old man emu Posted Monday at 12:48 AM Posted Monday at 12:48 AM What is the only real way that you can prove your age? It is a birth certificate. How many of us actually have an original birth certificate? I just realised that my original document is with my son at the moment as he needed it so my grandson could get a passport. How many parents have an original birth certificate for each child? Then, if you do have an original birth certificate, how do you provide it to a social media operator? There's all that information on the document that is required to establish identity. How secure is it? We believe that we live in a democracy where the majority rules. Has anyone ever seen statistics on how many Under-16s have been affected in a seriously adverse what through social media. I agree that those reported suicides and lesser ills should not have occurred, but what percentage of children do they represent? A minute percentage, I suppose. 1 1
facthunter Posted Monday at 01:02 AM Posted Monday at 01:02 AM What does suppose mean? I seriously doubt it's minute. We collectively have the responsibility of protecting Kids from predatory acts and that's an unfortunate fact of modern life.. Nev 1
old man emu Posted Monday at 02:09 AM Posted Monday at 02:09 AM 1 hour ago, facthunter said: What does suppose mean? I seriously doubt it's minute. We collectively have the responsibility of protecting Kids from predatory acts and that's an unfortunate fact of modern life.. Nev By "minute", I mean a number much less than 1% of the total population. In other words, most kids are not seriously affect. They have contact with it, but pass it by. "We collectively have the responsibility of protecting Kids". And the first people who have that responsibility are parents. They are duty bound to gain an understanding of how to deal with the problem and then spend the time talking to their kids to help them develop strategies to meet the problem. The most important thing for parents to instill in their kids is that keeping things bottled up and not talking to parents about them is a sure way to be beaten by the problem. Unfortunately, I don't think that the parents ever got that idea from their own parents. 1
facthunter Posted Monday at 02:35 AM Posted Monday at 02:35 AM I guess we each have our own views. Parents DO have lots of responsibilities but todays complex problems were not present in Past times where what you saw was what you related to. Not a whole world of danger contrived by experts intent on doing no good. Most good technology is under utilised in benefits and just directed at exploitation. Adults expect help from exposure to FRAUD. Surely easier impressed young minds more so.. Todays Parents have a really tough Job.. Nev 1 1
old man emu Posted Monday at 07:02 AM Posted Monday at 07:02 AM 4 hours ago, facthunter said: todays complex problems were not present in Past times The examples of the problems might be new, but the problems we are trying to help our kids deal with are just new example of things categorised as "DANGER". Modern parents are as adept with digital technology as their kids are. Those parents, if they are awake to what is going on in their kids' lives have to help them identify approaching danger and show them ways to avoid it, or, if the danger has struck, show them how to get out of its grip. A complete ban on access to social media causes the kids to miss out on the innumerable good things social media provides them and their friends. In our day, our parents happily let us go play in the surf, but they told us of the dangers and that they could be avoided by swimming between the flags. Let young kids today go swim in the social media surf, but show them where the flags are. 1
Marty_d Posted Monday at 07:10 AM Posted Monday at 07:10 AM (edited) 9 days now with no Internet. Bloody NBN. Their planning and execution of a fixed wireless tower upgrade is similar in effectiveness and timeliness to Putin's Ukraine expedition. Edited Monday at 07:10 AM by Marty_d 1
nomadpete Posted Monday at 08:21 AM Posted Monday at 08:21 AM 1 hour ago, Marty_d said: 9 days now with no Internet. Bloody NBN. Their planning and execution of a fixed wireless tower upgrade is similar in effectiveness and timeliness to Putin's Ukraine expedition. You must have been assessed as under 16 years of age. 1
spacesailor Posted Monday at 09:45 AM Posted Monday at 09:45 AM NBN suck's. Never makes a calender month without a breakdown , of some reason . spacesailor
pmccarthy Posted Monday at 06:53 PM Posted Monday at 06:53 PM Does anyone else find the new ABC news online format impossible to read? 1
facthunter Posted Monday at 09:09 PM Posted Monday at 09:09 PM The sky is falling in too, chicken Little. Nev
onetrack Posted Monday at 09:45 PM Posted Monday at 09:45 PM The ABC News format is nowhere near as good as it was previously - but this is common with website "revamps", they're done by geeks who have little understanding of what makes a readable webpage.
nomadpete Posted Monday at 10:00 PM Posted Monday at 10:00 PM 10 minutes ago, onetrack said: revamps", they're done by geeks who have little understanding Those 'geeks' are usually much younger than me. And are changing the style to suit much younger audiences - who generally have need for constant attention grabbing stuff. Mind-all-over-the-place. Hence a page that to me is disjointed and hard to follow. 1
old man emu Posted yesterday at 03:33 AM Posted yesterday at 03:33 AM Clothing gripe: I need to replace some well-worn T-shirts, so I had a look at what Big W had. Why do 'going-out' T-shirts have to have inane motifs or images of the current crop of American movie mayhem makers? The motifs are most often Wun Hung Lo's interpretation of American college football or basketball names and numbers, or are made to look like merch obtained at some obscure imaginary event. I don't mind wearing a T-shirt with the logo of a team or product I support, if it is worn at the appropriate time, but to wear one that is wholly a fiction irks me greatly. My limit is the small alligator or polo player logo on the clothing of those respective companies. It is hard to find a T-shirt in a plain colour, or even patterned that is free of this motif nonsense. I suppose I should simply join the wearers of Hi-Vis and blend into the crowd. 1 1
Marty_d Posted yesterday at 04:20 AM Posted yesterday at 04:20 AM I'm with you OME. I just bought some plain t shirts from Just Jeans. Even there I had to look for them. 1
spacesailor Posted yesterday at 05:55 AM Posted yesterday at 05:55 AM I'm peer about the ' Tshirt ' advertising. The there's the feminine attire that makes you look at the breast area . How about some male attire to entice those feminine eyes to our crotch area . It should get a few giggles . spacesailor PS. : remember I had four daughters . 2
facthunter Posted yesterday at 06:04 AM Posted yesterday at 06:04 AM THAT might explain a few things. I will try to be more Understanding. IF you want to fascinate Women try looking like Barry Humphries Sir Les Patterson. . Nev 2
Marty_d Posted yesterday at 07:05 AM Posted yesterday at 07:05 AM 1 hour ago, spacesailor said: I'm peer about the ' Tshirt ' advertising. The there's the feminine attire that makes you look at the breast area . How about some male attire to entice those feminine eyes to our crotch area . It should get a few giggles . spacesailor PS. : remember I had four daughters . Gravity affecting all things with age, you may have to direct the feminine gaze lower. 1 1
facthunter Posted yesterday at 07:08 AM Posted yesterday at 07:08 AM Genitalia are better to work with than Gaze at. Nev 2 1
spacesailor Posted yesterday at 07:22 AM Posted yesterday at 07:22 AM A I did it again .it should have read !. peed off . Very polite, not as son-in-laws say it . Dumb A I . How did that ' peer ' make any sense. spacesailor 1
onetrack Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago It's alright Spacey, we all spend a fair bit of time on your posts, trying to figure out if you're making sense! 😄 1
rgmwa Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 5 hours ago, Marty_d said: Gravity affecting all things with age, you may have to direct the feminine gaze lower. Any lower and they'd miss me altogether. 1
spacesailor Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Gravity is making me fat . Turn it down a bit so the trees can grow higher . Along with me . LoL spacesailor 1
facthunter Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Gravity keeps you strong. I find it very attractive actually. Nev
spacesailor Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago It's this " BMI " , That's worrying. According to them I'm 2 ft or half a metre shorter than I should be . spacesailor
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