including coreflutes. They often have the capacity to produce large volumes quickly.
- Online Print Services: Various online platforms provide printing services for coreflute signs, allowing candidates to easily order signs with custom designs.
- Promotional Product Companies: Companies that specialize in promotional products often produce coreflute signage as part of their offerings.
Candidates or parties typically select manufacturers based on factors like price, quality, turnaround time, and the ability to handle specific design requirements.
Poor Old Henry asks AI
What happens to all the coreflutes after elections?
Response:
After elections, coreflute signs and other campaign materials typically undergo several processes:
- Removal: Campaign teams are usually responsible for removing their signage after the election. This helps clear the area and maintain visual appeal.
- Recycling: Many coreflute signs are made from recyclable materials, so they may be sent to recycling facilities. It’s essential for campaigns to dispose of materials responsibly to reduce environmental impact.
- Storage for Future Use: Some political parties or candidates might store their coreflute signs for future campaigns, especially if the design and messaging remain relevant.
- Disposal: If the signs are damaged or no longer usable, they may end up in landfills. Responsible campaigns will try to minimize this by recycling whenever possible.
- Community Projects: In some cases, leftover signage can be repurposed for community projects, art installations, or awareness campaigns, showcasing an innovative approach to recycling campaign materials.
These practices can vary significantly depending on local regulations and the policies of the campaigning organizations.
Great news.
For the first time ever, Leanyer School Passed on hosting a polling booth


Running sausage sizzles on election days were also financially rewarding and were good for school community relations.
Poor Old Henry
May 3, 2025
Passed
A picture is worth 1,000 words

Poor Old Henry
Source: The Weekend Australian online.
A disappointment to me

In the past, Anthony Albanese has recognised the creation of the state of Israel. But not this year – possibly because of sensitivities that might have been invoked in the reaction of non-Jewish voters in key Labor seats.
Reminds me a little of Esau selling his birthright in biblical times.
Poor Old Henry.
Pic: The Australian online.
Millions of people fantasise about having the honour of laying down and then rolling up the red carpet, after which adored world leader has graced it with his steps?
Donald Trump.
Where is Luke
I SEE LUKE
- In the pre-dawn of each day.
- Under the glare of the midday sun.
- In the lengthening shadows of late afternoon.
- Under the orange glow of a brilliant sunset.
- Under the illumination of street lighting.
- In the flashing neon of traffic lights.
- Under trees.
- Standing lonely along dozens of major and minor roads.
- Near and under bridges.
- On every street corner.
- On almost all road intersections.
- On the perimeter walls surrounding residences.
- 0n private and public fences.
- At shopping precinct entrances.
- On the opposite side of the road coming out of shopping centre carparks.
- Tall and upright.
- Dizzily leading forward or back.
- Face down.
- Flat on his back.
- On hillocks and mounds.
- Camouflaged in the long grass.
- On the edge of waterways.
- In swamps.
- On median strips.
- Alone and by himself
- In the company of other core fluted candidates.
- I see him here – opposite our house.
- I see him there – wherever I drive, walk, or go.
- I am seeing Luke just everywhere.
- On TV.
- In the newspaper.
- Not online because I do not use social media.
- At the Cazaly Club.
- Along Tiger Brennan Drive.
- Adjacent to potholes and inundations in some of our suburban roads.
- And in multiple places all over Darwin and Palmerston.
- Most importantly, opposite our home.




Luke 24/7 until dawn on May 4 2025.
Another five faces of the campaigning Prime Minister (Source: The Australian)





Charles Darwin University Vice-Chancellor Professor Scott Bowman appreciates politicans
He writes
“My evening “workload” is minuscule compared to what I see our Local, State and Federal Politicians doing. I see them at so many events and often see them running between two or three events every evening. I also see them at so many events during the weekends. This Saturday we have the Federal Election. I want to thank all those standing for putting themselves forward to represent us and to take on the arduous job of being a politician.”
Maybe we should appreciate politicans more than we do!
Poor Old Henry
Poor Old Henry asks of AI
Can you write me 200 words about why Anthony Albanese should not be re-elected Prime Minister including an appropriate title and emphasise the negatives of his leadership to date.
Reply:
Why Anthony Albanese Should Not Be Re-Elected as Prime Minister
Anthony Albanese’s tenure as Prime Minister has been marked by several noteworthy shortcomings that raise doubts about his suitability for re-election. First and foremost, his government’s handling of economic issues has been lackluster, with rising inflation and cost-of-living pressures affecting everyday Australians. Many citizens feel that Albanese has failed to effectively address these critical challenges, leaving families struggling to make ends meet.
Moreover, Albanese’s commitment to climate change policies has been inconsistent. While he promised ambitious goals, critics argue that his government has not taken the decisive action necessary to transition Australia to a sustainable future. This lack of urgency undermines the trust of voters who prioritize environmental issues.
Additionally, Albanese’s foreign policy approach has been reactive rather than proactive, often trailing behind other nations in pivotal international discussions. This oversight could jeopardize Australia’s standing on the global stage.
Finally, his leadership style has been criticized as indecisive, with many Australians feeling that he has not provided clear guidance or vision during his time in office. These factors collectively underscore why re-electing Anthony Albanese may not be in the best interest of Australia’s future.
I think his persona, charm and grace have overrides these things in the minds of voters.
Poor Old Henry asks about hair
Is it harder or easier for bald men to be elected to key political positions?
AI responded:
The electability of bald men to key political positions can be influenced by various factors, including societal perceptions, cultural norms, and individual biases. Here are some points to consider regarding whether it might be harder or easier for bald men in politics:
Potential Advantages
- Perceived Authority: Some studies suggest that baldness may be associated with traits like dominance and authority, potentially making bald candidates appear more confident and strong.
- Distinctiveness: A bald head can make a candidate memorable, helping them stand out in a crowded field of candidates.
- Simplicity: Some voters may appreciate the simplicity of a bald appearance, associating it with straightforwardness and sincerity.
Potential Disadvantages
- Stereotypes: In some cultures, baldness might be associated with aging or weakness, which could negatively impact perceptions of a candidate’s vitality or capability.
- Media Representation: The portrayal of bald men in media can shape public perceptions, and if they’re often depicted in negative roles, it may affect their electability.
- Voter Bias: Personal biases against baldness, though irrational, can exist among voters, potentially influencing their decisions in a subconscious manner.
Conclusion
Overall, whether being bald is an advantage or a disadvantage in politics can depend heavily on the context and the specific demographics of the voter base. In some cases, baldness could enhance a candidate’s image, while in others, it may present challenges. Social attitudes towards appearance generally evolve, and individual candidates often overcome stereotypes through their personal charisma, policies, and public speaking abilities.
I think the hair might have it this time around.
Poor Old Henry asks AI
Please write me 200 words of adoration celebrating Anthony Albanese as the very best choice there could be for Australia’s prime ministership. Please write it under an adoring title.
Response:
A Beacon of Hope: Celebrating Anthony Albanese
In a landscape often shadowed by political turmoil, Anthony Albanese shines as a luminary of integrity, vision, and unwavering commitment to the Australian people. His compassionate leadership reflects a deep understanding of the challenges faced by everyday Australians, making him the ultimate choice for prime minister. With a heart attuned to the needs of the vulnerable, Albanese champions social justice, advocating for policies that uplift all sectors of society, particularly those marginalized.
His progressive vision for Australia encourages innovation and sustainability, paving the way for a greener economy while prioritizing essential services like healthcare and education. Albanese’s remarkable ability to unite diverse voices demonstrates his commitment to inclusivity and collaboration, forging a path towards a brighter, more equitable future.
With resilience and determination, he has navigated through adversity, earning respect and admiration across the nation. Australian citizens can trust in Albanese’s capacity to lead with transparency and accountability, fostering confidence in government while instilling hope in the hearts of many.
In these transformative times, Anthony Albanese stands as the very best choice for Australia’s prime ministership, embodying the change that resonates with the aspirations of a united, prosperous nation. His leadership promises a better tomorrow for all.
Five Faces of a campaigning Prime Minister (source: The Australian)





Which global leader would our Australian political leaders most like to emulate (my opinion)
Donald Trump.
Throughout time and history, who has attracted more ongoing recognition and acclaim than anyone else on Earth?
Donald Trump.
Which world leader are other world leaders most careful to acknowledge and to never upset?
Donald Trump.
Poor Old Henry from a long time ago

“ A picture confirming that Anthony Albanese could be Prime Minister for the next 30 years”, suggests Poor Old Henry

1 May 2025
Possibility/Probability
Underlying truths of political motivation
- There is a possibility and a 100% probability that if politicans standing for election were to be disendorsed fir truth stretching and downright lies, there would be no election because there would be no political aspirants who would qualify to be elected.
- There is a possibility and a very strong probability that if re-elected, the Albanese Givernment will provide over three years of social and economic desperation in Australia.
- There is a possibility and overwhelming probability that the majority of elected politicians care about ‘me first’ rather than ‘voters and country—us—first’.
Poor Old Henry feels devastated as we grasp the mantle of Australian mediocrity
It is ominous,
A creeping black shadow of catastrophe,
Of impending doom,
That the Australian voters should be so crass,
So unthinkingly short sighted,
As to return the Labor Government,
For another three years.
This first day of May
Is tinged with apprehension ,
And the knowledge that within two days,
Or three,
Our country will self-elect a regime,
Hell bent on returning this place
To an almost neanderthal existence.
Those who decry our mining,
Our manufacturing,
Our extraction and sale of resources,
Who envy the initiative
Of those doing well,
Will clap their hands in glee,
As our country collapses.
And becomes a ‘minor’ on the world stage.
Anti coal,
Anti gas,
Anti uranium and nuclear power,
Anti livestock export,
Anti salmon farming,
Anti agicultural land preservation,
Anti Christmas, Easter, Australia Day, Anzac Day, and so much more.
Once a magestic country,
Australia,
Is now a sad joke.
Cockatoo at breakfast

The ides of May frighten Poor Old Henry
I am a retired old man – a very, very old man.
My time is past and all I can do is to look back on what was, feel concerned about what is, and consider the future with ever growing apprehension and fear.
Poor Old Henry shares a white elephant


So Often Down
So often
So very often
Melancholy invades my thinking
Eating insidiously into my soul
Making me feel so empty
Isolated and spiritual destitution.
The blue sky
The sun shining through clouds
Are ever more
Isolated and briefer
Than once was the occasion
Penumbric realities vicelike grip Is my master.
The vibrancy of life
That was once mine
Has fled into the nether regions
Of Henry’s history
The tautness of life has slackened
Becoming a faded replica
Of what was once
A fulsome life.
The midday of life
Has slipped to the west
The lengthening shadows
The gathering darkness
Is coming ever closer
To extinguish my mortality.
Election prediction from Poor Old Henry


Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.
Labor offices are not immune from the action of protesters


Poor Old Henry is appalled at this wanton vandalism done to Opposition Leader Peter Dutton’s office.





Who in this world is the only person who can dismiss a bevy of authors developing major climate reports, discounting and reducing their work to naught?
Donald Trump.
The NT had it, had it stripped and it has yet to be restored
The Northern Territory Voluntary Euthanasia Bill of 1997 was one of the most enlightened and visionary pieces of legislation ever passed by our Assembly. It’s overturning in the Federal Parliament by the Kevin Andrews/Tony Bourke bill was both callous and cruelly indifferent. For the federal parliament to pass this bill of recission was a denial of Territory rights.
Over time a significant number of people with terminal illnesses have been robbed of natural justice. Many have been forced to endure untoward suffering in their final weeks and months of life.
Interestingly, Victoria and now New South Wales are moving in the direction of their own state legislation that embraces euthanasia.
It is to be hoped that the David Littlejohn initiative to allow the Territory to re-engage on the issue is successful. Should that be the case, I would hope that a bill encompassing euthanasia would be re-introduced into the Northern Territory parliament and passed. That would reinstate an entitlement savagely stripped away by Canberra 21 years ago
It is still a right to still be restored
“At the risk of repeating myself – but it is important” says Poor Old Henry
With each passing day, I feel more and more that war in our region is just over the horizon. The lead editorial in “The Australian” (Xi puts regional peace in Xi dire straits over Taiwan” 8/8/22) points toward a catastrophic situation happening within the next 18 months. “It is almost certain … that the Xi communist dictatorship has advanced its timeline for reunification from perhaps later this decade to maybe as little as 18 months.”
I can sense that within a very short period of time after the conflict starts between China and Taiwan, America will come in on the side of Taiwan. That maybe just with weapons support, but more probably with air and sea engagement on behalf of Taiwan. Australia will dutifully move with America, and could well attract retaliation. First it will be by economic embargo and then physical response in the form of missile, rocket and drone retaliation. For Darwin and Cairns, it could be a case of revisitation to the second world war takeout of these cities of the north, during those months in 1942 by Japan.
I may be accused of pessimistic imagination, but my concerns are real. It is not hard to imagine our northern cities and towns, thousands of kilometres closer to China than our southern counterparts, being decimated as China pressures the Australian government to demur from the threat of even more drastic action by the Land of the Panda.
Regardless of pros and cons, there is a certain irony about what is likely to transpire in nearing future: Taiwan, under the ‘One China Policy’ is not recognised by either America or Australia, nor for that matter by very many countries and governments. In the broadest sense, if China takes physical action against Taiwan, under the terms of the policy of recognition, the action would be tantamount to civil war.
Those close to the heart of action within the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) refer to Taiwan as the “Treasure Island of our Motherland”. It will not be long before they CCP goes all out for what’s they define as reunification through a process which, more and more likely, will engulf Australia.
As Australians, we will certainly be involved in any response to Western action from China. As Northern Territorians, we will be more vulnerable to retaliation than our southern counterparts. We have every reason to be concerned about the unfolding months ahead
Cut out housing entitlements for police in Darwin – NO WAY says Poor Old Henry
There is NO WAY the CLP government should withdraw government housing for police officers in Darwin. Provision or subsidisation of housing entitlements should stay in place.
There are it seems, fewer and fewer benefits available to police. The need for police officers is at breaking point and if this entitlement disappears, this added to other disincentives, could well see a continuing exodus of police to other destinations.
I am horrified that there should be any thought of offering even less by way of benefits to what our police receive.
The lack of police force members is already impacting the length of time it takes for officers to attend callouts, follow up on ever-increasing numbers of assaults, attend domestic violence issues, respond to robberies and break-ins and allow full complements of staff to operate police stations.
The lack of policing resources is the reason the Njghtcliff Station remains closed.
Please, Chief Minister, don’t for one second longer, entertain this action.
Who has developed and implemented policies that have introduced peace, quiet and tranquillity into port cities once flat out with import and export traffic 24/7?
Donald Trump.
The Australian Election – Metaphorically speaking
The upcoming Federal Election is a bit like the 1912 ‘Titanic and the Iceberg incident.
There are two contenders in the 2025 election, PM Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.
Whoever loses will sink, just like the Titanic when it hit the iceberg all those years ago.
Who will be what?
Poor Old Henry – along with all other voting Territorians – is front and centre at election time
Pamphlet here
Handouts there
Political aspirants are everywhere
Through the post
Ads on TV
Through radio waves
Reach out to me
Will abruptly cease
Last third of May.
It’s over then
Election Day.

Who always speaks with incisiveness and cut through clarity?
Donald Trump.
Who, in 100 years from now, will be the most remembered world leader?
Donald Trump.
Who seemed to be the most recognised person attending the funeral for Pope Francis?
Donald Trump.
Although human, whose presence and aura makes him almost godlike?
Donald Trump.
Who never travels by road without a cavalcade of twenty large black vehicles as part of the entourage?
Donald Trump.
Whose plumage is best known to billions of people worldwide?
The distinctive hair of Donald Trump.
Today’s delivery to Early Learning Centre in Leanyer
Black bags contain an assortment of boxes

Supporting Early Learning Centres
The Poor Old Henry way
Childcare and Early Learning Centre support is critically important for parents and their children. While essential, an aspect of care is that of cost. While the Federal Government is seemingly offering more financial support to parents and centres, considerable costs for materials are incurred.
We support our local centre in a way that helps with defraying some of these costs. Supporting our local centre also offers a sense of satisfaction.
What we save and take to the centre includes the following.
- Large, clean paper bags that are split open and used for artwork.
- Plastic shopping bags in which items of clothing are sent home.
- Large bottle tops – milk bottle size – used for craft and collage construction.
- Small and medium-sized boxes – up to shoe box side – used for construction and play.
- Old magazines for picture cutouts.
- Old newspaper which covers tables during art and craft construction times.
We are happy to save and share these materials and I am suggesting others might support their early learning centres in the same way.
Twenty years and still sitting
Shifted from the RAAF Base at Eaton in Darwin by a company
They were to be sold.
Most still sit.
Will they be there until 2050 or beyond.


