Well, dear listener.
Speaker:Welcome.
Speaker:This is the iron fist and the velvet glove podcast coming to you remotely
Speaker:during the Brisbane lockdown.
Speaker:3rd of August, 2021 episode 307 iron Trevor AKA the iron fist.
Speaker:Beavering away with a mouse on a on a treadmill is shy in her
Speaker:apartment Shay, welcome aboard again.
Speaker:And also Joe, the tech guy is somewhere Joe's just disappeared,
Speaker:but he is there somewhere.
Speaker:I don't know why that just did that.
Speaker:Yeah, but Daniel is there anyway.
Speaker:So it's the three of us and it's episode 307.
Speaker:And we're going to run through the topics of the last two weeks
Speaker:and talk about what's happened and there's been a few things.
Speaker:So sit back and relax.
Speaker:If you're in the chat room, say hello.
Speaker:And make a comment and share your thoughts and we'll try and
Speaker:get to your comments if we can.
Speaker:So just a little, a couple of issues first, before we start on what that was.
Speaker:But before we get going, just a few personal things.
Speaker:So the court case for the Nyssa temple of Satan is still scheduled for Thursday.
Speaker:Next week, the 12th of August, I checked with crown law and apparently ball cases
Speaker:are one of those things that keeps going even in a lockdown because it's just
Speaker:too difficult to reschedule everybody.
Speaker:So as much as possible court cases keep going.
Speaker:So at this stage, it's still scheduled for the 12th of August.
Speaker:Hi, to Craig in the chat room.
Speaker:Craig, I got your message.
Speaker:And I've been too busy to respond, but sorry about that.
Speaker:And just the other thing is I went to a function in the gap.
Speaker:Last.
Speaker:Week.
Speaker:It was like this little arts group.
Speaker:There's sort of a community arts place where there's going
Speaker:to be artists hanging stuff up.
Speaker:And as a or of art supplies, I thought I should go.
Speaker:And anyway, Jonty Bush, local state member labor party was there.
Speaker:And and I had my mask on and I just said, ah, hello on Trevor.
Speaker:And she looked at me and she said, oh, I recognize you went,
Speaker:where do I recognize you from?
Speaker:And I thought to myself, well, I'm a labor party member, but I haven't
Speaker:been to any meetings I'm really done.
Speaker:I really don't know how you would've recognized me.
Speaker:I'm I just, I was honestly stumped about five minutes later I thought,
Speaker:oh, it was probably because she's seen me in the paper and I've given
Speaker:the education minister a hard time.
Speaker:So I think that's actually recognized me behind the mask.
Speaker:So anyway, that was that.
Speaker:Shay lots of stuff for you to get your teeth into in this or Reagan,
Speaker:lots of women's issues shy, and you're a women's issues expert.
Speaker:We didn't get a flight attendant issue to K through and your expert brand damage.
Speaker:If you're watching on the live stream, you'll see Jay there with his fancy
Speaker:background, I made the joke earlier that Jay's taking this live streaming stuff.
Speaker:Why too, literally, but anyway, you'll have to be looking at
Speaker:the vision to get that joke.
Speaker:So Shea John coats Anastasia pallor, Shea, we Brisbane won the Olympic
Speaker:bead and there was this scene where there was a slight press conference.
Speaker:Everybody had their masks.
Speaker:And what is that noise, Joe?
Speaker:What is that?
Speaker:When that happens anyway, everyone had their masks on and.
Speaker:There was this confusion or there's debate about whether Anastasia was going
Speaker:to attend a opening ceremony or not.
Speaker:And John Cote said you are going to the opening ceremony.
Speaker:And he said, I am still the deputy chair of the candidature leadership group.
Speaker:And so far as I understand, there will be an opening and closing ceremony in 2032.
Speaker:And you're all gonna get along there and understand the traditional parts of it.
Speaker:What's involved in the opening ceremony so that none of you are staying
Speaker:behind and hiding in your rooms.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:And this was taken maybe to the main splining shy.
Speaker:It was John coats.
Speaker:Is it got anything to answer full there?
Speaker:Yeah, I thought it was I thought Joan Cara, now that actually, I think
Speaker:we've all been there in that type of situation before where they just get
Speaker:telling and takes them by surprise.
Speaker:And she just did the best she could with the resources that
Speaker:she had available to her.
Speaker:And basically she is down as she does.
Speaker:And she's damned if she doesn't.
Speaker:So she dealt with it as best she could.
Speaker:So is this a case of mansplaining and bullying by John cage?
Speaker:So you think absolutely right.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'm not sure.
Speaker:Let's see.
Speaker:I thought at first, maybe you were like, when you initially saw the
Speaker:footage, did you think oh, absolutely.
Speaker:Yeah, I did.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So when I looked at it initially, I thought, yikes, that's really ugly, but
Speaker:it turns out they're really quite close by all accounts, genuinely good friends.
Speaker:It seems.
Speaker:And the sort of, why it was described was that he was kind of
Speaker:joking in a sarcastic sort of it.
Speaker:It didn't translate well, and here's the thing is when everyone's
Speaker:behind masks, it's really hard to tell facial expressions.
Speaker:And if you are being, it's like a debate on Facebook, in a Facebook common page, if
Speaker:you are trying to use sarcasm or something like that, you basically have to say in
Speaker:the comment you know, sarcasm coming and then insert sarcasm sort of culminate
Speaker:because it's hard to read sarcasm in a Facebook comment, and it's hard to read
Speaker:if he was doing what he said he was doing.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:You're a big one on context and pretext and the pretext is their buddies and
Speaker:buddies joke with each other about things.
Speaker:Don't you.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, I think the pretext is Hayes accustomed to getting his own way,
Speaker:but he's a skilled negotiator and that he's unaccustomed to being held to
Speaker:account for the way he speaks to people.
Speaker:That's what I think is the pretext is that that's a typical way for him
Speaker:to behave and what he didn't expect was the backlash that's possible.
Speaker:That's possible.
Speaker:But, and I found it really surprising that it was like Anastasia was held
Speaker:responsible for his remarks as well.
Speaker:Also seemed to be that in the background of like, oh, well, she
Speaker:got what she wanted because now she can attend the Olympic ceremony.
Speaker:I'm missing the point.
Speaker:Isn't it?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It just depends.
Speaker:It's hard to know whether to believe it's possible.
Speaker:His version of events is possible.
Speaker:I'm simply saying.
Speaker:And I'm simply saying that this is one of the problems
Speaker:when people cover their faces.
Speaker:So w we used to talk a lot about the burka and the niqab and, and my objection to
Speaker:it was that it was if I'm just walking down the street or whatever, I really
Speaker:being able to read somebody's expressions.
Speaker:Facial expressions helps me understand if they're a friend or foe, like you
Speaker:just read a lot in people's faces.
Speaker:And I sort of turned around a little bit after a trip to Japan, where
Speaker:everybody was wearing face masks.
Speaker:And I thought for some reason I was happy to forgive face mask, but I wasn't
Speaker:happy to forgive Dekab and burgers.
Speaker:And but I think it just demonstrates one of the difficulties when people cover
Speaker:their face is nuance and sarcasm and.
Speaker:Saying something that you don't really mean.
Speaker:And in fact, you mean the opposite of it, which you can deliver
Speaker:that meaning with your face.
Speaker:And she was hard to read as well because it looked behind the mask that she was
Speaker:coward and, and sort of under pressure and feeling it, but she could have been
Speaker:smiling away and, and enjoying the joke.
Speaker:And we just wouldn't know, I guess that's possible.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, yeah.
Speaker:So I just thought that was an interesting example.
Speaker:It's just hard to know what really happened and I could easily imagine
Speaker:it when either of the two ways the one you described or the one he described.
Speaker:So yeah, when we go back over the footage, you can hear the laughter indeed.
Speaker:There is apple was confusing.
Speaker:The audience did seem to take it as jest, but then again, that maybe that
Speaker:doesn't make any difference at all later.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So Bronwyn in the chat room says she understood John coats to
Speaker:be exactly as Shay described.
Speaker:So you've got one there saying Roman, do you see though, that it's possible,
Speaker:it might've been the other way or you just totally discount that.
Speaker:Like it's hard to know.
Speaker:So dire straits in the chat rooms, there's a bit later.
Speaker:Can I bring up the topic of social media and whether it's promotion or
Speaker:not sure, John, you can bring that up.
Speaker:And Craig was in the chat room and he sent me a message, which I hadn't got
Speaker:to read fully, but he was really, I think concerned about what well, he was
Speaker:talking a little bit about my discussion with cam and psychopaths and I think
Speaker:sort of objecting to some of the broad descriptions that were made there.
Speaker:So we might get to that later.
Speaker:Alright.
Speaker:Next topic still to do with the Olympics and this is to do with the Norwegians.
Speaker:The Norwegian women's beach handball team.
Speaker:Did you see the Shea without me sending it to you or you?
Speaker:I did see it or not.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'm out of a Facebook page.
Speaker:That's a campaign group called collective shout.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And they're nonpolitical nonreligious, but they campaign against
Speaker:sexploitation of women lightly.
Speaker:Their main campaign has been against honey Birdette, which is the lingerie
Speaker:school that's in shopping centers and the way that they advertise basically
Speaker:soft porn in shopping centers.
Speaker:So they'd latched on to this as well.
Speaker:And started the hashtag, let them wear shorts.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Getting lots of signatures on a petition and building momentum.
Speaker:So what's the name of the group collective shout, like to share?
Speaker:So with the Norwegian handball team the women's team was fine.
Speaker:After the players wore shorts instead of the required bikini bottoms.
Speaker:And I've got on the screen, dear listener, if you're watching on
Speaker:the live stream, a picture from the 2019, when they were in their bikini
Speaker:bottoms, and I'll put up on the screen a picture of them in the short-stay
Speaker:war, which they were fined for wearing.
Speaker:And the interesting thing, just going back to the previous one,
Speaker:when you look at the guys, just take normal shorts and seamless,
Speaker:like it's a really strict, bad look.
Speaker:The way the guys are dressed in a singlet and a pair of shorts, and
Speaker:the girls are obviously required to just show lots of screens.
Speaker:It's pretty bad.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I think that picture would probably be the one that appears
Speaker:as a cover for this episode.
Speaker:So they were fined and the international.
Speaker:Handball Federation requires women to wear bikini bottoms with
Speaker:a close fit and cut at an upward angle towards the top of the leg.
Speaker:The sides of the bikini bottoms must be nine more than four inches men.
Speaker:On the other hand can wear shorts as long as four inches above their knees.
Speaker:As long as they're not too baggy and a spokeswoman for the international
Speaker:handball Federation said on Tuesday night that she didn't know the
Speaker:reason for the rules quite well.
Speaker:We're looking into it internally.
Speaker:She said, and she later said, no, I was the only country that had
Speaker:officially complained globally.
Speaker:We know that other countries like to play in bikinis, for example,
Speaker:especially in south America.
Speaker:And you could well imagine Brazilians loving it.
Speaker:Well, imagine it, but Hey, it's, it's not necessary a tire.
Speaker:The sport and it's a pretty poor standard when the guys can wear whatever they like
Speaker:and the girls having to just show scheme.
Speaker:So, yeah, so, so good on the women's Norwegian team for
Speaker:kicking up a stink and sign.
Speaker:We're not putting up with this.
Speaker:So the other associated story with that was, did you hear about the two time
Speaker:great Britain para Olympian, Alivia bream.
Speaker:So she is some sort of long jumper, I think.
Speaker:And she has cerebral palsy and she was at the English championships in Bedford
Speaker:and She was told her sprinting briefs were too short and inappropriate.
Speaker:Did you see that one show at all?
Speaker:Like how?
Speaker:Just, yeah, just like the reckoning is so slow in the pace.
Speaker:Like there's things that we just went along with the so many years, there's just
Speaker:like so absurd that we tolerated those kinds of Vermont's, but yeah, it's, it
Speaker:takes time to realize, let the Brazilians wear bikini's if they want to, but the
Speaker:Norwegians wear shorts if they want to.
Speaker:Oh, the unitards if they want that's what's coming out now as well.
Speaker:You're right.
Speaker:But to add that to the list.
Speaker:So normally the gymnast is showing a fair bit of skin and one of
Speaker:the teams in particular has sort of worn a leotard type outfit.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Whatever just works functionally for the person.
Speaker:If it doesn't give an unfair advantage them, just let them
Speaker:do whatever they want to do.
Speaker:Goodness.
Speaker:So yeah, so there we go.
Speaker:She felt very embarrassed when she'd been told her outfit was too skimpy.
Speaker:Sorry, there we go.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Shy.
Speaker:I'm going to get rid of that one there and get rid of it.
Speaker:Don't need the screen anymore.
Speaker:Shay, still on women's issues.
Speaker:Did you have a school for when you were?
Speaker:Yes, I did.
Speaker:Then he guys, was it a bit me?
Speaker:Were you a co you were co-ed or?
Speaker:Yeah, I was at a co-ed school girls school for a time when I was at that age.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Did the all girls school, when they have a formal, did they invite boys alone?
Speaker:I'm pretty sure I did.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So Morton college in outskirts of Brisbane and the bay area.
Speaker:They've come under fire for a sense of girls' school.
Speaker:And they've made a decision that ban students from bringing male
Speaker:partners to the upcoming semi-formal.
Speaker:And basically this comes about because last year, due to COVID, they
Speaker:weren't allowed to bring boys along.
Speaker:And this year they decided that was such a good time.
Speaker:Last year, without the voice, we're not going to have them.
Speaker:Was it just male partners though?
Speaker:I think so.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I don't think there's any issues of same-sex partnerships in
Speaker:this particular one just yet.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Cause that's usually the reason it is, but yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:This is just an all girls school and can't bring any males along
Speaker:because we had such a good time last year where they are and some people
Speaker:are up in arms and Shay, did you?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You have any thoughts about.
Speaker:If you were conducting, if you're a principal of an all girls school,
Speaker:would you be running it with, or without boys or you just wouldn't care.
Speaker:If I trolled at the previous here and found it really worked, then I can't say
Speaker:why wouldn't it laced, float the idea.
Speaker:Yeah, certainly I found at the semi-formal informal and I went to boys.
Speaker:The boy that I took both years was a different boy.
Speaker:Didn't really like to be in photos.
Speaker:Didn't want to dance.
Speaker:Didn't want to do any of the particular things you'd expect.
Speaker:So, you know, basically why put the boys through it, but I don't want
Speaker:to pay that fine fun book notes.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I don't get the upset.
Speaker:I don't get the tragedy of it, frankly.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, okay.
Speaker:But if you were a girl and you wanted to bring a boy along and we're told
Speaker:we can't first start, this was a unilateral decision from up high on the
Speaker:headmaster or headmistress, I think.
Speaker:That's it not doing it.
Speaker:So there wasn't any consultation.
Speaker:So that's on the one, you know, initially a bit mean you would think
Speaker:you would fly, as you said, float, the idea means ask students what
Speaker:they think don't think that happens.
Speaker:So so just looking at some of the comments here
Speaker:I like this,
Speaker:here's a comment.
Speaker:That is an interesting one.
Speaker:I completely understand why teachers would say the night would be
Speaker:more fun with just girls, because frankly it would be, however, the
Speaker:night isn't just about having fun.
Speaker:It's about having those awkward interactions with boys and
Speaker:learning from those interactions
Speaker:comment in the chat, but no, you're right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I don't think that really bolsters the case.
Speaker:That's not the point I would have taken if I were campaigning to
Speaker:have boys loud or put interactions.
Speaker:Is that the best?
Speaker:Is that the best reason to invite partners?
Speaker:I don't know if it's the best, but it is a reason that how would you make,
Speaker:what is, what is the, tell us, what is the purpose of a formal, is it to have
Speaker:fun or is it to force people to have uncomfortable confronting conversations
Speaker:and times as a maturing process?
Speaker:What is the purpose of a form or is it to dance and happy Friday?
Speaker:Tagan for us, we like the girls just want to look beautiful
Speaker:and have their photo taken.
Speaker:And that was, that was the point of me going, but now like I was
Speaker:visiting a school two weeks ago and.
Speaker:Often that's how teachers and principals get their students in line.
Speaker:So that's how they get their school phase pay.
Speaker:They get a whole, I get people to really clean their act up
Speaker:so they can attend formals.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The threat of over 10, the formal.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:If you're going to do it that way, then perhaps you'd better consider that your
Speaker:students might like to bring a date.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So yeah, I just thought that was an interesting one as well.
Speaker:I could see the argument on both sides.
Speaker:It really depends on what you think the purpose of formal is.
Speaker:So, yes.
Speaker:I went to an all boys school and.
Speaker:Basically when they organize the form all day said, do you need us, what
Speaker:will the guy who organized the form will say, do you need us to get you
Speaker:a date from, from all Hallows school?
Speaker:Cause there was just a ready supply of girls from all allies that they
Speaker:would rustle up if he needed a date or are you sorted yourself?
Speaker:And I didn't have a girlfriend, but I knew this girl when, cause I was working
Speaker:as a hamburger flipper at McDonald's.
Speaker:So I asked this girl and she agreed to be my partner for the formal, but we weren't
Speaker:like girlfriend boyfriend type stuff.
Speaker:She had a driver's license and could pick me up and take me there so that good
Speaker:thinking she made, like, it was great.
Speaker:It was better that she was there, then not there.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, but yeah, I don't know.
Speaker:I don't look back on fondly in any sense.
Speaker:Yeah, it was probably one of the reasons why I was determined that my
Speaker:kids would go to a co-ed school, just so it wouldn't be weirded out because
Speaker:look, on the other hand, I know with my kids who went to a co-ed school, they
Speaker:had fantastic falls like this, Tom.
Speaker:So we had the pre formals at our house and just kids everywhere.
Speaker:It was really lovely.
Speaker:Not a great time.
Speaker:So yeah, I think another reason to send your kids to a co-ed school, if possible.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So that's a gender issues done and dusted.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Show for helping us through that.
Speaker:So We need to talk about freedom just to get us in the mood.
Speaker:I'll just play a little audio.
Speaker:Alba goop, bruh.
Speaker:Scotland forever.
Speaker:I can, can take your lives, but I'll never take your freedom.
Speaker:Lockdowns freedom, new south Wales.
Speaker:Oh, where do we start?
Speaker:Where do we start?
Speaker:Your thoughts shy or Jo on the protests in Sydney, Melbourne.
Speaker:Brisbane.
Speaker:Did you go and protest by any chance?
Speaker:We did.
Speaker:Knowing, knowing Mel Gibson's rather Nazi beliefs, it wouldn't surprise me at all.
Speaker:If he was in an anti masker.
Speaker:No, wouldn't surprise.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:But yes.
Speaker:I saw a beautiful post today that said effectively, we're all fatigued from
Speaker:this because those of us who are taking it seriously are protecting those who
Speaker:don't and those who don't are running around going, oh, it's all a stupid thing.
Speaker:You know, look how fine I am.
Speaker:And the reason they're fine is because of the work that the rest
Speaker:of us are doing in protecting them.
Speaker:So those of us who are taking it seriously paying the price for those who go on about
Speaker:their freedoms and refuse to wear a mask.
Speaker:And generally the reason that they haven't ended up in hospital
Speaker:is because of the rest of us.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:If free free loaders on society.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And they just have this view that they're individual freedom.
Speaker:Has no responsibility attached to it that they can enjoy the benefits that
Speaker:society has without any responsibility to contribute back to society in any way.
Speaker:It's just take, take, take, and not any give, give, give at all in this.
Speaker:You, you know that statistically it's safer for me to drive home pissed from
Speaker:the pub than it is for me to walk home.
Speaker:So for me, it's safer.
Speaker:So my freedom should be that I'm allowed to get in the car and drive
Speaker:home drunk because it's safer for me.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Funnily enough, we've decided to make some rules to try and stop you from doing that.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, we make rules all the time.
Speaker:Restricting people's freedom when there's a good reason to,
Speaker:but the protection of everybody.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But isn't it more that they're like steadily alarmed about this
Speaker:slippery slope type conversation.
Speaker:Like I get the impression from people I say on my Facebook who are on the
Speaker:fringes of this Q Anon business.
Speaker:And they, they genuinely believe that governments are corrupt, which you could
Speaker:probably make, you could make a case for.
Speaker:They genuinely are alarmed about what they're saying.
Speaker:So they say themselves as lack, conquers, not as selfish people.
Speaker:And that has to be, I think, handled doesn't it.
Speaker:Well, they also don't necessarily believe that the virus is in any way as oh, maybe
Speaker:that it is real, but it's certainly not as dangerous as it's made out to be.
Speaker:It's like the people January 6th with the capital sort of apparatus.
Speaker:If you actually believe the election was stolen from Donald Trump, then you were
Speaker:really a, a, a democratic freedom fighter.
Speaker:If he believed that you were upholding democracy and freedom, because he,
Speaker:he believed the election was raped.
Speaker:So if you've got a misconceived view about lockdowns you're right,
Speaker:Shay, you could potentially be doing this thinking morally.
Speaker:You're actually in the, on the right side of the ledger.
Speaker:It's this, that nobody else understands it the way that it needs to be understood
Speaker:because they're all being manipulated by mainstream media or something like that.
Speaker:So there's something, I guess what you're saying is there's
Speaker:something admirable about the people who are protesting in that?
Speaker:No, they're admirable.
Speaker:I'm just kind of glad they're a little bit more out in the open.
Speaker:The gentleman who was charged for punching the horse, Shane wasn't
Speaker:able to get legal help for five days.
Speaker:He was in custody because he refused to have his test.
Speaker:Now, there is somebody who is really standing his ground over, being tested.
Speaker:That is someone who is really conscious, that there is some consequence around
Speaker:being tested and really mistrusting the system, which like a part of me
Speaker:does understand that is a pretty new requirement to receive legal help.
Speaker:So, I guess what I'm saying is that I, I understand kind of the, the rage
Speaker:and the lack of explanation and yeah, that's all, and I'm kind of glad
Speaker:they're out in the open because now we do have to deal with it more easily.
Speaker:Well, maybe that's one thing, but yeah, Carl Sagan warned us of this, right.
Speaker:Where, where people were believed that their beliefs were equivalent
Speaker:to your science, that, that that it's a matter of which sites you pick
Speaker:rather than science being a process of discovery and of continual learning.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So that's tricky.
Speaker:These people honestly believe That we've all been manipulated that these lockdowns
Speaker:are Y over the top compared to the risks that are actually there and that they are
Speaker:freedom fighters and democracy fighters on behalf of the sheeple who died to get it.
Speaker:So they're doing some favor.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:Some of the shameful and the cured on people have some things in common where
Speaker:we both think shit has got to change.
Speaker:Like it really has galvanized some of the social issues.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, I, I don't know.
Speaker:Like, yeah, I, I don't know.
Speaker:I mean, I, I think there's discussion about the social cost of lockdowns,
Speaker:and I think this is a very, very good argument for a UBI or something
Speaker:equivalent this discussion.
Speaker:Universal.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The discussion that effectively society, if society wants these people to take
Speaker:the hit to protect society, then society has an obligation to make sure that they
Speaker:don't lose their houses, that there's food on the table that they looked after.
Speaker:And the same with vaccines that the people who really are injured should
Speaker:be looked after by society because they have Powerade, the paid, paid the price.
Speaker:You know, there is a very small chance that a vaccine is going to cause injury.
Speaker:Because they've put themselves at risk, we should cover their costs.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:If people are wanting to protest, they could protest about the lack of support
Speaker:for people have been forced not to work.
Speaker:Meanwhile, Capitol can continue to grow and earn income.
Speaker:And flying to space.
Speaker:Yes, indeed.
Speaker:So that's what people could protest about, but people seem to
Speaker:be quite meek and mild on that.
Speaker:I saw in a central report where even labor party people had
Speaker:thought that the government support was around about adequate.
Speaker:And I really thought, wow, surprise me that there wasn't enough people thinking
Speaker:of all the billions of dollars that have been spent so far, what's another
Speaker:couple of billion and have they're taking some of Jerry Harvey and giving
Speaker:it back to the people who need it.
Speaker:But now it's sort of surprising that people weren't looking at it and
Speaker:going, we've just got to give people who can't work more money because
Speaker:it's too tough, but there's not really enough protest about that.
Speaker:I don't think so.
Speaker:No, it seems to be very selfish protest.
Speaker:I deserve the right to go and work.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Rather than the, okay.
Speaker:Let's look down society, but let's pay people properly.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And it, you know, there's just a real lack of recognition that in
Speaker:our society, we have restrictions and freedom all the time.
Speaker:Like you were saying with driving home drunk.
Speaker:And I saw this post, which I read a little bit about, which
Speaker:was welcome to the freedom cafe.
Speaker:We trust you make your own choices.
Speaker:If you want to wear a face mask.
Speaker:And in the same spirit of individual Liberty, we allow our staff to make
Speaker:their own choices about the safety procedures they prefer to follow.
Speaker:As they prepare and serve your food.
Speaker:We encourage employees to wash their hands after using the bathroom, but
Speaker:understand that some people may be allergic to certain soaps or may
Speaker:prefer not to wash their hands.
Speaker:It is not our place to tell them what to do.
Speaker:We understand you may be used to chicken that has been cooked at 165 degrees.
Speaker:We do have to respect that side of our cooks may have
Speaker:seen a meme or a YouTube video.
Speaker:Saying that a hundred, a hundred degrees is fine and we don't want
Speaker:to encroach on their beliefs.
Speaker:Some servers may wish to touch your food as they serve it.
Speaker:There's no reason that a healthy person with clean hands can't touch your food.
Speaker:We will take their word for it, that they are healthy and clean.
Speaker:And it goes on.
Speaker:So some of you may get sick, but almost everyone survives food poisoning.
Speaker:We think you'll agree that it's a small price to pay for the sweet
Speaker:freedom of no one ever being told what to do, especially not for the silly
Speaker:reason of keeping strangers healthy.
Speaker:I thought that was a good example.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:People just think freedom, freedom, freedom.
Speaker:And they don't get that.
Speaker:Your freedoms being cutout all the time for good reasons.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I was waiting, they a little while ago I was listening to it on audible around
Speaker:I forget the title, but it's a book.
Speaker:That's a really amazing book.
Speaker:Five years of riding around domestic.
Speaker:Look what you made me do.
Speaker:And she makes the case at the end about how, when Australia is well-known for
Speaker:when we have a public health emergency, we are known to put the reforms in.
Speaker:So for instance, you use the example of drunk driving has a
Speaker:story about how she didn't check.
Speaker:We didn't check community standards.
Speaker:We didn't go down to the pub and check how people felt about whether
Speaker:or not we would let them drink drive.
Speaker:We just brought it in, say it's cigarettes.
Speaker:We didn't we were actually taken Australia, was taken to court
Speaker:about some of our bores that we brought in a brand plain packaging.
Speaker:And we, and Julia Gilad still implemented them.
Speaker:And you can make the same case for vaccinations and a whole range of these
Speaker:things is it's a public health emergency.
Speaker:This is what we know.
Speaker:We do.
Speaker:Y.
Speaker:The problem is these people don't see the emergency.
Speaker:They think it's a beat up that it's not as bad as what it's being made out to be.
Speaker:And therefore these things are over the top.
Speaker:And maybe a limit, you know a time limit on these powers would be a
Speaker:suitable compromise to say that.
Speaker:And, and yeah, there was the whole Dan Andrews, oh, look, he's
Speaker:extended his emergency powers again.
Speaker:But the whole point, the emergency powers is you have to go back to
Speaker:parliament, you have to justify it.
Speaker:And I think it does.
Speaker:There's, there's a, a level of accountability there.
Speaker:Unfortunately with the, the September the 11th, we passed a whole raft of
Speaker:spying laws which didn't have an end date and have never been repealed.
Speaker:And I think we need to be careful of knee-jerk reactions.
Speaker:So that we do have Susan will safety when there is a real risk, but
Speaker:that it's not there all the time.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:In times of of fear laws get passed and then they're in the books forever.
Speaker:It's hard to turn them back.
Speaker:So look, really one of the, since we last spoke, the big thing has been
Speaker:the outbreak in new south Wales where they've been able to get by without
Speaker:too many troubles in recent times.
Speaker:Let me display a little bit of a Gladys Berejiklian being interviewed.
Speaker:Here we go.
Speaker:Why do Melbourne?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Or Victoria, you know, when we get a couple of cases, we, we,
Speaker:we kind of control it and it's, and it comes down very quickly.
Speaker:What happens in Victoria, where it just gets away from them.
Speaker:I keep saying to people, it's not for me to comment on what other
Speaker:governments do, but I've just got the, we've got the confidence that
Speaker:our systems in place, our public's used to doing things a particular way.
Speaker:And it's a question of trust and it's harder.
Speaker:It's much easier to lock down because you don't have to worry about anything.
Speaker:It's much more difficult to let people move around when the virus is circulating.
Speaker:And that's been a challenge for us, but it's been a worthwhile challenge.
Speaker:I hope we've demonstrated to other states that it is possible to manage an
Speaker:outbreak and not shut down a city and not stop businesses and not stop people
Speaker:being employed and not stop people.
Speaker:Having a relatively normal existence and comments have not aged well.
Speaker:I listened to a BBC podcast that we're talking to a couple of
Speaker:epidemiologists and they were saying that worked with the original variant.
Speaker:But the problem with Delta is it's so transmissible that the track
Speaker:and trace people cannot keep up.
Speaker:So where you have a relatively low R zero, which is the number of people,
Speaker:each person can infect your track and trace can keep up with that.
Speaker:But once you start getting above a threshold, you just can't trace the people
Speaker:as quickly as they are spreading it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:As the new south Wales track and Trice, all that flash compared to
Speaker:say, Victoria, wasn't that good?
Speaker:According to the epidemiologists that I listened to, they said, yes, it was right.
Speaker:It was significantly better than Victoria.
Speaker:They said Victoria's health system had been allowed to.
Speaker:Decay being rundown.
Speaker:Whereas new south Wales their chief health officer had come back with
Speaker:lessons learned from overseas and had really revamped the department and had
Speaker:put the skills in place that meant that they could get a suitable traffic trace
Speaker:up and running relatively quickly.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Queensland.
Speaker:Where did it fit in this scale of quality track and trace?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:It wasn't mentioned.
Speaker:See, cause it really was Sydney.
Speaker:Melbourne.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I didn't get a chance to, I know you shared that with us, but I
Speaker:didn't get a chance to, it's a long podcast, but yeah, you can
Speaker:put the link up if you want people.
Speaker:They want to find that and listen to it.
Speaker:But you know, I, I just know here in Queensland, I just thought
Speaker:we've just been lucky and I just thought Victoria was unlucky.
Speaker:It seemed to me, and it seemed to me that Sydney was.
Speaker:And their Lux run out.
Speaker:And as a leader of a state, I would never have made that comment.
Speaker:I like to think because I would have just had this self awareness that
Speaker:we've just been there, but for the grace of God go, I is the sort of thing
Speaker:that she should have been thinking.
Speaker:She was looking at it.
Speaker:So yeah, it hasn't aged well, and there were other comments
Speaker:where she was asked in that same interview with is it's ridiculous
Speaker:that they're playing a recording.
Speaker:The best interviews we get are from Kyle and Jackie O interviewing Berejiklian,
Speaker:but they got, sometimes these politicians appear on these shows expecting a free
Speaker:ride and just the odd things come out.
Speaker:So, but she was asked in that one, are you going to give any
Speaker:of your vaccine to Victoria?
Speaker:And she said, oh no, I can't do that.
Speaker:I can't do that.
Speaker:Oh, the feds might give him a little bit of extra of something.
Speaker:Tucked away in a cupboard somewhere, but we're not going
Speaker:to give many, can't do that.
Speaker:And then, you know, as soon as these are files are outbreak, oh, we need extra.
Speaker:Now you sense of Chrissy double standards.
Speaker:No, look, I know I say you guys can't have it, but I'd really
Speaker:like some now and I get it now.
Speaker:It was just,
Speaker:what can you say really?
Speaker:So it's a that's Gladys.
Speaker:Berejiklian I'm going to put on the screen.
Speaker:The bit of luck is what people think about the lockdowns thinking about the
Speaker:latest COVID-19 lockdown in your state, do you think your state government locked
Speaker:down too harsh, locked down about right.
Speaker:Did not lock down hard enough and.
Speaker:It's only new south Wales, Victoria and south Australia and Victoria,
Speaker:71% thought that the state had locked down at about the right level in south
Speaker:Australia, 85% thought that the state had locked down at the right level.
Speaker:But in new south Wales, it was only 39.
Speaker:And in terms of did not lock down hard enough, Victoria in
Speaker:south Australia was 6% and 9%.
Speaker:But on this question of did not lock down hard enough.
Speaker:New south Wales was 50%.
Speaker:I think that's fairly damning of what people thought about what they did.
Speaker:That's changed in the last week because I looked a week ago and they were saying
Speaker:that they thought they were about right.
Speaker:Okay, well, that was the essential report, but I was quoting there quite recent.
Speaker:So w you were looking at something how long ago?
Speaker:I thought it was the essential report and it was, how did everyone think that
Speaker:new south Wales had handled the latest outbreak, but that would be the other
Speaker:state said it was poorly, but new south Wales people thought they'd done it well.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I think even in this essential report, I didn't gather all of it sort of, sort
Speaker:of general impression of, are you happy with Gladys and the state government
Speaker:was still not too bad, but the, the, but the statistic of how do you think
Speaker:they went in terms of the lockdown?
Speaker:Was it hard enough that just got absolutely bashed on that one?
Speaker:So there was a little bit of a disconnect there, which won't come through.
Speaker:Well, it was, it was the fact that for so long, she just refused
Speaker:to utter the words locked down.
Speaker:And it was, yeah, they were trying to drag it out of her mouth that she was refusing
Speaker:to say it Voldemort, but get like that.
Speaker:Don't they like peanut BT was around for years.
Speaker:Like it's such an easy thing to do.
Speaker:You just do the Peter BD thing, say, sorry, he got it wrong promise.
Speaker:We're going to fix it.
Speaker:Yeah, you're right.
Speaker:We were wrong.
Speaker:We're done.
Speaker:And that just takes the oxygen, but yeah, I've got to learn from Peter BD.
Speaker:So so good luck.
Speaker:Do you, new south Wales, I'm, I'm working on a theory that they'll never
Speaker:get back to zero and that they will do some sort of our we'll have this
Speaker:local authority more locked down, but then these other authorities
Speaker:can basically do whatever they want.
Speaker:They'll just have little different districts with different rules
Speaker:and it just kind of give you.
Speaker:That's what I'm thinking.
Speaker:Anybody else agree with that theory, but there'll be locked
Speaker:out of the rest of Australia.
Speaker:I think if they do.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And I can't see that politically that's yeah, that might work for a period of
Speaker:time, but I can't see them surviving that.
Speaker:Well, she's going to get as many vaccinated as she can.
Speaker:That's the goal.
Speaker:So she will vaccinate as she can in August and then shrugs
Speaker:his shoulders and says, right.
Speaker:We're good.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:80, 80% of the 50% of the people that I made.
Speaker:No, I just skew it and spin it.
Speaker:And you know, that's the other thing is with the latest outbreak
Speaker:in Brisbane one day, what was it?
Speaker:Sunday of the 13 new cases, 10 were under the age of 10 and we can't
Speaker:vaccinate the under fifteens or whatever.
Speaker:The, the cohort.
Speaker:So there's the risk of it coming home from schools.
Speaker:Mm Hmm.
Speaker:It's interesting.
Speaker:In Sydney, the number of local local councils they have there, there are
Speaker:just, I don't know the exact figure, but they're like councils are really
Speaker:small districts and Sydney, I dunno.
Speaker:It might have 12 or 15 councils.
Speaker:I know around Bondai, like the Bondai junction shopping center,
Speaker:like straddles three councils.
Speaker:So when they're trying to approve something like that, just getting the
Speaker:roadworks and the building approvals for things like that are really difficult.
Speaker:So coming from Brisbane, we've got one of the largest local
Speaker:council organizations in the world.
Speaker:Like it's a Brisbane city, council's big and it's got a big budget in it.
Speaker:Whether it's live or liberal, it tends to operate pretty well.
Speaker:The Brisbane city council, I think But, yeah, Sydney's just
Speaker:got a lot of local councils.
Speaker:It's quite an archaic system where they really need to do something.
Speaker:And Clifford says, Trev, Melbourne is the sign, lots of local government authorities
Speaker:means lock sort of elected politicians.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And just these, you know, you're in the middle of the city and you're crossing
Speaker:over from one local council to another very hard to get properly organized with
Speaker:your transport and all the rest of it.
Speaker:So, so Brisbane is ahead of the game on that one.
Speaker:Where was I getting to, ah, yeah, in a Sydney, they're going to, you
Speaker:get to the point where they just say if you want to get into a pub or a
Speaker:restaurant, you're going to have to show some proof of vaccination and stuff.
Speaker:Everyone's just going to scurry for the AstraZeneca in order that they
Speaker:can get a some sort of vaccination proof and getting in do things.
Speaker:And they'll just, or I'll just forward to the certificate
Speaker:load they're doing in Russia.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But surely there can be a certificate that's tamper-proof
Speaker:Joe is a tech guy, Joe.
Speaker:They can't be that hard.
Speaker:Oh, I mean the easiest way is to have a website that you're searchable on, but
Speaker:you still get medical staff who will take a bribe, or there are unfortunately
Speaker:members of the medical community who are anti-vaccine, who are amenable to.
Speaker:Updating records to reflect things that aren't necessarily true.
Speaker:They're few and far between, but unfortunately they do exist.
Speaker:Apparently in France, they are quite a heavy anti-vaxxer type community.
Speaker:The French they're not keen on us.
Speaker:They heavily into their homeopathy.
Speaker:Are they?
Speaker:You were aware of that before?
Speaker:I wasn't aware of it until I read the sign.
Speaker:Oh no, no.
Speaker:My mother-in-law is very much, but you know, even just going into a pharmacy
Speaker:that the rows and rows of homeopathy and natural remedies rolling, I didn't
Speaker:know that about France, but apparently that is a bit of a French thing.
Speaker:So what French president Emmanuel Macron has done as he's created this health pass
Speaker:and it's mandatory to have this health pass, which is proof of vaccination.
Speaker:In order to enter cultural and leisure venues, such as movie theaters and
Speaker:museums, and it's going to be extended to restaurants, bars, and public transport
Speaker:and long distance and opposition parties denounced what they call an authoritarian
Speaker:move saying the government is depriving citizens of their freedom of choice
Speaker:without a meaningful debate in parliament.
Speaker:And the new measures are credited with boosting vaccination campaign, which
Speaker:in previous weeks had lost steam.
Speaker:So Joe, you're saying they're anti-vaxxer, but once Macron has
Speaker:brought in these things saying, well, if you want to eat a beget and drink
Speaker:some wine you're going to need it.
Speaker:And they're now about 60% of the French are in favor of the health pass.
Speaker:And there's a remarkable level of support given their previous hesitancy.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:I do love that bureaucracy and France.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So anyway, it's just an insight to what will happen in new south Wales,
Speaker:where people are going to be hesitant about vaccines and the rest of the
Speaker:country is going to say lifted game because we're not letting you out.
Speaker:And they're going to introduce these things.
Speaker:And young people are going to take AstraZeneca just so that they can
Speaker:get to a pub and have a drink.
Speaker:I that's, that's the iron fist prediction of what's happening in new south Wales.
Speaker:And what happened in France is also happening.
Speaker:The Greek government introduced a vaccine requirements for their
Speaker:new, such as bars, movie, theaters, and Italy it's followed suit.
Speaker:And Britain says it was planning to make it mandatory for nightclub goers.
Speaker:So either of you guys have a problem with a vaccine passport proof thing
Speaker:to get into venues, no anybody did.
Speaker:That's where we're heading.
Speaker:I doubt that.
Speaker:I doubt that Scott Morrison's actually got the gun.
Speaker:But I think we'll leave it to the states to implement as they
Speaker:already are the local councils
Speaker:obvious and easiest way to have us move around safely.
Speaker:It depends on the level of vaccination.
Speaker:I think if we don't get above the safe threshold, we will need it.
Speaker:But if we get above it, if we get to the point where effectively the
Speaker:disease diseases no longer endemic, then I don't know that we'll need it.
Speaker:You don't think we'll need, you think we'll get back to
Speaker:zero is what you're saying?
Speaker:Well, I think with enough people, I think with enough people
Speaker:vaccinated, there'll be outbreaks.
Speaker:There'll be pockets.
Speaker:The same as with measles.
Speaker:We've now got vaccination rates high enough that you get a pocket
Speaker:of anti-vaxxers that all suddenly go down with measles, but when it
Speaker:hits larger society, most people are vaccinated and it dies very quickly.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, we'll see.
Speaker:It's all ahead of us.
Speaker:So just in terms of mandating medical things, is this something that we've
Speaker:never done before, or do we have some experience of it in the chat room?
Speaker:Clifford says, how about a barcode tattoo?
Speaker:That'd be something you could do on the back of my head, but he could tattoo.
Speaker:Like you can have a fake tattoo, I guess somehow they work out
Speaker:the barcode and there's copy it.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:Nothing's beyond cheating isn't so he's current existing medical mandates.
Speaker:So in Australia, So don't worry about Italy and France and the Greeks
Speaker:we've got no jab, no pay policy removes entitlements in childcare
Speaker:subsidies from unvaccinated families.
Speaker:Current law Australia health workers are required to be protected
Speaker:from most diseases, including receiving annual influenza shots.
Speaker:Is your, your mother's a health worker.
Speaker:Shea, does she have to get as a matter of law, a flu shot?
Speaker:You don't know?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:I know that black flight attendants, their employment
Speaker:requires them to get Maysles rebel.
Speaker:I have to say before they're employed and take all medical and have proof of
Speaker:that, but the flu shot is optional, right?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Arrivals in Australia have to hold an international vaccination certificate.
Speaker:If they've stayed overnight or longer in a country designated to be yellow fever.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And here's a good one.
Speaker:Plumbers have to be up-to-date on their hepatitis, a B vaccinations.
Speaker:It's a high-risk job.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Sewerage, right?
Speaker:Is that yes?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Here we go.
Speaker:And yeah, so it's treatment workers.
Speaker:At the same, there we go.
Speaker:When I, when I migrated here, I had to have a negative HIV test.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And also I had to have a chest x-ray to prove that I didn't have tuberculosis.
Speaker:There we go.
Speaker:What about crime's disease had to get by with that?
Speaker:I actually was diagnosed with IBS before my medical and I wasn't diagnosed
Speaker:with Crohn's until I'd received my.
Speaker:So we should be screening people to keep, keep, obviously keep people like you out.
Speaker:I'm still paying more in tax than I'm getting back.
Speaker:Oh, you snuck through the system.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:There we go.
Speaker:I just jumped ahead now.
Speaker:I'm going to go back.
Speaker:I'm all over.
Speaker:Just stop with this one.
Speaker:Dear listener.
Speaker:Let me just see, I know I had, Shane is our resident expert on
Speaker:women's affairs and youth matters.
Speaker:We require you shy to explain when, when the, when the 25 to 35
Speaker:year olds, you know, I couldn't do opinion polls or thinking crazy.
Speaker:Here's another one.
Speaker:Apparently.
Speaker:It was a flight attendant who brought a Sydney sider across the
Speaker:border from Griffith to Queensland on behalf of all flight attendants.
Speaker:As soon as I had, I started my career at Quantis link on the turbo props.
Speaker:So as soon as I heard that ways, I knew exactly.
Speaker:And don't say anything that will defame her or or, or identify her,
Speaker:but she's already been identified.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You've got some inside knowledge that you share with us about that.
Speaker:And yes, that just, that her credibility had improved because I didn't think
Speaker:it will have bikey affiliations where a hundred percent the truth.
Speaker:Oh, right.
Speaker:There we go.
Speaker:Allegedly dated the cop killer.
Speaker:Well, the, the, the rags were plastering around the base.
Speaker:Talk about that.
Speaker:It didn't seem credible, but now it's sort of things possible.
Speaker:Look, airline hostess is just a you know, a representative
Speaker:of our society in general.
Speaker:And you know, they've got all sorts.
Speaker:They've got podcasters and they've got lucky associates and it's
Speaker:just, yeah, they just draw it on the normal human experience.
Speaker:That's like maybe 1% of us, even though I know recently there was an article
Speaker:about organized crime at Quantas website is a very, very low bikey
Speaker:affiliation among flight attendants.
Speaker:But I know what cops and other people say this I'm like, yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I do just want to say one thing.
Speaker:I'm glad she did go and get tested.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Cause she could, she, she didn't seem to be in any obvious.
Speaker:Problems.
Speaker:She went and got tested because she was experiencing symptoms.
Speaker:So I know it took a long time.
Speaker:I know she's in deep shit.
Speaker:I know she's been, you know, but I would just like to say she did
Speaker:go and get tested and however, it looks like he wasn't cooperative.
Speaker:And she went off sick the day before she went to pick him up and then lied
Speaker:about her exposures, which meant that she was exposed earlier than she had been.
Speaker:And that's why they were panicking about all the regional flights that
Speaker:they thought she'd been on when she hadn't even met up with him
Speaker:and caught the COVID from him yet.
Speaker:So the chance of her keeping her job after that, I think is very low.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Blackie affiliation among flight attendants after
Speaker:this one lace potentially.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Ramen in the chat room says when I was a kid, we had compulsory
Speaker:chest x-rays for adults in Victoria as a control measure for TB.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Dad was saying they used to have that there were bulk x-rays literally they'd
Speaker:get a mobile x-ray van turned up at the school and they'd all be x-rayed to
Speaker:check for TB right back in the fifties.
Speaker:We're in the really, and days when they were measuring people for their
Speaker:shoes, they used to x-ray their feet.
Speaker:And yes.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:That's well, before that, they realized that wasn't a good idea to extra weekly,
Speaker:full, so much headaches machines in the fitting mechanism in shoe shops.
Speaker:Apparently it was the shoe shop attendance that got the worst doses.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, when you're getting your teeth x-rayed or something and they all scurry
Speaker:out the door as they're zapping, you being pressured is not a good idea
Speaker:hanging around, but yeah, you're right.
Speaker:Lots of people.
Speaker:I mean, we laugh, but it's just one of those things that they
Speaker:just didn't know any better.
Speaker:And it seemed like a radio.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They used to paint the luminescent hands or the watches, the heirs.
Speaker:And so they'd be sat there, painting the dials of the watches with flora,
Speaker:luminescent paint, which is radioactive.
Speaker:And they, they would lick the brushes to get a finer tip on them.
Speaker:And yeah, at the time it was thought to be harmless.
Speaker:So they thought it was a bit of a laugh and used to paint their teeth
Speaker:with it so that they go into a room with the lights out and just green and
Speaker:look, their, their teeth would like.
Speaker:And so the stories of people who'd worked in these factories and what
Speaker:they used to do, just because they thought it was fun only to find
Speaker:out, actually it was poisonous probably with that sort of contact.
Speaker:It would only take a couple of years before people suddenly started losing
Speaker:tongues and teeth and things like that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Hopefully that didn't go on for decades and then appear decades later.
Speaker:They have like catching him.
Speaker:Don't know.
Speaker:I mean, at one stage it was radium.
Speaker:Water was sold as a cure role.
Speaker:You know, the, the usual snake oil salesman jumped on because
Speaker:they discovered radioactivity and therefore it must be good for you.
Speaker:There are some very scary, and there was also kids, kids experiment kits
Speaker:that came with a little bottle of radioactive, something that you
Speaker:could do various experiments with.
Speaker:And you tell kids today that, and they won't believe you, you know, like the four
Speaker:Yorkshireman will just tell them, well, you know, well, the guy I play squash with
Speaker:now, now is only 10 years older than me.
Speaker:And when he was a high school student at Mitchelton high school,
Speaker:the school had its own armory.
Speaker:Like the kids used to go in and get guns and head out onto the firing range and
Speaker:practice shooting and all sorts of stuff.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Two schools, I went to one was an army school.
Speaker:So you kind of expect that, but the other one was a standard stock standard,
Speaker:private school, private school yet.
Speaker:So would be called a public school in the UK.
Speaker:But yes, we had an armory with Leanne fields and a couple of brands.
Speaker:And various T2 rifles.
Speaker:This sounds very familiar.
Speaker:My friend Knoll says, this is exactly what they had at Mitchelton high school.
Speaker:And that wasn't that long ago.
Speaker:When you think about it, it would have been you know, the chances of
Speaker:a school shooter in those days were minimal because the kids could have
Speaker:gone into the, into the gun room and loaded themselves up and taken the
Speaker:guy on and they had training to do it.
Speaker:Like it's amazing what they used to, like kids would be lying down and, and shooting
Speaker:on the firing range and some of these guns instead of a recoil, it would like
Speaker:drag them forward the force of the gun.
Speaker:And if you weren't heavy enough, because you were such a small kid, the supervisor
Speaker:would S as you're lying down on your tummy and firing this gun, somebody
Speaker:would have to stand on your feet to stop you from being dragged forward by.
Speaker:Well, the full wood coil of this gun, crazy stuff like
Speaker:that, that they were doing.
Speaker:Yeah, the British army when they introduced the SAA T decided to make a
Speaker:cadet version because it was a semiauto.
Speaker:So they took the gas parts out and the cocking handle and nurse ATS
Speaker:forward, and the cadets, the arms weren't long enough to reach that.
Speaker:So they tied a bit of string on the cocking man.
Speaker:So I had to cook it for every round and eight required, a fair amount
Speaker:of effort to pull it back to Kochot.
Speaker:And if you didn't pull it back hard enough, the spent round would
Speaker:inverse inside the breech and then go backwards into the breakage.
Speaker:It was a really, really bad design.
Speaker:These are the things that used to go on.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Amazing.
Speaker:So at King's school, something far more serious happened.
Speaker:One of the teachers attended a lockdown protest much, and he was saying.
Speaker:What do we think of that?
Speaker:What do you think?
Speaker:A teacher being sanct for attending the lockdown protest March.
Speaker:And there was proof of it because it was in his social media stuff.
Speaker:And he'd said something like, I don't believe in living in fear.
Speaker:I don't believe the propaganda.
Speaker:I do not believe in unjust hacer raced.
Speaker:I stand for all students.
Speaker:I stand for all families who are stranded, isolated and suffering.
Speaker:I stand for freedom.
Speaker:I love you.
Speaker:He got sacked.
Speaker:So the concern is that somebody who doesn't believe in a virulent
Speaker:disease is in close contact with large numbers of people every day.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So he was a risk because he was well.
Speaker:So that's the argument.
Speaker:It's more because he was he'd likely to spread it because he would
Speaker:be unlikely to take precautions.
Speaker:Is that the reasoning here?
Speaker:I don't know that that was their reasoning, but that would be my reasoning.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I've I've, I've heard of people on mine sites being sacked at the weekend
Speaker:because the boss drove past and saw them mowing the lawn in thongs and said
Speaker:you have the wrong attitude to safety.
Speaker:You're a liability on my mind side.
Speaker:Really?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So I've heard of people driving onto sites with a ladder in their Ute,
Speaker:and the guy's saying turn around and not coming on here with a ladder.
Speaker:Those things are dangerous.
Speaker:Like we use cherry pickers here if we need to get off high on anything.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But I don't know a teacher unrelated to his work.
Speaker:Who was he?
Speaker:A maths teacher.
Speaker:English teacher.
Speaker:Could he still do his job?
Speaker:Was that affecting the way he performed his job?
Speaker:I'm not so sure about that one.
Speaker:I don't think as long as he was teaching from behind a glass screen, is that
Speaker:really an argument to say that he was more likely to transmit the disease?
Speaker:What if there were some medical tests that said, oh, this person's more likely
Speaker:to be a super spreader than another one?
Speaker:Would you say that's a reason to sack them?
Speaker:No.
Speaker:I mean, I just all to move them to a job where they weren't in contact
Speaker:with large numbers of people.
Speaker:I just think it's a bit rough.
Speaker:That one, I just don't think it's associated with the job.
Speaker:What do you think?
Speaker:What's that shot?
Speaker:What does he teach it?
Speaker:Didn't say.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Brainwash, the kids are not, I think he was just a liability in terms of
Speaker:he would not take suitable precautions that would make him considerably
Speaker:more likely to, to bring the virus into school and spread it apparently
Speaker:until recently where they even like putting in proper measures for schools.
Speaker:Like I said, I visited a school two weeks ago and the assistant principal
Speaker:loves, he said, you could take your Moscow off because apparently
Speaker:we're immune lull like as dark.
Speaker:Yeah, no, but a lot of the students, it's not mandated that they wear masks.
Speaker:So I don't know, you know, if his job was to teach medical safety procedures,
Speaker:maybe he's inadequate for the job.
Speaker:But if he's with assistant normal teacher, I just don't think that's right myself.
Speaker:Cause it's, it's, like we say in a religious school, a teacher who teach
Speaker:math, what's their job to teach math.
Speaker:It doesn't matter whether they're religious or not.
Speaker:So that we look, we concern ourselves with the function that they do.
Speaker:And we object to religious schools wanting to sack them because
Speaker:they're not of the right faith.
Speaker:We say that's irrelevant to the job you're doing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Just sort of thing to a large extent, the fact that he's an antilock lockdown
Speaker:guy and attended an illegal protest.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But Hey, if he, if he was a, if he was a drunk driver, should he be sacked?
Speaker:Just cause you breach the law.
Speaker:I mean, obviously if you're a kiddy Fiddler, you get sacked,
Speaker:but if he had committed.
Speaker:Just because you've broken the law.
Speaker:It doesn't mean you're suitable teacher.
Speaker:I think it'd be good if we could stop dealing with like people's anxiety around
Speaker:the way that people are suffering and this like, going back to what we're
Speaker:saying before about like freedom fighters and this like be good to do like proper
Speaker:research and explore the social impacts.
Speaker:This is having on people.
Speaker:And, and if, if there is possible treatments vehicle, they are fearful
Speaker:enough to go out and protest.
Speaker:There are people who are being intubated by nurses in America who still don't
Speaker:believe that they've got COVID.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:COVID is a lie.
Speaker:Doesn't that mean we are missing something and we aren't
Speaker:tackling that side of things as.
Speaker:I forgot to forward onto you.
Speaker:Did you see the report of a YouTube influencers?
Speaker:Who'd been approached by a, an advertising company and asked, I've
Speaker:seen that a few weeks ago where they offered goodies if they were
Speaker:to promote things and offered money.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And some of these influences did a bit of homework about who this organization
Speaker:was and, and it all looked a bit bogus and weird and ended up in Russian sort
Speaker:of websites or something like that.
Speaker:So to their credit, a number of influences said, no.
Speaker:Yes, but it's interesting to say.
Speaker:And there's been the anti lockdown protests were being
Speaker:organized out of Germany.
Speaker:And I believe the intelligence community is investigating
Speaker:links to foreign government.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:I was going to say, there's a question of whether this is deliberate disinformation.
Speaker:It's a lot of gang around.
Speaker:But Jay, you were talking about just people, just not believing the truth
Speaker:as such, I think is what you're kind of getting at with like this guy,
Speaker:this, like, for example, this teacher based on his comments, truly thought
Speaker:he was correct factually about things.
Speaker:And sometimes this, I've got a story here from vice, which isn't
Speaker:the world's greatest source, but they claim that they contacted this
Speaker:person and verified the information.
Speaker:So so you know, it's not the world's greatest source for this story, but
Speaker:it's a good story and it's frightening if it's true and it just might be true.
Speaker:So Bill's final semester at Marjory Stoneman Douglas high
Speaker:school in Parkland, Florida.
Speaker:Was already difficult enough.
Speaker:He was part of the final graduating class of survivors of the 2018 shooting.
Speaker:And that had all just mark.
Speaker:The third anniversary of the day, 17 people were killed nine of whom were
Speaker:Bill's classmates, but bill had to deal with his father's daily accusations
Speaker:that the shooting was a hoax and that the shooter bill and all his classmates
Speaker:were paid pawns in a grand conspiracy organized by some shadowy fours.
Speaker:Poor bill says, he'd say stuff like this straight to my face.
Speaker:Whenever he's drinking, he'd say you're a real piece of work to be able to sit
Speaker:here and act like nothing ever happened.
Speaker:If it wasn't a hoax shame on you for being part of it and putting your family
Speaker:through it too, and builded this post.
Speaker:And as I say, I can't guarantee exactly a hundred percent.
Speaker:This is a true story, but quite possibly a parent of.
Speaker:A kid who witnessed a school shooting and saw all his classmates killed,
Speaker:just denying it ever happened.
Speaker:It's imaginable that it is true.
Speaker:Unfortunately, have you yet watched beyond the curve?
Speaker:No, what's that?
Speaker:It's about flat earthers and so they're, they're searching for the truth.
Speaker:They're there, you know, that they really truly want to know the truth
Speaker:and they perform an experiment and the experiment gives them the answer
Speaker:that the earth is round and they are frantically searching for reasons
Speaker:why the experiment failed, because it didn't give them the answer that they
Speaker:expected rather than accepting it.
Speaker:And moving on, it was the levels that these people will go to, to
Speaker:keep hold of a belief that is.
Speaker:So much a part of them.
Speaker:And I don't think that there's anything you could do to change their minds.
Speaker:And this is the problem with the, the, the, the COVID deniers is even
Speaker:if you gave them COVID, even if they couldn't breathe, they would still
Speaker:think that it was something else.
Speaker:There's nothing you could do that could prove to them.
Speaker:That COVID was railing is, is just, that has the impact that it does.
Speaker:Some of them tint around some of them sail, I was wrong, but you're right.
Speaker:There are still a number who are dying and their deathbed.
Speaker:And it's so sad for the medical staff to witness as these people still continue
Speaker:to refuse to acknowledge that it's COVID this got them at the end of the day.
Speaker:And the people that care about them.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'd have tried to raise it with them, try to a whole range of things.
Speaker:I think there is a mental health aspect.
Speaker:It's a baseless, but I just think people are really anxious and really suffering.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The BBC actually interviewed the son of a well-known UK conspiracy
Speaker:theorist, who has her own YouTube channel with thousands of followers.
Speaker:And he was saying, I just can't talk to her anymore.
Speaker:Hanrahan, who is like a war correspondent.
Speaker:He's been into lots of dangerous places.
Speaker:He's doing episodes.
Speaker:Like he's become quite a long time, been doing a lot of research on Q and L.
Speaker:And so he does a weekly podcast as well.
Speaker:So like for it to Ghana attention from someone like him, who's been in.
Speaker:No frightening situations to be alarmed enough to be doing that.
Speaker:It's just like, woo.
Speaker:Is he debunking that the, all the cute clearance is kind of like a jog
Speaker:each week, he takes a different angle.
Speaker:So he kind of explains to ordinary humans about like, so for instance, one of
Speaker:the things I didn't know about Q1 on is that there is a utopia, so if they will
Speaker:get to the other side and then they'll all be, you know, ridiculously wealthy.
Speaker:And so I didn't know last week he did an episode on how it's
Speaker:really gaining traction in Japan.
Speaker:right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So just sort of this meme that said the irony of auntie, the irony of anti-vaxxers
Speaker:saying they don't want to be part of an experiment, is that without realizing
Speaker:it, they're now part of the control.
Speaker:You'd want that to have a date?
Speaker:I can't, we just show them that, that name alone, like to vote
Speaker:anti-vax in an upcoming election because dear listener, you've got
Speaker:lots of opportunity if you wish to.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Sadly, there are lots.
Speaker:So kicking off with Clive Palmer in the United Australia party, the billionaire
Speaker:magnate has been led to boxing and running radio advertisements with misleading
Speaker:messages about the safety of vaccines.
Speaker:So that's one choice for you.
Speaker:If you want to vote anti-vax you could go for the informed medical
Speaker:options, party, alarm bells ring.
Speaker:When you hear that title, a be informed medical options party
Speaker:they'd been active in organizing the anti-vaccine Andy lockdown protests
Speaker:since the start of the pandemic.
Speaker:Look for them on your Senate ballot sheet, Pauline Hanson's one nation.
Speaker:So she's towed the line of not being explicitly anti-vaccine while adopting
Speaker:messaging used by anti-vaccine campaigners saying Pauline's a bit of a dog Whistler
Speaker:when it comes to these anti-vaccine things, not outright saying it, but using
Speaker:all of the right terminology and phrasing.
Speaker:There's another group reignite democracy Australia.
Speaker:So they're anti-vaccine anti mask and COVID denial is group born out of
Speaker:Victoria's 2020 lockdowns that has links to mainstream conservative politicians.
Speaker:It's nice to see nut group, not bad groups coming out of
Speaker:Victoria and not just Queensland.
Speaker:Every light, the fire or light the fire or whatever his name is.
Speaker:We've had our fair share.
Speaker:I agree, but it's just nice to read Victoria.
Speaker:in the chat room on behalf of all Victorians, would you like to.
Speaker:Yeah, you call us Hicks up here, but seems like you're generating
Speaker:your fair share of nonsense down.
Speaker:There is the great Australian party recruited conspiracy theorists,
Speaker:superstar, Pete Evans, as a candidate.
Speaker:That's the greatest Dahlia party its policies take cues from anti-vaxxers
Speaker:means yes, paleo P and they are into anti-vax is men's rights, activists,
Speaker:sovereign citizen movement, but they faced a recent setback as the ISE
Speaker:threatened to deregistered because they are unable to prove they had 500 members.
Speaker:And then you've got people like Craig Kelly, he'll be an independent, you've
Speaker:got fringes of the coalitions, such as George Christiansen, Alex antic,
Speaker:Erica bed's, Matt Canavan, Jared Renick of all flirted with messages
Speaker:and policies popular with anti-vaxxers.
Speaker:And so lots of opportunity there.
Speaker:If you'd like to vote, anti-vax at an upcoming election.
Speaker:What else I got here?
Speaker:So rise up Australia was the party I was thinking of.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Which was a Melbourne preacher is with catch the fire ministries or something.
Speaker:It eventually got dissolved, but he was in hot water for some, I can't
Speaker:remember what it was, but so rise.
Speaker:So they rise up.
Speaker:Eventually went down, did it basically, but yeah, there, there are jobs, Victorian
Speaker:political parties is what I'm saying.
Speaker:When you still have somebody defend Victoria.
Speaker:Cause we're just going to bag him this.
Speaker:It was like if we get the chance.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Oh, prominence is the guy you're thinking of is Danny now prize moron.
Speaker:There we go.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:In the New York times isn't is an article by Alan McCloud about and yield
Speaker:times, and basically sign that the Neal times as bagged the Chinese vaccines.
Speaker:And so the New York times has relied on indeed when you're innuendo to
Speaker:discredit China, it's headline reading, they relied on Chinese vaccines.
Speaker:Now they're battling outbreaks and the article profiled a trio of
Speaker:countries by rain, Mongolia, and the Seychelles that had bought an
Speaker:administered Sinai farm and Sinai vac.
Speaker:But in saying that instead of freedom from the coronavirus, all three countries
Speaker:are now battling a surge in infection.
Speaker:But what the times did not inform readers was that the vast majority of serious
Speaker:or deadly cases in those countries happen to unvaccinated individuals.
Speaker:And it gives it a sort of expos.
Speaker:I, that it was really a hit job by the New York times on these vaccines, which
Speaker:are not so bad and not so unusual.
Speaker:And that they're just your run of the mill vaccine based on the normal principles.
Speaker:And when an institution like the New York times bags, a Chinese vaccine,
Speaker:then that just transfers over to create vaccine hesitancy amongst
Speaker:Americans for their own vaccines.
Speaker:When I hear those stories.
Speaker:So their, their willingness to be so anti-China and pick on
Speaker:the Chinese vaccine has other effects that might not be so good.
Speaker:So that was that YouTube banned sky news for a week because it
Speaker:was a spreader of Corona virus.
Speaker:Misinformation.
Speaker:Can you not see the tears on my cheeks?
Speaker:They've been creeping up on my YouTube feed and I don't know
Speaker:how, because my algorithms got to be not interested in sky news.
Speaker:I'm glad you just hesitated over a sky news live stream of a, of a you know,
Speaker:the chief health officer reports or any like never, never watched one of those
Speaker:or this display things that get you angry actually gets you more engaged
Speaker:and keeps you on YouTube for longer.
Speaker:They're very clever.
Speaker:They've got a very, very clever YouTube sort of thing happening.
Speaker:So, you know, that's good.
Speaker:At least they're off the ears.
Speaker:Clearly cares about us, at least for the next seven days until I let them back.
Speaker:I think listening to the chase, you know, how often quite the chaser report
Speaker:for their headlines and fake stories.
Speaker:They've got a great podcast if you know that.
Speaker:Yup, absolutely.
Speaker:It's great.
Speaker:It's almost daily.
Speaker:It's like 20, 25 minutes.
Speaker:The listener, or how are they remit recommend checking out the chaser
Speaker:or is it actually use a little bit?
Speaker:Can you use mostly?
Speaker:Yeah, but really good on stuff you listen to this podcast will love it.
Speaker:So yeah.
Speaker:The chase of podcasts recommended you were talking about I social media
Speaker:person who had a lot of influence.
Speaker:We just talked about that early or maybe it was in the chat room.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There's a guy called Joseph from the color.
Speaker:And he he's, he's been known amongst skeptics for many years.
Speaker:He is natural use or one of those, he sells snake oil.
Speaker:Basically.
Speaker:He makes he's a millionaire because of the anti-science and
Speaker:anti-medicine that he sells.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So he's published over 600 articles on Facebook that casts
Speaker:down on COVID-19 vaccines.
Speaker:And his claims have been widely echoed on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube.
Speaker:And he's part of the disinformation.
Speaker:Doesn't a list of 12 people responsible for sharing 65% of all
Speaker:anti-vaccine messaging on social media.
Speaker:So this is the theory that this dirty dozen, including
Speaker:this dirty doctor dirty Dr.
Speaker:McCollough.
Speaker:Responsible for 65% of the anti-vaccine messaging that originates with these
Speaker:guys and then just washes around the internet with other people sharing and
Speaker:passing it on, which is interesting that 12 people have and Facebook
Speaker:won't count the misinformation against them once it's been reshared.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So if he shares it to a thousand people and they then share it on
Speaker:and it becomes a million views, they only count the thousand people who
Speaker:viewed it originally against him.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So what else we got?
Speaker:So he's a pioneer in the anti-vaccine movement.
Speaker:He's a master of capitalizing on periods of uncertainty.
Speaker:And what he does is does lots of AB experiments in terms of posts.
Speaker:He's incredibly keen on how things go viral.
Speaker:He's got.
Speaker:All these people working for him, pasting staff, and he creates this
Speaker:fear and uncertainty and then shuffles people off to his new age medicine
Speaker:solutions and makes a fortune from it.
Speaker:And that's sort of characters, one of the sort of characters
Speaker:floating around on the internet.
Speaker:David Wolf was another one that I haven't seen recently, but lots of people, he
Speaker:had very inspirational messages that lots of people shared far and wide.
Speaker:And then you went and followed him and got exposed to all sorts of pseudoscience.
Speaker:Bullshit.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:Craig in the chat room says I spent, I suspect Joe and I frequent
Speaker:similar skeptic groups podcast.
Speaker:Sounds like he's on your, you're on the same book list by looks of it.
Speaker:What else have we got in the chat room?
Speaker:Alan Jones.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Alan Jones.
Speaker:I don't, what is it with?
Speaker:What's the motivation for God, like Alan Jones to be so, you know, pro
Speaker:hydroxy chloroquine, an anti-vaccine and I think the Andy isn't it like?
Speaker:Oh, who's that the American who got sued for the Sandy hook shootings.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Alex Jones.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Who said it's a character he plays basically it gets him more views.
Speaker:More lessons.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So it's actually nothing to do with ideology.
Speaker:It is just, he knows it'll be popular and therefore it's eyeballs.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I can't speak to his heart.
Speaker:But certainly it's a it's a winning solution, isn't it?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I think the other part of it is that these guys just have a version to
Speaker:collective action where we are trying to get people to act collectively
Speaker:in the Goodwill of the community.
Speaker:And they just see the danger in that, in what it might lead to in other areas
Speaker:that they don't want that to happen.
Speaker:There's a little bit of that in there as well, but I think you're right.
Speaker:Show is just, it's just numbers and they know that they'll get
Speaker:the viewership and they've got a contract that will reward them.
Speaker:The more viewers they have and saying the most outrageous things will just
Speaker:get them more of those eyeballs.
Speaker:I think you probably right.
Speaker:Good explanation.
Speaker:Let's see.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:What else do I have here?
Speaker:In terms of traveling now, difficult to leave Australia.
Speaker:It's not easy.
Speaker:You've got to be you can only quality over a million dollars a year.
Speaker:Well, a liberal party member, technically according to the government, you can only
Speaker:qualify for essential overseas travel.
Speaker:If your travel is part of the response to the COVID-19 outbreak, including
Speaker:the provision of aid, if it's for your business or employer, if you are traveling
Speaker:to receive urgent medical treatment, not available in Australia, if you're
Speaker:traveling on compassionate, local, per, or compelling grounds, you're traveling for
Speaker:urgent or unavoidable personal business, your travel is in the national interest.
Speaker:It's just hard to see how Brian and Bobby.
Speaker:Good.
Speaker:Find a reason to head to Mexico and do some preaching in amongst
Speaker:that stuff, their business.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Maybe it's your business.
Speaker:Well, you know you know, Jesus doesn't sleep during a pandemic.
Speaker:It's very important to spread the word.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:He's not asleep at the wheel.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Finally.
Speaker:Finally let me get this one up on the screen as well, which this is a table.
Speaker:The number of close friendships that Americans have has declined
Speaker:over the past several decades on the left-hand side in dark blue is 2021.
Speaker:And on the right-hand side in the lighter blue is 20 years ago, 1998.
Speaker:It's asking sort of the Banes there of how many friends have you got?
Speaker:0 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 to nine, 10 or more.
Speaker:And 20 years ago people just had more friends and you can look at the table
Speaker:and there'll be in the show notes, but essentially 10% I think of, I
Speaker:think these are in 10% gradients.
Speaker:Let me just see.
Speaker:And that's 12%, 12% of them say that they have no friends.
Speaker:Whereas previously that was only three.
Speaker:And only 13% have 10 or more friends, whereas previously 33%, it's a striking
Speaker:figures that the number of friends, people have in America as declined rapidly.
Speaker:So more than one in 10 Americans reports having no friends at all.
Speaker:And the sad part is that people see this as just normal now.
Speaker:So it's an interesting statistic.
Speaker:We don't see these things for Australia.
Speaker:There's always an American stuff that I find for this.
Speaker:But so yeah, the number of friends people have is rapidly declining.
Speaker:That can't be good.
Speaker:A lot of psychology research is weird.
Speaker:So Western educated industrial, rich, something can't remember what it stands
Speaker:for, but then there's an argument that a lot of the psychological papers and
Speaker:effects may not replicate across cultures.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Because, because the easiest group to experiment on are university
Speaker:students who are beholden on their professors for a pass and
Speaker:therefore volunteer for experiments.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:The sort of people who are going to be hanging around a university that
Speaker:are psychology on a student can crab.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Don't represent that's true Delaware that came from, I should
Speaker:maybe look that up, but Riley is reporting being lonely though.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:This was a survey of 2000 U S adults.
Speaker:The Gallup survey was conducted over the telephone.
Speaker:So anyway, that's where I came across that one.
Speaker:And finally, remember we spoke about how they were the us Catholics were saying,
Speaker:well, these politicians who believe in abortion law we should withhold the
Speaker:Eucharist and not allow them to have the body and blood of Jesus anymore.
Speaker:So the church official who'd denied.
Speaker:It wanted to deny Biden.
Speaker:Joe Biden, communion has recently resigned in a sex scandal.
Speaker:Surprise, surprise.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Well, that's an hour and a half whereabouts and what's
Speaker:happened in the chat room.
Speaker:From when typing in, can we predict the limits of SARS cov two variants
Speaker:in their phonetic consequences into Google first results.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:What is that about the title of the paper?
Speaker:I'm guessing.
Speaker:Why don't we go?
Speaker:I can't copy it.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:What happens when you Google it?
Speaker:Well, I'm just trying to find the Sage link, right?
Speaker:Sage is the UK government advisory.
Speaker:While you're looking on that, I'll just refer that next week
Speaker:briefly, which is next week.
Speaker:Wednesday is a public holiday in Brisbane, the show holiday for the
Speaker:show that's just been canceled.
Speaker:We could still be in lockdown.
Speaker:Don't know what's going to happen.
Speaker:Thursday is the big Dane court case.
Speaker:I have been I've never spent so much mental energy on so few words, but
Speaker:the words, religious denomination or society basically I've been pondering
Speaker:them so heavily in the last few days.
Speaker:My head hurts and I wake up at night at two in the morning.
Speaker:I go, ah, religious denomination.
Speaker:What does it mean?
Speaker:I I, I switch where I go.
Speaker:I think I've got it.
Speaker:I think I've got this case.
Speaker:I am going to win and then I read a bit more and I go, Hm,
Speaker:actually, that wasn't so good.
Speaker:Maybe I'm not going to win.
Speaker:And then I read something else to go.
Speaker:Yeah, I've definitely got it.
Speaker:So that's all happening Thursday next week.
Speaker:And.
Speaker:Court cases keep going locked down or no locked down provided
Speaker:one of the main players like me.
Speaker:Doesn't become sick with COVID or something, you know, it'll happen.
Speaker:Lots of media interest as happening.
Speaker:We may, I don't think I'll podcast Tuesday night.
Speaker:I've just got too much happening in my head.
Speaker:But if successful, we may not even know the result on Thursday because
Speaker:the judge might just say, I'm going to reserve my decision and tell
Speaker:you about it in a few weeks time.
Speaker:So he may not know, but I think next week will probably be a live stream on
Speaker:the Thursday night where I will talk about what happened as best as I can.
Speaker:And it may even be a film crew in here as well with progress with me.
Speaker:And so.
Speaker:Just don't know.
Speaker:So it's scary.
Speaker:It's tricky.
Speaker:It's stressful.
Speaker:And I can't wait for it actually to be, to tell you the truth
Speaker:because I've had enough of it.
Speaker:It's just all consuming, isn't it.
Speaker:And anyway, rest assured giving it the best shot I can.
Speaker:And I've had some good help from some pro bono barristers.
Speaker:And I've got a lodge something tomorrow, which is basically my
Speaker:final legal submission and we will see what happens on the day.
Speaker:It'll be a very interesting memorable moment in the life of Trevor bell
Speaker:and my, when I eventually pass away and the eulogies have written sure.
Speaker:There'll be a few made of whatever happens about Thursday
Speaker:next week and the result of it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Interesting.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:I don't know whether it'll be, look, keep an eye on the Facebook
Speaker:page if it's possible to live.
Speaker:If the court streams it or, or if there's news will play something there.
Speaker:So so anyway, we'll see what happens, but that's exciting
Speaker:and scary at the same time.
Speaker:So very interesting, Joe, did you mend to see what happens
Speaker:when you Google that thing?
Speaker:What that Bron Roman mentioned?
Speaker:Was there anything else?
Speaker:Oh yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:I found the paper, right.
Speaker:And sorry, other side, this side.
Speaker:That's the QR code, which should take you directly to the paper.
Speaker:And what is it?
Speaker:What is this paper?
Speaker:It's a paper by a bunch of UK scientists.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That talk about.
Speaker:Talk about possible long-term evolution of COVID.
Speaker:One hypothesis is for example, with similar co-morbidity mortality to other
Speaker:zoonotic Corona viruses, such as , which has 10% case fatality or MERS cov, which
Speaker:has a 35% case fatality, which is where they're getting the one in three dying.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So they're saying it's possible that it might in the future
Speaker:evolve to be this right.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:It's getting scarier.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, all right, we'll do listener we're done and dusted for another episode.
Speaker:Keep an eye on the Facebook page.
Speaker:Probably appear in a newspaper or two on Thursday next week, no matter what
Speaker:the results and we'll possibly live stream Thursday night, possibly with.
Speaker:Fingers crossed at all, guys.
Speaker:Well, talk to you then.
Speaker:Bye for now.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a good night from him.