Saturday, 14 March 2026

Iran, not the US, currently has the strategic upper hand.

Extract from ABC News 

Analysis

By Laura Tingle

Donald Trump wearing a dark suit and red tie speaks behind a podium.

It is Iran — not the US — setting the terms of a battle, which is now not a battle over military might but of economics and messing with people's heads. (Reuters: Evan Vucci )

‘All the boys have them’: Trump’s bizarre shoe spree emerges.

 Extract from The New Daily

Stephen Colbert on Trump shoes

Source: LateNighter

US President Donald Trump has apparently been on a gifting spree for his top advisers – with some rather perplexing results.

For the past few months, Trump has been gifting senior cabinet members and political allies pairs of his favourite dress shoes, according to reports in The Wall Street Journal last week.

The shiny black lace-ups are from American brand Florsheim and reportedly cost just $US145 ($A203) a pair. According to the newspaper, Trump is – er – footing the bill himself.

“All the boys have them,” one female White House staffer told the Journal.

It’s true. Recent photos show Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff all lined up in the same shoes.

“It’s hysterical because everybody’s afraid not to wear them,” another female official said.

The hilarity comes because Trump apparently doesn’t feel the need to ask people what size shoe they wear before handing over the gift.

“He asks an aide to put in an order and, a week later, a brown Florsheim box arrives at the White House. Trump sometimes signs the box or attaches a note of gratitude, according to people familiar with the ritual,” the Journal reported.

Recent photos, however, show that Trump’s eye might be slightly off. An image of Rubio went viral this week showing him seemingly wearing loose Florsheim dress shoes with a large gap between his heel and the back of the shoe.

“Hysterical,” late night TV show host Stephen Colbert said this week.

“Just like that classic joke: Knock, knock. Who’s there? It’s the man who checks the shoes. I see you’re not wearing them. Get in the van.”

Colbert also called out other members of the administration – “or, as they’re collectively known, Trump’s wet little shoe cucks” – who had been noticeable by their footwear. He saved special mention for Vance and, particularly, Rubio – who he said looked like a kid trying on his father’s shoes “to pretend to be secretary of big boys”.

“Take a look at JD Vance and Marco Rubio’s itty bitty ankles drowning in their giant clown shoes,” Colbert said.

trump shoes

Vance, Rubio and Pete Hegseth at an Oval Office meeting with Trump in February. Photo: TND/AAP

Rubio and Vance were reportedly gifted their Florsheims back in December – after a meeting where Trump got bored.

Vance told right-wing commentator Benny Johnson that he, Trump, Rubio and another unnamed politician were discussing a serious policy issue — until Trump abruptly shifted the conversation.

“The President kind of holds up his hand and says, ‘No, no, no, hold on a second. There’s something much more important. Shoes’,” Vance said.

Trump then “peers over the Resolute Desk” and declares: “Marco, JD, you guys have s–ty shoes. We gotta get you better shoes.”

Trump then apparently asked the men in the room for their shoe sizes. Vance said one said “seven”, at which Trump apparently “leaned back in his chair”.

“You know you can tell a lot about a man by his shoe size,” he said, according to Vance.

Other American media have noted that Florsheim parent company Weyco Group is suing the US government over Trump’s tariffs. The shoes are made in China, and therefore subject to significant sales penalties in the US.

Friday, 13 March 2026

‘Beggars belief’: calls for federal intervention after extension to ‘carbon bomb’ open-cut coalmine approved by Queensland government.

Extract from The Guardian

 Hail Creek coal mine in central Queensland

Hail Creek is responsible for about 20% of Australia’s coalmine methane, while only producing 1% of the country’s coal

A proposed expansion of the Hail Creek coalmine in central Queensland, described by conservationists as a “carbon bomb”, was backed by the state’s government on Wednesday.

The mine, operated by multinational Glencore, has been approved to expand its footprint and extend its lifespan for three years, to 2038. The extension project will mine an additional 24m tonnes of coal.

The approval will allow Glencore to clear 600 hectares of koala habitat described by experts as “nationally significant”, to expand the mine west of Mackay.

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In granting the approval, the Queensland environment department deemed “the risk to the long-term conservation of biological diversity and ecological integrity” as low, and the project’s influence on the climate crisis also as “low by comparison to global emissions”.

Hail Creek is Australia’s most methane-intensive open-cut coalmine. It is responsible for about 20% of Australia’s coalmine methane, while only producing 1% of the country’s coal, according to Freja Leonard, a climate campaigner at the Australian Conservation Foundation.

“Queensland is the biggest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions nationally and the Hail Creek carbon bomb is a huge part of the problem,” she said. UN-backed research found in 2025 that the mine’s methane emissions were likely between three and eight times higher than officially reported.

“At a time while we’re seeing an escalation of climate impacts directly affecting Queensland communities, through flood risk … and unseasonal bushfire events, it just absolutely beggars belief that the Queensland government is walking back from their commitments to the climate,” Leonard said.

“We call on federal environment minister Murray Watt to reject Glencore’s proposal to make climate change even worse by expanding Hail Creek.”

The expansion has been referred to the federal government, with the environment department considering whether it will require an assessment under national environment laws.

Emeritus Prof Peter Rayner, an atmospheric physicist and chief scientist of the Superpower Institute, said: “Methane is a super-pollutant – 80 times more potent than carbon dioxide, and is responsible for a third of recent global warming.”

“Extending Hail Creek locks in significant emissions for decades to come – which are currently under-reported. This endangers pathways to net zero and hence Australia’s compliance with the Paris Agreement.”

Dr Claire Gronow, central Queensland coordinator for the Lock the Gate Alliance, said the approval “condemns Queenslanders to more climate chaos which drives up the cost of insurance, repairs and food prices”.

“The area contains nationally significant koala habitat, and we found a high density population in the footprint of Glencore’s proposed coalmine using thermal drone technology. Glencore should not be allowed to destroy wildlife refuges for their own polluting profits.”

Queensland Conservation Council campaigner Charlie Cox said: “Disappointingly, the Crisafulli government is willing to bulldoze the home of a nationally significant koala population, but the final decision now sits with federal environment minister Murray Watt.”

“Queensland communities are still mopping up after some of the worst floods on record. Approving Glencore’s Hail Creek coalmine does not help them, it makes the next disaster more severe.”

Glencore said in a statement: “Hail Creek mine continues to manage and reduce its greenhouse emissions in compliance with the national safeguard mechanism.”

It said the mine, as part of the extension project, had committed to “implementing a greenhouse gas abatement plan, undertaking a gas pre-drainage study, as well as conducting ongoing reviews of existing and emerging emission reduction technologies”.

A spokesperson for the federal department of climate change, energy, the environment and water said the extension had been “referred for consideration under national environment law. The Minister’s delegate must determine whether it is a controlled action, meaning it would require thorough assessment before a decision can be made on whether to approve the project under the EPBC Act”.

The Queensland environment department was approached for comment.

King penguins successfully changing breeding habits in face of climate change.

Extract from ABC News

By Amy Briggs

Several adorable brown furry baby penguins stand with a couple of tall black and white penguins with touches of yellow markings.

King penguins have the longest breeding cycle of any penguin species. (iNaturalist: admss, King penguin, CC-BY-NC 4.0)

In short: 

King penguins on the Crozet Islands are breeding earlier and with a higher level of success than they did 24 years ago. 

Researchers say this is likely in response to their changing environment and food availability. 

Other penguins in the region are also bringing forward their mating cycles.