Hanson says that she is "sick and tired"of criticism.
Many of us are "sick and tired" of Pauline Hanson. She is nothing but a publicly and privately funded, wealthy, privileged, self-entitled whinger who continues to be a parasite on Australia and Australians.
Oh ffs so many wealthy people are crying that they might have to pay some extra tax so Labor can help young people into the housing market.. Fucking cry me a freaking river.. Just get over it folks.. You'll survive, they won't if the ALP doesn't do something #auspol 😮
This is the pic of Donald Trump on Epstein's plane with a child.
This is the pic the DOJ deleted yesterday.
Now they want to scrub this from the Interne
Share this everywhere.
@montrosegraham John Howard promised no GST. Tony Abbott promised no cuts to the ABC, SBS, or Medicare. Scott Morrison didn't hold a hose. He also lied about holding five ministries.
But a radical change to make our tax system fairer makes the ALP illegitimate? What a joke.
In 1981, Jimmy Carter walked out of the White House.
He had been the most powerful man in the world.
Leader of the United States. Commander-in-Chief. A man with access to anything, anywhere.
Then suddenly, it was over.
Most former presidents take a different path.
Million-dollar speeches. Book deals. Private jets. A life far removed from ordinary people.
Carter didn’t do that.
He went home.
Back to Plains, Georgia. A small town. No spotlight. No luxury lifestyle.
And then he did something almost no one expected.
He picked up a hammer.
With Habitat for Humanity, Carter started building houses for people who couldn’t afford one. Not posing for photos. Not supervising.
Working.
Sweating under the sun. Carrying wood. Hammering nails. Side by side with volunteers.
Year after year.
Into his 70s.
Into his 80s.
Even into his 90s.
This wasn’t a one-time gesture. He helped build and repair thousands of homes across the world.
The same man who once sat behind the most powerful desk on Earth was now on rooftops, fixing homes for strangers.
No cameras needed.
No applause required.
While others chased wealth after power, Carter chose something else.
Service.
He lived longer than any U.S. president in history. Long enough for people to look back and realize something simple.
Power didn’t define him.
What he did after power did.
And in a world where leaders often take, he kept giving.
Story based on historical records. This post is for educational purposes.
My family and I watched the 60 Minutes interview with Donald Trump and Norah O’Donnell last night, and we were shocked. Seeing a president speak to a woman journalist with that level of contempt — and a clear allergy to facts — is disturbing, though at this point not unexpected given his pattern of behavior.
But that is the problem. Because when that level of disrespect from the highest office in the country repeats itself, it starts to trickle down into our culture and define what power looks like, shaping how boys and plenty of men see women and girls and what they come to accept as normal behavior.