- Joined
- 3 July 2009
- Posts
- 27,628
- Reactions
- 24,511
Maybe Bas, the loony left think they can make Australia better than the best, because they have this underlying need to prove something( prove we can stop DV, prove we can stop Indigenous incarceration and crime rates, stop violence, stop theft, stop crime.Perhaps.. Hopefully.. And anyway in the political world of 2021 "truth" and "fact" are in short supply. The previous President of the United States still insists he is the rightful President and non one seems capable of stopping this travesty.
Anyway it seems that the Right Honourable Christian Porter (?) may have settled a number of previous sexual abuse allegations with non disclosure agreements. And now these may come to light ?
Clearly, given the zeal of the Right Honourable Christian Porter to protect his good name, we have to wait for the appropriate legal outcome before speculating on just what have have transpired in Christian Porters history and how these impact on any statemenst he has made to date. ( Or if in fact the Government cares..)
Lets just hope this coincides with justice.
So quick to judge Bas, another example of our brilliant media. ?Seriously ? After reading that story I think Andrew Roberts-Smith is half way to a long jail stretch. Intimidating witnesses, conning police into a massive home raid on a potential witness - not to mention what actually happened in Afghanistan on the ground.
Very ugly indeed. Going to be interesting to see how long Kerry Stokes supports him - or gets dragged down.
So quick to judge Bas, another example of our brilliant media. ?
From the article:Nine drops claim soldier Ben Roberts-Smith murdered Afghan man in 2012
Nine drops a claim that Australian SAS soldier Ben Roberts-Smith murdered an Afghan man in 2012 as it prepares its final defence in a landmark defamation trial.www.abc.net.au
That defence, which was previously tendered to court, related to the alleged "execution of an unarmed Afghan".
The media company had claimed Mr Roberts-Smith crossed the Helmand River in search of the "unarmed man" he believed was fleeing as Australian forces approached the area, before shooting him dead at close range.
During a previous hearing in the Federal Court in 2019, counsel for Mr Roberts-Smith, Bruce McClintok QC said the sum of the allegations were "extraordinarily grave".
He raised the example of the man who was shot dead near the Helmand River, stating he was not "unarmed" as Nine was set to claim, but was equipped with detonators and an AK-47.
"My client took off his body armour and his pack and with only his weapon and a medical kit, swam across the river onto the land to the rocks, killing him," he said.
"On him, he had an AK-47… he also had detonators which were significant because they had never seen that kind of detonator in Afghanistan before, presumably foreign made.
"My client took the body down the river so it could be photographed.
"He's accused of killing an unarmed man. So far as being unarmed, my client put on display the AK-47 in the patrol room at Tarinkot…"
Bas that doesn't change the fact, it was put forward as evidence and had to be removed as it was erroneous, that 'evidence' is supposed to be the result of an investigative report.SP if your going to quote a story perhaps you could acknowledge all the material rather than pick the lines you want to run ?
Mr Roberts-Smith has many horrific and credible accusations against him as the ABC story notes. And these were echoed by the Defence Forces investigation.
The defamation trial will establish how much evidence can be brought to bear.
From the ABC story.
The killing was not raised in the original articles published by Nine's newspapers but was set to form part of its defence.
It is also separate from another allegation first raised in the media articles over the killing of Afghan civilian Ali Jan.
Nine's newspapers claimed Ali Jan was handcuffed and kicked off a cliff by Mr Roberts-Smith before being shot dead by another soldier.
Maybe Bas, the loony left think they can make Australia better than the best, because they have this underlying need to prove something( prove we can stop DV, prove we can stop Indigenous incarceration and crime rates, stop violence, stop theft, stop crime.
Well they have been able to support this utopian belief, on the back of the hard working never say die work ethic of an aging population, that tried hard worked hard and now are criticised.
I hope the young idealistic cotton wool generation, can carry the burden they are placing on themselves.
Just my opinion.
That's interesting IFocus, my oldest is an underground sparkie on $160k, best mate is a garbo on $100k, daughter works 3 days a week in a library on $50k.I think you are living in a bubble to some degree SP my kids and their friends hold serious jobs with more responsibility, work far harder, longer hours and get paid less than I did as a tradesman back in the day... pretty much thanks to your Liberal Party.
Kids work harder, longer, and get less? Sounds like poor parenting over poor government.I think you are living in a bubble to some degree SP my kids and their friends hold serious jobs with more responsibility, work far harder, longer hours and get paid less than I did as a tradesman back in the day... pretty much thanks to your Liberal Party.
Kids work harder, longer, and get less? Sounds like poor parenting over poor government.
Try using data instead of anecdote.That's interesting IFocus, my oldest is an underground sparkie on $160k, best mate is a garbo on $100k, daughter works 3 days a week in a library on $50k.
So I don't know what you did back in the day, but I was a senior supervisor in SECWA in the late 80's on $35k, with 5 foreman and multi disciplines working under my supervision.
So either you were paid really well, back in the day, or your kids are in the wrong jobs?
Figure 2: Average weekly household income (before tax), by household type, 1995/96 to 2017/18 to 2017-18
Does this include government benefits, family tax allowances etc or just employer pay ?
It would also be interesting to see a breakdown between public and private sectors.
Robs chart shows average weekly wages, the one I posted shows household income with government subsidies.Does this include government benefits, family tax allowances etc or just employer pay ?
It would also be interesting to see a breakdown between public and private sectors.
I went back 50 years and the data is accurate.You could go back a bit Rob, 2008 - 2012 the Rudd/ Gillard years. ?
Check out the 2000 - 2008 Howard years. ? ? ?
You shouldn't be so selective with your data.
Household incomes
Even with the gender pay gap and many women working part-time, household incomes have, on average, increased considerably over the last two decades. In the 2017/18 financial year, the average weekly household income, before tax, was $2,242, up from $1,361 in 1995/96 (Figure 2).
Figure 2: Average weekly household income (before tax), by household type, 1995/96 to 2017/18 to 2017-18
View attachment 125105
Note: Adjusted for inflation to 2017/18 dollars. Data for 2001/02 were not available. To maintain the two-year intervals, data for 2000/01 and 2002/03 were averaged as an estimate for 2001/02.
Source: ABS (various years - 1996 to 2019)
Credit: Australian Institute of Family Studies 2020
Not an appropriate metric, yet again!Lets go back to your years and see the plunge, Labor years 1980-1990. ? That's 50 years Rob.
View attachment 125110
Fact: the largest fall in real wages was under Hawke.
Real wages and nominal wages are different things, and that's why @IFocus was correct.Fact: the largest fall in real wages was under Hawke.
Fact: the largest increase in retirement age was under Rudd.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?