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Many years ago I use to follow F1 quit heavily however having nearly all races in the middle of the night whilst also going to work I lost interest as I became sleep deprived however last year I renewed my interest in F1 being able to watch all races, through Kayo, and not being able to work. The other thing is having a great Australian kid in Oscar Piastri representing Australia to the world driving a Mclaren has been great to watch, becoming an Australian hero to all of us that are into F1. Anyway I imagined what it would be like to Australia if Oscar's car in the Melbourne Grand Prix was painted in the iconic Australian Green and Gold. What a marketing success it would be. So I created a mock up of one:6 points
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been talking about it for as long as the Epstein files have been in the headlines5 points
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The main problem with recycling EV batteries in Australia is that there have not been enough of them to warrant the creation of a recycling plant. This will of course change as more EVs are added to the Australian vehicle fleet. The early recycling plants in the US (there are a number of good You tube videos) have proven that almost all of the critical minerals are recyclable. We just do not have the volume at this stage & that is all lithium based batteries able to be recycled. At this stage old EV batteries are still quite valuable for use as home or commercial energy storage but there are few available & mostly they are from early BMW or Nissan Leaf EVs as well as those recovered from crashed EVs. I imagine the federal and state governments battery subsidies will have the effect of reducing the value of these as well. Once an EV battery gets to about 70% of its original storage capacity, it still has many years of home storage left even though no longer useful in the EV. Add to that the fact that EV batteries are lasting considerably longer than original predictions. I have done just over 35,000km in my 2023 MG4 & battery health is still showing 100% The good thing about all of this is that batteries have a circular life with 96% of materials being recovered during recycling. Compare that to fossil fuels which are used once & then they are gone.5 points
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Venezuela's current production is only about one million barrels per day, which is a drop in the bucket and certainly won't bother China very much. Estimates are that to get it up to even 1.5m bpd would cost about $7 billion and take 2 years. Chevron is the only major US producer with a significant footprint in the country, and Trump can't simply order other US producers to move into a politically unstable country and spend billions of dollars ramping up production as he claims, even if they are led by his cronies. At the end of the day they have turn a profit for their shareholders, and even if Venezuela is sitting on 303 billion barrels of oil, which the US doesn't own anyway, time is not on Donald's side in getting his hands on it in his political lifetime. At the end of the day, they may have Maduro in jail but not much else to show for their efforts.4 points
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Sometimes I do wonder about people's ability to think logically. We have yet to buy a replacement for the written off mini. It is really my partner's car and she flatly refuses to drive a manual. Which is a pain in the UK, because most cars - even luxury ones - that are sold are manual. So, after fruitlessly searching for a replacement for her that was in budget and auto, I took a look at some EV cars - as they are all "autos". Used car sellers here work a bit dfifferently to Aus (at least when I last purchased a used car in Aus, which was admittedly about 20 years ago). If you know what you want, you can buy online unseen from a reputable seller and if you're not entirely happy with it whtin 2 weeks or something like 1000 miles, they will refund you in full and take the car back. In addition, most offer 12 month warranties under similar terms to new car warranties. And of course, if the car they sell you has a balance of a new car warranty, that transfers to you (as long as the previous owner/s have kept to the terms of the warranty) and they will make up the difference if the balance of the new car warranty is less than the 12 months. There is also statutory protections as well that the larger used car dealers adhere to without resistance because they work on a model to stack them high and kiss them good bye. They don't make much on the sale of a car, but on the finance. They don't much like cash buyers, but to ensure they get the volume, they do a lot to preserve their reputation. Some of these are not venturing into making the used EV purchase a virtually risk free proces as they see a big market of better value cars and better demand. So I was looking at autotrader.co.uk for cars with bettter than 250 mile range. I selected a few, of which the MG ZS 72.x KW was one, and checked out the ads. The reputable dealers have RAC or AA battery tests performed. Fore about £9K, I was looking at 2021 - 2023 models of varying mileage, but averaging arount 30k miles (50k kms). So much for 10% degradation per year of the battery - most were showing 98 - 99% of life left in them, and the lowest was about 96%. I did some research and, ironically, apart from the mini, the real world ranges were not far off the claimed range - probably on average 10% less than claimed range. The batter checks also stated claimed range and provided estimated real world ranges at 0 degrees c ambient temperature and 25 degrees C ambient temperatures. At zero degrees, it was about 25% less range than at 25 degrees. OK, for the cars I was looking at, and taking into account the decreased range at motorway speeds, I should still be able to get to London without needing a charge and have some in reserve. Sticking it on a charger overnight would have me right tor the trip home and assuming it would be 0 - 100% charge. cost me about £35 - half that of the Volvo and about 2/3 that of the now dead mini. Not to mention the generally lower servicing costs, less to go wrong and therfore more reliability, etc. it sounds like a no-brainer - especialliy when you consider partner's driving - glorified shopping trolley and occasional run to pick up the daughter - on A roads as she doesn't do motorways/highways. So, even then, her range will normally be longer than the average. So, I decided to broach with her the subject of getting an EV. I was met with a resounding "no" at every turn. But no logical argument to say why not. Just "I want a petrol car..." I was flabbergasted.. Why? Eve3rything she read was about EV fires and lack of infrastructure. Also, when we sell this house, she may end up in a mid-terrace house with no guarantee she can park outside to connect the car to charge. OK.. the infrastrcutre down here is not what it is in London. But there is good infrastructure. First the chances she won'[t have a driveway are pretty low. But even on that assumption, I explained the area she was looking at has a public charging point and there is no petrol station for about 10 miles or so heading towards Exeter. So, it would be easier for her if she was low on fuel to get the battery topped up than petrol in her car. Then she said she would use it only hopefully once evry couple of weeks and the battery woudl discharge.. I could have put any number of stats in front of her to say that it would take anything from 6 months to a year to discharge a 72kw/h battery not in use.. and that she could expect the lead acid battery to discharge enough to make the car unuseable loing before that. Still she wasn't having a bar of it. Oh well, she will have to live with it and the costs. But the research I did made EVs even more compelling to me than they were beforehand. [Edit] I forgot to mention, most of the batteries still have 5 years of warranty left and a lot of the cars still had 2 - 3 years of warranty left, too.. Don't get that with the petrol cars of the same age.4 points
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The ironic thing about what Trump has done is that the majority of Venezualians are celebrating the arrest of Maduro. But remember that a lot of Sudeten Germans celebrated when Hitler annexed the Sudatenland.4 points
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Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who was convicted of drug trafficking, was pardoned by President Donald Trump on December 1, 2025. Hernández had been sentenced to 45 years in prison for his role in a scheme that imported over 400 tonnes of cocaine into the United States.4 points
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The E-horse was a marketing failure. Owners had difficulty plugging in a charger.4 points
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I simply pointed out that the recycling industry is tooling up to provide recycling. There have been lots of doomsday sadsacks claiming that EV's are a pollution problem. It looks like the EV has a more profitable recycling lifecycle than piston powered vehicles.4 points
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This morning, my little son said, "My ear hurts, Dad." Concerned, I asked, "Inside or out?" He walked away, then returned through the back door. "Both, Dad." I think I'll cash in his university savings account.4 points
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Piss off to the USA then, if it's not to your liking here. We have fair elections. He did say, If she wasn't MY daughter, I'd be dating her. A bit ODD to my way of thinking . He free's Crooks IF their Mother donates enough to him. He's a Perve Himself. Calls under age young Females "the Merchandise" and recommends Grabbing Women by the pussy. . Nev4 points
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The latest executive order is commanding the US secretary of defence to build up the national guard. The purpose is to have a larger readily available force for rapid deployment anywhere within the country. Why? Recently the national guard has been used to suppress political dissent. Some are comparing this to the SS.3 points
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What the USA is doing is proving that the US style of democracy is a failure. In other countries with true democracies, Trump would have been ousted from power by now.3 points
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His reason for pardoning Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández? "He reminded me of myself."3 points
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The Chairman of the NRMA was quoted today saying that we can expect petrol prices to drop to about 2020 levels simply because there is a it of a glut in the market. He did not atach the cause of that glut to Trump's latest actions. Perhaps EVs are causing a drop in demand, or maybe Trump's tariff attacks on oil producers are causing the producers to sell in other markets. If the USA cannot meet its own domestic demand for sour crude, then we might see lots of Yank tanks abandoned on the side of the road. Look out for the Amish to take over long haul transport!!3 points
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The Express is extremely alarmist, and nothing sells news like saying WW3 is upon us. Putin is too smart to confront the U.S. directly, and he'll find a way to undermine the Americans efforts in Venezuela.3 points
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Have these idiots not seen Avatar one, two, or three? Or Afghanistan, Vietnam, or Iraq? Foreign invaders seldom get along well with the invaded. Buy more popcorn folks! We all thought it was winding up, but the story has just begun.3 points
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I have found similar EV advantage here in AU, too. Our Mitzi is getting a bit wheezy, with 340,000k on it, and dropping a new (s/h) motor into it will cost more than she is worth. There are some nice new EV's coming onto market at last. But the market is not settled yet - who knows which brands will still be around in a few years? The S/H market looks quite good. And battery degradation (as you noted) doesn't look like being an issue. Next car will definitely be EV.3 points
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It's generally accepted that Maduro was every bit as bad as his reputation suggested and his demise is welcomed by most of the population. However, Trump is far more interested in getting his hands on Venezuela's oil than in restoring democracy. He will prop up whoever he thinks will facilitate access for American companies to get their hands on the oil reserves. Like Canada, Venezuela has the heavy crude that US refineries are set up to process. The US produces a lighter grade that doesn't suit their refineries and most of Venezuela's current limited output goes to China which is another reason he wants the oil. His biggest problem will be that US companies will be very wary of pouring a lot of infrastructure development money into a country that is politically unstable. Even if they did, it would take years to get a significant increase in production because the existing infrastructure is in such bad shape.3 points
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Yep, what a great move. A special military operation to remove a threat to stable Govt - which Govt, only the invader can provide. Straight out of his best mates playbook. The only thing missing is the Nazis that were threatening the countrys democratic stability.3 points
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His prospects for a Nobel Peace prize are starting to look a bit bleak, but on the positive side his prospects for a referral to the International Criminal Court are looking much better.3 points
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Putanna and Xi would be very happy. Justifys anything they do if the US can do it, so can they.3 points
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Unfortunately such a list would require more bandwidth than this site has in order for that list to be posted.3 points
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There's nothing like a good war-move distraction to reduce the heat level being applied to one arse.3 points
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More perverse than "I grab them by the pussy" More perverse than telling a very young girl (about 8 years old "I will be dating you in about 10 years. More perverse than being found civilly liable for sexual assault. More perverse than calling Epstein a terrific guy. I could go on and on.3 points
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"The price of liberty is eternal vigilance." It pays all free peoples to be vigilant to the possible loss of liberties. That means careful monitoring of our system of leadership. Fortunately our Australian system has the means to remove leaders who remove liberties. However that often simply results in placing a similar type in the role.2 points
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That’s true but Trump’s focus is now on the Western hemisphere and he’s pretty short sighted when it comes to strategic thinking. Hopefully his more level headed military advisors would stop him walking away completely. Even so, his instinct is to reduce his overseas forces and get the NATO countries to make up the shortfall.2 points
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America has been self Indoctrinating for a Long time. ie the government, FBI, CIA is always your enemy which cannot be trusted. It's been correct enough times to consider, but it's Just another manifestation of all pervading corruption of a greed filled Society being overcome by temptation and MIGHT is Right.. Not the Only Place in the World with THAT Problem. That's WHY we Have RULES and DUE Process. ( Or DID Have). Nev2 points
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This article was posted on Facebook. Very interesting. For fifty years, he was one of the British Empire's most brilliant surgeons—and after he died, the world tried to erase everything he'd accomplished because of what they found when they examined his body. London, 1809. A slight young man barely five feet tall enrolled at Edinburgh University medical school. His name was James Barry. He was brilliant, abrasive, and determined to become a surgeon. He was also living a secret that would remain hidden for the next fifty-six years. Barry excelled at Edinburgh, graduating with honors in 1812. He joined the British Army as a medical officer and was posted to Cape Town, South Africa in 1816. What happened there would change surgical history. In 1826, a woman in Cape Town was dying in childbirth. The baby couldn't be delivered naturally. In that era, this was essentially a death sentence—both mother and child would die. Cesarean sections had been attempted for centuries, but almost never successfully. The mother nearly always died from blood loss, infection, or shock. Dr. James Barry decided to try anyway. He performed the surgery with precision and care that was extraordinary for the time. He controlled bleeding meticulously. He worked quickly to minimize shock. He managed post-operative care with techniques far ahead of standard practice. Both mother and baby survived. It was one of the first successful cesarean sections in Africa, and one of the earliest in the British Empire where both patients lived. The child was named James Barry Munnik Bekker in honor of the surgeon who'd saved both their lives. But Barry's achievements went far beyond one surgery. Over his fifty-year military career, he revolutionized medical care across the British Empire. He improved conditions in military hospitals and prisons. He advocated for clean water supplies and proper sewage systems—critical public health measures before germ theory was understood. He insisted on treating soldiers, prisoners, and enslaved people with the same medical standards as officers. He fought constantly with superior officers who thought he was arrogant and difficult. He was court-martialed multiple times for insubordination—usually for refusing to provide inadequate medical care or for treating people his superiors thought didn't deserve treatment. He was promoted anyway, eventually becoming Inspector General of Military Hospitals—one of the highest medical positions in the British Army. Barry served in South Africa, Mauritius, Jamaica, St. Helena, Trinidad, Malta, Corfu, and Canada. Everywhere he went, he improved medical standards and saved lives. He was known as brilliant, temperamental, eccentric, and absolutely uncompromising about patient care. He kept everyone at a distance. He never married. He had a long-term manservant named John who was fiercely protective of his privacy. He wore padded clothing and walked with a peculiar gait. People found him strange, but his medical skills were undeniable. In 1865, Dr. James Barry died in London of dysentery at approximately age 70. And then the secret came out. The woman preparing Barry's body for burial, Sophia Bishop, discovered that Barry had been assigned female at birth. Moreover, she claimed there were marks suggesting Barry had given birth at some point. Bishop told the army. The army told the newspapers. The scandal exploded. Victorian society couldn't comprehend what they'd learned. The newspapers struggled with how to report it. Medical journals debated what it meant. The army sealed Barry's records. And almost immediately, people began trying to erase Barry's achievements. Instead of celebrating one of the British Empire's most accomplished surgeons, Victorian society focused on scandal and deception. Instead of acknowledging fifty years of medical innovation, they obsessed over Barry's body. The person who'd performed groundbreaking surgery, who'd revolutionized public health across multiple continents, who'd fought for the medical treatment of the most vulnerable people in the empire—all of that got buried under shock and gossip. Barry had specifically requested in writing that there be no post-mortem examination after death. That request was ignored. Barry had lived as a man for over fifty years, had built a career as a man, had been buried with military honors as a man. After death, all of that was suddenly called into question. Here's what we know for certain: James Barry was an extraordinary surgeon who saved countless lives and advanced medical practice across the British Empire. We know Barry performed one of the first successful cesarean sections in Africa. We know Barry fought for sanitation, clean water, and medical care for marginalized people. We know Barry challenged medical orthodoxy and military hierarchy to improve patient outcomes. We know Barry wanted privacy and specifically requested no examination after death—a final wish that was violated. The rest—how Barry understood their own identity, why Barry lived as a man, what that meant to them—we can't know. Barry never explained publicly. The only person who knew was Barry, and Barry took that knowledge to the grave. What we do know is that Barry's medical achievements deserve to be remembered. The child born by cesarean in Cape Town in 1826 grew up, had his own children, and his descedants are alive today—all because James Barry had the skill and courage to attempt a surgery most surgeons wouldn't try. The soldiers, prisoners, and colonized people who received medical care because Barry insisted they deserved treatment—their lives mattered because Barry fought for them. The hospitals that improved sanitation, the cities that built clean water systems, the medical standards that were raised—all because Barry wouldn't accept "good enough" when lives were at stake. For over a century after Barry's death, these achievements were footnotes to scandal. Medical history books focused more on Victorian shock than on surgical innovation. Only recently have historians begun to properly recognize Barry's contributions to medicine and public health. Today, there are plays, books, and documentaries about James Barry. Medical schools teach about Barry's innovations. Public health experts cite Barry's advocacy for sanitation and clean water. The child from that 1826 cesarean, James Barry Munnik Bekker, grew up to become a prominent South African. His grandson, James Barry Munnik Hertzog, became Prime Minister of South Africa. Three generations descended from a surgery most doctors said was impossible—all because one surgeon refused to accept that "impossible" meant letting patients die. Dr. James Barry lived for fifty years as a military surgeon, saving lives and challenging medical orthodoxy. Whatever else Barry was, whatever secrets Barry kept, whatever identity Barry held privately—those achievements are undeniable. The world tried to erase them after Barry's death. We shouldn't let that erasure stand. Because James Barry proved that brilliant medical care, fierce advocacy for patients, and revolutionary public health thinking matter more than society's rigid expectations. And that's true regardless of what anyone discovered after Barry died. In honor of Dr. James Barry (c. 1789-1865), Inspector General of Military Hospitals, who saved countless lives and whose medical innovations outlasted Victorian scandal.2 points
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I may be rude sometimes but I believe in democracy and the rule of law, two things that pathetic excuse for a human does not. Have fun in your far right bubble GON.2 points
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