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Suburban Eastern Australia, an environment that has over time

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evolved some extraordinarily unique groups of homosapien.

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Despite the reputation of their Homeland, some are remarkably thin skin.

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Some seem to have multiple lifespans.

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A few were once thought to be extinct in the region.

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Others have been observed being sacrificed by their own, but today we observe a small

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tribe akin to a group of mere cats that gathered together a top, a small amount

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to watch question and discuss the current events of their city, their country, and

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their world at large let's listen keenly and observe this group fondly known

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as the iron fist and the velvet glove.

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Well, hello deal is now episode 322 on the iron fist and the velvet glove

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podcast got the panel back this week.

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And it's tough.

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You more days until Christmas, just a few sleeps.

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I've caught some Trevor Iki.

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Well with me whenever she can squeeze us in between flights and work, the

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working class, a shy welcome back shy person and J and J the tech guy evening.

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All right, dear listener.

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If you're in the chat room, say hello, dire straits, is their hair going, John?

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Good to see you there.

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If you're in the chat room, say hello.

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And if you're in the chat room, look, we've got lots of videos

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and different pictures that we'll be putting up on the screen.

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So I think as this podcast is evolving next year, there might be more and more

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videos and clips and pictures and things.

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So become more of a visual experience, not just audio, but we'll try and always

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make it so that if you are listening to the podcast, you will understand what's

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going on, even if we are using a picture, but we'll just add a bit more to it.

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So.

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All right, well Shay, welcome back.

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First of all, you've been working in your job as a hostess.

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Is that what, what's the technical term for your job?

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I think we prefer having cruel flight attendant now.

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All right, good.

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Sorry.

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Yes.

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I knew I was committing some sort of transgression there.

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Surely Dolly biscuit Slinger.

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Right.

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And I was just curious what's the atmosphere like in the planes that

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people more or less pleasant or angry than normal or what's it like there.

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Business as usual, I've found them to be maybe more tense.

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Certainly.

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People never liked it when they had people sitting beside them, but they're

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even more annoyed about that now.

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Right.

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Okay.

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I would've thought most of the flights would be fairly full.

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It varies.

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I think Queensland is actually aren't moving around that much, but I think lots

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of people coming in were empty on the way out and then we're full coming back.

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Very good.

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So I know my daughter is planning on coming up from Sydney and she

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was very nervous because you have to provide a, I clear COVID test.

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That's no more than 72 hours old.

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By the time you take the flight.

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And the problem was that it was taking longer than 72 hours to get the tests.

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It was one of those classic catch 22 situations, but she's got a test

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result back it's negative, and she's going to be on a flight tomorrow night.

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So that'll be good.

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So it's just a really nervous time for normally a holiday.

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It has to be PCR.

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I think so.

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I don't because you can get the rapid tests.

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No, that wasn't the pharmacy.

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No, I think it had to be something else.

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So it's quite a nervous time for everybody trying to get away and worried

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whether they gonna get on the flight.

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And then if they get on the flight, the idea that the guy in front of

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you, the row in front or behind.

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Might have COVID and therefore you are then put into quarantine.

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That's scary.

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So, yeah.

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Oh, you know, what was really interesting as I was having conversation with

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my today, who was saying that people want people are really fearful of

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is Anastasia shutting the border.

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And I said, no, I think it's a deadly virus

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worried about them shutting the border.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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I understand.

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It's a consideration, but then I think anesthesia is the whole point of it.

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Surely not in this age of personal responsibility.

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My main worry would just be being forced into quarantine.

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The fact that somebody in another row had done and just out of an abundance of

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caution, I'm having to be in quarantine.

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I need to be in Sydney at the end of January, potentially.

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I think I might drive rather, rather than fly I'm solid yet.

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So although I've noticed on the contact tracing thing, they've

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actually put it down to rows

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instead of the whole airplane.

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Yeah.

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But it could be the row in the front of behind.

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Yeah, that's true.

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That would be annoying.

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How long in the chat room to Brahman essential law Dawn and grant Clark.

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Grants is the white time for visa to get into Australia is eight to 20 months.

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Let's say out of China, I would assume grant, is that the case?

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So boy, that's a long wait time for visa.

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Yeah, because there were people today going we flew them into

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Sydney from Melbourne and they were going to Fiji or going to Canada.

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Yep.

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So there's a few people that are willing to risk it.

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Yep.

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Yep.

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You can make it, you can leave.

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But getting back in at a friend was G to come from the UK

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to Australia in March, 2020.

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And this is the second year that he's now not being able to, or the third

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time he's been trying to plan the trip

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and he's going March 20, 22 is looking no better at the lower.

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Yeah.

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Yep.

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All right.

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Well, another velar chit chat about our COVID experiences.

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What are we going to do and talk about tonight?

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A little bit of an update on a satanic court case.

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We're going to talk a little bit further about what I was mentioning

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last week with my democracy rant.

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So hope you enjoyed that.

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There's some kinda keep ranting about it for a little bit.

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Juliana Sanje Polk barreling.

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Oh, of course.

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Scott Morrison and what he's been up to Sam Kerr and the way she

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shoulder charged in pitching.

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A whole crazy number of things.

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Plus COVID stuff.

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I look at the list and there's about 35 topics.

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I've checked with Joe and shy, neither a mess to get up early in the morning.

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So we're just going to keep going and see how many we get through.

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Yeah, so let's let's start off.

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First of all, the court case for religious satanic instruction in

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Queensland, and I got a message from the judge's associate early last week,

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which was, are you available on Friday?

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Which is the Friday just go on.

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Because the judge might be able to give his decision and we're all

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available, but unfortunately the judge then said he wasn't able to do it.

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So it was close.

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I thought I was going to be able to give you a decision, but now it's

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not going to be until the new year.

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So by the time we get it in mid January, that's going to be five

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months since the court case.

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So I don't know, obviously the case had some there it's taken five months.

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So so anyway sometime mid January now I would suspect for an answer on that one.

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So hanging out for that other things that have happened, I had

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to visit a customer at QUT the Queensland university of technology.

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And as I walked past yeah, old parliament house building.

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What did I spy, but I nativity scene at the front.

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So of course I had to take a photo of that and obviously Christian nativity scene.

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And I've put that on the list for next year.

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If we are successful with our satanic political action is to start working

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on nativity scenes and saying, well, if you want a Christian nativity scene

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somewhere now, I don't think we'll ever be able to do anything in parliament

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house because it's essentially a law unto itself, what they're doing

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there, it's up to them, what they do.

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But anyway, if I get if I get half a chance, then we'll be having a

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nativity scene with this character.

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You can see on the screen and it's a baby Beth and my, so hopefully

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that'll be one of the things we'll we'll sort of look at next year is a

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Christian nativity scenes and equal rights for other sorts of things.

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So that's on the agenda, so.

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Alright.

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Did you guys happen to listen to my rant about democracy and at all?

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Or maybe not?

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So that's all right.

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I'm about half an hour into it.

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Are there you go?

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Okay.

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It wasn't too long.

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So essentially what I was saying was that when you have to, when you're looking

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at the success or failure of different countries, you just have to look.

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Whether the USA treats them as a friend or a foe.

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And it didn't really matter whether they were democracy or not.

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It was a weather.

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The current arrangements were favorable in the, in the

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self-interest of America or not.

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And if you've got the right of America, you're in trouble, that was essentially

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a save yourself, listening to it, show that you have it in a nutshell.

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And I don't know, it's a little bit like if you're holding a hammer,

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everything you see is a nail.

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And so since doing that little rant, I've, I've come across

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a number of different things.

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And one of them was a little segment by an economist called Michael Hudson.

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So I'm just going to play that clip for you.

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So let me just find that, and I'll play this clip by Michael Hunt.

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Is going to end America's ability to control other countries.

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So yes, the CIA's job is to promote what is America's means that

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have financial leverage, as we're seeing now over Argentina which

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is now running into trouble again.

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And the pro us Argentina and government looked like it was going to lose the

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election that IMF lent an enormous amount of no money to Argentina, so that all of

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the wealthy Argentines and the American companies there could move their money

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out of Argentine currency into the dollar.

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And then after the left Britain took over the IMF, let Argentina drop and foreign

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speculators moved against Argentina.

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And so the United States can say, you know, whether your country has an

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oligarchy or democracy, if you have a democracy, we're going to crush you.

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If we support oligarchy, we said and that essentially I think is a Biden his

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hand having the summit between next week between a democracy and authoritarians, he

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said, look, America is backing autocracy.

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We're the autocracy, our enemy, our democratic countries

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that actually a follow up.

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Okay.

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And so that's Michael Hudson and I've read different things by him,

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which are quite interesting when it comes to currency and the U S dollar.

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And I just happened to come across another one.

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And so what are you going to hear from here as a guy, John mere Shimer and

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he's actually speaking at an event held by the center for independent studies,

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which is a right wing think tank.

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So for people what's that I said, Susan T yes.

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Yes.

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RT that would have been Russia to die was Michael Hudson.

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Yes.

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So from the left, you've got that view.

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And I'm about to give you from the rides.

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Well, you know, Santa Fe, independent studies, you can't get

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much more right-wing than that.

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Can you maybe the Institute of public affairs?

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So so John Mearsheimer is going to be speaking next.

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He's an American political scientist in international relations scholar who

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belongs to the realist school of thought.

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He's the, our Wendell Harrison distinguished service professor

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at the university of Chicago.

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If you've heard of university of Chicago economic center, you'll know

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we've got a right wing center there, I'm speaking at the right wing think

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tank center for independent studies.

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And he's known for his developing a theory of offensive realism, which

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describes the interaction between great powers as being primarily driven by the

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rational desire to achieve regional.

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In an anarchic international system.

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So he was a I've got it in the show notes there.

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So this is what this guy was saying while addressing the right wing think tank.

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And he is from the university of Chicago economic school.

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So let me find him here.

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Now, the question is, what does this all mean for Australia?

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You're in a quandary for sure.

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Everybody knows.

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Everybody knows what the quandary is.

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Security wise.

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You really want to go with us.

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It makes just a lot more sense.

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Right?

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And you understand that security is more important than prosperity

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because if you don't survive, you're not going to prosper.

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So Bibles of the utmost importance, because you can't pursue any

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other goals, if you don't survive.

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Right.

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So security has got to be number one.

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So you'll sacrifice prosperity for security, right?

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That's what will happen.

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That's why you'll be with us.

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Now.

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Some people say there's an alternative.

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You can go with China, right?

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You have a choice here.

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You can go with China rather than United States.

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It's two things I'll say about that.

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Number one, if you go with China, you want to understand you are.

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You are then deciding to become an enemy of the United States, because

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we're, again, we're talking about an intense security competition.

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You're either with us or against us.

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And if you're trading extensively with China and you're friendly with

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China, you're undermining the United States in the security competition.

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You're feeding the beast from our perspective, and that is

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not going to make us happy.

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And when we are not happy, you do not want to underestimate how nasty we

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can be just as Fidel Castro nervous laughter from the crowd there, but

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I'm just quoting Caitlin Johnston.

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She said, so that you have it.

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Australia is not aligned with the U S to protect itself from China.

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Australia is aligned with the U S to protect itself from the U S so

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anyway, a left-wing and a right-wing view, sort of in alignment with what

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I was saying in my rant last week.

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And essential law dances of the ranch was very Ren tequila.

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What does that mean?

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Essential law daunting.

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Okay.

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And also as part of that rant or spiel I was talking about, neo-liberalism and

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some people really don't understand, or I've never heard of the term Neo liberals.

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And George Monbiot wrote a piece, which was when, like the Russians

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who have never heard of communism.

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So imagine if the people of the Soviet union had never heard of communism, the

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ideology that dominates our lives has for the most of us, no nine mentioned it in

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conversation, and you'll be rewarded with a shrug, even if you'll listen to this,

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even if your listeners have heard the term before, they will struggle to define it,

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neo-liberalism do you know what it is?

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And in a nutshell, it's a sort of free market deregulation pro globalization

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reduce government spending, sell off government assets promoted by

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Frederick Hayek, Milton Friedman, and the Montpellier on society.

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That's in a nutshell neo-liberalism, which was, again, Reagan

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promoted by Reagan and Maggie.

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And essentially that's been accepted as, as the dominant theory of how economics

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works and should work in the world today.

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And what's people just don't know that, but it sort of has a way of insidiously

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sort of seeping into our culture where it's accepted those sort of principles.

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And, and we don't even see it.

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And there was an article here from independent Australia, which talked about.

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Journalists have the power to frame reality for audiences because they set

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the standards for what is considered good, bad, normal, or controversial.

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So we all know what framing is, is is, is where you ask a question or you make

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an initial statement in such a way that you sort of set it up to be in a, in a

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certain direction from the very beginning.

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So in this article it says, you know, journalists have the power

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to frame things and, and gave a really interesting example.

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I thought and I'm going to apply it now.

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It's not the guys for 30 seconds.

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And it was a recent interview between Lee sales on the seven 30

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report who was about to interview the treasurer, Josh Frydenberg.

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So let me just find this one.

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And here we go.

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Rottenberg joins me now from Cambra.

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Thank you for being with his treasurer must be with you.

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He's your March 29th budget.

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Next GA going to be about starting to recover the nation's balance sheet

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and pay down debt, or are you going to be unable to resist taking the

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nation even further into debt because you'll want to splash cash around

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because you heading into an election?

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Well, the buck, so this article gives that as a really interesting example

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of framing because the writer says there's nothing neutral about this.

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It presents without question the ideologically loaded idea that government

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debt is bad for the economy and that the government spending is politically

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problematic rather than desirable.

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It doesn't matter what Frydenberg responded because the question itself

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presents a bias view of the world.

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It presents a neoliberal assumption and thoughts is not balanced, but instead

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privileges conservative free market ideology ahead of competing perspectives.

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For example, it it elides over the opposing perspective of Canadian

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economic theory, which argues that government spending is good for

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the economy because it stimulates growth, particularly in tough times.

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So the way this writer says the questions set a standard for the respondent in the

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same way that when I asked my husband, if he has put the bins out, I'm asking

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because I want him to put the bins out.

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Not because I'm leading him to say yes, I have.

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At the end of the day, the audience was served up a boss,

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representation of reality.

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And this is subtle.

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And she goes on.

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She could have framed the question like this.

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Can you please explain for your audience, how you plan to manage the economy to

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ensure there is enough demand to stimulate economic growth and to make sure there is

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a job available for everyone who wants one and the writer would have been interested

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to hear the treasuries of response.

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I thought that was all very good.

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I think they're all about jobs and growth.

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Yes.

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But in which case, why not ask it in that fashion, but Lee sales

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definitely framed it as debts.

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Bad.

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You need to pay this down.

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If you're not doing that, then you obviously pandering to something else.

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So it was a set-up and yeah, I, myself might have spotted it.

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I don't think if I was just watching it, but this rod is gone all

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day, guy classic vise question.

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And I think the rider is correct.

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So, so again, I thought that was interesting.

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Right.

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That's enough of ongoing about my rant.

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Finish on that now.

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Julian Assange, sorry.

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If John was asking you, if you could define Neo liberal.

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Well, I think we did just earlier, like Neo liberal theory is that

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you must allow free markets.

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You cannot regulate them or you should not regulate them.

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There should be no tariffs.

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Globalization must be allowed.

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So multinational countries must be allowed to operate.

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Government spending on social services has to be reduced if the government

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owns assets like water and electricity or other things, it should sell

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them off because governments should not be in the business of business.

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Even if it's essential services.

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You know, that's, that's what neo-liberalism is about is, is a total

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reduction in the government of virtually nothing except defense and as few

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polices necessary, preferably you should hire your own security guards, you

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know, that's, that's near liberalism.

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I think somebody wants to add to it.

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Anything I've missed there, but that's, that's it in a nutshell, I think dice

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strain unless the question was why new liberalism, as opposed to old

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liberalism, what is the no, how it got the actual terminology neo-liberalism

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but they don't like to use it because it's seen as being a little bit evil.

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So you won't find people openly saying I'm a Neo liberal they'll

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tend to say Neo as in Neo Nazi or Neo nationalism may be, it's

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definitely got a negative connotation.

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They would prefer to say it's revisionist, isn't it.

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It's taking the original concept and almost turning it on its head.

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Yeah.

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I don't know.

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Next time I might look up the origins of the term.

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Neo-liberalism how it sort of came together.

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I did, I do recall seeing it somewhere, but I can't remember

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what the details were saying.

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Oh, essential dark central law.

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Don says and rant rant.

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Tacular means it was a spectacular rate.

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Yes.

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I just made that word up, Don.

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Okay.

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Julian Assange, there was an appeal where the us argument got up and

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now there's a further appeal.

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And so he's still in that terrible prison doing hard time.

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They're waiting for this appeal process to go through.

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Did you see who's Barnaby Joyce's comments at all about Julian Assange?

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Yeah.

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A few years ago out in front of parliament house, and now he's locked up in a hotel

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saying it again, basically Prius launch.

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I don't lock the door, but so deputy prime minister is saying, it's not right.

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The son shouldn't be held there.

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It should be, you know, all the reasons the left assigning it.

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Of course he says it because he comes from a libertarian approach I think,

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and also a sovereignty of approach.

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So I think he's genuine, very genuine in it.

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And this is the part I don't get the guys, the deputy prime minister, like,

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well, that's what I, that's what I was going to say is they approach

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he is approach this issue the way he's approached everything else.

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Like, Hey, he didn't hate.

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Didn't actually didn't occur to him.

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How absolutely stupid.

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When it came out saying, oh yeah, but who's got a plan.

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Who's got a detailed plan about climate change and everyone's going, you're

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the deputy prime minister maybe.

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Right.

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Like, I don't know what to do about it.

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I think should something should be done, but I don't know what to do about it.

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He thinks he's an opposition.

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Doesn't mean

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he's the deputy prime minister and he can't wrangle a

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wine to get this done with.

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Julia sounds mean him, you know?

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Yeah.

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I just, yeah.

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So I just, I just find that I'd never say anything where

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somebody says, well, hang on.

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You're the deputy PM like do something about it.

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You are, you are powerful, man.

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You should be able to move this issue in your direction.

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Is he though?

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I think at the moment, it's kind of just keep your Dick in

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the pants and keep out of the

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people just avoid and meetings.

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He's also, he's also deputy chair of the powerful national security committee

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of cabinet, which considers the major foreign policy and national security

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issues for the federal government.

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He's the deputy chair.

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Anyway, according to this article from the Sydney morning, Herald

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asked for a response to Mr.

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Joyce's.

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I government spokesman said its position was unchanged.

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Australia will continue to respect UK legal processes, noting that

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these are ongoing proceedings.

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The spokesman said, I just don't get this.

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And this, this journalist, how you could write this, that

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the deputy PM says one thing.

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And they asked the government for a response and he is the government.

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And they say an online government spokesman said, well, we're just

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going to let the UK legal process run.

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What sort of journalism is this?

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I'm just, I'm bemused by the whole thing.

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And I'm just appalled by the whole thing.

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And, and the thing I don't get, like I said, I can fully understand

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a, a sort of a libertarian type of guy, like Barnaby, Joyce being a

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supporter of Julia . You know, these guys are supposed to be free speech.

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That's one of the mantras and say, whatever you like, and

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whether you're offend somebody or not, doesn't really matter.

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And we are a sovereign nation they're big on free speech and sovereignty.

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Like, it makes sense that Barnaby Joyce is kind of in support of this.

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The only reason you wouldn't be is that you are so much a lapdog

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of the U S that you will just do whatever they say, no matter how much

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that compromises your own personal principles just to keep them happy.

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So that that's the only sort of hang on.

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Are you saying Scotty has principles?

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Well, well, you're you're well, he does like religion promoting

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religion would be one of them.

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So so yeah, so I still get, look, I still get emails from spite and the spectator,

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even though I unsubscribe all the time, but they're still coming through.

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I still haven't seen anything in those magazines that supports or

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says anything about Julian Assange.

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So so much for freedom from the freedom of speech loving publications of spite and

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the spectator and Caitlin Johnson, Jack Caitlin Johnson is an interesting one.

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Dear listener, if you're looking for stuff for independent blogs

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and writers and thinkers outside of mainstream media, and we've

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mentioned before, crikey is very good.

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John Mina do blog is very good.

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Previously have liked Kennan Malik.

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He's still good.

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Lady called Caitlin Johnston, follow her on Twitter or follow her on sub stack.

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She's got lots of good things to say.

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And she just says in relation to a song.

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What's the difference between how the U S deals with journalists

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at Heights and how Saudi Arabia deals with journalists at Heights.

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And the answer is speed, and that's a pretty fair summation of it.

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So so yeah, that's Julian Assange I'll move on to now.

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Last week I had my rant the week before that I think we were talking

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about Morrison and ICAC and how appalling it was that he came out

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and called ICAC a kangaroo court.

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And I think we all agreed.

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Isn't that terrible?

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What's the world coming to in virtually the next day a central

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report came out with a survey to that and I put it on the Facebook page.

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And the survey question was the prime minister has described the new

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south Wales ICAC as a kangaroo court and suggested that premium Gladys

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Berejiklian was handed out of office.

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To what extent do you agree or disagree with the prime minister and in terms

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of disagree or strongly disagree?

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The title was only 31%, 36, neither agreed nor disagreed and 34%.

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Either agreed or strongly agreed.

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So only 31% of the people who was surveyed could say, I disagree

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with Scott Morrison, hauling new south Wales ICAC, a kangaroo court.

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I'm depressed.

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It's anyone else equally as depressed?

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It just goes to show it's all about who your party preferences

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and nevermind the rest.

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Yep.

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That's

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we're up.

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They'd rather a corrupt premiere then Dominic parenthood.

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No it wasn't asking.

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What's your preference.

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It was just saying he called it a kangaroo court, says she was handed out.

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Do you agree or disagree?

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I think it's a pretty well-worded question to get the proper response.

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Even now they're still banging on about how great she was bringing it back.

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Yeah.

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So anyway, it seems that the efforts to put her in as a candidate in the

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next selection of a forum, by the way.

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So I'd say maybe he did that as a distraction and just ran it up the

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flag pole, see how it flies ups.

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That'd be the heat on that.

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I'll try something else.

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It could have been as simple as that.

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So

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It's great to say that Gladys is corrupt enough to be in federal poetry.

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So I think Leiba is making noises about if they get into power, they will

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be creating an ICAC and there'll be asking it to look at, in particular,

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the routings that have been going on allegedly with Polk barreling of, of

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electrodes by this government side.

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That would be good if that happens, sign

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well.

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I mean, it's helping isn't it.

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In fact now I wonder if I've got this Scott Morrison one.

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I don't know if I've got him here, but there was an incident where the prime

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minister was being interviewed and what that was doing was the there's

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been reports in the nine newspapers.

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I'll read this article actually.

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Analysis found that coalition held states got nearly four times

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as much grant funding as ones.

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The prime minister has shrugged off the controversy climbing coalition seats.

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Far more money than nearby labor seats, simply because they

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have quote a good local member.

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So this was a defense rejected by labor MP who climbs at every single one of

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her funding proposals has been rejected by the government at the last budget.

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Despite months of work in contrast, Peter Dutton's neighboring seat got more than

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46 times as much government funding.

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Now this seems to be funding, which is inherently discretionary.

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So it seems to be funding that doesn't have the same process that

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Gladys Berejiklian fallen foul of.

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That's what it seems to me.

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So, but it's just a blatant use of that discretion to favor your own

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seats that you hold so that your own politicians can look marvelous because

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of the things that you buy for them.

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So our reports in the nine years papers analyze the allocation of

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19,000 federal grants in the past three years, for which the government had

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discretionary power to allocate coalition electorates were given 1.9 billion

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labor seats got less than 530 million.

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And when he was asked about it, We said Dixon must have a very good local member

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and he just sort of laughed it off.

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And they've done a he's he's, he's worried that the potato is coming for him.

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He's trying to buy him off.

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Well, now the potatoes now they're just giving them money left, right.

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And center to every electorate that they have in the hope that, that I

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can hold onto that electric assigned.

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But Dawson, Dustin is inching closer to leader of the liberals.

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That's what the talk seems to be.

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Yeah.

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But that's what the talk seems to be, but I, well, it was in Dutton's

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interest that he got so much money.

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So if Morrison was doing something, he might've done something to reduce

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the amount of funding that dicks that seek, or is it just, just a stop

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to him to try and keep him sweet?

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Not, well, that's not going to work.

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Isn't Dutton's not going to say, oh, I won't challenge you for later because

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you gave lots of money to my lecturer.

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I'm going to do that.

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Do you feel like you live in a $40 million seat?

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No, I, I, I you were in Dixon, auntie.

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Yeah.

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I I'm forever shocked that they keep returning him even

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after he ran off to the post.

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Because he's still for pre-selection of the gold coast and these then took

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him back when he didn't get selected.

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Anyway, then the neighboring electorate not one of the 30 proposals was funded.

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So she was pretty upset when it was suggested that she wasn't a good member.

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She just said, I'll just go knock back 30 times.

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So right.

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Now case statistics are the largest grant was $90 million to the salvation

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army for drought payments to households.

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What the hell are we doing?

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Giving $90 million to the salvation army so that they can then give

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money to drought affected households?

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What is going on?

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Well, let better place to determine who is worthy or not.

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And obviously who is worthy is based on how religious they are and

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whether they're the right sort of religious, the largest grant and

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an electorate 35 million in Dixon.

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Let's see.

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So the salvation army got 90 million St.

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Vincent DePaul, but 7,200.

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To give $3,000 a piece to struggling households in drought stricken reasons.

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So, ah, we've, we've spread it around, you know, not only have we given it to

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the salvation army to give to drought households, we've given 72 million to St.

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Vincent DePaul and said, here, you guys are clearly better at this than

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we can you hang out this money for us?

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Goodness, psych for Christmas, I got a subscription to the

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monthly, which is the, yeah.

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These paper magazine connected to the 7:00 AM podcast.

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I just glanced at it then.

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And LPs has done a interesting article on how that sort of funding

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and almost sourcing how charity is another impact of realism.

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So you just got out a bit then shine.

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He's still with us.

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You've frozen.

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Can you just say that again?

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Now Pearson said what no PSN positive or put forward that that's

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another impact of neo-liberalism.

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So were most thing ask services to charities and then the

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charities need the money.

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So it's just, it's almost a cycle of, because we don't have a government

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department, that's got people that can actually hand out stuff.

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And we've got a government department that's quite good

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at taking money off people.

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And could quite possibly do the reverse

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the suggestion.

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So I think it was for UBI, the suggestion was the tax department would do it.

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Yes.

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Like the drought affected farmers.

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Surely you arrived.

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Surely the tax department could be best placed to say with, with some other

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data about where droughts have been in the country, are you in this area?

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Has your income drop significantly?

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Okay.

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We can give you this amount of money.

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Rather than the salvation army walking around, beating their tambourines, as

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I decide whether to hand out money or not on vulnerable Brodmann says holy

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Roman, our seat, which is the second most marginal seat in Australia.

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And they got about 4 million obviously a liberal member.

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Isn't a very good member.

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Okay.

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Still on that topic of the top 20 grants, five went to professional football

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clubs for, for swimming pools for winter private manufacturing businesses, an

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ammunition factory, a brewery, a fruit processing plant, and a dairy cooperative

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seriously and ammunition factory.

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And one went to a property developer to build a marina in Townsville.

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Wow.

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Well the ammunition factory, possibly, because that increases

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our ability in case they'd time before to create our own ammunition.

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Yeah.

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In lieu of the submarines.

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Yeah.

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Possibly.

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Yeah.

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But you know, even then they wouldn't give it to an ammunition

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factory that was in a library.

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Electric.

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I can tell you that now.

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Yeah.

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Yup.

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Okay.

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I presume the grants or loans.

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No, these are grants.

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Like grant is a grant.

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It's just money.

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Just dull down these people who are yeah.

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We'd like to go spend it.

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Yeah.

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I've always wondered about these grants to government school or sorry,

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not the private schools, so yeah.

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Here's $5 million to build whatever facility.

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And then the school goes bust.

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He gets the money.

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The schools go by.

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It's too good.

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It's too good.

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, it's good to go past.

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But if they did, if they decided to wind up who gets to keep the asset,

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it's a private school with the government paying all that money.

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Well, Oh, look, all these entities are owned by different things.

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Aren't they insane being operated entity and then a, and a land holding entity.

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And it's the operating entity that goes bust.

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But the land is going.

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Yeah, I was going to say usually it's the church.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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I think that's quite a hypothetical where a school goes bust, you know,

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I think they just take the, yeah.

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The taxpayers are effectively giving money to the churches though.

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It's improving the value of their land indeed.

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And ammunition factories, and property developers to build marinas.

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You didn't have to build the Murena surely you'd have to

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send them a photo or something.

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I'll send marina.

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Yeah.

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But you know, if someone's going to give you the money, it makes it easy.

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You're right.

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They might even go a step further, not even build the thing and just

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put the money in their pocket.

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You know, I'm sure that the case will get discounted.

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Right.

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So for boring.

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Anyway we've talked about the caliber of candidates in our federal parliament and

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the liberal party is without confirmed candidates in Hughes, Gilmore, Bennelong

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Dobell McQuarrie paramedic, green lion, Eden Monaro, and indeed bell on the new

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south Wales central coast dire straits.

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Is that your territory?

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Morrison is backing Pentecostal preacher Jamaima glean.

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In what multiple state officials described as I captain's pick that

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continues to deadlock the negotiations.

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So fear not Ms.

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Gleason is a worship leader with the hope unlimited church and she is Mr.

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Morrison's preference over cardiologists.

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Michael Fennelly has got the boxing backing of moderate

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and conservative leaders.

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So so yeah, Scott Morrison is trying to work in some of his favorite picks and

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it said here a federal source said Mr.

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Morrison is not seeking a captain's pick in die bill.

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And the prime minister has never spoken to Ms.

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Gleason.

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Well, he doesn't have to knowing that she's a worship leader with

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the high-fat limited church.

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I've never met in displacing, but I can tell you a lot of Ms.

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Gleason already I'd have to meet her.

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She's a Pentecostal preacher called Jamaima Gleason and a worship leader.

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Funnily enough, I've got a pretty good idea.

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And we go, yep.

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Okay.

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Now there was an interesting interview with Is going in the UK parliament

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was the former speaker Berkow Berko.

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And if you'd ever seen sort of question time in UK parliament, you would have seen

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this guy he's no longer in the parliament.

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I don't think as the speaker, but I've got what he had to say.

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So he's talking about Boris Johnson and what you've got when you're

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listening to him, talk about Boris Johnson, ask yourself, could this

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be said about Scott Morrison.

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Here we go.

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Person who is in charge of the ship is regarded as a serial

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assembler as an a bitch.

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You a liar as somebody who has made his career through ducking and dodging and

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diving dissembling and deceiving people.

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That's the difference.

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And that is why it is so incredibly serious and enormously damaging.

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I'm sorry to say it, but I ran 12 prime ministers in my lifetime and by a

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country mile, Boris Johnson is the worst.

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His natural instinct is not to be open, not to be transparent, not to be

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accountable, but narcissistically to think what suits me, how can I extricate

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myself from this awkward situation?

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By what means can I aggregate blame somewhere else?

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Apply that to a number of people just insert nine there.

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So seems to be current right-wing politics.

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Yes.

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English speaking states.

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Yes.

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That's what we've been lumped with.

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So so that was him now.

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I was talking to my next door neighbor and he you know, is a traditional liberal

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five-time and we have great discussions and we're discussing the pros and cons

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of Morrison and Albanese and he said, oh, Albanese, he's just an old lefty.

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You know?

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These, these guys don't change.

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And I, I said to him, name me one policy.

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What's the most left-wing policy that Alvin EASI has that Scott

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Morrison does not also support.

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And this guy is quite, well-read very smart, like w and he couldn't answer.

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He said, I have to get back to you.

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Like, this is the thing.

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People get impressions about people.

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And, and when they give you an argument like that, it's, it's really, sometimes

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when people fire hose you with a bunch of things, side of them, what's the best one.

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Like you've just said a thousand things in one sentence, what's your

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strongest, best argument for something.

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And if I deal with that, then you know, the rest of it Paul's white,

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but often of people are having a bit of a rant about something.

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If you really put it on them and say, 9 1, 1 policy.

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Because let's face it every time that liberal comes out with some

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statement at the moment or in the last three years, labor just agrees

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how hardly with whatever it is.

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They are so determined to be a small target that I just can't just can't think

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of anything that they have stood up for.

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And, and I was genuinely curious, like it just nine, one thing that

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you think is left wing that Albanese stands for and he couldn't name it.

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So if you're having arguments with people or discussions, then try that tactic.

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I would hope workers' rights, but you know, but it's not

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a specific policy, is it?

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No, you can't, you can't think of that particular thing.

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So so, and just in terms of the other arguments, if you're having with people

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about, you know, if you're not arguing over COVID and you've moved on to,

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on to just politics in general, every Christmas with your favorite relatives,

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and you've had a few too many drinks and your right wing uncle is just going off

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about that high taxing labor government, then introduce them to this concept.

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So The government has sought to paint the opposition as the party of high taxes.

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But according to the labor is the coalition, his track record on taxes

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fall short shadow treasurer, Jim charmers tweeted whenever treasury,

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Josh Frydenberg bangs on about tax.

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Remember that the two highest taxing governments of the last 30 years

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have both been liberal national governments, including his, and

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the question is, is that correct?

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That the two highest taxing governments in the last 30 years have been liberal

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national governments, including the current defined highest taxi

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we'll get to that, is he correct?

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And in this article from the IVC, they had a little fact checking sort

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of thing that they did and their response was the claim is a fair call.

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Tax revenue, as a share of the economy was highest under prime minister.

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John Howard next was the current coalition government elected in 2013, then the Hawke

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Keating government, and then Rodan Gilad.

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So but direct comparisons are complicated.

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So the introduction of the federal goods and services tax the GST in 2000,

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that distorts things a bit because.

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The federal government said we'll collect, we'll collect GST in return for state

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governments, not collecting a bunch of other taxes, sales taxes, for example.

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So, so the GST sort of artificially bumped up what the federal government

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got prior to the GST years also that tax figures are subject to factors

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beyond the control of governments, including resource prices, for example.

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So so yeah, in assessing it, they've, they've looked at the Australian federal

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government's tax take as a share of GDP.

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That's how they've ranked the government's total tax received as

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a share of gross domestic product.

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That way you can deal with the economies that are getting larger over time.

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So the problem with that measurement is that in, for example, the Howard

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Costella years, there was a mining boom, where resource prices skyrocketed,

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and as a result, the governments tax take on those resources skyrocketed.

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So one of the reasons why Howard and Costello's government was the

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highest tax in government wasn't because they actually write.

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Texts percentages, but it's just that the resource boom was so big

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that they collected all of these tax money from resource companies.

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And they took it right at tax time.

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So, so when you are having your argument, you have to concede, okay, the GST

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effected things, introducing it increase the federal government's texting.

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And there are things beyond the government's control that

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affect it's textile like price of resources, but on the other.

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But that's why, you know, when you talk about, well, was a government high

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taxing or not, there are things beyond their control, but if you just want to

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go with the actual statement of a high tax in government the tax collected as

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a percentage of GDP how to Castillo, where the highest the current government

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started in 2013 and second, then it's all CADing and then it's rod Gilad.

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So do you have any idea that would be the case shine?

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No, but I'm, I'm glad, right?

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So I'm not even glad about it because to some extent you could

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argue, well, Texas should be higher.

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Like there's not enough tax.

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Like you might as a lefty argue that for example.

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But I'm curious where the burden of the tax is lying, correct.

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It's just a total tax collected.

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So it's corporations resources during.

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A coalition governments that falls more proportionately on the middle and lower

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classes than during labor governments.

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Yes.

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Although again, when you look at Howard and Costello, he is as, as

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Paul Keating said about Costello, he was kissed on the ass by rainbow.

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Like the, just the money was flowing in from the resources that

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personal income tax rates could be cut because of that resource.

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Boom, that, so everybody got, you know, middle and lower classes got tax breaks.

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The problem was it's the higher income levels also got tax breaks

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and, and, and those breaks have been kept in place even when the

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resource boom stopped and we arguably needed more money for other things.

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So so yeah, it's it's complicated, but it's also a fun thing to do if

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you want to poke fun at a sort of your right-wing uncle, he talks about the

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high taxing, loving labor governments.

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Try that one around the kitchen at the dinner table when the Turkey served

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and and just say, Hey, fun fact, everybody who recommends the highest

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tax in government in the last 30 years checked by the left leaning ABC.

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So it doesn't matter if it's fake news.

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Yeah.

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But the fact that you can actually deal with it's total tax collected GDP, it's a

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pretty it's one you can actually measure.

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So so yeah, I like that one.

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All right.

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Now, did you guys see Samantha Kerr, the soccer player at

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all with her hip and shoulder?

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You probably haven't seen it.

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Well, didn't mind nifty clips that I've got here.

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I can show it to you.

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So so you want to be out?

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Well she is our best female soccer player and, and this was her

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and a match with a pitch invade.

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I came onto the field.

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So check this.

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and she's playing a soccer match fits in five accounts on just the layout.

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Obviously it's geared off and he's got his phone out.

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He's taking a selfie of himself.

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He's taking his time getting off.

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And Samantha has just come in from the side with the hip and shoulder

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and knocked him onto his back.

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So I heard the reaction there.

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This is interesting shy because Sam, Kerr's knocking this according

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to an article from Michael Bradley and crikey Sam Kerr's knocking down

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male entitlement raises ethical questions, but feels so right.

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Sam Kerr, Taka team, captain executed a perfect hip and shoulder drop on a

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pitching Vader putting anomalies ass and earning a standing ovation from the crowd.

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She also got a yellow card by the way for that presumably full on gentlemen.

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The writer says, I imagine many people shared my immediate reaction, give

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her a metal micro strain of the year, a good old fashioned data argue.

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Could anything be according to our cherished self image,

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Australian, but violence is bad.

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Always.

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What if she'd been a bloke in that pitching Vader or a woman all hell

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would be breaking loose right now?

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These points are not illegitimate, nor is it wrong per se, to watch the video

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of curd delivering her Kuda CRA to the smirking fool and feel unalloyed joy.

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The standard ethical position on violence, whether retaliatory righteous

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or not is that it is unjustifiable except in either self-defense

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or defense of the defenseless.

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Otherwise violence is reserved exclusively to the state,

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which defends us collectively.

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Once we begin allowing for exemptions or exceptions to the slippery slope,

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ah, the slippery slope runs all the way down to the gladiatorial

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equivalent of love island.

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Then however, there are Nazis and can be controversial, but in my

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view, well justified argument that it is always okay to punch them.

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The basis for that principle is essentially look what happens when you

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don't the motivations and impacts of your average football pitching Veda are a

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long way from genocidal totalitarianism.

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So it's difficult to find a general principle which supports Curtis.

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She wasn't in any personal danger, nor was anyone else there was security

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albeit less effective than her.

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And the only immediate downside risk was delay of the game.

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So I want someone who is, I know someone who is on the wrong

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end of one of those, right?

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There was a Brisbane, Sydney footy match, I think, at the Gabba.

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And he rang it up, ran on during one of the during the match.

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He was pissed and tackled one of the Sydney players who put him

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in his place and he was there probably arrested and charged.

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Right.

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Okay.

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So in that case, it was the pitch invader who tackled a player and the player then

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retaliated by doing what, by thumping him.

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This was a mate of yours, a former colleague.

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Right.

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So he was, he was young drunk and stupid.

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Right.

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It was kind of a lesson learned.

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Yeah.

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I sort of, I was interested in the sort of gender lens.

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So I had tried to have a poke around to see what stats of men running onto the

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field versus women running onto the field.

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I couldn't find anything, but there's certainly plenty of cases

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of women getting on fields as well.

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So not sure that running onto a field is about male entitlement.

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I think the reason that people love it and even I've watched it 15 times is

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more like, I kind of say it as a almost underdog sort of clap down where yeah.

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She it's like YouTube is just full of these types of videos where

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someone gets put in their place.

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And I know that there's yeah.

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I think putting a gender lens on it might be over-analyzing it.

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I'm trying to justify it because obviously you look at it and you just want to go.

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Yep.

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That is the right.

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There's nothing wrong with that.

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And I think my justification is that it wasn't actually a violent act.

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Like what was that?

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Was he seriously?

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He dusted himself off and off.

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He went.

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So, I mean, there's a risk that he was, you know, had an eggshell

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skull and could a dog or something.

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But I mean, at the end of the day, it just wasn't a violent act.

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I think, I think calling that a violent act is either stating

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it and essentially it was like a parent smacking a two-year-old he's

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just having a tantrum in a sense.

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It don't see it as a violent act.

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So I think that's where I can justify it and saying good on you.

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Whereas if a big beef.

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120 grand footballer shoulder charged or hip charged a female 70 kilos.

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You know, I think, I think then the risk that C could have actually broken

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something would be much higher and general risk of you got to see as the

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genuinely more violent if they picked them up and just carried them off the

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pitch as if they were a naughty child.

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Would you object to that?

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If the security did?

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No.

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No, no.

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If the player, so if, if, if, if some, the beefy footballer picked

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up, I a 70 year old female carried her off the field, a pitcher Vader,

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no, I wouldn't have a problem with that because that's what sometimes

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security guards have to physically do.

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So just be you know, you'd recommend against it because

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you might get injured doing it.

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Like Terry alderman was a cricketer in Australia who tackled a pitch invader

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in a cricket match and he busted his shoulder and was out of action for a

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long time and affected his bowling.

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I think almost for the rest of his career.

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Like it was quite a significant injury for him because he tackled the guy, say

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to apply, you'd say, don't do it because.

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Tackling somebody might hurt yourself.

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I'm sort of contradicting myself there because if you admit that

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then maybe her giving a hit and Sheldon might've injured that guy.

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Anyway, I think that risk is so low.

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That good honor.

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I think showing any thoughts for the system, was that okay for that to happen?

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Think about the context.

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As part of my research on women running on fields, they're mainly streaking.

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Another reason why a male footballers shouldn't touch them,

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but the reaction is quite different from the crowd as well.

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And they seem to be fairly compliant when security sort of surrounds.

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What's a blanket on them,

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the punch, the punching Nazis.

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On the other hand, I do have a problem with I do as well because the definition

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of Nazi seems to be very loose and now seems to be anybody I disagree with.

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And I don't know, what's a punching now, ah, that is that if somebody

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was at a rally or something, and there was somebody stood up and made

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all these sort of pro Nazi comments, it would be okay to punch them.

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You know, some of these obvious there was, there was a Neo Nazi leader in

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America who was being interviewed on TV and somebody walked up in the

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street and punched him in the face.

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Yeah.

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And there was a meme that went around on that saying it's

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always okay to punch a Nazi.

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Yeah.

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But then I've heard the term Nazi banded around and arguments

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against everybody and anybody.

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So by the, as soon as you say, it's okay to punch a Nazi, you're basically

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saying it's okay to punch anyone.

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Yes.

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Yeah.

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Time.

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And you know, there's a difference between punching somebody in the

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face and her giving this guy hip and shoulder wary lens on the ground.

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The punch is differently violent.

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The other one, not so much.

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The other thing that happened once a few years ago was the egg boy.

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I remember there was a politician and egg boy came along and cracked an egg guy,

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raised his head and he wanted, I mean, Stuart, Robert or somebody like that.

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And lots of people were like, good on egg boy.

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Like that was okay.

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But now that wasn't something that was going to harm you, but

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what's that it was just a yes.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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Thanks Jay.

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But you know, that was unacceptable because the guard was in a

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mess, then covered in an egg.

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Like he couldn't just dust himself off and keep going.

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And he had an invited, a pitch and asked for trouble, like he was just conducting

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it, press conference at the time.

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So quite different in that, in my opinion, Right.

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And you could argue with similar, the, the, the lots of

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people said good on egg boy.

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He was a bit of a hero to people and yeah, wasn't the

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politician sort of Pauline Hanson.

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Escalade.

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Yes.

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So everyone hated the politician.

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And so they felt like a bit like a Nazi.

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You could throw an egg at this person, but at the time we sort of said,

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well, no, that's not on, but yeah.

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So they were just conducting their affairs, Fraser running.

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Thank you.

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Fraser writing.

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Thank you, Julia.

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I got egged.

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Yup.

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So yeah, he hadn't invited a pitch and done anything wrong.

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He was just minding his own business sprouting, his usual nonsense and yeah.

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The people who were in favor of a boy and that it was a good thing really

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needed to think harder about again, what if it was a female politician?

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Who'd and some big burly guy had crushed an egg on her head.

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Maybe they might've thought the same thing.

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So, yeah.

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Alright.

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That same Kerr, that's an interesting conundrum.

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Ah, here's a depressing one for you.

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I think I've got this one on I've gone to town on video clips.

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Here's one for you.

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It's got sort of strange background to it.

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So what you saw there was about a skin to cash at the front.

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What you saw there was about eight people on a basketball.

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I know it's maybe it's an ice hockey arena and they're on carpet and

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there's all this money and they are grabbing obviously thousands of notes.

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They're stuffing them into their shirts and it's, you know, it's

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obviously some sort of competition grab as much money as you can.

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And whatever you can grab, you can keep, but the twist and the title of

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this one deal listener in his dash for cash, they're actually teachers on their

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knees fighting for $1 bills that they could use in a classroom for supplies

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while spectators watch and cheer.

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Oh, what's, what's a marathon, man.

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The devil is similar, seen in marathon man to die.

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I'm Steve.

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No, no, no.

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Stephen King it was one of the Stephen King films where basically it

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was just anything for entertainment and they were murdering each other.

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It was, it was gladiator.

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It was fight to the death, but it was the fact that American entertainment

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is getting to the point where.

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Basically, we're going to have people killing each other for money, just

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for entertainment, squid game, but actually televised sort of thing.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Did you ever see marathon man shine?

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No, don't go before going to a dentist.

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There's this, there's a scene where he gets tortured by dentist.

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It's horrendous.

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It's horrendous.

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You'll just squirm.

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It's awful.

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Anyway well it's good with saying I recommend it.

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So yeah, that was a picture dear listener of about eight different teachers

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on their hands and knees scrambling around grabbing dollar bills, starting

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them into their shirts so that like, you'd use it for classroom supplies.

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All the audience watched him.

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You.

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Yeah.

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Running man.

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Mel says, Joe, there we go.

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Alright.

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Martin, remember our stance issue with the satanic temple where we created a

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satanic stamp Australia post knocked us back and said, we couldn't have it.

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Even though they agreed that we could have a new church of Christ

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stamp, we just couldn't have a noose of temple of sight and stamp.

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And beginning in the end, we decided not to pursue it at this stage because

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we just didn't have the energy.

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But next year we might order some stamps and good our loins and run with it.

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Let's see what else.

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But in America, they have a similar thing, customized stamps.

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And there was an artist who won a legal battle with the post office.

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So the artist wanted to print a stamp that had some sort of political message on it.

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It had a painting that featured the words.

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Democracy is not for sale, and it showed uncle Sam being strangled by a snake,

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bearing the name of citizens United.

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So I referenced to a Supreme court ruling that revoked limits on

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political donations from corporations.

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And there we go.

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He took it to court and the court found in his favor.

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So so that was an American customized stamp, free speech issue with

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some similarities to what we were trying to do within this template.

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Satan.

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So there we go, right.

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Do this.

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Now this could be the last podcast for the year I suspect.

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And look, I don't mention it enough.

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I should, because there may be more people would sign up and do it, but we have

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patrons out there who have gone to the website, iron fist velvet glove.com today.

Speaker:

Probably the first time.

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I've mentioned that in all year, I really need to do a bit more

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self promotion on these things.

Speaker:

So we have a website, you can go there, you can find all that old episodes and

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you can find the IFPG secular index.

Speaker:

Whereas you can look up any federal politician and find

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out what religion they are.

Speaker:

If it's publicly known and also a writing about their secularity.

Speaker:

And you could leave a SpeakPipe message.

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If you are land hard and bottom, you could click on that and leave a

Speaker:

recorded message, which is possible.

Speaker:

So, and the other thing you can do is you can click on the link

Speaker:

and become a donor to the show.

Speaker:

So I subscribed to a number of different publications.

Speaker:

Let me just see if I've got this handy.

Speaker:

Cause I didn't have this ready, but I might be able to find it.

Speaker:

So there's the hosting of the website.

Speaker:

There's the media file that has to be hosted.

Speaker:

There's this nifty restrain thing that we're using, but you can see the

Speaker:

chat room and we can play these clips.

Speaker:

There's a descript software that cuts out the ums and ours there's subscriptions

Speaker:

to the guardian crikey an RSS feed up the Australian I've actually paid for

Speaker:

the Sydney morning, Herald the Korean mile, New York times per episode, it's

Speaker:

costing about 80 Australian dollars.

Speaker:

By the time you add up all those subscriptions.

Speaker:

So there's some patrons who contribute one or two or five or $10 per episode.

Speaker:

And if you'd like to become one, that would be great to help me

Speaker:

pay for some of these expenses because as you can see, they add up.

Speaker:

So I'm going to call out the names of the people who have been supporters.

Speaker:

Can you believe it?

Speaker:

I think we've only lost a couple over the last 12 months, even though I never

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mentioned their names, they stay in.

Speaker:

So thank you.

Speaker:

I really appreciate it to the following patrons.

Speaker:

And by the way, this was updated from patrial on this morning.

Speaker:

And if I don't call your name, that it could be that your, and you think

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you're a patron, it could be that your credit card was declined and your

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payments haven't been coming through.

Speaker:

So if you think you're a patron on Patrion and I don't mention your name, hop on

Speaker:

there and update your credit card, please.

Speaker:

So I'm going to start with the most recent patrons and then work our way to

Speaker:

the ones who've been around the longest.

Speaker:

So thank you to say thank you to warehouse guy, Tom Ricco, Greg P.

Speaker:

William Halley Dawn to the Daniel Flanagan, MedWatch

Speaker:

SU crib, James Branwin wine.

Speaker:

David Hanby Virgil Craig, Shane Ingram, yam yam Ballou, Zam buck, David

Speaker:

Copeley grime Hannigan yet another Pinker fan John in dire straights,

Speaker:

Donnie Darko, Camille, Tom Doolan.

Speaker:

Paul wiper.

Speaker:

Hello, Paul.

Speaker:

Haven't heard from you.

Speaker:

Are you back in Brisbane yet?

Speaker:

And let's catch up.

Speaker:

Alexander Allen Clinton rigs, Matthew Craig S professor, doctor dentist,

Speaker:

Len bell, Adam priest, Marie wiper.

Speaker:

Andy Daylin, captain doomsday he'd to speak is Daniel Curtin, Leah McMahon,

Speaker:

Dominick Damascene medic man Pele.

Speaker:

Ron went.

Speaker:

Thanks Brahman.

Speaker:

You've been a patron since 2nd of June, 2018.

Speaker:

Kane Jimmy sparred is back Jimmy's back.

Speaker:

He was a patron.

Speaker:

He disappeared.

Speaker:

Now he's working again.

Speaker:

Tiny wool, Steve Shinners.

Speaker:

Alison, are you in the chat room?

Speaker:

Thank you, Alison and beat a patron since December, 2017.

Speaker:

Uh, Yama.

Speaker:

Why?

Speaker:

No, Craig glad SPE do know Louise and the original, the one the

Speaker:

only going all the way back to the 5th of February, 2016, Sean.

Speaker:

Thank you, Sean.

Speaker:

And there are some people whose support via by via PayPal rather than Patrion.

Speaker:

And that is Mr.

Speaker:

Anderson madman.

Speaker:

Mr.

Speaker:

T.

Speaker:

Paul Evans, Wayne seaman, and raid a bread, a postcard Rica, Darren Giddens.

Speaker:

And what Lee and red Clark and Dave is from Cairns.

Speaker:

Thank you.

Speaker:

It is appreciated.

Speaker:

There are some shows and some podcasts where they rattled

Speaker:

through those nines every week.

Speaker:

And I think it sort of puts people off in my water fast forward.

Speaker:

So you are unsung heroes.

Speaker:

And even though I don't mention it very often, thank you very much.

Speaker:

And if you'd like to become a patron hop on and and do that, that'd be good.

Speaker:

So, all right.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

Right now, Mel Jay says updating credit card excavation there.

Speaker:

We're good.

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Okay.

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Here we have the smoking ban in New Zealand.

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Yeah.

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What I say basically that they going to pass a law that passed

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it preventing Kiwis born from 2011 onward from ever buying tobacco.

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It will be come a fence to sell or supply tobacco products to

Speaker:

anyone aged 14 or under when the legislation kicks in from 2025.

Speaker:

And they're also going to Wiccan weaken the nicotine content.

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So you know, in 2050, they're going to say, you want to buy.

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I'm sorry, you're younger than 39.

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We're not going to give you a pack of cigarettes, but you might there who's 40.

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We'll let him buy it.

Speaker:

Like the, Tetes find it thoughts on whether this is a good idea or not.

Speaker:

It's been suggested that this is the fairest way to ban smoking is to figure

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out a demographic that aren't yet smoking that aren't yet hooked and make it illegal

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from that demographic onwards shine.

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Is it a lawyer pass?

Speaker:

If you're yeah.

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Yeah.

Speaker:

I actually suggested this ages ago and it was my son who found the article

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and said, look, dad, the finally did what you suggested years ago.

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It's going to be, it's going to be a little bit tricky a little bit tricky

Speaker:

because tourists, like, I suppose they could lose a lot of tourist trade, but if,

Speaker:

and you just get you cigarettes duty gray, if you're going to get through all the

Speaker:

NACARA and then your holiday, that's true.

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You could bring in your own cigarettes.

Speaker:

That's true.

Speaker:

That's answers that I would imagine.

Speaker:

Probably not.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So they're going to say at the.

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If you're a distant 18 year old and you've come in from some cigarettes, then they're

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just going to let you come in with them.

Speaker:

Is it, is that what you're saying?

Speaker:

It's cause it's not going to be illegal to possess them.

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It's just going to be illegal to sell or buy them.

Speaker:

Correct.

Speaker:

There we go.

Speaker:

That answers that.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

That solves, that, that strange thing is, and they're going to sort of

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weaken the nicotine content as well.

Speaker:

And the strange thing is that it's not going to fake vaping, so they're

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still gonna allow people to Vipe.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And the question is how vaping is very much aimed at a younger demographic,

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especially with all the flavors.

Speaker:

So yeah, I I'm sorry to interrupt, but there was a good interview by, I think

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the man who has been putting forward this policy is the professor of public

Speaker:

health at the university of Auckland.

Speaker:

And he did a very good interview where he said that it's recently

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been a study come out that says 25% of young people, something vaping.

Speaker:

And that that research has been, it was very poorly designed and he wouldn't

Speaker:

bank any sort of serious factual evidence from that study at all.

Speaker:

And that primarily what they're seeing is that vaping is used

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as an aid to give up smoking.

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And I see it as less harmful than cigarettes smoking.

Speaker:

Very good.

Speaker:

Didn't see that.

Speaker:

But anyway, so public, so you could Google him.

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That makes, cause it just didn't make sense.

Speaker:

I didn't understand why they had to let vaping out.

Speaker:

So there you go.

Speaker:

Ricky, Ricky and the chat room says, great idea.

Speaker:

Can we do it for religion?

Speaker:

If only dire straits is trouble is prohibition never works.

Speaker:

I don't think it will work.

Speaker:

Sadly.

Speaker:

It's going to make it difficult for people to get hold of it.

Speaker:

It depends what, what you're looking for as a result.

Speaker:

Doesn't it say it doesn't work.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I'm in this concern about the long-term health risks of vaping.

Speaker:

And if it's used as a stop gap for cigarettes, it's probably not bad,

Speaker:

but if the tobacco companies are using it as a revenue filler to ma

Speaker:

to make up for the revenue loss from cigarettes, then that's a good turn.

Speaker:

I guess I can always watch it, see what happens.

Speaker:

And if vaping sort of takes over as a substitute, then I could do something

Speaker:

about it and just own that as well.

Speaker:

The supply of nicotine over here is now illegal to import because

Speaker:

people were buying it from an Zed.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

You now need a doctor's script to get nicotine.

Speaker:

So if you're vaping, it's nicotine free.

Speaker:

Ah, okay.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

No that there we go there.

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Okay.

Speaker:

Let's do it in the chat room, says have a read of John Safran's new book puff piece.

Speaker:

It looks at vaping, the cigarettes and finds big tobacco

Speaker:

has their hands all over it.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So I'm sure they do.

Speaker:

Anyway, but then I'm sure that medical professional had some valid

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reasons for it in New Zealand.

Speaker:

So interesting to see where that ends up.

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I think crikey article, I've got a link here to, to while

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since I read it was against it.

Speaker:

Saying that basically we've texted people as much as we can.

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My dad was a smoker, but he quit cold Turkey.

Speaker:

When packets of cigarettes reached a dollar, a packet,

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he said, that's outrageous.

Speaker:

I'm not paying that.

Speaker:

And he stopped at that point.

Speaker:

I gave up when I was on a training course in Belgium and

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I ran out of English cigarettes.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

And I couldn't smoke the Belgium ones.

Speaker:

They were disgusting.

Speaker:

They, again, I gave up shy.

Speaker:

Are you a smoker at any point?

Speaker:

Yeah, this is the pandemic.

Speaker:

It

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relieves pressure on my lungs.

Speaker:

All right.

Speaker:

How old were you when you started?

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14.

Speaker:

There we go.

Speaker:

It's saying a law like this presumably would have made difficult for you to

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get a hold of cigarettes unless you had older brothers and sisters or

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friends who could have supplied you.

Speaker:

I started smoking at 10 and it definitely wasn't legal.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

Speaker:

I guess it just gets progressive.

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The point is it will just get progressively harder and harder.

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Okay.

Speaker:

In the first few years, as a 14 year old, it's easy for your 16 year old

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mates to get cigarettes and to supply.

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But 15 and 20 years later, a 14 year old can't get their 16 year old

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friend to buy-in for them is going to have to some 40 year old to do it.

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He's going to say piss off, like, and the big leap all we had was the cafe

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that was, I don't know, a mile down the road, had a vending machine in the lobby.

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Right.

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And of course it doesn't ask for proof of age.

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Yes.

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Presumably vending machines are no longer allowed anywhere.

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So, alright.

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Smoking rates just out of interest Australia, smoking lights are smoking

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rights, a low by global standards at 10%.

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He countries have squeezed smoking lower than that.

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New Zealand is aiming for 5% by 2025.

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So there's a chart there.

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I don't know if you've got that one gel on smoking rights globally.

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I don't want to be able to put this one up myself.

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Hang on a second.

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Oh, actually hang on.

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Yeah, I've got that one.

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There we go.

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The big pink line is Spain.

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19.8%.

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Astonia Luxembourg Finland, 12% Australia, 10.3, New Zealand, 9.4

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Canada, 9.1, Norway nine and Iceland 7.3.

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So international smoking rates.

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Okay.

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Oh, hi.

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It's smoking rates are falling in Australia.

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Still.

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The pandemic has accelerated the, the trend because smoking is for many, a

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social activity, not being able to go to the pub meant fewer chances to smoke.

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Quitting smoking has been like baking sourdough, a trend of the pandemic.

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Are you baking sourdough as well?

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Okay,

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there we go.

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All right.

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It was basically another chart here that shows that smoking

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rates have declined significantly.

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Actually put that one up if I can put that one up.

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So back in the two thousands, the smoking rates look to be around

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20 to 23% to just over 10%.

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Now that's a big drop.

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Excellent.

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So the fallen smoking rights has been acute enough.

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That major supermarkets are calling out the impact of

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cigarette sales on their revenue.

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So tobacco use is in free fall already without having to rely on a band

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that could create opportunities for organized crime and unfair employment.

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According to this article and crikey, that is a significant decline.

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According to that chart in smoking rates from 2000 year, 2000, it was 20 to 22%.

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Now just over 10.

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That's a lot.

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It's interesting.

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It was from crikey.

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What else we go in?

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Okay.

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Now the topic, how are we going for time?

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Right.

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We've got shy out of the shark tank already with a three minutes ago.

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Joe, you would have heard of birds.

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Aren't real.

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Like I have heard of birds.

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Aren't real.

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They're actually government drones that are monitoring everybody.

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Yes.

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And you would have heard of the story, cause it would be up your

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alley of the thought this is a, of the tech guy sort of story.

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True.

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So there's this, I love conspiracy theories and the wackos that follow them.

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Yeah.

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So in Pittsburgh, Memphis, Tennessee, and Los Angeles, massive billboards

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recently popped up declaring birds.

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Aren't real.

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And on Instagram and tick-tock birds, aren't real accounts have racked up

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hundreds of thousands of followers and YouTube videos about it have gone viral.

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So it's all connected to a gen Z field conspiracy theory that posits that

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birds did not exist in our really drone replicants installed by the

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us government to spy on Americans.

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So hundreds of thousands of young people who joined the movement wearing

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birds, aren't real, t-shirts swarming rallies and spreading the slogan.

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So it might smack of Q Anon except the creator of the movement and

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its followers in on the joke.

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Imagine that a political movement that's in on a joke anyway.

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So it's a parody social movement with a purpose.

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And essentially the guy who started it was watching some Trump rally, I think.

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And he thought these guys are just nuts.

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This is crazy.

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And he just grabbed a sign and just wrote what came into his head, which was birds.

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Aren't really.

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It's just started marching up and down the street.

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Cause he was like, if people can coming out with a rubbish,

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these people are coming out with all the state birds aren't real.

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And anyway, he was sorta videoed on and a YouTube video went viral and then

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he and his mate went well, he's a gig.

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And I sort of milked it for as much as they could and started selling

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t-shirts and the actually remained in character saying genuinely

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of course birds aren't real.

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And but in recent times they've had to admit openly that of course birds

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are real and this is a satirical movement just to demonstrate the

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knotty conspiracies that are out there.

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So you've heard of Poe's law.

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Yes.

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Cause you've told us this is the one there's nothing you could say.

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So crazy that I, something about Christie's the creationist couldn't

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say it or something like that.

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Is that it?

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Basically?

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Yes.

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And have you seen behind the curve yet?

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No, it's brilliant.

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It's up on Netflix.

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Eighties, a documentary who very respectfully went and talked

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to a bunch of creationists and their experiments to prove.

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And a lot of creation is flat earthers and they're prove the earth is flat.

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And it's the fact that they perform these experiments and come out with the exact

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answer that you'd expect if the earth was round and it's, they're explaining

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away of these results that somehow the experiment had been performed wrong.

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It couldn't possibly be that they were wrong when the

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earth was round the experiment must've been done wrong somehow.

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And it's this mindset of how, even when presented with evidence, people

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will justify, they will rationalize their rationalize of where the

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evidence to square with their beliefs rather than change their beliefs.

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Yup.

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Yup.

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Melon and chat room talking about birds.

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Aren't real says I knew it was a piss take when the apostrophe was used correctly.

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What are you doing now?

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Are you and Ricky, just sitting back with a beer, just watching the shower.

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Are you, is that what's happening there that you too okay.

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Shy.

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I don't get this one.

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Did you want to skip out Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of

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theranostics and this whole story?

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Was it when you wanted to do talk about, or do you want they're an

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OSCE just to give that background is this young woman who she's part

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of the Silicon valley and she did a startup where she well, it's not yet.

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But I think she pretended that you'd had this amazing scientific discovery where

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she could do blood tests, just take a drop of blood and it's been no, not COVID

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whole thing, diabetes, a whole, she said this one drop of blood could accurately

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test for a whole range of diseases.

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I'm not sure, but I do remember the hype.

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Yes, it didn't work.

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So she got funding from people like Rupert Murdoch, a whole

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range of wealthy benefactors.

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She had very influential people supporting her and then it started

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to become clear that it didn't work.

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And how she's mounting her defense is she is saying that her boyfriend at

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the time was using coercive control.

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She, that she is just a victim in a coercive controlling relationship.

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And I just wanted to.

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As a woman just sort of call that out.

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We cannot be pushing for seats at the table as leaders, as entrepreneurs.

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And then as soon as the going gets tough, say he made me do it.

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It's buying into the sexist rhetoric that we can't be cutting.

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We can't be strategic.

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We can't be, you know?

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Yeah.

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Is her name Gladys wanting to, I just wanted to put that forward,

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hopefully in a constructive way, just as I'd expect any bloke to call

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to account these sorts of things.

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Yeah.

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We're another bloke.

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Okay.

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So that's kind of a little bit in line with, or similar to the politician, Alan

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Tage and his mistress, who was like a staffer who, who basically said are,

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you know there was a power imbalance and I knew he was married, but I ended

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up having an affair with him and, and she sort of excused herself because

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of a power imbalance that was there.

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Did you hear that one or that story?

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There was the power imbalance woman.

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There wasn't a parent balance.

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She was the same.

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It's been widely covered.

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It's been very well investigated.

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People raise the alarm with her on a number of occasions.

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It was at the helm of this debacle where, whereas that other, a woman, she

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was constrained by a power imbalance.

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She may not have had the conditions where her choices were made,

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where they made as freely.

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I'm not sure actually liking it more to what's happened with Gladys, Gladys.

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It's just, you know I w wanted to give her a fair game before, because you know,

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she's a woman and I'm biased, but when all the recordings came out, I just thought

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she had, she's taking the piss here.

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Big time playing into this thing.

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Finances fell in well as though she's not canning, she's not strategic as though she

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wasn't, you know, potentially in on it.

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It's not possible.

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No, no, no.

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She wasn't in love because she, she denied it being anything more

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than a fuck buddy relationship.

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I just think it takes.

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Y it's a very costly case.

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It's a very costly argument to make for these seats, that these important

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tables that we be of entrepreneur and leadership material, and then at the

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first sign of trouble, it's his fault.

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Okay.

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So just getting back to the, okay.

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So I, okay.

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I can see the distinction between the Allen Taj case.

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I give you that, but accepting that distinction, I'm just a little bit

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uncomfortable with her saying there was a pallet, a power imbalance on the victim

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here, but she knowingly had an affair with a man who she knew was married and

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it was kind of like, can you really fight?

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You know, like I can, there might've been a pairing balance, but you went and had

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a family, the man that he was married, like some, it was almost like she could

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say, Aw, I'm, I'm the victim here because of the parent balance without, without

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taking any responsibility for knowing the God was already hitched up and

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hadn't yet exited his first relationship.

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Like, dude, I don't know, am I crazy or not?

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I just sort of thought I'm having trouble finding sympathy for the

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lady was what I was feeling as I was.

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Yeah, I think you'd probably not on your own there.

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Was it a, a case of a power imbalance or a case of it had to be in secret?

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She wasn't arrays, you know, some of her concerns with her

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girlfriends about certain things, because it was a secret affair.

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Like yeah, I have I have sympathy for her after she came out and

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said he kicked her out of bed and stuff that seemed awfully yeah.

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Same terrible, awful guy.

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Yep.

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But, but she's also like a jaded ex as well.

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She's well, intentioned parliament house seems to be a very toxic place.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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So Julia says a guy can be married and not exercises advantage in a relationship

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in which there is a power imbalance touch seems to have been abusive sign.

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Yeah.

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But there's also what was her responsibility?

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Like what point is it?

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It's whether she could have said no you're merit.

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I don't want to be with you.

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Yes.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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I'm surprised women fall for that one.

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I was gonna say I'm surprised women that engage in affairs.

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Men who are married, you know, are surprised to find out it's gum.

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Yes.

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Surprised to find that he doesn't actually leave his wife and run off.

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Yeah.

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Anyway, across to Kara, it's not a burden for us to carry.

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It's like fun.

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Joe, you found this one, I think about California and a ban on assault weapons.

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So dear listener with the abortion law issue in Texas, where the court said,

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look well, at that point in history, it was, we can't overturn Roe V.

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Wade.

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We can't legalize that we can't make abortions illegal, but if you describe

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it to me, Joe, I so the, the Texas law basically said the Supreme court stops

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the states from enforcing the law.

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However, if we allow private citizens, then we haven't

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created or enforce this law.

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It's down to the private citizens to then, to effectively Sue the

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people who provide the abortions or who are tangentially involved.

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And people said, this was opening a can of worms.

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This effectively was mob control.

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And predicted that the left-wing, if this went ahead that the left wing

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would do the same in effectively a.

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Set of rules to implement their policies, which the Supreme court

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have said they can't implement.

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Yep.

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And so this is the mirror legislator.

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Yep.

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Which is essentially with guns where California governor Gavin Newsome has

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played to empower private citizens to enforce a ban on the manufacturing

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sale of assault weapons in the state.

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We will work to create the ability for private citizens to Sue anyone

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in manufacturers distributes or sells an assault weapon or a ghost

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gun kit in parts of California.

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So drawing inspiration from the controversial Texas law.

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So that was anticipated and that's, what's coming about in

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the failed states of America.

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It will be very interesting to see what the Supreme court have to say on

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it, whether they managed to find some loophole to ban one and not the other.

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Yep.

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Okay.

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So that was a California gun control Olympics.

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So the U S and its lapdog Australia have decided not to send officials sort

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of diplomatic officials or government officials to the Beijing winter Olympics.

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The athletes can still go.

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But I mean, cause we wouldn't want our diplomats to.

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Talk to the Chinese at all.

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Would we, I mean, it's not like we complain that they won't pick

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up the phone and hear that invited it happened with the, the Moscow

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Olympics back in the eighties, certainly America, Bali costed here.

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A lot of countries made it optional for their athletes, but they

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put a lot of pressure on them.

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So from memory Australia, didn't make it didn't ban athletes from competing,

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but they really put pressure on them, not to say lots of poor let's

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face it, a swimmer who spent half their life head down, bum up in a

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swimming pool, holding a black line.

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Isn't in much of a position to argue about the rights and wrongs of whether they

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should have attended the Moscow Olympics.

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I think like Tracey Wickham or someone like that.

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And didn't go cause that's sort of pressured not to go.

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So anyway, athletes can go, but so this is, this is the, you know, this

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is the government that's complaining.

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The child is not talking and won't pick up the phone and says, well diplomatic

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representations won't be going.

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And what does the life of a party do roll over and completely agree.

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Anyone and Don feral of the Australian labor party put out a state.

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Labor supports the decision not to send officials and dignitaries to the Beijing

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winter Olympics in February, we hold deep concerns about the ongoing human

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rights abuses in China, including towards a week is another ethnic and religious

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minorities and about isolate safety.

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Given questions about the treatment of tennis player, Pang Schweiger, oh,

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for God's sake, you're not worried about the human rights in China.

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It's nothing to do with human rights.

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You've been winging and bitching that you can't have a diplomatic conversation

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and you decided not to show up and lie.

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Shame on you, labor shame on you.

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How hard would it have been to say these guys are arguing

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about not being able to talk.

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Let's go and talk after Jesus Christ, just pathetic labor prophetic.

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Ah, there was a call for a Royal commission into rhythm Murdoch's

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news Corp, and a Senate environment and communications reference

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committee published its report.

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And it said that there should be a Royal commission, but the government and labor

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have agreed that they shouldn't be once again was rolled over on that one as well.

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As to whether there should be press.

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Yes.

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What'd you do anyway?

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Yes, exactly.

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Friday in the middle of press.

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Meanwhile, we've got a new head of the, a triple C Australian

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competition and consumer commission.

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This is the, this is the group that is supposed to look into monopoly

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power, where it is detrimental to the interest of Australia and good news.

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Well, that's a woman.

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Yes.

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Good news.

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Good news.

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Gina CAS Gottlieb is a woman.

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Bad news is she's not just a mate of the Murdoch.

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She's the director of the Murdoch family trust to get it to go wrong.

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And she's the chair of Australia's competition.

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Regulator.

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He's been a lawyer for Lockland Murdoch that's in itself,

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not enough to disqualify her.

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This is an article I'm reading from crikey top lawyers work for the biggest clients

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in the specialized field of competition law, any serious contender for the top

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job who isn't a lifetime public servant is going to have a history with some of

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the biggest companies in the country.

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So fair enough that she has worked for the Murdochs.

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But she's the director of the Murdoch's family trust crude and

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financial services with a 12.5%.

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Ah, so that's not just a role for a talented lawyer, but a trusted insider.

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I mean really, and that's who the government has put in

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as the chair of the Australian competition regulator, but it's, isn't it?

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Well, the Australian financial review put a glowing review about it.

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The joke, first time we ever had a female chairperson.

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So,

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so I haven't read labor's response.

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Have you, are they even going to respond?

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But I've got a feeling they'll just roll over, so, okay.

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All right.

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Let we've we have to finish off with the COVID stuff.

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Let's let's just go through a few COVID things.

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So I deal this now.

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I live in the leafy Western suburbs of Britain in a suburb called the gap,

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and there was a thing from John D.

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Bush, our state member where the premier spoke about the vaccination

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rates in different suburbs.

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And.

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Now this was last week.

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So there's probably about four or five days old.

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So 95.1% of residents in the gap have had both doses and a

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staggering 99.4% of residents of the gap have had at least one dose.

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So 99.4% is a high figure.

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Now there's roughly 13,000 people in the gap, age, six, 15, or over.

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And if you work out the maths, that means of the 13,136 people only

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79 have not had at least one jab.

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That's an amazing figure.

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We're very white.

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Middle-class law-abiding citizens here at the gap.

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That's in a nutshell, I'm surprised there aren't more libertarians in that.

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We're very no, not here.

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So there you go.

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Yeah, on the 14th of December in Victoria the, the population that

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was fully Vaxxed was 91% and unpack.

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6.4% that doesn't add up.

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It was 91.9% fully Vaxxed and 6.4%.

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3% percentile partially boxed or whatever.

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Ah, oh, okay.

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So that's a high proportion of people in Victoria fully vacs, 91% 91.9.

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Let's say let's call it 92%.

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And in the ICU unit at that time, the the percentage in ICU that were

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fully VAX was 9% and the was 88%.

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So that's a pretty good indication of the value of getting vaccinated.

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So I should put that one up.

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There we go.

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So yeah, but vaccines don't work.

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No, cause people still get COVID and I can still transmit it.

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Yes.

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Yeah.

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But the whole point is they don't get as sick and they don't

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end up in ICU nearly as often.

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So only 6.4% of the population on vaccine, but they make up 88% of the

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people in ICU, presumably for COVID.

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That's an interesting statistic I thought.

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Hm Hmm.

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Take that one off the screen still on COVID good story.

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Out of Italy.

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The stratagem was the lightest and perhaps most original episode of vaccine

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evasion in the struggle between Italy's government and the country's anti-vaccine

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faction on Thursday morning at a vaccination center, a veteran nurse face,

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something she had never seen before.

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She was preparing to give the man a dose of COVID vaccine.

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When she realized that the small patch of army offered in a gap

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between sweatshirt and t-shirt looked much Pinker than his face.

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When she touched it, she realized what was wrong, rubber foam.

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She said it was made of rubber foam.

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The man whose identity is not disclosed, wore a thick theater

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course had covered in rubber foam to which two foam arms were attached.

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She said it was quite well-made.

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His goal was to obtain a vaccination certificate and Eileen to get to work

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without actually getting the shot.

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So the had lots of people was to go to work whilst being potentially infectious.

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Yes.

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And the syringe would have been put into the fake foam.

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Then I like this one, the nurse, the nurse said it was so humiliating

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thinking that a nurse cannot tell the difference between rubber foam and skin,

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but just you idiot.

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But like you bust to get through all that stupid.

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Well, he was that stupid.

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He thought everyone else was.

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Yeah.

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It was just insulting and humiliating for her.

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It would be insulting.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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It's like the story of the Dunning-Kruger.

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Yes.

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Are you aware of that one?

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Yes.

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Dunning Kruger is the people who aren't very smart, ended up killing

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themselves, taught people who don't know people who are dumb.

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Don't know how dumb they don't know what they were.

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They was the guy who robbed a bank and there's clear security footage

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of him from the police pick him up.

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And he goes, but how did you know?

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It was me?

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I used the lemon juice and they're going what he said, how did you know it was me?

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I used the lemon juice.

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Apparently he thought, because lemon juice is invisible ink.

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It would make him invisible to the security cameras and he'd sprayed it

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on his face and taken a photograph.

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But you'd miss saying the camera.

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And so the photograph he took was of the ceiling behind him or the wall behind him.

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I'm not of him.

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And he thought it had made him invisible to the camera.

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And so he was absolutely certain that he could hold up the bank.

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Hey gang hashtag not an Oregon diner anymore.

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So people who are anti-vaxxers and who were previously organ donors, and

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now revoking their status as an organ donor because the government is saying

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that you need to be vaccinated if you want to receive an organ donation.

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So that's been trending hashtag not an organ donor anymore.

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Let's say it.

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So hang on.

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The government is saying that people who have suppressed immune

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systems should be vaccinated.

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Yes.

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What a surprise.

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Yes.

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And G the government with organ donations has been putting restrictions

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on people for a long time saying you want a lung transplant.

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You've got to quit smoking.

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Guess what?

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You don't get a lung unless you quit smoking terrible invasion of civil

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liberties, but that's the way it is.

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Yeah.

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Want to live a transplant, quit drinking.

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Yep.

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Army Cron is the latest variant.

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That was interesting that they skipped over and in the Greek alphabet new,

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because it would confuse in new, as in new would confuse people.

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If they called it the new variant, then people would think

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just means different to old.

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And they also had to skip over sheet XR, which in the Greek

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alphabet and comfortably close to the name of the Chinese leader.

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Isn't high in Greek.

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I don't know.

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That was all a bit messy in Chinese.

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So they skipped over new and Z and went straight to army crime.

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Next one will be PI that's any reason maybe I'll skip over that

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because pie is used so much.

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If pirates, Glade, et cetera, people will want the PI

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variant tasty Rho, R H O would.

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They need to skip over that one Sigma Sigma variant.

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Anyway maybe you sent me this one in your own words, how would you describe

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the battalions housecats they are convinced of their fears, independence

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while utterly dependent on the system they don't appreciate or understand

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might have got that from Ugo Austria.

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This one's interesting.

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Austria is reaching the point where they're going to force people to

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get the vaccine or they'll be fined.

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So most countries seem to have taken a position where if you don't get the

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vaccine or you can't work or when you can't visit these places, but Austria

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seems to be going to the position of saying you have to be vaccinated.

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Otherwise we'll find you.

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I'm not so sure on that one.

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Anybody thoughts on that one?

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I'm fine with that.

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You find with that one that was just upon.

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Ah, got me.

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That seems to step too far.

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Does anyone wanna support that, that Austrian idea of mining the courts

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so far with the mandates have said effectively, there is a blanket

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ban on people moving around, but there is an exemption to that ban.

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If you take precautions and the precautions are that you're vaccinated.

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So they're saying that excluding people that the effectively the not

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allowed to, to shops, not allowed into cafes, whatever it is, is not

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picking on the, the, the unvaccinated.

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They're saying that is a blanket across the board, but you can get an exemption

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and the exemption is get a vaccine.

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Yes.

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So you are opting out of the exclusion of the exemptions.

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Correct.

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Does that make sense?

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This does.

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I mean, my argument, my thoughts are like, we're trying to protect the commons here.

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So we're saying if you want to use the facilities that civilization

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has built up the commons, then we have the right to regulate it.

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But if somebody just wants to stay at home in their underpants, in their mother's

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basement and play video games and not get vaccinated and shouldn't be allowed

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to, if that's what they want to do, I think you can, you can order online.

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There are plenty of ways that you can not interact.

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But the second you start coming into places where the flip of it is you are

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a risk to people who are high risk and either they should exclude themselves

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or you should exclude yourself.

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And why should the burden be on the people who cannot avail themselves

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of the vaccines when the people can avail themselves of the vaccines?

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We're also going to reach a point where you know, why we're doing

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all this is because we don't want the hospital system to be overrun.

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And that's the real risk in my mind as to a real justification.

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And if we got to a position where there were so many people vaccinated

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and really the handful of people left to are unvaccinated, wasn't going to

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cause a problem with that hospital being overrun, then I'm, I'm kind of

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okay with them not being vaccinated.

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Sorry.

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I had to finish that off here.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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The mayor of London yesterday declared a major incident because the number of

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AMR Crohn's cases has risen so quick.

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They now have so many emergency service workers off sick that they cannot respond

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to emergency calls in their usual time.

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Yeah.

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So it's not even these people are in hospital yet.

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These people are just off with a cough or whatever, but so many of them

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are off that it's having an impact.

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Yeah.

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Yup.

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Yup.

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So anyway in the chat room, I think Julius said in reference to this

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Austrian law, I think that goes too far.

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Dolly Austrade said, well said, mill says it takes a lot of

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work from a state to ensure they are staying in their basements.

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Well, you don't have to ensure they're there.

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You just checking that they're not in the pub, aren't you, and we're

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sort of setting up systems for that.

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So anyway, I think Austria has gone too far with that one myself.

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And last but not least only 1.7% of people in PNG have vaccinated.

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They were in for a terrible time.

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Once things get going, they say it's all right, Jesus will say, yeah.

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Well the role of Christianity nearly all Papa new Guinea wins, 99.2% are Christian.

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And the religious landscape in the country is powerfully influenced by

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Pentecostal and evangelical churches.

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And.

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In P and G Christianity provides not only the promise of eternal salvation,

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but biblically inscribed frameworks and prophetic ideas and inform how people

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live and view the world around them.

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And they've got a strong interest in the end of the world as the signals, the

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return of Jesus Christ and crucially, the imminent return of chromosomes is

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heralded by the world's rapid moral decline and humanity being branded with

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the mark of the beast, a process mandated by Satan as such many Papa, new Guinea

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and Christians continuously and fearfully scan the horizon for the definitive sign.

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Anyway, religious got a lot to do with the problems in poverty.

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Guinea.

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There we go.

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All right.

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9 31.

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That's a two hour podcast.

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That'll keep you going for a while.

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Thank you.

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Shy.

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And Joe fuel efforts so far, I don't know when we will be back cause I'm

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going to be having Christmas and I'm going to be down the case for a while.

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We'll just miss each other privately and see who's around and what they're doing.

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I'd say by early January, I'll have been outraged by enough things that I will

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feel like getting behind a microphone and raining about and you probably will turn.

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So I'll keep collecting my articles and bits and.

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You back at some stage, if you're not following us on Facebook, then

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you should, because that will tell you what's going to be happening.

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And yeah.

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Final word.

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If you are not a patron, then think about becoming one.

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Again, watch the Facebook page because if I get a decision on that court case, then

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that's where you'll find out about it.

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And holy smokes, if it comes out in our favor, my goodness,

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it's going to be a big year.

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And yeah.

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Thank you to everybody in the chat room in particular, it's really good.

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Having people in the chat room really adds a lot to it, knowing that

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there's somebody actually listening rather than just the three of us tech

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amongst ourselves and not knowing.

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So it's, it's really fun having the chat room there with people commenting.

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So thank you for that.

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And so it's goodbye for me.

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Talk to you sometime in three weeks or so.

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Ish, talk to you then Shay and J say goodbye.

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That's a good night from him.

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All right.

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That was a very awkward goodbye for the last show of the year.

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But anyway, it'll do for the moment.

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Talk to you next year.

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Bye for now.

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Well, you probably wonder what our politicians do on Christmas save

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well, when it's drought cattle,

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now you don't have to convince me that the climate is not changing.

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It is changing.

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And my problem's always been, whether you believe a new tax is going to

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change it back, but I just don't want the government any more of my life.

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I'm sick of the government being in my life.

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Yeah.

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And the other thing is, I think we've got to acknowledge is, you

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know, there's a higher authority.

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That's beyond our comprehension and run up there in the sky, unless we understand

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that that's gotta be respected, then we're just fooled and we're going to get nailed.