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1d2d56d | No its more about risk management, why accept a small % more to run the risk that an inspection might find something unforeseen and your sale falls through when u can accept a little less for an unconditional sale. Plus there is the fact that when the market is hot properties normally go to auction where the seller cant set conditions to their bids. | 1 |
1d2cfsd | I don’t play this game.
Them: “What are your salary expectations?”
Me: “In order to post this vacancy, factors such as the salary budget for the position were pre-approved by the relevant people/departments. I would rather know what your company’s expectations are and negotiate from there.”
They are hoping you undercut yourself. If you’re female, statistically this is even more likely. | 0 |
1cw9vcr | Well I'm not really confident that we'll see mismanagement on the scale of Turnbull's Hydro 2.0... especially given several of the issues with building Hydro 2.0 came from stuff they couldn't reasonably have predicted in the first place.
This the real reason why we have an energy crisis and why nuclear won't be built here anytime soon. The media actively criticises any investment in building assets or infrastructure and if there are any snags in the project, the criticism flows even harder. No consideration for any aspect of the project beyond the price tag. And the writer of this article thinks they're being clever by drawing a spurious inference between Snowy 2.0 and the FMIA program, which ultimately amounts to "uhhh watch out for unforeseen liabilities!" That's the state of political journalism in this country; business economics 101 presented as cogent criticism of government ministers. | 0 |
1czvemb | He's not wrong though alot of media is RW slanted, especially news Corp.
Imo there needs to be a pretty serious discussion on the toxicity of sky "news" as an organisation..
Abc might occasionally be pro-labor, the Guardian aswell. But these organisations maintain a degree of civility in their reporting.
Turn on any sky segment and you'll be met with the most vile language, laced with toxicity and venom. There is no civility in it, there is no decorum. Just pure disgusting narrativisation and crude character assassination tactics.
It is not news, it is political toxic social engineering and should be seen for what it is, and addressed accordingly.
That kind of toxicity is not good for a person's psyche and we can see its affects everywhere that Newscorp has its tendrils. | 0 |
1d3x6bo | Please contact safe transport Victoria. This is a very big issue in Melbourne and they will promptly take your issue very seriously. You have excellent proof. | 1 |
1d3s1nh | [
[
You will get a better response if you do some legwork yourself and wanted a local's opinion on something specific, AND also if you provide more details about your interests and budget. | 1 |
1d3znfx | Thanks, Ararat sounds beautiful! | 1 |
1d5nm3z | I have been in my pyjamas and dressing gown all day and I regret nothing. Soon I’ll have a nice hot shower and put on different pyjamas | 1 |
1d30cgv | It's kind of annoying. I gather it's just part of their marketing. I can't remember the last time I actually looked a bit of junk mail like catalogues. | 0 |
1cye52b | It's a bloody good answer, actually, they just needed to scope out the project for a few more years. instead they jumped in and tried to dig a tunnel through soft shitty soil without the proper equipment in place. Smart move! | 0 |
1cvczli | More oversight from a suitable entity, sure. The greens have no experience and are demonstrably anti-defense. | 0 |
1d0te17 | I don't think cost is the issue for most people as to whether they use public transport or not.
It's have a frequent, reliable and pleasant service that gets them from A to B in a reasonable time. They're willing to pay for that.
Quite often the A or B aren't on the network, and if they are, the service is not frequent, reliable or pleasant. People aren't willing to pay for that. The outer suburbs of Melbourne are an unfortunate example of this. Nobody's walking 1.5km to stand at a bus stop in the sun or rain for a bus that comes once every 45 minutes and is often late or cancelled so they can then walk 1.5km at the other end. They'll just drive instead, if they can possibly afford it.
Even with the much better trains in Melbourne, they're often late or cancelled due to trackworks, whether building new tracks and stations or fixing up old lines. You can't plan, "Let's visit the city this weekend and go to Vic Market," you might find yourself taking a 90 minute bus journey instead of a 25' train journey, and falling over every time the overcrowded bus lurches to a stop or swings around a corner. | 0 |
1d34g2t | They never name the people behind these. | 0 |
1d16xvt | Next to none due to the 6 month per employer limitation
That's what the visa is designed for - funding your holiday with seasonal / temporary / casual work, not a permanent job that an Aussie would want | 0 |
1d5xu97 | A succulent Chinese meal! | 1 |
1czdql8 | I've got friends from the US, Canada and France that also commented on how prevalent it was here.
I'm 40 and have never had a full time job. ( Well technically I have but it was month to month contracts and anyone who took a day off for any reason didn't have their contacts renewed.)
I've been in my current job for 8 years and got denied permanency based on the fact that my shifts are irregular, and the annoying thing is the union rep agreed. Like I worked 2583 hours last financial year but because it wasn't 8 hrs a day 6 days a week, every week I don't get permanent.
Also as someone whose been casual for a while, other things have changed, like how long before a shift begins that they are scheduling something , places are literally getting calls from clients and saying yeah we can do that today for you, then ringing around staff to see whose available. It's shifting the risk/cost of business from the employer to the employee.
The law hasn't caught up with technology, I've talked to people who did my job more than 30 years ago, casual wasn't a thing because most people didn't have mobile phones, so they paid people to be on call, they don't anymore because everyone has a mobile so if I don't answer they'll try someone else and eventually someone will pickup and agree to come in. I've brought that up with the union and again they don't care.
I want at a minimum what a friend in the US told me that they were proposing in his state ( can't remember if it went through) they were proposing a minimum notice period for temps ( what they call casuals) of 72hrs. A shift had to be scheduled with a person assigned to it at least 72 hours in advance. The only exception was if someone called in sick. The Idea was to make businesses go back to putting people on call. | 0 |
1d4lx64 | I’m sort of baffled that the moral of the story is to add to the chaos and barge on rather than encourage others to help people with prams (or mobility aids) if they’re struggling… why did nobody help her? | 0 |
1d03qfh | Another punter learns the Bunnings lesson. They're every bit as undeserving of your money as Harvey Norman. Fuck em. | 0 |
1d66324 | Gruen recently noted that Woolies is running the ad from 2016 showing the checkout bloke packing everything.
[ - I've seen this so many times watching Lego Masters on 9 Now. | 0 |
1d1iuen | Don't forget their third policy, "the economy is bad because of immigrants" | 0 |
1d60zwb | He's current job is chairman of Goldman Sachs Australia. That'd be a $500-750k pa package min with bonuses and RSUs
Highly doubt he's joining the Dutton bandwagon. | 0 |
1d1l9fw | Department of Honesty aka DoH! | 0 |
1cyhh7e | These attacks on the ICC are pure hypocrisy. International law is not just a tool to be selectively applied when it suits the US and its allies. The US and EU was insistent on the former Yugoslav countries co-operating with and handing over suspected war criminals. The US did not object when it issued an arrest warrant for Putin.
The ICC charging and trying war criminals is of the international rules based order, whose protection is supposedly the cornerstone of Western diplomacy, especially when it comes to convincing countries to sanction and condemn Russia. But now the Americans are not just attacking the court but considering sanctioning the court for literally doing it's job.
As for Dutton he overestimates how many people outside of the conservative (and some non-conservative) media and political elite care about Israel, and outraged by this. For most Australians it is a far away war that has being going on for as long as they can remember, that has little to do with us. Attacking Albo on this is not good politics. | 0 |
1d5kce4 | Fuck non-daylight savings.
Makes everything shit. Yes I hate cold, wet, short, grey Melb winter days.
The only thing preventing S.A.D is the copius amounts of Opiates & any other mind altering drugs I consume each day to cope. Mmmm Morphine. Makes everything juuust fiiiine. | 0 |
1d41669 | Not sure if it’s the best but I rate Angus and Bon :) | 1 |
1d2ieem | This is a great example of headline leading to a false conclusion.
Doesnt mention deciding factor e.g. that he is the farther of 3 Aboriginal kids but goes into something that will ragebait people. | 0 |
1d5ngze | Privatising the department that holds very sensitive private information, what could go wrong? | 0 |
1d2gnlt | Weird rather than a backlash. | 0 |
1d3tjx3 | When they're recovered and ready we will make sure to find them the best home | 1 |
1d23xgh | Australians have the memories of goldfish. | 0 |
1d4t7ip | Great for two years | 1 |
1czcbpf | Australia is a nation of NIMBYs. No way nuclear would ever be built no matter what anyone wants because the FUD surrounding the technology is too profuse. | 0 |
1ctsmdx | Dutton is going to have problems winning back the teal seats with this line of attack and he’s not going to get too many of the anti-immigrant voters to leave one nation so his strategy is a bit shit. | 0 |
1d3cwsb | On the plus side, I have eaten a slice of sticky date pudding. On the downside, I now wish I had more sticky date pudding. | 1 |
1d5yvdq | Ranong Town, Dorset rd Ferntree Gully.
Nothing is dulled down.
A converted old milk bar, it's basic but brilliant. | 1 |
1d3t5mt | charcoal chicken in sunshine is the best one | 1 |
1d5ddnc | It doesn't have a pool table, but The Gem in Collingwood definitely has the visual aesthetic you're going for. It doesn't have a country theme per se, but Labour in Vain in Fitzroy has a pool table and an old bar/pub type look and vibe. Lulie Tavern in Abbotsford is definitely going for the American/western flavoured thing and has a pool table, but is a bit more done up and not really divey but it might work. | 1 |
1d4im5u | So that their front bumper doesn’t get taken off by someone cutting the corner turning right from the street in front | 0 |
1d4qkqz | 5 weeks of annual leave is standard for shift workers.
The other 4 weeks are usually ADOs from working shifts above the standard 38 hour week.
It's a pretty shit gig.
They get spat on, punched, and kicked.
They see murders, assaults and the worst of humanity.
On top of that, [they have to make split-second decisions while everyone else gets 10 months to tear it apart](
You get shat on by the community, management, and the government when something you had 2 seconds to decide in the heat of the moment. | 0 |
1d3t5mt | Ooof, you've gone from a city full of amazing charcoal chicken places to one with mediocre places. That sucks. | 0 |
1cyhh7e | You can believe the Netanyahu is a criminal and still support Israel right to exist. Like wise you can believe the Palestine's have the right to exist and still believe HAMAS is a terrorist organization. The only person here I see abandoning principles is a journalist who would prefer to try and score political points instead of reporting news. | 0 |
1cyyfzp | Cunt is a really derogatory term, no matter what anyone tries to tell you. It’s rude and that person should be shut down. | 0 |
1d36uru | Hypothetical situation:
Someone is born overseas and arrives with his parents when he is 3 years old. He attends school through to grade 12. Later on he gets mixed up with the "wrong crowd" and is jailed for several years - let's say it was armed robbery. He has never left Australia - too poor to consider travelling.
At the end of his prison sentence, he is deported because he never became an Australian citizen.
In my view, he is Australian, he has no ties to that foreign country, can't even speak the language well. He has no family left in that country.
Should he be deported? Sure he's not a nice bloke, but isn't he Australia's problem?
This is the reason we should, and indeed always have in previous directions, consider ties to Australia before deporting them.
This isn't being soft as a society. This is taking responsibility for the people we brought up. Also, what happened to do the crime, do the time?
The thing is, examples like this have happened. I disagree with their treatment. Our bad guys are our bad guys to look after, monitor, or whatever. Dumping them overseas shouldn't be an option. | 0 |
1d5al5g | Alphington Social has a beautiful function room upstairs. We’re having our wedding there with 25-30 guests. | 1 |
1czih0z | I believe a considerable amount of theory taught as well | 1 |
1d5f2t8 | Definitely, it’s bizarre. I live near McKinnon but am in the Glen Eira College zone and the socioeconomic demographics between the two areas are pretty much identical but McKinnon is seen as something to aspire to while Glen Eira is (generally) seen as “good enough”. I don’t get it.
Australia’s education system is so messed up in so many ways but the most appalling aspect of our education system is this class divide that only seems to be worsening. Private schools receiving government funding is sickening, then even within the public system there are gross inequities. The whole thing needs a massive shake up but of course that won’t happen because people are terrified of acknowledging the issues within the education system, let alone actually doing something about said issues.
Rant over, I’ve been pissed about all of this since I finished high school nearly ten years ago lol | 0 |
1d3t3d0 | Coming from Cali you must like the warm weather, and have decided on Melbourne. Great choice but bloody freezing in winter. If schools were your priority then I would look in Canterbury, Balwyn, Bulleen, Kew, hawthorn, McKinnon to start off. These areas have great private and public schools and are very nice areas to live in. Melbourne is very diverse so you should love it here. Good luck! | 1 |
1d10055 | What’re you goals in life? It sounds like a cliche question, but what’re you working for? Is it to travel more? Buy a big arse house? Something else?
I found when didn’t have a goal/purpose for working/ something to reach for and motivate, yeah, it sometimes sucked. But now wife and I are planning to retire early around 50, travel Aus and maybe overseas for many years, turning up to work is much easier. We’re working for something rather than workings sake | 0 |
1d26657 | I’ll take a look thanks! | 1 |
1d4kufy | My kiddo works at The Waiters' Restaurant, in the CBD. She's well-looked after :) | 1 |
1d4u875 | Very true haha. | 1 |
1d3iwgi | So this might be a bit controversial but if you have any interest in living somewhere quiet but nearby lively suburbs - then can I suggest East Melbourne?
There's nothing in East Melbourne - no pubs, a handful of cafes and no supermarkets except a strange overpriced IGA - but it is beautiful, next to lots of beautiful green parkland and is adjacent to every desirable northern suburb worth living in and the CBD. It's also cheaper to rent than the interesting 'burbs | 1 |
1d66324 | I wish the guy at woolies hadn’t packed my bags today. Manhandled my bread and had no concept of what should go in bags first or last. I had to repack a bag after I left. | 0 |
1d68uab | Maybe no bad luck but a fucking shit effort on behalf of the thief, people trying to make a living and some fuckhead steals your work vehicle? | 0 |
1cxpdgd | Yeah, but what if I simply don't accept the report? /s
>Ted O'Brien: "At first glance, there’s nothing that stung me in the capital costs of the large reactors that was out of the ordinary. But I don’t accept the price of electricity that I see in this report."
| 0 |
1d5vino | I would like to comment on how vocal the opposition is on foreign policy. Even in the lead up to Iraq invasion, i dont remember labor being this vocal for this long. Opposition dont usually comment this much on foreignpolicy, we usually have a united front even if the other party disagrees. Like his predecessor, Dutton is toxic to our conventions | 0 |
1d63c4y | It is, the police minister is deflection away from failures within his department. | 0 |
1cpqqgf | Is it a crisis when the large majority of the population aren't affected, except for the "problem" of having more equity | 0 |
1d2k5bf | I thought thursgay shut down? I used to go all the time! | 1 |
1cxh25g | $8.6bn. Bargain. So if we divert around 12 years of what we are spending in infinitum to subsidise renewables annually, it would pay to replace our entire coal station fleet with nuclear and provide us what the article describes as 89% continuous capacity.
12 years of funding for 60 years of 89% capacity sounds like a good deal to me. We don't need to mine the buggery of the earth for battery minerals nor litter the land with panels, batteries and wind turbines. | 0 |
1d1ngrk | If you are interested in upskilling, some TAFE courses can be free for you, judging by your age and low income. | 1 |
1d5yvdq | Assume you want city restaurants, but huge shout out to Imm Oon in Lilydale, it’s fantastic. | 1 |
1d3rblp | Bolognese. Stroganoff. Other rice and pasta based dishes. Marinara seafood mix goes a \*long\* way. Obviously mince/pasta sauces/etc do too. You could even go the whole hog -- spend $40, and use that extra $20 to buy ingredients to make your own sauces and store them for ages.
I buy cheap frozen meals because they're like fucking $3 a pop for cheap brands and can be used to stretch out your other ingredients in a very cost effective way. The meat in them is rarely the best cut, but when you've got your own chicken breast etc to stretch them out -- it's very, very cost effective. | 1 |
1d13itp | Nope. Never watched | 0 |
1d08tkm | Our birth rates have been below replacement since the 70s....... | 0 |
1cxm9w3 | **Anthony Carbines is under fire after admitting to being confused by a line of questioning, which has drawn criticism that he is “either totally incompetent or intentionally misleading parliament”.**“
Police minister Anthony Carbines has been forced to admit he misled parliament amid the [worsening police pay crisis.](
In what is threatening to become the biggest schism between the force and the state in more than a decade, Victoria Police remains locked in a [bitter stalemate with the Police Association]( over a push to introduce nine-hour shifts for frontline officers.
Appearing before a parliamentary inquiry on Tuesday, Mr Carbines emphatically denied being a signatory to a deed between the state government, Victoria Police and the Police Association of Victoria, in which they agreed to implement the new rostering model, which would also see officers work nine-day fortnights, providing it didn’t incur additional costs or require extra resources.
“I don’t think you’ll find my signature on pieces of paper that relate to the parties, being Victoria Police and the Police Association, they are the parties to the deed, an agreement to commit themselves to work on these matters with the assistance and the leadership of the mediator,” Mr Carbines said.
“That process continues and while that process is under way, it’s not appropriate for the government or minister to intervene or interfere.”
But the state government later confirmed Mr Carbines had indeed signed the deed on December 20 last year, a day after the Police Association announced a “breakthrough”.
Mr Carbines later admitted to being confused by the line of questioning by Nationals MP Danny O’Brien, a veteran of the public accounts and estimates committee probing this month’s state budget.
Mr O’Brien said the police pay deal was critical to the committee’s work because Chief Commissioner Shane Patton, who is vehemently opposed to the introduction of nine-hour shifts, has claimed it would add $3bn to the force’s annual wages bill.
He has also warned it would force the closure of police stations and take up to 2400 police off the beat and undermine community safety – a claim vehemently denied by the police union.
“The impression I was getting from the question that was being asked was that somehow signing the deed was determining the outcome, or obliging parties on the way in which they had to negotiate,” Mr Carbines said.
“The deed simply sets the parameters through which the parties have agreed to have a dialogue and a discussion, it was certainly not a task for me to sign a deed that directs or confirms the way in which this enterprise agreement has to be determined.” Shadow police minister Brad Battin slammed Mr Carbines, who is also Minister for Racing. “When you have a minister more focused on horse racing than police, of course he can’t explain his mistakes,” he said. “Anthony Carbines is either totally incompetent, or intentionally misleading parliament. Either way, he is failing those he pretends to represent.” | 0 |
1cydof0 | Nah. The entire workforce has changed over since then. Maybe a couple dinosaurs floating around but the vast majority of their workforce would have been hired in the Islamic terrorism era. Most of their work now is probably following fucking Nazis around the suburbs. | 0 |
1d1rxsp | Wet + mold. | 0 |
1d2d1bi | Lets be clear - calling out actual racism is not divisive, it is pointing out actual division. Classic conservative playbook approach to quash movements for equality.
However I feel like progressives labelling the whole country racists is having diminishing returns. Of course some people in Australia are racist and this may be worse in certain demographics. But for those that aren't who aren't also progressive, it is just alienating
Labelling everyone as racist will often mean you are blind to the true forces underlying racism or what appears to be racism, which IMO is usually economic inequality. People in economic hardship are more easily convinced their circumstances are the result of the other tribe and race can so easily play into that (eg if you are poor, why does it make sense to vote Yes in the referendum if you perceive that someone else gets a leg up when you are doing it tough)
In this sense, this type of rhetoric is divisive to the working class who need to be in solidarity to overcome those real economic problems. You can't let either side of politics tell you ordinary people are the problem.
This is of course not the actual motivation of Price, who doesn't give a flying F about ordinary people when it actual comes down to it | 0 |
1cu98y1 | Shouldn't inner city residents be catching public transport and car sharing? | 0 |
1d25xi7 | >Labor already has said it will delay introducing legislation for its $13.7bn package of production credits for hydrogen producers and critical minerals processing announced in the federal budget to allow time to negotiate with the Greens
This article exists for this sole paragraph. | 0 |
1d63se4 | Coming from a PO. I always feel sorry for the dispatcher and call taker. They are juggling heaps, sounds crazy, and hope they get paid well for it at least. Like they are juggling all the units and they relay all messages.
I can't imagine taking a 000 call and people screaming at the call taker etc.. sounds shit. But you never know, why not just give it a go? | 1 |
1d5gc93 | Charge the owners of vacant houses rent after a certain amount of time of being vacant.
If it falls into disrepair, force it to be condemned until they fix it or sell it. | 0 |
1d1ngrk | I’m 19 and in the same boat.
I apply to so many jobs and don’t even get the courtesy of a rejection email, I knew it was over for me when I done a day’s work for a job trial and then got left on seen when I asked if I got the job or not 5 days later.
Honestly it’s made me feel so completely and utterly useless, my parents are so disappointed in me. I don’t leave the house because it costs too much money, I don’t even get Centrelink because my parents think it’s only for dole bludgers.
Sorry this was a rant but still it’s good to know people feel the same way <3 | 0 |
1d2flpg | The priority primary care centres are great for things that need to be seen too asap, but aren’t immediately life threatening ( and therefore going to be a bit of a wait at the ED). You can find your nearest one here.
I’ve been there with the kids a handful of times and they have always been quite quick. | 1 |
1d2z4dt | The funny thing was when The Age came late to the party and decided to give out their "Express" paper in the mornings for free. But it was as cringe as Paul Barry trying to be hip with his "Media Bites" segment on ABC that only masochists watch to experience some second-hand embarrassment.
And of course pretty much all the content in it was the same news as MX had shared the day before, so there was nothing new to read. It very quickly become a section in the Age newspaper somewhere and then disappeared. | 0 |
1d367a1 | Let’s hope so because I saw an add for bitcoin on this post | 1 |
1d6a115 | Head out to some regional towns...Orange, Bathurst, Gulgong... Taree maybe? Dubbo is nice, good Zoo too.
Do you want desert?
You could look at some gold mining towns? | 1 |
1d3w71e | I wonder if you actually heard the crimes that these people did would you still want them here | 0 |
1d4ny77 | Good point! | 1 |
1d0r77q | I'm not paying fucking $400 a month for some dipshit to tell me I can't have a dog | 0 |
1cv8lu9 | He almost certainly shared information that should not be shared outside friendly sphere of influence.
Australia has an interest in maintaining the integrity of that information.
He‘s no ‘hero’… if anything he’s a complete fucking sellout if he’s more willing to go contracting than to serve his country.
That’s even before you add the detail about his clients being foreign nationals from a country that is increasingly antagonistic towards both Australia and the US…
Do you think any of these points might be at all related to the reason why he‘s been extradited? | 0 |
1cyvuc4 | Vegas only exists because it rapes the Colorado river of all of its water. Australia cant & probably wouldnt want to do that. | 0 |
1cvnyoi | It's Newscorp, they always frame the results in the worst possible way for Labor. | 0 |
1d5n16x | He gave you the courtesy of telling you he had to cancel (because sometimes shit comes up at the last minute) instead of just ghosting you, and you went off at him?
​
Yeah, he ain't contacting you again, he's cut you off for being a psycho. | 0 |
1d348o3 | If it is still furnished, you could always turn it into a space for creating content; for example, film/photography/art. | 1 |
1d0ny0b | It’s all in the GenCost report. Their figures for large scale nuclear assume a continuous build and it’s optimistically applying South Korean numbers. Even so, it’s a very expensive alternative to firmed solar and wind and the build times are out the door.
Likewise, when a single LSR goes down it’s the equivalent of losing about three coal units at once. You need a lot of redundancy to make it work. This is also in the GenCost report.
Insiders isn’t on iview yet so I can’t check your poll but if we’re just saying a majority of Australians are in favour of nuclear, then sure. But that doesn’t justify the selective omission and distortion of facts to push nuclear. If it’s the better approach then it should be obvious in the numbers. | 0 |
1d0p5nx | It is convenient for the Labor government to have the universities and businesses of all sizes and shapes hankering for more student immigration. The easy GDP growth we get from students hides the fact that they have been absolutely ineffective in getting growth in more complex industries or any efficiency in our other export industries. Most growth is from education providers that rely on the lure of permanent residency and domestic work rights and unskilled low wage businesses with low barriers to entry that rely on foreign students. | 0 |
1d3znfx | I took the car ferry and stayed at Wellington. Was cool.
The Coorong is a spectacular part of the country but not on your inland route.
Coonawarra is lovely.
Stay in the Adelaide hills too. | 1 |
1cvae4i | Yeah, “end” overstated it. But if we got our local birth rate up, ending it isn’t not outlandish. I reckon a net migration rate of about 50k a year is appropriate now. That’ll give Aussies a chance to buy a home and get a job—utopia. | 0 |
1d60dm6 | The geographical history of Port Philip Bay is very interesting. It didn’t exist until 10,000 years ago when the ending of the last ice age flooded what was once a giant river plain with lakes and wetlands. Even as recently as 3000 years ago the bay had completely dried out. Thank you, Wikipedia. | 0 |
1d395tb | I have already ordered tks very muchhh | 1 |
1d68iig | The toilet seat looks in better condition than the one in my rental tbh | 0 |
1d4s9l5 | Yes, I have been eating 65kg of grass per day.
In all seriousness, my slow cooker has been working overtime. Beef cheek, lamb ragu, vege soup, etc.
I feel you. Also, I look forward to winter for this very reason. Freezing my balls off, putting on the uggs, cuppa, a movie.
Colour me cozy. | 0 |
1d5rzal | You're comparing possession charges to distribution charges. Without knowing the laws I would guess that distribution of CSAM would have a higher penalty. I would also guess that possession of deep fake porn would have a lower penalty | 0 |
1d5iiip | Righteo.
Just messaged an MEL ATC friend. She said "The lights are all synced via GPS/GNSS off the clock. The new CASA standard for obstruction lights requires it".
We went on to say that most planes do no synchronisation, so it makes it easier to see. Particularly when arrivals are tracking on any of the "NINE" series of standard arrivals, as they go south of the city.
I learnt a thing today. Way cool. | 1 |
1d31dkk | Not a bad idea in itself but it works on choice; I can see that you’re ripping me off so I’ll go somewhere else instead.
The problem is that despite Aldi or IGA’s often having better deals, I can’t do all my shopping at those places so I tend to end up at the big 2. I already know they’re ripping me off but I don’t have time to drive to 3 different places to get all the stuff I need. I don’t usually have time to get just to my closest Aldi. And *the big 2 know* this too. They know I’m gonna grumble then pay their shitty prices.
More evidence isn’t going to help. | 0 |
1cuptcb | Was it a "core" or "non-core" commitment?
The point is that the Coalition's record on keeping promises is so bad that you simply can't believe it. | 0 |
1d35hu3 | Yes! Man, I've missed it. | 1 |
1d26657 | Looks like I'm wrong:
| 0 |
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