Proud Australian Lawyer and Rabbi! 🎗️| “The standard you walk past is the standard you accept.” Featured on: @JewishChron @SkyNewsAust @SpectatorOz, and more.
“Obviously, we fought very well with Israel, and we’ve had a great relationship with Israel. We’re very formidable at Bibi Netanyahu, he’s a warrior prime minister. And he should be acknowledged as that. They should give him credit because he really did. We had a very good relationship, generally, with all of them, but we really fought hard with Israel.”
MUST WATCH
A body language expert just exposed Jim Chalmers.
When asked if the government was being sneaky on negative gearing, he said “Of course not”, and nodded.
The footage doesn’t lie.
Virgin is still sitting on $93 million of Australians’ COVID flight credits.
@senbmckenzie nails the issue:
Either give people their money back or extend the credits indefinitely.
Qantas and Jetstar did the right thing. Virgin chose to keep the cash instead.
Not good enough.
🚨NSW Liberal Leader on immigration:
“Everyone that comes to our country must share a common thread… that you love our country, that you’re gonna work hard for our country, that you’re gonna be a lifter and not a leaner. And that’s what makes our country great.”
NSW Liberal Leader Kellie Sloane on the monoculture debate:
She rejected the idea of a monoculture but said everyone who comes here must “share a common thread”, to “love our country”, “work hard for our country”, and be “a lifter and not a leaner”.
We can celebrate what different cultures bring while requiring the commitment that binds us together.
🔥 Bridget McKenzie (@senbmckenzie) on immigration:
“We need to be welcoming people from right around the world. If you wanna bring your hate and prejudice with you, well, quite frankly, you can stay where you are… and I don’t think that’s anti anyone, it’s pro Australian.”
The reality is only about a third of jobs in Victoria can actually be done from home.
The rest need people to actually be there.
Just look at the biggest jobs out there:
Sales assistants-over half a million of them-in shops dealing with customers.
Aged care and disability workers-hundreds of thousands and growing fast-doing hands on care that can’t be done over Zoom.
Nurses in hospitals and aged care. Truck drivers. Builders, carpenters, electricians, plumbers and labourers on construction sites. Waiters, kitchenhands, factory workers and cleaners.
These aren’t small groups. They’re a huge chunk of the workforce, and most of them can’t just log in from the kitchen table.
Pushing this as some kind of right just creates a two-tier system. The people in offices and professional jobs get extra flexibility, while the nurses, tradies, retail and hospitality workers get nothing.
Small businesses will cop the hassle and cost of arguing over it, and a lot of essential roles will suffer.
Let employers and employees negotiate, don’t force square pegs into round holes from Spring Street.
The reality is only about a third of jobs in Victoria can actually be done from home.
The rest need people to actually be there.
Just look at the biggest jobs out there:
Sales assistants-over half a million of them-in shops dealing with customers.
Aged care and disability workers-hundreds of thousands and growing fast-doing hands on care that can’t be done over Zoom.
Nurses in hospitals and aged care. Truck drivers. Builders, carpenters, electricians, plumbers and labourers on construction sites. Waiters, kitchenhands, factory workers and cleaners.
These aren’t small groups. They’re a huge chunk of the workforce, and most of them can’t just log in from the kitchen table.
Pushing this as some kind of right just creates a two-tier system. The people in offices and professional jobs get extra flexibility, while the nurses, tradies, retail and hospitality workers get nothing.
Small businesses will cop the hassle and cost of arguing over it, and a lot of essential roles will suffer.
Let employers and employees negotiate, don’t force square pegs into round holes from Spring Street.
The reality is only about a third of jobs in Victoria can actually be done from home.
The rest need people to actually be there.
Just look at the biggest jobs out there:
Sales assistants-over half a million of them-in shops dealing with customers.
Aged care and disability workers-hundreds of thousands and growing fast-doing hands on care that can’t be done over Zoom.
Nurses in hospitals and aged care. Truck drivers. Builders, carpenters, electricians, plumbers and labourers on construction sites. Waiters, kitchenhands, factory workers and cleaners.
These aren’t small groups. They’re a huge chunk of the workforce, and most of them can’t just log in from the kitchen table.
Pushing this as some kind of right just creates a two-tier system. The people in offices and professional jobs get extra flexibility, while the nurses, tradies, retail and hospitality workers get nothing.
Small businesses will cop the hassle and cost of arguing over it, and a lot of essential roles will suffer.
Let employers and employees negotiate, don’t force square pegs into round holes from Spring Street.
@TrumpWarRoom@JDVance Not true.
Leaders including Milei, Modi, Orbán, and others from the UAE, Bahrain, Czechia, Poland and Slovakia support Israel.
Critique Israel all you want but at least be accurate.