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One Perfect Day

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I guess everyone has days like this from time to time. Utterly perfect days, when everything falls into place, where expectation meets denouement, and everyone involved walks away a winner. Clearly, I am not talking about politics in this country. It is something a lot more important.

As readers of The Australian will know, I was diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2016 and after a series of cowardly attempts at avoiding surgery, I was left with no alternative. The knife beckoned.

In layman’s terms, my bladder, prostate gland and a foot or two of urethra were hacked out and casually hurled into a cytotoxic bin before being incinerated at 1500 degrees centigrade. Wafer-thin slices of my pelvic lymph nodes were sent off for pathology to determine if the cancer had or might spread to what remained of me.

The old bladder has been replaced with a brand, spanking new bladder which is not really a bladder at all. Rather, it is a piece of bowel that is suffering a deep existential crisis but if everything went swimmingly, the new kid on the renal block would develop a rock-solid five schooner capacity.

In the bland words of my medical report, the word swimmingly made no appearance. My recovery was compromised by hypotension (low blood pressure), hypothyroidism (brought on by failed earlier attempts at immunotherapy) and one or two problems with the surgical wound that had to be corrected with another bout of surgery.

I aspirated into my lungs during the first surgery, which led to a bout of pneumonia. Post-surgery, the nurses could no longer find a vein that would pump nutrients and antibiotics into my body, so a PICC (peripherally inserted central catheter) line was installed by angioplasty.

In the early morning the day after the major surgery, I roused from a gentle opioid slumber to find at least two dozen nurses and doctors standing around me with brows furrowed, looking deeply concerned. It is the way of near-death experiences that the near-expiree is always the last to know.

My blood pressure had plummeted. I drifted in and out of consciousness for the remainder of the morning while they pumped my body with 17 litres of fluid. It worked, although the following day I turned into the Michelin Man. My hands looked like I was sporting a pair of flesh-coloured wicketkeeping gloves and, peering underneath the blankets, my scrotum had become elephantine in both structure and size.

I underwent what is politely called nasogastric intubation. Of the many indignities and outrages my body was subject to, this was by far the most unpleasant. My bowels had temporarily packed it in and the tube would enable the nurses to pump out the awful green, bilious contents that had backed up into my stomach. I was conscious throughout as what felt like seven feet of garden hose was thrust up my left nostril. The doctor urged me to swallow and keep swallowing while the tube went past my throat and into my stomach.

At the time, the thought occurred that death would have been preferable, but once the tube was in place, there was no discomfort. I merely felt like a horse with a bad dose of colic.

Those undergoing any form of renal surgery will awake to find themselves attached to various tubes, bags and drains. Often a patient might have one or perhaps two. In my case it was four.

In the two weeks post-surgery, this led to a baffling assortment of bendy hoses leading to drains attached to my hospital bed. At the beginning of their shifts, the nurses would examine all of these and ensure they understood where each tube led. They would then carefully record how much had come out. It was only a matter of time before the tubes looked like the tangle of phone chargers and electrical cords that run out of the power boards behind the telly in most suburban homes. If I wanted to go for a walk around the ward it required the kind of logistics planning normally associated with a polar expedition.

I’m sure endocrinologists would not want me to make light of hypothyroidism, but it led to some amusing encounters and generally lifted my popularity in the ward from just another boring patient to somewhere between multimedia celebrity and sideshow freak.

Within a day or so of surgery, the first of the unscheduled visitors started arriving, pulling back the curtains theatrically as they might when viewing the Bearded Lady or Lobster Boy at P.T. Barnum’s.

They were second-year medical students. They showed little or no curiosity about the tubes and drains hanging out of me, but my neck was of particular interest. It transpires the endocrine system and how and why it goes awry forms a major part of the second-year medical syllabus. And there I was, effectively a rare, captive example of endocrinal dysfunction, available for poking and prodding at will. Roll up, roll up.

By my third week in hospital I had received 40 or so medical students all prodding about my neck and asking a bunch of questions.

There was nothing quite like these visits for kicking in the Joseph Merrick syndrome and I wondered if, after they got home, some of the students would start off the dinner table conversation with a comment like: “You should have seen the misshapen bloke we clocked today.”

I was nil-by-mouth for nine days. I dropped 20 kilos. The expected stay of 10 days became 23.

These and other sundry adventures took place in the surgical high dependency unit at Sydney’s Westmead Hospital – one step down in seriousness from intensive care. It’s an odd sort of ward nomenclature and I suspect health bureaucrats were briefly infiltrated by bean-counters from corrective services when they came up with it. The nurses were wonderfully attentive and endlessly patient; the docs coolly efficient.

For all the fun I had at Westmead by the end of May it was time go. As I gingerly left hospital (with a couple of tubes still attached to me), I still did not know if all of this had been for bugger all. I’d asked the doctors on numerous occasions and got equivocal answers. In fairness, they are urologists and were fixated on the success of the installation of the neo-bladder.

I found out on that glorious Thursday last week. Lymph nodes negative. The only cancer they found were on the bits of me that had already been cut out. It is not quite remission but I am cancer-free. Even that little confused bladder of mine has begun pulling its weight and ahead of schedule.

This is all wonderful, of course – but as happy as I am, I’m struggling to comprehend it.

You see, over the past three years, while others would plan overseas holidays, retirements in sunny climes or the pursuit of new adventures and opportunities, I would lay awake in bed at night planning my funeral. That’s how cancer works. It is a constant reminder of one’s own mortality, like a grim shadow, a cartoon cloud that sits above pelting rain and lightning bolts down while all else around is blue skies and sunshine.

I got so used to it that I’m not quite sure what to do now – but I’ll figure something out.

This article was first published in The Australian on 20 June 2018.

729 Comments

  • Dismayed says:

    We see the command and control cons have been exposed the real nature of the Ramsay Foundation’s commitment to free speech and inquiry: as part of the deal, the centre wanted to not only have control over hiring and firing, but also plant operatives in the lectures, to scrutinise staff performance, watching out for thought crimes

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Thoughtcrimes? Huh ….. I must say Dismayed, you regularly display an idiosyncratic disposition yourself in many of your offerings on here. You a fully paid up member of Ingsoc mate?

  • Dismayed says:

    Did anyone else notice that Huawei were the biggest sponsor of politicians travel the biggest users of the travel were the conservative coalition.

  • Perentie says:

    Well, the World Cup is over for Australia. When it came to the crunch nobody put their hand up. I’m not criticising the Australian players, it’s the Peru defenders that less us down. The needed to put their hands up and give away penalties as that’s the only way we’re likely to score goals.

  • Boadicea says:

    Trying to operate a business in this country must be a nightmare. How on earth would a business be able to plan for the future? The outlook changes every five minutes.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Utter nonsense. This has to be the easiest country in the world to establish and operate a business and make money.
      What we do have is a lot of privileged whingers with a sense of entitlement who wouldn’t know what hard work was if it bit them on the arse.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        What business are you in JB, flogging fairy stories?

      • JackSprat says:

        Ever tried to start one JB?
        The number of permits, Government departments, council regulations etc takes years.
        Of course, that is assuming one is starting a business other than making coffee.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          I’ve had several. All successful. Still run a couple.
          Everyone is in the same boat, you just have to be better at it. And no, it’s not hard, if you don’t like work, don’t go into business. That’s what competition is all about isn’t it ? Stop whingeing.

          • Milton says:

            Trust you to turn a paper run and some leaflet distributions into a healthy profit, you running dog lackey of capitalist imperialist oppressors!

        • Penny says:

          JB is right, Australia is one of the easiest countries to start a business. Try starting a business in France and England to give two examples…..the issue is though that too many people think it’s easy to make the business successful. Running a restaurant/cafe/hotel is particularly hard JS, I’m seeing these businesses closed in most country towns we’ve visited lately, it’s quite depressing.

          • JackSprat says:

            I think it depends on the type of business Penny.
            A tradie setting up a company and basically working from home is totally different from somebody who wants to make widgets.
            I did hear from a totally unreliable source that most of the owners of small businesses in Australia work for nothing.
            Small rural towns are doing it tough for many reasons – large agribusinesses being one and the terrible prices that framers get for their products being another.
            In Mona Vale there used to be one very good Japanese Restaurant . It still exists along with 3 sushi trains, 2 other little hole in the walls. The competition must be murderous.
            If there is a downturn in the economy, Sydney will look like the rural towns that you mentioned.
            By the way, the rent on some of these places is murderous – we have had a hamburger place for years in the little village shopping center. The owner, a single Mum was told my the owner that, if she did not tart up the shop, the lease would not be renewed. She had to mortgage her house.
            Yes – the restaurant/food business is tough.

            • Dismayed says:

              JS the stats from ABS and Treasury tell a very different story to yours. Australia is in the top 10 for ease of starting a business. The stats show an exit rate after 12 months of about 19% so about 81% are still operating after 12 months. The food service industry is one of the more successful. Female small business owners make up around 35% of new small businesses. Just the facts man simply facts.

        • Boadicea says:

          Exactly JS. Obviously has never had to do a cashflow forecast!

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Wrong! As usual.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            I feel as if I have been bit mean and unsympathetic in this exchange Boadicea.
            By way of apology may I just say I fully understand why your good self, JS and COTC would struggle with a spreadsheet, BAS and simple formal applications.

            • JackSprat says:

              Bit of info JB, the companies I have worked for could not be run on a spread sheet.
              Spreadsheets are good for household expenses and not much more – oh and for itsy bitsy companies that have a few transactions a month..

            • Boadicea says:

              I was the financial manager of one of Melbournes largest architectural firms, JB. Hige job. We’re talking large institutional buildings. Not residential stuff.
              Trust me I know more about huge spreadsheets and tax issues than you’ll ever know.
              Now go away. I’m really not interested in your assumption that I am an idiot. Go chat to your little mate here.

              • Jean Baptiste says:

                So you say. Australian companies seem to be doing just fine.
                Maybe it was just a nightmare for you.

    • Dwight says:

      Sovereign risk has become very real. It means short term planning overrules the long term.

    • Gryzly says:

      They need to buy my soon to be released(?) book.

  • Milton says:

    No cigar. Outclassed. No one really backed themselves in front of goal. Now i’m hoping for a lotta good football and the poms getting close and then having the rug pulled out from them!!
    My tips from what I’ve seen would be Uruguay and Mexico and Belgium (depending how they go against the poms). And Argentina still have a chance of getting into the next round. So if you’re in need of some coin back against those tips.
    Finally, Foz is making some fair points and i’m not happy that Cahill (even at 38) did not get a run against Denmark.
    And aren’t the Icelander’s a good looking race (both male and female). Most model material. No doubt I’ve got a bit of them in my dna!
    .

    • Bella says:

      Icelanders have just resumed their illegal hunt for 191 endangered finback whales so that makes them very ugly Milton. Iceland was ordered by the IWC to cease their barbaric operations & for the past two years they all did however one company has already killed two ‘protected’ whales in one week. Shame on Iceland.
      https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/apr/18/iceland-sets-target-of-191-kills-as-country-resumes-whaling

      • Milton says:

        Beautiful on the outside and evil and ugly on the inside? Thanks for warning me, Bella it’s one of the devil’s oldest tricks.

      • Wissendorf says:

        The annual slaughter fest in Canada has just ended (May 15). It’s no longer possible for protestors to approach or enter the hunting grounds. Canada no longer release figures for the hunt, nor expected income from sale of skins. I’m not sure anyone buys the skins any more. The Japanese have warehouses packed with some 700 tonnes of unwanted whale meat; I’m sure a good investigation would reveal storehouses of unsaleable skins in Canada. I have many Canadian friends and they are ashamed and appalled that their government doesn’t have the balls to ban it. Sadly, the rest of the world seem to have given up trying to end this – doesn’t make the news any more.

        Protest in Toronto 2018 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k23zrfv49H8

        Graphic footage from last year. https://www.thedodo.com/canada-seal-hunt-2333758471.html No footage this year as protestors are now banned from Newfoundland and they switch the dates and places for the open season to make it harder for protestors.

        • Bella says:

          Thank-you for the post Wissendorf & yes you’re right, our protesters have had their lives threatened many times over the years, trying to intervene to stop those soulless bastards from clubbing pups for their fur. As one of the first Greenpeace activists, Paul Watson & two other men physically put themselves on the ice every year, stood between the killers and their victims before being bashed & arrested by complicit authorities.
          Before Trudeau became PM discussions between himself & Watson led Sea Shepherd to believe he was dead against the hunt & would end the cruelty once in office. It always stuns me how easily convictions can be sold-out, just look at Turncoat & the SO Japanese poachers he turns a blind eye to.
          To be honest with you, I couldn’t watch your links mate coz I’ve seen it & it just does my head in to see human beings savaging six month old babies while their mothers vainly fight back & scream for their pups. Humans are despicable.

    • voltaire says:

      Strikers (typically 9 & 10) need to be very skilful and possess an instict for goal: we don’t really have any of the requisite class, so it was always going to be tough. These guys have to be able to beat the opposition at least one on one most of the time – so togehter with a playmaker (Mooy for us) need to be the best players….

      We had no defence for this level – & Marwik worked wonders to convert what leaked like a sieve at the Asain qualification level.

      Our tema played very well indeed given what we had to work with.

      You don’t start with Cahill because he is 38, not playing regularly andyou are limited to 3 substitutes: what dodo to cover injuries? He won’t last a full game at this level and is ideally suited to playing behind the striker – typoically making a run to come in and head a goal.

      Marwik won the tactical battles but lost the war: no surprise when you consider the transfer values or wages of the opposition.

      Frankly the criticism of Marwik is misplaced: talk to experts including the players who were impressed by him (disclosure my nephew is a professional soccer coach and captained an Oz indoor team)….I have been a keen armchair analyst (and was a poor player lacking pretty much al of the qualities needed to be any good – except for conceptual vision – just couldn’t produce …)..

      cheers

      • Milton says:

        My only complaint with Marwik is him not putting Cahill on in the last 15mins against Denmark. I agree with the rest of the analysis. In fact I thought we looked pretty good. We even ended up in the same spot as the Germans! If we think we’ve got the blues(and we have up here in God’s country) imagine the disbelief in Germany.
        Some interesting games coming up.

        • JackSprat says:

          Milt, you seem to know football well – do you have any thoughts on this.

          Considering the amount of brain damage that is done to senior players heading the ball, I often wonder why it is not banned in the juniors.

          Watching a 7 year old head a ball fills me with despair – especially when a bright little kid a few doors up keeps doing it.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Yairs JackSprat, you’re asking the right person. Thanks for the clue. I reckon Milton must have training for soccer by heading a medicine ball from the time he was five years old.

          • Milton says:

            Sorry mate i can’t help you with that.

          • Trivalve says:

            At least they don’t still play with the leather lead-weights that we used to back in the day. If it rained…jeez.

            Btw, I started in the under-8s for what was a brand new club in NW Sydney which had stripes of Essendon-like colours and which quickly became known as the Redbacks. There wasn’t much quality about us but I’m pleased to see that in later years it has produced Aaron Mooy. Go Redbacks!

          • Boadicea says:

            Good point, JS

  • Milton says:

    Fancy Bill Shorten negotiating his union employees away from the award rate of $50 p/h and onto $18 p/h ?! Old Beaconsfield Bill, the workers champ. I wonder where the rest of the money went? No wonder people are keen for penalty rates if the unions orchestrate that sort of deal. No surprises.

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Shorten a bloody shocker alright Milton, a disgrace imho . Cheers

      • Trivalve says:

        And h it is too!

        • Penny says:

          h isn’t in Henry’s vocabulary TV. If it was he wouldn’t keep assuming we all walk around with our heads in the sand and that we need him to tell us every little thing that is going on in the world. Nor does it ever occur to him that it annoys the hell out of a few of us…..even Gryzly has pulled him up about it and that’s saying something

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Sorry to say it Penny but you’ve got Henry all wrong.
            Henry doesn’t assume we have our heads in the sand and he is fully aware that he annoys the hell out of a lot of you.

            raison d’etre, my dear Penny raison d’etre.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Au contraire my dear, Henry is fully aware that he annoys the hell out of a few of you and it is his raison d’etre. It brings him joy and satisfies a deeply seated impulse for revenge.

            Undoubtedly, if we accept Fyodor Jublowskis premise, and I can think of no better example than Henry to reinforce it, “the child who is forced to sit in the corner wearing a dunces hat regularly in his early school years will almost inevitably become a habitually capricious irritant to society and will imagine that a more advanced and welcoming society exists elsewhere.”

            Cut Henry a bit of slack.

          • Boadicea says:

            HB is being himself, Penny. He is not slagging people off or demeaning them. Jovial and harmless and often quite funny. He takes nasty comments well and with good humour.
            If they bore you don’t read them. Which is the advice you dished out here once but seem to have forgotten.

          • Carl on the Coast says:

            ” …… we all walk around with our heads in the sand ….. ” ??

            Count me out Penny.

      • Milton says:

        And the master tactician , with a few elections coming up, declares that he will overturn tax cuts. Rudd was bad enough with taxpayers money, imagine what Shorten would do with it. Perhaps a roll out of Marx, Mao and Stalin statues for every town square?

        • Bella says:

          At least he knows what the battlers need.
          When asked, Turncoat didn’t even know the price of milk. Words fail me.

          • Martha says:

            Bella sweetie how would Bill know what the battlers need? He’s a private school educated lad. Father a Union official and mummy a lawyer! He was for a long time part of the Melbourne establishment. Come now dear. One rant about a cold pie does not a summer make.

          • Carl on the Coast says:

            Some people dont even know the price of water Bella. What is the price of milk btw?

          • Dismayed says:

            Bella the PM had to seek advice from his department on the median income when questioned he returned to the dispatch box with the answer. $53K. those on $53K will get about a $200 a year from the tax cuts those on over $180K will get over $7000. 80% of Australians earn less than $80K per year. close to 4 million working Australians earn around $37K or less. They get nothing from the tax cuts. Oh I should remind all the tax cuts are Unfunded. so that $150 billion will come from cuts to health and Education and the poorest students who have to pay more while the wealthier students get to pay less. this is the conservative way. Worst government in Nations history. No FN surprises.

        • Dismayed says:

          Have you missed the over $200 billion of Tax cuts your cons are putting into the budget. you are some sort of delusional Milton. Or the fact your cons have spent at 25.5% of GDP for the last 5 years. the former Labor government averaged 24% over the 6 years including the stimulus budget. You cant handle facts can you. You like most cons live on misinformation and disdain for anyone who dare utter the truth. It really is time you got out of the echo chamber you preside in.

    • Bella says:

      Wow Milt you so talented at conservatism, the best.
      Trying to depict unions & Shorten as the ultimate evil in our society makes me want to live in your bubble coz it must be heaven to have no concern for the lowest paid, working their guts out to eke $40G a year or the other victims of a Liealot government, the vast pool of unemployed who get a $300 a week below the poverty line allowance, not to mention the homeless coz hell, your government never does.

      A politicians daily accommodation ‘entitlement’ exceeds a week’s subsisting on the dole, but your Fibs say they can’t afford ANY increases for millions of people on the lowest rung.
      This is disgusting & a perfect example of why your Fibs loathe and target unions mate coz those individuals & familes do not matter in their schemes & they hate that unions can & do fight all the time for fair wages & conditions.

      Say what you will about Shorten, but do spare a thought for Alan Joyce, one of the Fib’s corporate mates, struggling along on a little shy of $25M last year whilst his employees still receive the average wage.
      If Turdball & co want workers to believe their spiel on trickle-down then they must give decent wage rises now as a show of good faith.
      I won’t hold my breath.

      • Dismayed says:

        Hear Hear Bella Hear Hear. so let get it straight Milton and the other cons here don’t Shorten like because he helped their businesses save money on wages, he helped the workers secure better conditions and rates that they agreed to. Which is it because he dudded employees and helped business or the other way around. the conservative coalition are the worst government in this Nations history.

    • Trivalve says:

      Please explain. What was it that Shorten did at Beaconsfield that so grates on you Milton?

      • Dwight says:

        Never quite figured out why he was there, except to appear on Sunrise daily.

      • Boadicea says:

        It seems to be the general opinion that Shorten used Beaconsfield to get himself into the limelight, Triv and further his political ambitions.
        The joke going around at the time was that the biggest hazard at the site was to get between Bill and a TV camera!

        PS: JTI some of my posts seem to disappear into the ether. Ones from smartphone seem okay but from Windows laptop may be a problem? Might be an issue with Internet Explorer. Will see if this one works!

        • Jack The Insider says:

          This definitely did. Not sure about the vanishing ones. Every comment I’ve seen from you has been posted.

        • Dismayed says:

          ” General Opinion General Opinion” ? they are the worst Generals of all you know. (to borrow a line from Midnight Oil.) What a ridiculous comment. Where did you get this pearl of information from? Oh wait that’s right the local conservative knitting circle. the cons continue to prove just how nasty they are. all the cons have are personal attacks on a bloke for showing up at a worksite accident or for having lunch with a wealthy bloke. Nobody hates like the hate filled cons. No surprises.

          • Boadicea says:

            Nobody hates like the hate-filled cons, ay?
            Care to have a think about that comment?
            You are the most hate-filled person on this blog .
            Does that mean you are a con then?
            Another one for your loonies board, HB

  • Milton says:

    Oh dear! All the possession and we go into half time down 1-0. Our build up is fine but our execution has a bit of the Gary Gilmore about it. Still hoping for miracle! My thought from the armchair concerns the Tim Cahill. Most people, myself included, would have favoured/expected him going on in the last 20 mins of each match. Looking at the way we started this match, putting him on for the first 30mins could have been a go. Anywho, i’m not paid the big bucks for some reason, and we are still in it at 1/2 time, though it’s 0-0 in the other game.

  • Dwight says:

    Jack, you on the wagon right now?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      It’s not laid down by the docs. I can have a drink (nothing after 9.00pm for the new bladder’s sake), I just haven’t yet. To be honest I haven’t missed it much either.

      • Bella says:

        Sounds to me like your body’s recharging well without it mate so maybe you could, as you say, not miss it for a while longer……just saying. 🤗

  • Dismayed says:

    Wholesale electricity prices in QLD have this week numerous times dropped below Zero. Because of Renewables, namely large scale and domestic Solar. You cons can put that in your pipe and smoke it. The same thing has been happening in SA for the last couple of years Due to renewables. Well done Mr Weatherill. the Liberal idiot just elected has caused the solar and wind industries to literally come to a stand still, fall off a cliff would be more apt the future spending intentions by business has literally gone straight down vertically due to the idiots refusing to let industry know what it will do. the SA Liberal government still favors using $200 million of taxpayer money to subsidise those who already have Solar panels and provide them with batteries. the Market and industry thanks to SA Jay Weatherill still wants to put $ hundreds of Millions of dollars up to provide the poorest in the community with Panels and batteries to create a huge virtual power plant. Which will send prices even lower. SA JAY left the state with the equal lowest unemployment rate in the Nation the Budget in surplus and had paid down debt and undertaken a massive infrastructure spend SA has the 3rdlowest Energy bills and has been a net exporter of Energy for the last 5 years. Just watch this Marshall idiot blow it. It is already happening. No surprises.

    • Bella says:

      Jay Weatherill was a forward thinking leader mate & a highly respected one by those who believe clean energy is our future if we want to reduce emissions. The Fibs don’t want that.
      God knows there’s no LibNat in the country that’d be game to stand up for our grandchildren.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Yes, yes Dismayed, that’s all very well but did the rich get richer and the poor get poorer? If that was not the case then the man has gone against the natural order of things doncha know?
      Fella should have been horsewhipped on top of a good flogging from the press.

      • Dismayed says:

        JB he did actually manage to maintain the status quo in that regard. you cannot hold onto government in SA without looking after the old money set in the Eastern suburbs. But he did try to do the right thing by the state not just the old money cons.

    • JackSprat says:

      Any truth in the rumour that at 1:45 pm today, the wind stopped in Tas and SA and the was not much in Vic.
      Qld coal fired power stations to the rescue.
      Electricity generation is about reliability – something you seem to forget time and time again.
      Oh, and at that time prices went through the roof.

      • Dismayed says:

        No. Fossil fuel generators broke down 52 times last summer. Wholesale Elec. price in QLD have dropped below $0 numerous times this week Due to Renewables. It was the big battery that SA Jay Weatherill had installed that kept the NEM going last year. Seriously Js do you go to the Dr for the latest information and technology or stick with the lady reading tea leaves down the road. you are out of touch, and refuse to accept FACTS.

        • JackSprat says:

          You either cannot read or you have nill comprehension unless it is spelled out in one syllable words. I suspect both plus some form of mental problem.
          The wind stopped at that particular time and the only thing that saved the east coast grid was the coal fired QLD fire stations.
          The message: being totally reliant on renewables is particularly dangerous if you want continuous supply.
          Secondly, the reason why the coal fired stations are in a state of disrepair is that they are unprofitable.
          WHY?
          The governments of this country has decreed that renewables come first.

      • Dismayed says:

        Oh JS SA has 4 Gas Peaking powered generators that kick in for the 10% of the time during the year that SA is not exporting excess Renewable power into the NEM. You are so out of your depth your need a hooker line to breath chump.

      • Boadicea says:

        Sheesh tell you what JS, it was bloody cold here this morning. At 10.00am it was 5deg, apparent 0 !! And no wind..….

  • Dismayed says:

    Dwight my so called fringe guys as you call them managed to make us 20% over the last 12 months how are your “orthodox” neoliberals doing??

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