- Joined
- 3 July 2009
- Posts
- 27,716
- Reactions
- 24,661
It wont work out, unless the rent seekers get their way, that is the way today.It should work out cheaper as long as the rent seekers don't get there way.
Well I doubt this government will be as corrupt as the previous.It wont work out, unless the rent seekers get their way, that is the way today.
Someone has to pay the rent, it just depends whether you make the privates take it out of their profits, or you take it out of the taxpayer.
It seems at the moment the taxpayer is going to be the bunny, which is fine there is way too much money available for uber eats and streaming IMO.
From my life experience nothing much changes, only the faces, but it is nice that some have an unwavering faith.Well I doubt this government will be as corrupt as the previous.
Michael Pascoe: Political coroner finds Coalition deeply corrupt
The latest chapter of the coroner’s report unsurprisingly finds the Coalition government was a particularly diseased body when it was put down on May 21.thenewdaily.com.au
What? You think John Howard was deeply corrupt? Robert Menzies? Bob Hawke?, Julia Gillard? No, the legacy of Morrison in particular is why so many want the anti corruption commission set up for the Feds, but I suppose you are against it.From my life experience nothing much changes, only the faces, but it is nice that some have an unwavering faith.
I wasn't saying any particular person is corrupt, or any particular party is corrupt, only that due to the number of people in Government the law of averages implies that some will be corrupt. As can be shown throughout history.What? You think John Howard was deeply corrupt? Robert Menzies? Bob Hawke?, Julia Gillard? No, the legacy of Morrison in particular is why so many want the anti corruption commission set up for the Feds, but I suppose you are against it.
I didn’t say it, the Auditor General did and only just recently as per article posted.Are you implying Scott Morrison personally is corrupt? That is an interesting statement and unless I could prove that I personally wouldn't say it, but I suppose you do have proof.
Obviously you didn't read what I said, I would rather an anti corruption watchdog wasn't appointed by the Government, I would rather it a function of the police department, where every investigation is treated as a possible criminal one.I knew you would be against an anti corruption watchdog. At least in NSW and to a lesser extent, due to a weaker watchdog, the corrupt politicians get caught.
Yes, good point, I hadn't noticed that.Am I in the right thread ?
This is really the first project that has successfully generated electricity for a customer, and that goes to prove that ocean energy can work," Stephanie Thornton from Australian Ocean Energy Group said.
"That electricity is of a very high quality and has been accepted by Hydro Tasmania as suitable for the grid on King Island, so that's a very important achievement."
Big watch but worth it Rumpy. Thanks.Research continues on nuclear fusion.
I'm inherently wary of the "not needed" argument.An interesting article on New Zealand and its issues as it chases the illusive 100% renewable grid.
That is the underlying problem with all this, it is renewables or nothing and also it is renewables with no adverse environmental or ecological outcomes, the parameters just about makes what they want impossible IMO.I'm inherently wary of the "not needed" argument.
Seen this one before and the track record of such claims isn't good. It ends up with a fossil fuel plant built in a hurry when the inevitable happens.
It's like the argument against pumped hydro in Australia. What opponents don't mention is that their claim of it not being needed assumes ongoing use of fossil fuels which, strangely, they also seem opposed to.
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?