All Things Australia

Discussion in 'Australia, NZ, Pacific' started by Moi621, Dec 4, 2017.

  1. Jack Hays

    Jack Hays Well-Known Member Donor

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    Could be.
     
  2. Jack Hays

    Jack Hays Well-Known Member Donor

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  3. Sallyally

    Sallyally Well-Known Member Donor

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    Thought this cartoon was cute.
    IMG_3286.png
     
  4. Sallyally

    Sallyally Well-Known Member Donor

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    This is so true, albeit a look back at the good old days. How did we let it get awry?

    The immigration regime that welcomed us to Australia was driven by stability and integration. Integration into a society where the people owned and operated the water, electricity, gas, telecommunications and transport infrastructure – all ready, affordable and running like clockwork.
    A sustainable and self-reliant population approaching 13 million that did not overwhelm hospitals, schools or employment and allowed homes with gardens.
    Australia manufactured, and youth could find stable employment or careers. On one wage, a (resourceful) couple with kids could pay off a mortgage in a decade or two. The priority was stability – growth was the carefully managed byproduct.
    Now, we have overpopulation to the point of species extinctions, exploitation, homelessness and vast expanses of disenchanting concrete while the infrastructure grinds to a halt.”
    from the ABC news today.
     
  5. Jack Hays

    Jack Hays Well-Known Member Donor

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  6. Sallyally

    Sallyally Well-Known Member Donor

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    Jack Hays likes this.
  7. Jack Hays

    Jack Hays Well-Known Member Donor

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  8. Sallyally

    Sallyally Well-Known Member Donor

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    Is that about the young man stabbing the Assyrian bishop and the footage online?
    Do we need to see such stuff?
    On the other hand, it’s global and once the cats out of the bag……
     
  9. Jack Hays

    Jack Hays Well-Known Member Donor

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    From the link in #2057:
    "It’s true that violent content online can be disturbing. I think platforms should put warning labels on them and find some way to prevent minors from seeing it. I also think there are real privacy concerns that should be addressed.

    But violence is not the only thing the Australian government has told X to remove. It has also targeted political speech. And nothing can justify the Australian government censoring the entire global Internet of content it does not like."
     
    Last edited: Apr 25, 2024 at 6:42 AM
  10. Sallyally

    Sallyally Well-Known Member Donor

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    Political such as beheadings and and the like? The owners of social media don’t seem to be able to control what they publish and don’t want to be accountable.
    It’s all very well having disclaimers about mis/disinformation but the lies that are published can have effects on elections, people’s personal lives, confidence in once respected institutions etc.
    I’m in favour of censorship because Musk and Zuckerberg are careless of social responsibility.
     
  11. Jack Hays

    Jack Hays Well-Known Member Donor

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    We'll have to disagree. I'm as close to a free speech absolutist as you'll find.
    And btw, Happy ANZAC Day.
     
  12. Sallyally

    Sallyally Well-Known Member Donor

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    Ok, agree to disagree.
    Anzac Day is always a bit sad. At least it didn’t rain on the parade.
     

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