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1d4ffjg | If someone could please destroy the televisions which play audio ads on the train platforms below that, I think we'd all call them a national hero | 1 |
1cyb6ga | The Conversation: [‘No one can act with impunity’: ICC arrest warrants in Israel-Hamas war are a major test for international justice](
> Khan has asked ICC judges to issue warrants on charges of crimes against humanity and war crimes against Yahya Sinwar (head of Hamas in Gaza), Mohammed Diab Ibrahim Al-Masri (also known as Mohammed Deif, the commander of the military wing of Hamas) and Ismail Haniyeh (head of Hamas’ political bureau, based in Qatar).
>
> They are alleged to bear responsibility for international crimes on Israeli and Palestinian territory at least since October 7 2023.
>
> Khan has also requested arrest warrants against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, again for war crimes and crimes against humanity. They are alleged to be responsible for crimes in the Gaza Strip since October 8 2023. | 0 |
1d1hwkr | They actually sell salt and vinegar chips in Germany in Turkish markets. It's popular in Turkiye and they import a lot to Germany. | 1 |
1d4h1cu | wuhhh, I've walked past that place heaps and didn't know that was the vibe in there. I always assumed it was pokies | 1 |
1d5ox26 | Thinking about queuing up for mensho? Go to hakata instead | 1 |
1d0upb1 | Did you read the OP has a place overseas where labour is cheap, they wont two fucks about rules or regulations.. | 0 |
1d3stts | Unless you are 5, you cant be serious. | 0 |
1d3cs8k | :D
all said in humour, i understand | 1 |
1d619sm | Okay then figure out how much it costs to hire an excavator to move those rocks and there's your answer | 0 |
1d28erd | Littering. | 0 |
1d2z4dt | The thing most of this place forget Mx was at its peak before the advent of the first iPhone. It was something to read on the way home.
And if you were coming into the city a handy little find to kill some time. | 1 |
1d60dm6 | I think we're better off using our military to conquer French island. Not sure how or why they got it in the first place. | 0 |
1d4ru6q | Oh shut up! You don't bite the hand that feeds you. And Australia is being fed by the American government. If Trump wins (I'm giving him a 30% shot of winning) than things are going to look really bad soon for the Labor party. | 0 |
1cq4slp | It should need funding, ironically, the only people who receive funding or care are those that have developed extreme forms of illness such as psychosis, or those that have already broken the law and are now on some kind of order to be treated as a result through the courts.
If you go to a hospital beforehand seeking help you will be turned around and be told to use the privatised system.
Want to see an actual psychologist long term for a clinical condition indefinitely? Once you hit your 10 sessions you pay entirely out of your own pocket.
It's a dimly lit road, it creates its own chaos and then ironically?
Even where the chain of causality is unbroken and the government is responsible for its own mess when a man stabs over 20 people, while there are laws to punish the doctors involved with medical negligence, at a criminal level, leading to a manslaughter charge... the knives are turned on the community as a whole instead. Ironically, the entirety of Queensland Health was aware who that person was hence the causality.
What I have learned is that the government is great at knee jerk reactions, and coming up with bad responses as a result.
But to be proactive, or even retroactive and to deal with the problem from where it stems from in the lack of interest in providing clinical care, or prosecuting those that allow for these lapses? That's a nigh on impossibility, even when the cases, and reasons for action are plonked directly in the face of governments that continue the harm...
I don't have all the answers but I have one, and it would start by holding the director of Queensland Health to account for the negligent homicide of 20 innocent people in Sydney last month and rooting out every bad practitioner that refuses to treat.
Maybe that's a tough road but at this point its what it deserves...
Those types of actions are beginning in the United States through civil action such as the actions into the wrongful death of Tony Timpa, but more widespread action needs to be taken and healthcare practitioners need to be held to account for the clusterfuck of a situation they themselves have created even if they claim the duress of not having enough funding.
On that note, not having enough funding never means:
"Blame the patient..."
But clinicians attempt to assert that repeatedly nevertheless.
"Blame the patient for turning up with a mental health complaint (or outsource it to some third party that may or may not give a fuck). | 0 |
1d605km | Dutton would be looking over his shoulder lol | 0 |
1d60dm6 | I wasn't aware we had a lack of land | 0 |
1czdql8 | Casual work suits me. I like the higher pay rate and ability to work hours that suit me and not work when that also suits me. | 1 |
1d5q1gh | Adelaide - Port Noarlunga is an mid-outer suburb, 40 minutes to the city by train. Has beach and reef right there. Reasonably cool in winter tho' | 1 |
1d1m0lw | We had a similar event ... the real estate was aware of the situation prior to us moving in and never warned us. Screams and gibberish from 5 pm to the small hours of the morning. Then this person would get up - start their car and rage at the world. Then take off and disappear for the day. Found out later it was to avoid the social workers. We contacted police to do a wealth fare check but the person would turn the lights off and refuse to answer the door. The police would just leave. We called them more than once. The Ambulance would not attend as their was reason to believe that the person was aggressive and dangerous. Long story short it took 2 years before anyone would help this person. Our health in that time deteriorated due to a lack of sleep. We were lucky to get 2 hours sleep. What worked was to get in contact with the local public mental health services.
I worry that this is the same person.. | 0 |
1d395tb | Yeahhhh me tooo i remember it i have saw them once in Highpoint but not sure right now | 1 |
1d29da3 | And what is his plan? to go around telling men not to beat there partners? then what? this just screams optics rather than having a real plan or idea on the issue | 0 |
1d06cd8 | Pubs around my area banned those all-red shoes that eshays sometimes wear now. I think it's an alright policy I've never met anyone wearing them who wasn't a fuckwit.
If you like the pubs just try some other nikes? In my experience most of them are pretty comfy. Ignore all the sad cunts, idk why everyone is so pissed off about a reformed eshay who still likes his shoes | 0 |
1ctucxt | Demoted for stating an indisputable objective fact? Basically dystopian. | 0 |
1d2kf2d | As is tradition with a midlife crisis, buy a sports car and bang a string of younger people, getting rid of each for a new one any time they don't suit you anymore. | 0 |
1d3cwsb | Headed to work now and it's really fucking dark outside. I'm listening to The Cure and Joy Division on the train in and the mood is matching the weather in a kind of awesome way though. Forgot that [A Night Like This]( had a saxophone. | 1 |
1d4o1ya | Where to study VCE:
Box Hill institute (City Campus) CAE offers VCE that might be appropriate.
There’s many TAFEs that offer VCE, or VCE with vocational major.
Also, there’s the free Adult Migrant English Program.
Edit- what was the reason why Chisholm said she couldn’t do VCE there? Have you approached other TAFEs? | 1 |
1d1ngrk | same age and similar situation to you. cost of living has been fucking me without the lube for a while now… hopefully it gets better soon otherwise i’ll be hosting a self deletion party lol | 0 |
1d5qq1n | Thank you | 1 |
1d36av0 | Probably Port Macquarie or Coffs Harbour would be best. Coffs has the Big Banana too.
The Breakwall at Nambucca is worth a look too. It’s been painted by tourists and the community. | 1 |
1cpft2l | As an Albany local - fuck this homo/transphobic piece of trash.
Unfortunately there are very conservative attitudes prevalent in the region - Rick Wilson being a hard-right federal member. In my personal experience, the liberal vote here is driven strictly by the scare campaign againt Labor in printed and Murdoch media. Liberal members are simply coasting. | 0 |
1d3rblp | I ask my local butcher if they have any free dog bones, then make bone broth with ‘em. | 1 |
1d0vfvd | In Victoria, The Great Ocean Road, along the Shipwreck Coast, is a must (and the Grampians temperate rainforest in close by so I would see that too, and pop in to see the Redwoods of the Otway Ranges). In the other direction from Melbourne, Phillip Island is worth a visit (with its fairy penguins).
A bit closer to Melbourne, Daylesford with its thermal springs, and Hanging Rock are worth a visit.
Apart from Melbourne Zoo, Werribee Zoo and Healesville Sanctuary are also great to visit.
In Melbourne itself, you have the MCG, The Botanical Gardens, National Gallery Victoria (NGV), Melbourne Museum, Immigration Museum, State Library, Melbourne Skydeck, Southbank, Queen Victoria Market, St Kilda including the foreshore, and Albert Park lake to keep you entertained. For much of this the free city circle tram will get you there (or very close by) | 1 |
1d3w59e | That needs a referendum that has no confirmed chance of passing. It may be like the voice and scaremongers will ruin its chances. | 0 |
1d3gcjq | Sounds like you have more money and time than you need. Get back to us in three months about that. | 0 |
1d64r0w | Can attest to Suitor being a great place to hire from. When I last used them they sent me a brand new suit for hire, still had its tags on. | 1 |
1d265lz | Who is your retailer? | 1 |
1cx48pw | News Corp is a mix of stupidity and hypocrisy. Fixed the headline (by a former News Corp sub-editor). | 0 |
1cs31w4 | I characterise it as blackmail because they tell labor they will only pass something if they include this, that and the other (a lot of them are huge policies and things only their party believes in), otherwise it’s never getting passed by them ever. Instead of constructively negotiating. | 0 |
1czaput | Not really. The gist of Michael West's article is what's known as the doctrine of command responsibility.
[
It comes about when senior leaders did not *order* war crimes, but they *knew or should have known* and stopped them. This applies to military leaders, of course, which is what McBride was upset about. But it applies to political leaders, too - since ultimately, in a democracy the military acts on the direction of the civilian political leadership.
Just think of it this way. Let's imagine that our intervention in Afghanistan had been a stunning success. Let's say that today - because of Australia's intervention - the country is a peaceful stable liberal democracy. Do you think the members of the government of the day would want to take the credit?
Of course. So - if you're to take the credit when things go well under your leadership, you have to be willing to take the blame when they go badly.
That's the doctrine of command responsibility. As the wikpedia article quotes,
>*The Prosecutor v.* [*Delalić*]( *et al.* ("the Čelebići case") first considered the scope of command responsibility by concluding that "had reason to know" (article 7(3)) means that a commander must have "had in his possession information of a nature, which at the least, would put him on notice of the risk of ... offences by indicating the need for additional investigation in order to ascertain whether ... crimes were committed or were about to be committed by his subordinates."
Returning to the article, a link within it,
[
notes that then-Defence Minister Stephen Smith was in 2012 made aware of allegations of war crimes publicly and within days. There is no indication that he took any measures whatsoever to investigate these claims - in fact he publicly denied them.
The Minister for Defence is in overall control of the ADF. Under the doctrine of command responsibility, Stephen Smith may be responsible for war crimes.
Anthony Albanese was a member of Cabinet at this time. Given that the war crimes allegations were aired in the media at the time, Albanese cannot claim to have been unaware of them. However, over the period of ALP government 2007-13 he held a variety of roles (including Deputy PM under Rudd), and so it would be arguable when, where or whether he could be held responsible. Nonetheless he was a member of a government where the ADF was suspected to be committing war crimes, and the government rejected action on this. | 0 |
1d25rda | Car means a lot to you, I’d go with Burnley.
Burnley has tram that will take you along swan st to the bars and restaurants that in my opinion are much nicer than bridge road. The train is at Burnley too that can take you directly to city in a few stops or to Richmond station that is a hub for trains going elsewhere. You can walk/ride along the river to the city too. The MCG and sports stadiums are along the same tram and train line out of Burnley. I know you have a car but the PT options for you and visiting friends is much better in Burnley and Swan st has more of what you are looking for in terms of nightlife. You can also easily get to south Yarra from Burnley for other restaurant and bar options.
Source: I used to live in Cremorne off swan st for 5 years. | 1 |
1d4kufy | Pickles Milkbar in Carlton North. They haven't been open that long, but they are slinging some of the best sandwiches and other snackos in the city AND owned and run by the biggest sweetheart legends in the business you could come by. (I worked with most of them previously at a different business). | 1 |
1d2gwi3 | lol. You were the clowns searching for ‘donut days.’
How’d that go. ROFL. | 0 |
1ctbnbr | He also wants to crack down on knife crime.
Which you know has been trending downwards over tiem anyway but just had a couple of high profile cases recently | 0 |
1d36av0 | It's an easy drive done it a heap with my two kids.
My method wss leave at around 4am so you're clear of Newcastle and have zero traffic issues getting out of Sydney. Also so your not tired, after an early night with the car already packed and fueled so your ready to just hit the highway. | 1 |
1d3iwgi | Appreciate it | 1 |
1d43it3 | Try Adelaide. | 1 |
1d42oma | The reality is that only time and experience will make a difference. It was idiotic for the Manager to put you in the position you were in. There are a number of other tasks within the store more suitable | 0 |
1cza07d | When my kids are here: Dinner table. We eat as a family. Rarely unless it’s a special night on the couch.
When they aren’t, mostly on the couch with my feet up watching tv. It makes me feel like a grownup making my own damn decisions | 1 |
1d1nhyk | 36M and cut. I honestly see no problem with it having been done. I find the argument between cut and uncut is a very American argument personally and I see them bickering all the time about it.
That being said:
Pros:
-Easier to keep clean
-Not overly or under sensitive
-Less chance for it to get caught on anything if I go commando
-Phismosis is not a concern for me
Cons:
-Looks dry compared to uncut
-Being middle ground on sensitivity means you can still feel negative things
-See above, then add in the textures of the wrong types of pants
-More likely that if I get sweat pimples, they can form around and even at the tip at times.
Both sides of it have their ups and downs, but most women have told me they prefer cut because the idea of peeling back the skin to find something nasty beneath it due to the persons lack of hygiene is an ever present fear. | 0 |
1d2jwgq | You're welcome.
Yes there's [apps]( you can use that will tell you if there's an airtag in your presence or if it appears one is "following you". It detects Tile trackers as well.
There are GPS trackers you can get that are not easily detectable and can be activated via SMS. They have a battery and/or external power supply and once activate they can perform a variety of functions depending on the model, such as txting you it's location every few minutes or sending you links to online tracking. An Aldi PAYG sim would probably be adequate, just make sure it has a decent battery. | 1 |
1d4msj1 | Yeah bud, it's right there on the little house. It's a similar colour so it kinda blends in. Zooming in helps | 1 |
1cx2znc | Should I be surprised it's a month old noun-noun-number account that's pushing for the shortsighted xenophobic solution?
We saw in COVID what happens when immigration suddenly drops. Cafes can't open, farmers can't get workers, jobs nobody wants like aged care struggle.
And that's just the low-skill immigrant jobs. How are we going to hit out targets for trained nurses, trained teachers, etc? Our immigration visas are already set up to only let on people who will benefit the economy. Visas are easier if they live in rural towns which have too many houses and not enough workers, etc etc. | 0 |
1d3y5ip | Sports bar @ Crown pretty sure | 1 |
1ctsmdx | Dutton blaming immigrants for life’s problems is as predictable as day becoming night. He has no policy nous, no vision for Australia and this Budget reply shows this: populist nonsense that STILL doesn’t address the structural problems with our housing market. | 0 |
1d2zss0 | Ah, I didn't know that's what it was referring to. Thanks for the info! | 1 |
1d4tlv6 | The ignorance of this comment. | 0 |
1cxmdye | Thank fuck the court/board over-turned th we attempt by the UFU to be completely in charge of who gets to join Fire Rescue Victoria. Since when was the union solely in charge of that on a legal basis. Imagine the jobs for mates bullshit that would’ve gone on with that.
The UFU is a worse version of the CMFEU. And that’s saying something. | 0 |
1d4rhnw | >It is probable now that Australia, for at least this century, will live under the reigns of Charles III, William V and George VII with a second referendum most unlikely.
Cringe and not based. I can understand the monarchist position in principle, but this simping for born to rule British aristocrats, is beyond me.
To save others time, the reason why it doesn't matter, according to the article, is that the monarchist movement is lead by political geniuses who will outwit republicans at every turn. | 0 |
1cyk40i | “not fiscally sustainable in the long term”.
Of course it’s not.
The author praises the Covid stimulus and then ignores the follow up inflation from that and the interest rate rises to deal with it, - which just squeezed the middle class. | 0 |
1d0wqfz | I think we already know the answer to that.
Especially considering how tone deaf the LNP are to the electorate. | 0 |
1d64uxd | I’d honestly just laugh if someone said that to me seriously. | 0 |
1d60iqa | Yeah that’s part of what has alarmed me to the way and how of fish | 0 |
1d4k42f | That's common in all the cities I've been in , give way to pedestrians. Never seen a blinking orange arrow. | 1 |
1d5al5g | Registry Office and then find a nice restaurant in the CBD for a small function. | 1 |
1cpr67f | How would you like it if the government said one day. We are banning the job you are doing and we won't compensate you. Horrific? More like unpleasant but humans are at the top of the food chain not sheep. | 0 |
1d0a204 | SPC used to make them many years ago. I found them problematic as they had a weird mold spore that survived the canning process and regenerated after opening the cans. | 0 |
1d395tb | Oh really thank you so much im going to buy it w amazon right now | 1 |
1d2y8wr | **PAYWALL:**
Plumbers, bricklayers, cabinetmakers and other tradespeople needed to tackle Australia’s housing crisis have not yet made the cut on the federal government’s list of core occupations for its new skills-in-demand visa, despite pleas from the construction industry to make it easier to recruit from overseas.
As part of the government’s December 2023 migration strategy, which aims to halve net migration from 510,000 within two years, Jobs and Skills Australia has been asked to categorise occupations that will be eligible for the “core skills occupations list”.
Under the current draft, tradespeople including bricklayers, painters, roof tilers, stonemasons and cabinetmakers are listed as “targeted for consultation”, rather than guaranteed a spot on the core skills list.
A case will have to be made for these occupations to be included, which Master Builders Australia chief executive Denita Wawn said was “bizarre” given the industry’s “mammoth task” of building 1.2 million homes by 2029.
In a submission to Jobs and Skills Australia, Master Builders argues that to exclude any trade or trade-related profession in building and construction at a time of critical workforce shortages “would be a failure”.
“Given the industry is facing chronic labour shortages across all occupation groups and has a mammoth task of building 1.2 million homes with supporting infrastructure, all building and construction trades and related occupations must be included on the list,” Wawn said on Tuesday.
“Bricklayers, cabinetmakers, stonemasons, painters, plasterers and roof tilers are all in shortage but have all been put on the ‘maybe’ list. If we are going to have any chance of addressing the housing crisis, this needs to change.”
A spokesperson for Skills and Training Minister Brendan O’Connor said Jobs and Skills Australia was an independent agency and was still in the consultation process to determine which occupations would be on the final “core skills occupations list”.
“Jobs and Skills Australia will provide advice to the government on the core skills occupations list later this year,” the spokesperson said.
Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil and Immigration Minister Andrew Giles retain decision-making power on the final list of trades eligible for the new visa, which will allow migrants to fill areas of skills shortage, as long as they have guaranteed annual earnings of at least $70,000, indexed annually. Successful applicants could have their visas approved in 21 days, and have their length of stay doubled to four years, with potential for permanent residency.
Coalition skills and training spokeswoman Sussan Ley accused the government of contributing to the construction shortfall.
“\[Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s\] failed energy and industrial relations policies were already making it harder than ever for the construction industry to build the homes Australians need, and now we see him making it even worse,” she said.
“There is a clear contrast between the Coalition, who as \[Opposition Leader\] Peter Dutton said in the budget reply, will place tradies who can build homes at the front of the queue, versus Anthony Albanese who is busy kicking them out of the queue.”
Earlier this month, the National Housing Supply and Affordability Council’s State of the Housing System 2024 report found the government’s target of building 1.2 million homes by 2029 would fall short by more than 250,000 due to building industry constraints, complex planning processes and lack of land.
In December, O’Neil said migrant tradies would be considered under the core skills program, but “we need to make sure it is not a free-for-all with unintended consequences for Aussies doing apprenticeships”.
However, the federal government is also under pressure to cut immigration, with the May budget forecasting a fall in net overseas migration to 395,000 this financial year and 260,000 next year and 255,000 in the subsequent year. | 0 |
1d34ukx | I've known a lot of former chefs who work as sales reps for food/ bev suppliers. Seems to be an alright gig.
Also, this isn't what you asked, but I've also heard good things about cheffing in aged care facilities. It's still cheffing obvs but it's regular non-insane hours, you can often secure a breakfast/lunch thing so you're not always working nights and weekends. Regular residents getting fed regular food so you don't have insane customers yelling at you about their madeup steak rules and no unexpected service rushes. | 0 |
1d2b2ny | The equivalent of building a house in a cul-de-sac and wondering why there's no cars driving by. | 0 |
1cxlqov | Gas runs out. It produces ongoing waste. It's sourced from a small number of places, with a small number of providers. The price can rise incredibly sharply when policies (national, state, or corporate) change. Supply can be cut off.
Renewables don't run out - that's their whole point. They don't, in general, produce ongoing waste of multiple types from their point of production to their point of use, or at least it's significantly less than fossil fuels or nuclear. The production equipment is either highly recyclable or likely to be able to become so as technology advances. And because renewable power can be produced by thousands of companies, and even in-house by businesses and individuals, it's a lot harder for prices to do anything but go down per watt-hour, even on initial equipment costs. It's not controlled by a small number of providers. It doesn't need large-scale and separate infrastructure (of a kind significantly different to the existing electrical grid) to be maintained. It doesn't need things continually physically transported in order to operate. And it's a lot harder to cut off supply when more end-consumers are producing at least some of their needs themselves and can source the rest extremely locally.
The only two reasons to go with non-renewables are (1) price per watt-hour, and (2) politics from people who want to make all the money and/or have control over fuel supplies. And the first reason is rapidly approaching a non-issue, especially if you factor in total cleanup and waste-management costs from every aspect of the operational process.
Previously, the first reason held economic sway, and it made sense to go with non-renewables. I'm not about to point fingers at people who made that decision at the time. But it's becoming far less of one, and increasingly likely to swing over to renewables on larger scales than it already has, over time. | 0 |
1cz7h14 | ideas such as non means tested cash hand outs which apparently aren't inflationary? ideas such as bringing in the highest per capita immigration on record when we are in a decade long housing shortage?
ah yes | 0 |
1d5f2t8 | I’m blown away that you don’t have more selective schools in Melbourne. They’re so common in Sydney, and while they don’t solve everything, they ensure that no matter where a kid lives if they’re bright and academically driven then they’ll get a spot in a good school. I was shocked to find out that they’re pretty much not a thing down here. | 0 |
1d3t46i | I was lactose intolerant from very early young age right up to 18-19... then one day I left Australia for my first holiday in France... and I came back lactose tolerant. Don't know how it happened , but the fresh dairy food in the French markets were next level couldn't resist no matter the thought of possible lactose repucutions... and there were none. I could consume cheese for the first time.
Prior to that... I always consumed Goats milk.
Decades have passed. All good. | 1 |
1d2bvm2 | A tree ripened Williams. 100x better than anything bought. | 1 |
1ct40gb | It was 4 years I think, but the dude said he cant afford a place in the area at market, so one of two things will happen. 1. Someone buys it that wants to move in, he has to go. 2. An investor buys it, charges market rent, he cant afford it, he has to go.
It always sucks having to move, but he also isnt owed a 3 bedroom PM subsidised home in inner Syd. Albos already saved him tens of thousands of dollars, he should just take the win. | 0 |
1d0uxwj | Yes I was bought up to have manners. Pointing is rude! | 0 |
1d6aucv | Because the rental scooters are some company monetizing our shared public space. | 0 |
1d07lhu | Better than the Beyoncé country album. | 0 |
1d43it3 | Why would a conservative choose Melbourne of all places? | 0 |
1d4lztg | I've given some money in the past on days where it's extremely hot or cold because I worry about how someone will do in harsh conditions. But I won't be able to spare cash for a bit.
I thought I could at least give someone the opportunity to get their own hot chocolate or coffee etc from the Woolworths Metro because of that offer that comes up sometimes. Instead it just goes on the rewards card and not a receipt that I could give to someone to turn in. Maybe they did that on purpose specifically to block people from that? | 0 |
1d5b0v2 | Hi hello, long time hospo working for a decade
Melbourne has such a diverse range of cocktail bars in so many areas that you can list them by style per se.
For modern, forward thinking cocktails I’d look at Byrdi, one or two, black kite commune and most recently Molli in abbotsford (which has a program by one of the most progressive female bartenders in the country, Kayla Saito)
For the best in classic execution, can’t go past caretakers cottage, above board and whisky and alement
And just to showcase places that offer the best full packages absolutely check out Capitano in Carlton and Maggie’s in Brunswick. Both have phenomenal wine, cocktail and food programs
There’s way more but I don’t wanna be here forever | 1 |
1d4y0co | Similarly swapped from AGL to OVO last year when I moved house and it’s been much cheaper.
Website is easy to understand, can live track usage, have links to affiliated/unaffiliated offers like greener home upgrades, etc.
Haven’t had to contact them yet but happy so far. Here’s a [referral discount]( for $120 off over 12 months. | 1 |
1d1yfiq | Do a trade mate. Labouring you’ll end up doing all the heavy lifting and cleaning no one else wants to do. | 1 |
1d4k6zi | I think it would only be fair if they also started using a test that would still be positive up to a week after drinking alcohol. | 0 |
1cyee7t | It's what happens when you don't have domestic gas reservation. The yanks do, and they are doing much better in the green transition because of it. Oh, manufacturing, too. The stone age would be a major technological advance for this country. | 0 |
1d5ycgm | Then go and live in America. | 0 |
1d36ejb | Not sure about that, the place has always been very sketchy. My dad had stories from over 50 years ago about that place. | 0 |
1cqv2nx | Nope, telephone interviewers. Face to face interviewers. | 0 |
1csiwhx | This senator has an interesting background. Dad was a refugee who arrived by boat. Originally from Afghanistan, some technical questions over dual citizenship as she is unable to surrender her citizenship of Afghanistan due to the political situation there (but looks fine to me FWIW).
She can probably indicate where the Jordan river is on a map.
| 0 |
1cxs4er | They failed young Australians before they were born, the moment governments turned to immigration for the illusion of endless growth. | 0 |
1d4t7ip | I love Mackay, it’s got everything I need, beautiful beaches all within 5min drive of my house, beautiful rainforest national park an hour drive away, great fishing, mud crabbing prawn catching, not much traffic some nice restaurants and coffee shops and that country town feel. If you’re coming from a major city you might think it’s dull and boring but a place is what you make of it, don’t compare it other places and take it for what it is. | 1 |
1czgx88 | When I was a teen, I announced that I would never get married and intended to bring up all my kids the same.
I should have listened to that message. | 0 |
1d2bxho | Cosi on Toorak Rd South Yarra is very good, but probably not kid friendly.
As others have said, Lygon St isn't what it once was but Tiamo is still good and welcomes kids.
If you want a Melbourne experience Pellegrini's Espresso Bar on Bourke St is an institution, although I doubt even its most ardent admirers would say it had the best pasta. | 1 |
1d5ldv0 | It's amazing the confidence meth gives people | 0 |
1d31ykp | Join the Renters and Housing Union, fight back. | 1 |
1d4ru6q | smart move for Albo to stay out of it, trumps still the front runner and if you go back and look at polling, the mugshot release of trump led to a huge spike in his numbers and i remember seeing opinion polling showing about 64% of people thought the charges against him were politically motivated, im not sure if the positive effect on trumps numbers will have diminishing returns but either way the democrats really need to change up their strategy if they want to win in November | 1 |
1d40hsg | As someone who went to a private school where union is the code we played at school most of us supported {an NRL team + the Wallabies}.
Provincial union has historically never been that big in Australia and there was usually only 2 teams (NSW / QLD). The Brumbies did well but there was never the depth for the Rebels. It was a bad idea and to be honest Rugby Australia’s scant resources are better focused on those 3 teams and the Force for as long as they have a fairy godfather in Twiggy.
I’d love to see Union be better run here but NRL is our professional rugby code. It’s crazy to me that the “big money leagues” for Union are France and Japan. | 0 |
1d5rzal | It's possibly because of the ease of doing it. Other sexual abuse require actual contact. This one can be done remotely and easily anonymously. Maybe that is what is being counterbalanced that it is easy to do and can do a lot of very public damage that has long term repercussions. What goes out on the internet tends to stay there. So something that is more of a deterrent is needed? | 0 |
1d4g94s | Palestine - going by the colours. But yknow these days, they protest everything at once. So take your pick. | 0 |
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