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The official OZ bashing thread.

Re: The New Paper:Australian Nurses Poorly Paid, Costs too High, Forced to be Prostit

Hi the condemn-one, if u can waste so much time trying to make a point that 'shockshit = redbullshit = Ozsucks =busy123', i suggest u dun post. U r not debating, not arguing, and what u post dun instigate, dun make my blood boil, it's tasteless, it's crap.
Is this not what this forum is created for?
To debate your point, to make each other angry, to practise freedom of speech when they dun do it in real life, and make enemies?
if u only want to confine yourself into inner circles that talk and listen what u like, why u bother to post here?
U r like drilling a hole in the wall and asking ur peers to fuck the same hole..and tell each other how much all of u enjoy doing....
listen to my advise, stop posting....

Hey Moron!!! Like you have mentioned, this is a free forum. so who the fuck are you to tell me not to post? My point is, I will only debate and encourage others to debate with people who are rational and constructive enough to post and debate logically, not shit brained loser cockroaches who post half truths and rubbish and condemn even others family the moment they lose an argument or their lies are exposed. I do not feel that it is ideal for me to argue with an idiot because it will involve me lowering to his level and it is beneath me to do so. Since you are siding with this cockroach so much, are you someone in his category as well? :oIo:
 
Re: The New Paper:Australian Nurses Poorly Paid, Costs too High, Forced to be Prostit

what kind of nonsense u r talking? I think u just argue without relevant grounds and twisting facts just to suit your likings..what u write are complete rubbish! tons of shit!!
And pls dun point the arrow at singapore when bullet holes are already found in OZ...how much we pay the nurse in singapore is not the point of discussion, the fact is nurses are working daytime serving patient, night time serving selling bodies...

For a nurse to rather work as a prostitute is a disgrace not only to the hospital, but also to the whole society.
If there are strict labour laws and strong unions as what u have said, why dun the nurses voiced up and called for protest, which is what generally most OZs will do. Why keep mum and go for the least dignifying job??
It's either the union are wayang or the nurses are stupid...
There can be 3 reasons for them to take this extreme decisions....
1) OZs are lazy and cannot take hardship.
2) the job market in OZ is so tough that they have to resort to this job,
3) the cost of living is too unbearable.
if they are getting $900/wk ($3600/mth) and still cant support their livihood,

If what u say is what u mean, why dun u asked ur wife or u sis to work as a prostitute since they can earn higher and does nothing...after all, clients are paying....( pls forgive me for been so straightforward, but i am a strong believer of 'do what u say'...haha)


See? You are behaving just like this shockshit idiot. Bringing people's family unnecessarily into the picture is not the way to go. If you argue, please argue constructively otherwise you are going to make yourself "very popular" like this cockroach in the negative sense. Let's now look at your points:


1. You are talking about strict uniions and why they can't protest. Why, do you have to protest for everything? Can't you think of a better alternatives? Now, if you are being paid low, wouldn't you look for another job? That's precisely what the nurses have done. And if you say it is disgraceful, have you never visited Geylang yourself? If you have, then you are just being a hypocrite, just like any other pathetic Sinkee. If it is so disgraceful, then why is your Sinkee govt having Geylang? Ask them to abolish prostitution.

2. In any society there may be some lazy guys and people who exploit the system but is it right to pass a general statement like this? Its true that many Ang Mohs don't work OT but they finish their work on time and deliver positive results, which is far from what you could see in Sinkees ( the very reason quoted by your govt to bring in FTs).

3. Job market may be tough anywhere, why it is the case in any developed country. Perseverence is required. At least, in Oz you get rewarded well however in Sinkeeland, how hard is it going to be to lose your job to a fake degree F Trash? This is frankly unheard of in Oz.

4. Cost of living, if you are so concerned about the ocst of living like this loser cockroach shockshit, please stay on in Sinkeeland. If you are earning
a decent sum, how is cost of living going to affect you? :oIo:
 
Re: The New Paper:Australian Nurses Poorly Paid, Costs too High, Forced to be Prostit

listen to my advise, stop posting....

Should be "Listen to my ADVICE,...".

"Advise" is a verb.
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

one of my ah neh IT folk here worked in california for a couple of years. health insurance there ran at US$900+/mth for the whole family!

Can you please provide a breakdown?

Over here my health premiums for us (family of 3) are US$ 202 per month and its company paid. Mind you this is for Aetna PPO (health), Cigna PPO (dental), and VSP for Vision. Every health cost is covered here. We even have free Legal and Childcare services through my wife's company.

I have not heard of many companies not paying for their employees health premiums.
 
Re: The New Paper:Australian Nurses Poorly Paid, Costs too High, Forced to be Prostit

listen to my advise, stop posting....

How you can ever be a civil servant or a Division I officer. (Shame on you) How can we listen to your "ADVICE" if you cant "ADVISE" adequately ? heehee
 
Re: The New Paper:Australian Nurses Poorly Paid, Costs too High, Forced to be Prostit

How you can ever be a civil servant or a Division I officer. (Shame on you) How can we listen to your "ADVICE" if you cant "ADVISE" adequately ? heehee

GWB spells "Advice" as "Advise".
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

Can you please provide a breakdown?

Over here my health premiums for us (family of 3) are US$ 202 per month and its company paid. Mind you this is for Aetna PPO (health), Cigna PPO (dental), and VSP for Vision. Every health cost is covered here. We even have free Legal and Childcare services through my wife's company.

I have not heard of many companies not paying for their employees health premiums.

Keep working, there is no free universal health care in USA if you are not working.

I find it disturbing that healthcare is paid by the employer. Hope Obama will change that. You Amercian residents deserve better.
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

according to forbes magazine melbourne is the 8th most expensive city there now. what a disaster.

hee hee

Poor thing! Can you afford to live in Melbourne? Maybe you can try Tokyo.
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

I have only been to Melbourne twice before. Should the costs of living there be anything close to Sydney or Perth, I would think people are jumping off buildings due to the exorbitant costs there.

Redbull,
Sorry to disappoint you, there are not enough high-rise buildings in Perth for people to jump down. But there is hope. With 3.2% unemployment rate in Perth, and a numerous jobs paying better wages than the average in USA, perhaps we need more Perthians to work for a living. heehee:D
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

once again you heard it here, saw it here, people. what more can i say?

http://news.theage.com.au/national/gang-attacks-christmas-charity-workers-20081226-75fo.html


Gang attacks Christmas charity workers

December 26, 2008 - 2:20PM

A charity worker and his wife had their peaceful Christmas Eve shattered in a "random and cowardly" attack by a gang of teenagers.

Paul and his wife Ilse, whose surnames have been withheld, had just finished watching Carols by Candlelight when they were disturbed by a noise outside their home.

At his wife's request, the 56-year-old went to investigate to find a group of teenagers had kicked over a bin outside their Noble Park property in Melbourne's south-east.

But when he confronted the youths, they turned on him, kicking and beating him about the head and face before one of the gang turned on Ilse, 68, who had followed her husband outside.

"I turned around to see where the wife was and seen her lying on the ground, struggling to get up - it broke my heart to see a woman being treated like that," Paul recalled on Friday.

........................... "

At least such incidents get reported in Australia. In Singapore, the Strait-Up Times will keep quiet, esp those incidents at Bugis I witnessed. No even reported in that newspaper. All covered up ;)
 
Re: The New Paper:Australian Nurses Poorly Paid, Costs too High, Forced to be Prostit

Should be "Listen to my ADVICE,...".

"Advise" is a verb.

Its all right boss. Excuse these PAP lackeys for their fucked up English.
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

At least such incidents get reported in Australia. In Singapore, the Strait-Up Times will keep quiet, esp those incidents at Bugis I witnessed. No even reported in that newspaper. All covered up ;)

you think every attack gets reported in australia? try 10% of all asians being beaten and killed. its not my fault australia is so bad.

hee hee
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

you think every attack gets reported in australia? try 10% of all asians being beaten and killed. its not my fault australia is so bad.

hee hee

Statistically, you are right. 10% of this earth populations are idiots and low-life, no matter which country you look at.
 
Boom in Australia goes bust as global slowdown hits

http://www.usatoday.com/money/world/2008-12-28-australia-boom-bust_N.htm

Boom in Australia goes bust as global slowdown hits

For Leigh Davies, the good times ended with a phone call.
Until that day in mid-September, he could hardly keep up with all the demand for his firm's mining equipment. Like just about everyone else in the mineral-rich state of Western Australia, he was riding a worldwide commodities boom, ignited by China's seemingly insatiable demand for the riches beneath the Australian soil — iron and copper ore, zinc, magnesium, coal.

Then the phone rang, two days after the collapse of Wall Street investment bank Lehman Bros.: "We got a call from one of our better clients, saying, 'Most of our finances are tied up in Lehman bank, and we're suspending your contract until we get it sorted out.' "

From there, things got worse. Other clients, caught up in a sudden credit crunch, delayed or canceled projects, idling all eight of Davies' drill rigs for the first time ever. "We've got no work," he says.

In a matter of weeks, Australia's boom has gone bust. Now economists at Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, among others, are forecasting that Australia's economy will shrink this quarter and next, tipping the land down under into a recession for the first time since 1991. JPMorgan sees the jobless rate — a record low 4% just 10 months ago — rising to 9% by 2010.

FIND MORE STORIES IN: United States | Europe | Wall Street | Christmas | China | Citigroup | JPMorgan Chase | mid-September | Australians | Queensland | Prime Minister Kevin Rudd | Western Australia | Rio Tinto | Davies | Lehman Bros. | Glenn Stevens
Davies is stunned by the speed with which it all unraveled. "The whole of Australia had been screaming for more drilling rigs and equipment. We had a severe shortage of manpower. It all stopped within two weeks."

"It was very quick," says Ron Wyndow, whose firm in Karrinyup, Western Australia, provides equipment and services to mining and mineral exploration firms. "It hit about eight weeks ago. Just, bang!"

The financial crisis is hitting debt-laden Australians hard. "We're headed for a recession for the same reason the USA is in one now — the bursting of a debt-financed speculative bubble," says economist Steve Keen of the University of Western Sydney, one of the first forecasters to sound the alarm. Keen says Australian households have been adding debt — as a percentage of economic output — even faster than their U.S. counterparts over the past 18 years. Now they're feeling pinched and are cutting back. "We have a homegrown recession coming our way, regardless of what happens in the rest of the world," Keen says.

"Shoppers are on strike," Canberra-based consultants Access Economics reported recently. "Their confidence is shattered, and they are pulling back sharply on discretionary spending." Access expects retail sales to drop 0.1% in the fiscal year that ends in June and to grow an anemic 0.9% the year after that.

Keen predicts the downturn will unfold a bit differently than it did in the USA, where problems began in the housing market and spread to the broader economy. "We're likely to go into the macro crisis first as debt growth plummets; then a housing crisis as the newly unemployed are unable to maintain their mortgages; and finally a credit crunch where the banks' solvency doesn't look so hot anymore."

China, Australia's No. 1 trading partner, isn't providing as much shelter as expected from the global economic tempest. China itself has proved unexpectedly vulnerable to slowdowns in the United States and Europe. Its economic growth is decelerating rapidly from the double-digit annual pace of the past decade. Last month, Chinese exports fell for the first time in seven years.

"China's economy has slowed much more quickly than anyone had forecast," says Glenn Stevens, governor of Australia's central bank. Add in China's plummeting stock market and crumbling housing prices, and "There goes Australia's China blanket," economist Keen says.

"We were living in a bubble in Australia, thinking that we'd manage because of China and because of our resources," says Nick Read of Drill Technics Australia, a Queensland maker of drill rigs. "The fact is, resources have hit rock bottom, and China is struggling also. It happened very fast."

Australian policymakers have responded aggressively to the economic threat. Stevens' Reserve Bank of Australia has been chopping interest rates. And the government of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is spending more than $10 billion to jump-start the economy.

For now, businesses are hunkering down. Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto just announced plans to slash 14,000 of its 112,000 jobs. Drill Technics, its rigs running just half the time, has cut its drilling crew to 15 from 32. Davies has laid off 15 of his 27 workers. "If you want to be in business after Christmas, you have to cut costs," he says.
 
Australia not only founded by Convicts, but Cannibals! True Story!

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...arce-australias-cannibal-convict-1215866.html

The Last Confession of Alexander Pearce: Australia's cannibal convict

It's an historical episode that Australians don’t talk about much – after all, cannibalism by one’s ancestors is not the stuff of dinner party conversation. But now the story of Alexander Pearce, an Irish convict who ate his comrades while on the run, is being retold in a new film that has stirred debate in both Australia and Ireland.


The Last Confession of Alexander Pearce, made in Australia and starring two Northern Irish actors, opened in Tasmania recently and was shown on Ireland’s RTE Television on Monday. The film’s rather chilling tagline is: “No man knows what hunger will make him do.”

Pearce, a farm labourer, was transported to Australia in 1819 for stealing six pairs of shoes, and ended up on Sarah Island, a notoriously harsh penal colony off the west coast of Tasmania. Flogged repeatedly for the slightest misdemeanour, tortured and brutalised, he decided to escape, along with seven fellow prisoners.

Hacking through dense wilderness previously unpenetrated by white men, pursued by their jailors, and with little food to sustain them, the fugitives quickly grew desperate. They made their awful decision, targeting first Alexander Dalton. Robert Greenhill, a former sailor, cut Dalton’s throat, then Matthew Travers, a former butcher, decapitated him. All but two of the men consumed his flesh.

And so it went on, for seven weeks, until only Pearce and Greenhill were left alive. With Greenhill exhausted, Pearce killed and ate him. Finally recaptured, he confessed all to the British authorities, who refused to believe him. Surely no European would commit such horrific crimes?

Pearce was sent back to Sarah Island, but soon escaped again, together with an English convict, Thomas Cox. When caught, Pearce was lying beside the remains of Cox. This time, the evidence was irrefutable.

Pearce, who is played by Ciaran McMenamin, was convicted of murder and hanged in 1824. Before he died, though, he made a detailed confession to an Irish Catholic priest. Father Philip Conolly (played by Adrian Dunbar), who had been sent out to minister to the Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania) penal colony, visited Pearce, chained to a wall in Hobart Jail.

The film, which will also be shown on British television, presents a surprisingly sympathetic picture of Pearce. Its Irish-Australian writer, Nial Fulton, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) that, while he did not condone cannibalism, “I can empathise with the men that were on Sarah Island, I can empathise with the notion of doing anything to escape that kind of horror.”

Pearce himself used the phrase “No man knows what hunger will make him do”, and, according to Fulton, that question underlies the whole story. He said: “Unless you’re in that situation, and you’ve suffered the barbarity of what Pearce suffered, then you can’t begin to fathom what he went through.”

After he was executed, Pearce’s body was dissected for science, and his skull is still kept in the Museum of Pennsylvania.

The film’s director, Michael James Rowland, acknowledged that the episode was one of Australia’s founding stories, telling the ABC that “these very gothic tales often are at the root of Australia”. However, the nation had not turned out too badly, he added
 
Re: Boom in Australia goes bust as global slowdown hits

when it hits home, it might just be worse....thank your lucky stars now and count your blessings now before the tsunami hits our homes and all we have here....it's going to be very painful for many of us here...very chamm!
 
Re: Australia not only founded by Convicts, but Cannibals! True Story!

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...arce-australias-cannibal-convict-1215866.html

The Last Confession of Alexander Pearce: Australia's cannibal convict

It's an historical episode that Australians don’t talk about much – after all, cannibalism by one’s ancestors is not the stuff of dinner party conversation. But now the story of Alexander Pearce, an Irish convict who ate his comrades while on the run, is being retold in a new film that has stirred debate in both Australia and Ireland.


The Last Confession of Alexander Pearce, made in Australia and starring two Northern Irish actors, opened in Tasmania recently and was shown on Ireland’s RTE Television on Monday. The film’s rather chilling tagline is: “No man knows what hunger will make him do.”

Pearce, a farm labourer, was transported to Australia in 1819 for stealing six pairs of shoes, and ended up on Sarah Island, a notoriously harsh penal colony off the west coast of Tasmania. Flogged repeatedly for the slightest misdemeanour, tortured and brutalised, he decided to escape, along with seven fellow prisoners.

Hacking through dense wilderness previously unpenetrated by white men, pursued by their jailors, and with little food to sustain them, the fugitives quickly grew desperate. They made their awful decision, targeting first Alexander Dalton. Robert Greenhill, a former sailor, cut Dalton’s throat, then Matthew Travers, a former butcher, decapitated him. All but two of the men consumed his flesh.

And so it went on, for seven weeks, until only Pearce and Greenhill were left alive. With Greenhill exhausted, Pearce killed and ate him. Finally recaptured, he confessed all to the British authorities, who refused to believe him. Surely no European would commit such horrific crimes?

Pearce was sent back to Sarah Island, but soon escaped again, together with an English convict, Thomas Cox. When caught, Pearce was lying beside the remains of Cox. This time, the evidence was irrefutable.

Pearce, who is played by Ciaran McMenamin, was convicted of murder and hanged in 1824. Before he died, though, he made a detailed confession to an Irish Catholic priest. Father Philip Conolly (played by Adrian Dunbar), who had been sent out to minister to the Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania) penal colony, visited Pearce, chained to a wall in Hobart Jail.

The film, which will also be shown on British television, presents a surprisingly sympathetic picture of Pearce. Its Irish-Australian writer, Nial Fulton, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) that, while he did not condone cannibalism, “I can empathise with the men that were on Sarah Island, I can empathise with the notion of doing anything to escape that kind of horror.”

Pearce himself used the phrase “No man knows what hunger will make him do”, and, according to Fulton, that question underlies the whole story. He said: “Unless you’re in that situation, and you’ve suffered the barbarity of what Pearce suffered, then you can’t begin to fathom what he went through.”

After he was executed, Pearce’s body was dissected for science, and his skull is still kept in the Museum of Pennsylvania.

The film’s director, Michael James Rowland, acknowledged that the episode was one of Australia’s founding stories, telling the ABC that “these very gothic tales often are at the root of Australia”. However, the nation had not turned out too badly, he added

this does not surprise me at all. just goes to show how bad australia really is

hee hee
 
Re: Melbourne, one of the World's most Expensive and Dangerous Cities

Statistically, you are right. 10% of this earth populations are idiots and low-life, no matter which country you look at.

dont you just hate the media? they always make things worse than they are.
 
Re: Boom in Australia goes bust as global slowdown hits

when it hits home, it might just be worse....thank your lucky stars now and count your blessings now before the tsunami hits our homes and all we have here....it's going to be very painful for many of us here...very chamm!

well, i have only been saying it will be very painful in australia in 2009 and 2010 for almost a year now. ouch. it will hurt.
 
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