Friday, April 17, 2026

This Was Never Just One Case

The first one has gone to court. That’s how it will be reported. As if it’s contained. As if it’s unusual. As if it’s something new.

It isn’t. This is just the first one that made it far enough to become inconvenient.

There are already thousands of these images circulating. Probably more. Most of them will never be traced back to anyone. Most of the people in them will never even know they exist. That’s the part no one seems to sit with for very long.

You don’t need photos anymore.
You don’t need access.
You don’t need permission.

You just need a face.

A school photo.
A social media profile.
A picture taken from ten rows back at a sports day.

That’s enough.

From there, it’s just time and intent.

William Yeates isn’t a freak (well he is a freaking pig). He’s just early. That’s what makes people uncomfortable. It would be easier if he was something extreme. Someone obviously dangerous. Someone you could point to and say — that’s the problem right there. Isn’t he hideous!! Just like Quasimodo!

But he’s not. He looks normal. A normal kid going about his business! But I hope his name keep getting tossed around! I intend to name and shame him every chance I get!

He’s exactly the kind of person these tools were always going to land in front of. Curious. Bored. Disconnected from consequence.

And surrounded by a culture that already treats women’s bodies as something to be used, shared, altered, consumed. The technology didn’t invent that. It just removed the last bit of effort.

There’s a quiet assumption that the law will catch up. It won’t. Not in any meaningful way. By the time one case makes it through court, thousands more have already occurred. This process is too slow; the tools are too easy. How the hell can you regulate something that takes minutes to produce and seconds to distribute.

You can only react to it. After the fact. When the damage is already done. And the damage is strange, because it’s easy to dismiss. It is real in every way that matters.

Reputation is real. Humiliation is real. Loss of control is real.

And the image - fake or not - will always move faster than the truth. The uncomfortable reality is that we’ve crossed a line that doesn’t reverse. Faces are no longer private. Once an image of you exists anywhere online, it can be used. Altered. Rebuilt into something else entirely.

You don’t get a say in that anymore. That part is already over.

So, this case won’t be the last. It won’t even be close. It’s just the first one that someone couldn’t laugh off, deny, or quietly delete. The first one that became visible. And once something becomes visible, people start paying attention.

Briefly.

Until the next one.

And there will be a next one. There is always a next one!

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Boys will be Boys...

Interesting to Aussies at least was that this week, William Yeates, who attended Mercedes College (Adelaide, South Australia which charges fees of up to $20,000 a year!) entered guilty pleas to four counts of the new offences - creation and distribution of deepfake images. He didn't need to touch her. That's the part they'll keep circling.

As if the absence of hands makes it cleaner. Smaller. Easier to file away.

He didn't need to touch her because someone, somewhere, decided to build a world where that step was no longer necessary. All he needed was a face. And the quiet confidence that nothing would really happen to him. After all, he went to a good school!

He has admitted to creating sexually explicit deepfakes. You can already hear the cushioning. Former. Student. Admitted. No mention yet of the girl. There rarely is.

She's not the story.

He is.

His future. His mistake. His momentary lapse in judgment. Private school matters. Let's not pretend it doesn't. It means resources. Access. Polished corridors and carefully worded emails to parents when things go wrong.

It means boys who grow up understanding systems very well - or at least how to work them, how to bend them, how to step just close enough to the line without feeling the drop.

This wasn't curiosity. It wasn't experimentation. It was control. A person reduced to pixels and arranged into something she never chose. Not because he couldn't have her - but because he didn't need to ask. That's the shift. Not desire. Entitlement.

We've spent centuries teaching boys how to succeed. How to lead. How to compete. How to dominate a room, a market, a conversation. Less time on what happens when they're alone, unobserved, and handed tools that can erase another person's autonomy in under five minutes. And now they graduate, and not just with qualifications. But with capability. This story will move quickly. It always does. There will be concern. Statements. Perhaps even consequences carefully calibrated not to ruin a promising life. Because that's the real fear, isn't it?

Not what he did. But what it might cost him.

Meanwhile, she inherits something permanent. A version of herself that can be copied, shared, reshaped. Again, and again. Endlessly available. This is what we've built. Not monsters. Something much more functional. Boys who don't need to cross a physical line anymore - because the line has been quietly removed for them.

And it sucks. Personally, I hope they throw the book at him.

But they won't...

There are thousands of deepfakes out there.

This is just the first one someone admitted to.

Just like my ex-father in law... When my drunken pig of an ex-husband cheated on me and was leaving. And here I was, with a 2 year old and 4 months pregnant with the next... 

`Boys will be Boys!` that was what he said...

It's why Secretwomen.org will come about eventually! I wrote that website 30 years ago and it's still relevant!!!! 

Kill them all I say! Well at least 70% of them!    :)

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Can I finish? lol

There’s something almost charming about a politician asking, “Can I finish?”

It sounds polite. Reasonable. Civilised, even.

Which is interesting, considering the context.

JD Vance - now very much a fixture of American politics - was recently heckled mid-speech. His response? A slightly strained, slightly irritated, “Can I finish?”

And that’s the moment everyone noticed.

Not the speech.
Not the policy.
Not even the message.

Just the interruption.

Because that’s where things are now. People aren’t quietly disagreeing anymore. They’re not waiting for Q&A. They’re not nodding politely while mentally drafting a tweet.

They’re interrupting.

Out loud.

In public.

And not in a protest-sign kind of way. More like… a fed up way. Like someone finally saying what everyone else is thinking, just without the filter.

So… You can ask, “Can I finish?”

But that assumes people still think there’s something worth finishing.

Now we watch and the fun begins…

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Deportation Thing

There’s a certain tone creeping in here again.

You hear it in the numbers they are spouting. Sixty five thousand. Not explained. Just… dropped there. Large enough to sound decisive. Vague enough that no one asks what it actually means.

Federal opposition leader Angus Taylor, says we’re going to deport that many visa overstayers. 65000…

It’s interesting how quickly people turn into numbers when it suits.

We’ve seen this before. In the US, under Donald Trump, agencies like ICE stopped sounding like government departments and started sounding like alarms.

Not laws. Not process. Just… heavy enforcement. With guns!

That tone sticks.

Australia likes to think it doesn’t do that sort of thing. We’re practical. Measured. Not dramatic. Except we already built an entire offshore detention system and told ourselves it was temporary. Necessary. Controlled.

It never is.

Deporting people at that scale isn’t a policy tweak. It’s infrastructure. It’s surveillance. Its people being processed in bulk until they stop looking like people.

Most overstayers aren’t criminals. They stayed too long. Sometimes deliberately, sometimes because life is fucking horrendous where they come from and systems are worse.

You can say they should go. Fine.

But once you start talking about them as a number to be “cleared,” something shifts. It gets easier to ignore what that actually looks like.

And it always looks worse up close.

What’s odd isn’t even the idea. It’s how normal it sounds now. No one really flinches. Big number, tough language, move on.

Same script. Different country. Just a lot quieter about it.

I don’t know about you guys, but I for one, don’t want this… If they are “overstayers” they haven’t done anything wrong; it’s not like they are going to blow up anything or shoot anyone! Why not let them stay?

I pretty much think we are all fucked anyhow. We are living “The Terminator”. Just no one with any clout has the brains to see it. We’ve given them the power to do it with AI. Hell, I use AI for a lot of stuff. The difference is I don’t have my own island to retreat to!!!

Monday, April 13, 2026

The Theatre of War — and the men who perform it

Yesterday, over lunch with two Aussie women (come to think of it they were both poms lol) we were talking and inevitably, the talk turned to the war. Now in one afternoon, we had it corrected. Putin and Trump - pair of school yard bullies. If every country is a back yard, well they should stick to their own back yard!

But no; and there’s something grotesque about watching war turned into a personality contest.

Missiles fall. Cities fracture. Families disappear into statistics. And somehow, in the middle of all that, the conversation bends - again - toward Donald Trump.

Not the people living it.
Not the cost.
Not the consequences.
Him.

Trump doesn’t talk about war the way leaders used to - with restraint, with weight, with an understanding that words can escalate as quickly as weapons.
He talks about it like a man reviewing a deal that didn’t go his way.
“It wouldn’t have happened under me.”
“I’d end it in 24 hours.”
“It’s weak leadership.”

It’s all so clean. So easy. So utterly detached from reality.

War is not a branding exercise.

It’s not something you solve with bravado, or by puffing out your chest and declaring dominance like it’s a boardroom negotiation. The idea that global conflict — layered with history, ideology, alliances, and human desperation — could be wrapped up neatly by force of personality alone isn’t just naïve.

It’s dangerous. What makes it worse is how well it lands.

There is an audience for this. A large one. People exhausted by complexity, hungry for certainty, willing to believe that chaos can be tamed by a single decisive voice. Trump understands that instinct better than most - and he feeds it relentlessly.

He doesn’t need to offer solutions.
He offers simplicity.
And in times of war, simplicity sells.
But simplicity is also how you sleepwalk into catastrophe.

Because real leadership in wartime isn’t loud. It’s careful. It’s measured. It understands that every statement carries weight, that alliances are fragile, and that miscalculation can cost lives far beyond your own borders.

Reducing all of that to slogans and self-promotion isn’t strength. It’s performance.
And yet, the performance continues.

Every statement is calibrated not for impact on the ground, but for impact in the headlines. Every claim is less about ending conflict and more about reinforcing a narrative: that only he could fix it, that everyone else is failing, that the world is simpler than it appears.

It’s a comforting lie.
Because the truth is far less satisfying.

No one ends a war in a day; or a week (ask Putin how well the ‘over in a month’ fight with the Ukraine is going!)

The tragedy isn’t just the war itself.

It’s that even now, even as it unfolds, it’s being repackaged into something smaller, something easier to consume, something that fits neatly into political identity and personal loyalty.

And in that shrinking of reality, something important is lost.

Perspective. You can support a leader. You can oppose them. That’s politics. But when war becomes just another talking point - another opportunity for self-promotion, another stage for ego - we’ve crossed into something far more corrosive.

Not just bad leadership. But a fundamental failure to recognise the gravity of what’s at stake. Because war isn’t about who looks strongest on television. It’s about who understands the cost.

And who is willing to carry it without turning it into a show.