@mattvanswol@SecKennedy@POTUS What fucking results you brain dead MAGAT,The reintroduction of German Measles? How fucking dumb are you people to believe this fucking idiot?Oh thats right,you coted for Trump,IQ matches shoe size. Fuck me you MAGATS are the dumbest fuckers Ive ever seen.
This is fucking hilarious. Regardless of what Hughsey is going on about,he has a right to his opinion. BUT,for a poor man done well,he certainly forgot about battling once he joined the millionaire property invester club. Fuck the poor who can't afford a house,what about me
Exactly right. This guy would be the biggest hypocrit going.Made his name as a battling,no hpoer dole bludger. His background. Now,success and money and he's a whingeing money hungry ,greedy,selfish male version of Poorline. The low life cunt can go fuck himself
@Shan11tweet@noplaceforsheep This is an absolute bullshit of an idea. Why would we here in Australia want to import into our community the hatred spite and cruelty that these people live by. Fuck,I'll take a muslim family next door any day as opposed to these decietful manipulative control freak nutters
The fryer is the liar!
Imagine being a young person supporting your party
Imagine wanting to start a life, a family and home.
You want to keep wages and conditions low
Scrap childcare and paid parental leave
Support affluent property investors pricing out first home owners through negative gearing
Cgt, majority goes to affluent 55 plus.
Pauline you are a fraud.
The party of ‘Aussie jobs for Aussies’ is funded by the billionaire who said Aussies should work for $2 a day, and is now outsourcing its own work to the Philippines.
https://t.co/RUKPp5d5J6
@TracyWesterman@RonniSalt When Hanson refused to answer @msmarto all of them should’ve have walked out. But that would require journalists with integrity…
@TracyWesterman I believe that you're absolutely correct @TracyWesterman, we do 'get the leaders our journalism produces'. Unfortunately, rather than having journalists who pursue rigorous investigation, to uncover truth, we appear to have many who simply wave the flags of their masters.
#PaulineHanson “Businesses..you can’t sack workers..they’re on their phones..don’t turn up.. actually are lazy. Why should people get paid when not working?” Projecting. Salary $300,000+ 88% missed Senate estimates. Voting record Parl divisions & procedural motions, 30% to 50%.
Netanyahu: "I demand that Western governments do what is necessary to fight antisemitism“
No person on the planet has done more to fuel the rise in antisemitism than this psychopath.
Australia isn’t “on the ropes” because workers have annual leave, sick leave, penalty rates, workers compensation and safety laws.
Those things weren’t handed down by generous employers. Workers and unions fought for them over generations. The 38-hour week, annual leave, superannuation, parental leave, workplace safety standards and unfair dismissal protections all exist because people organised and demanded them.
The claim that productivity has stalled because wages are “forced up” doesn’t stack up. For years, wages grew slower than productivity and slower than company profits. In fact, one of Australia’s biggest economic problems has been weak wage growth, not excessive wage growth.
If employment laws were making business “almost impossible”, Australia wouldn’t have thousands of profitable businesses, record company profits in many sectors, or unemployment near historic lows.
As for offshoring, companies offshore work because it is cheaper. That’s a business decision made by boards and executives trying to reduce costs and increase profits. Blaming unions for decisions made in corporate boardrooms is like blaming firefighters for house fires.
Australia absolutely faces challenges: housing affordability, productivity growth, energy transition, infrastructure bottlenecks and an ageing population. But the answer isn’t to strip away worker protections and return to some mythical past that never existed.
The countries with the highest living standards in the world generally have strong worker protections, strong institutions and productive economies. Those things are not mutually exclusive.
If we want a stronger Australia, let’s have an honest conversation about tax reform, skills, innovation, infrastructure, housing supply and competition policy. Blaming workers, unions and employment laws for every problem is simply looking for an easy scapegoat.
Australia has a relatively small population.
We share no land borders and are protected by vast oceans.
We have abundant agricultural land, enormous natural resources, and some of the world’s most valuable exports.
We’ve enjoyed more than 80 years without war on our own soil and never experienced a civil war.
There is no reason poverty should be increasing in this country.
There is no reason the middle class should be shrinking.
There is no reason each generation shouldn’t have the opportunity to live better than the last.
Australia’s challenges aren’t the result of a lack of land, resources, wealth, or stability.
They are the result of political decisions.
And for too long, we’ve kept electing politicians who fail us.