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Posted

Practice HERE is for Parties to make policies and truthfully explain them fully and expect them to be acted on IF they win the election. Teals don't do that and have contested Liberal seats exclusively as far as I know,. Hanson votes NEVER go to Labor. I was sorry to see Nick Minchin go. Rebecca Sharkie is the only one who got a lower house seat out of all that. Nev

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Posted

As far as I recall, Nick Minchin was very pro-coal to the extent of lobbying banks when no-one would finance Abbott Point.  So on his stance on climate change I'm glad to see him go.

I have much more respect for his distant cousin Tim Minchin.

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Posted
5 hours ago, onetrack said:

4. Increase taxes on the extremely wealthy and make their "innovative" accounting and tax-minimisation methods illegal.

5. Limit the size of corporations so they cannot have more wealth than Govts, whereby they can control the Govts accordingly.

 

No 4 is an issue I wrote to politicians about, hand written letters sent by snail mail in those days (70's), talking about "Thin Capitalism" and "Transfer Pricing" in regards to global foreign multinationals mining and value adding our minerals predominately for export - no profit made in Australia, therefore no tax here from any profit. The profits made overseas remained overseas in headquarters accounts and they were cancelled out by large borrowings which kept the Australian plants producing more to sell overseas. The politicians answers were, you guessed it, "They provide employment that outweighs any anomalies in their business models", a Senate inquiry determined, Flo Bejelke Peterson was on it. They are called "Cost-Toll" operations, and the ATO turns which ever direction the political wind is blowing.   

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Posted

Trumps dopey decision to can EV's and anything to do with them, is going to hand the global car market on a plate, directly to the Chinese - and destroy all of the U.S car manufacturing industry.

 

If Trump thinks canning EV's and putting huge tariffs on Chinese cars is going to do great things for America and Americans, I've got some news for him.

I wonder how long before U.S. car manufacturers start pulling him aside and saying, "you'd better drop this crazy idea of yours that oil and fossil-fuel powered cars are the future - because they aren't!"

 

https://www.torquenews.com/17995/uss-end-ev-support-will-significantly-strengthen-chinas-aggressive-moves-dominate-ev-industry

 

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Posted

This discussion about constitutions seems to have a stumbling block in that no one has defined what the word 'constitution' describes. Basically, any constitution is a written instrument embodying the rules of a organization. Recreational Flying Australia has a constitution, as does the Mens Shed organisation. 

 

Although not having Jerry's grasp on the two Constitutions being discussed in this thread, I think that the Australian one is the better. Don't forget that it is the product of over ten years' discussion and debate here in pre-Federation Australia, as well as having been scrutinised by legal experts in the United Kingdom.  The Constitution is a document which was conceived by Australians, drafted by Australians and approved by Australians.

 

A distinct difference between the USA's and Australia's is the distinction between the Parliament and the Executive Government due to the fact that, in Australia, the Prime Minister and the other Government Ministers (who form part of the Executive) must be members of Parliament.  This reflects the principle of responsible government under which Government Ministers (the Executive) must be members of, and accountable to, the Parliament. The difference with the USA is currently being displayed through Trump's appointments.

 

Looking at the process by which either Constitution can be amended, Australia has the more democratic. Firstly, most of the National electorate must approve the amendment, then the wishes of the electorate in each State and Territory are taken into account. This is done by a simple counting of the votes. First past the post wins. The decision does not have to be ratified by State parliaments. The original Constitution has been amended eight times, in 1907 (S.13), 1910 (S.105), 1929 (S.105), 1946 (S.51), 1967 (S.51, S.127), and three amendments in 1977 (S.15, S.72, S.128), so the original version must have been pretty watertight.

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Posted

Trump had a TV ratings win with the televising of the inauguration. Actually the prize was for the lowest ratings for an inauguration since 1969 when Nixon was sworn in.

 

The figures were compiled by the ratings agency Nielsen's. An estimated 24.6 million viewers tuned in on Monday, January 20, 2025 to watch the inauguration. That's 7.3% of the total population of the USA, and 10% of the eligible voters. Very interesting is the break-up by age

 

Viewership Across TV Networks

Live plus same day,
U.S. audience estimates
Viewing Audience Rating
Persons 2+ 24,589,000 8.0
Households 17,531,000 14.1
Persons 18-34 1,430,000 1.9
Persons 35-54 4,665,000 5.8
Persons 55+ 17,397,000 17.4

Source: Nielsen Fast Data, Live+Same-Day.

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, facthunter said:

The Fitzgerald enquiry stirred them all up. Nev

 

Quite, yes it did, but the "No profit - No tax" system, continued on merrily.

 

When the Fed politicians took up the issue decades later and tried to get some tax out of the companies, it was only for public consumption, following demands for the companies to pay more tax. There was really nothing they could do. The only way to stop the rort would have been to send them packing, or demand a high percentage of Australian equity in those companies, we're talking about all the large mining companies and value-adding companies that had a finger in the pie of the "No profit - No tax" operations. Also trying to force them to move their headquarters to Australia. I'm not sure how it all panned out in the end, there has been so much hidden from us, it would take a real indepth study by 4Corners to reveal it all to us.

 

Employment provided by these companies has always been the driving factor for the politicians, so it's a waste of time crying "Pay more tax", or "Pay your fair share of tax". If we keep voting (exclude me) in the two major parties, don't complain about "Cost-Toll", no tax operations. It's a issue you'll just have to live with, like a lot of other issues you don't like, but live with. Change your vote if you think "no tax" is wrong.

 

I did my bit years ago, over a span of about 2 years, I don't know how many letters I sent, a fair few I remember. Each answer told me to mind my own business, we know what we're doing Squirt.

Posted
4 minutes ago, Grumpy Old Nasho said:

Fair enough

 

Trump's czar Homan has removed hundreds of illegal immigrants in the last few days.

Moved ?

I heard that quite a few moved right back to USA soil. On the same plane!

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Posted
3 minutes ago, Grumpy Old Nasho said:

Trump's czar Homan has removed hundreds of illegal immigrants in the last few days.

With mixed results.

 

Trump’s Immigration Threats Are Already Wrecking the Food Industry

ICE Detains US Military Veteran Without Warrant

Trump hits Colombia with tariffs, sanctions after it refuses deportation flights

 

I have no problem with the law being enforced however there seems to be a contradiction between "lazy illegal immigrants sponging off the system" and farmers complaining that their "workforce has suddenly disappeared".  It seems to me that there has to be an intelligent way of allowing people in to do necessary work that US citizens won't do, even if temporarily.

 

 

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Posted
4 minutes ago, octave said:

It seems to me that there has to be an intelligent way of allowing people in to do necessary work that US citizens won't do, even if temporarily.

US citizens do what ever work they can get. They need the money.

Posted
Just now, Grumpy Old Nasho said:

US citizens do what ever work they can get. They need the money.

 

Not according to the farmers that employ them on I imagine pretty low wages

 

Farmers Can't Find Enough Workers to Harvest Crops—and Fruits and Vegetables Are Literally Rotting in Fields

 

I am not necessarily against any country enforcing its immigration laws as long as it is done humanely and sensibly.   The veteran who was briefly detained was detained purely because of his ethnicity.  

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Posted
20 minutes ago, octave said:

the farmers that employ them on I imagine pretty low wages

The treatment of itinerant workers in the food growing areas of California is nothing new. It formed the basis of the 1939 John Steinbeck novel, The Grapes of Wrath.

 

In that novel, the itinerants were tenant farmers who had been driven from their Oklahoma home by drought, economic hardship, agricultural industry changes, and bank foreclosures forcing tenant farmers out of work. Due to their nearly hopeless situation, and in part because they are trapped in the Dust Bowl, the main characters of the novel set out for California on the "mother road", along with thousands of other "Okies" seeking jobs, land, dignity, and a future.

 

When the "Okies" reached California, they found the State oversupplied with labor; wages low, and workers exploited to the point of starvation. The big corporate farmers were in collusion and smaller farmers suffered from collapsing prices. All police and state law enforcement authorities were allied with the big corporate farmers. 

 

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grapes_of_Wrath

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Posted

Promote division and  CREATE a cause of ALL the trouble. It's become "These extreme lefties" for a while now. A FAIR GO FOR ALL is not acceptable. It's a THREAT to the OBSCENELY RICH. for whom $hit Loads is never enough, POWER will NOT be shared. The MORE POWER, the More corruption and FORCE required to maintain it. Nothing NEW Here. It's just a lot more BLATANT and SCARY, than normal.  Nev

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