Die Judicii wrote:This year in particular I've noticed a distinctly low number of ads being placed on "Used Guns" over the Xmas break. A few years back there were an assortment of "Unwanted Gift" ads placed on Xmas day. I guess hard times are really starting to bite.
bigrich wrote:Die Judicii wrote:This year in particular I've noticed a distinctly low number of ads being placed on "Used Guns" over the Xmas break. A few years back there were an assortment of "Unwanted Gift" ads placed on Xmas day. I guess hard times are really starting to bite.
recent reports are that australian living standards haven't been this bad in 50-60 years . poor management from both sides of politics and greedy corporate attitudes are destroying this country
bigrich wrote:Die Judicii wrote:This year in particular I've noticed a distinctly low number of ads being placed on "Used Guns" over the Xmas break. A few years back there were an assortment of "Unwanted Gift" ads placed on Xmas day. I guess hard times are really starting to bite.
recent reports are that australian living standards haven't been this bad in 50-60 years . poor management from both sides of politics and greedy corporate attitudes are destroying this country
wanneroo wrote:bigrich wrote:Die Judicii wrote:This year in particular I've noticed a distinctly low number of ads being placed on "Used Guns" over the Xmas break. A few years back there were an assortment of "Unwanted Gift" ads placed on Xmas day. I guess hard times are really starting to bite.
recent reports are that australian living standards haven't been this bad in 50-60 years . poor management from both sides of politics and greedy corporate attitudes are destroying this country
Everything is out of whack and I think a lot of it is the western world has put other countries like China and India and the 3rd world as a priority and has neglected their own citizens and putting their own citizens first.
Fester wrote: Nothing can even start to change for the better until people start not only voting them out but also not voting for the major corruption parties.
It's like Dumb and Dumber.
The pack of Woke faggots will do a lot more damage as they sign every UN, WHO and any other word order wackers plans.
They have put us last.
With living standards going down and heaps further to fall with the corp greedies looking to get their earns before the collapse, we haven't even started to pay for the green energy infrastructure or transition yet.
Why would they even be thinking up attacking LAFO unless they want the public fully disarmed before it gets worse.
It's not like legal firearms offences would even get to a single-figure statistic, would it?
Billo wrote:Its the wealth effect, Real estate values have gone from $7 trillion to $11 Trillion in only a few years.
No shortage of money rolling around, if you didnt get on the Capital Gains Gravy train then I can understand your beef
Usedguns has a lot more competition, I picked up 2 bargains off SSAA usedguns last week, I rarely buy off the over priced Used guns
mickb wrote:Billo wrote:Its the wealth effect, Real estate values have gone from $7 trillion to $11 Trillion in only a few years.
No shortage of money rolling around, if you didnt get on the Capital Gains Gravy train then I can understand your beef
Usedguns has a lot more competition, I picked up 2 bargains off SSAA usedguns last week, I rarely buy off the over priced Used guns
Well the next generation wont get on the 'capital gains gravy train now', hardly their fault if they cant afford a house. I could buy in Brisbane 20 years ago when houses were about 3x my salary. Now its more like 10x. Part of building a country, even fighting for it , is securing the same basic rights and ability for the next generation to join the party and enjoy what we did. The wealth effect is meant to mean wealth for all, not wealth/costs moving upwards out of reach of half the population ...
And no shortage of money rolling around, you just need twice as much of it, to buy the same thing you could afford 3 years ago. The big players gouged the fk out of the market in that time, doubled and tripled their net worth, and we pay double at the supermarket.
noneyabussiness wrote:
(sarcasm font)
But how dare you think of someone else but yourself... sheesh you must be one of those loser broke people...
I think it's fuc#ing hilarious when the " older " generation rant on, on how much it was better in the old days... then why the fuc# did you change things... oh wait, greed...
mickb wrote:
And no shortage of money rolling around, you just need twice as much of it, to buy the same thing you could afford 3 years ago. The big players gouged the fk out of the market in that time, doubled and tripled their net worth, and we pay double at the supermarket.
bigrich wrote:noneyabussiness wrote:the current situation hasn't come about by the older generation mate , it's due to successive governments of both sides of politics failing to act in the national interest against big corporations and doing away with import tariffs to protect local industry and manufacturing, courtesy of john howards free trade agreements in 1996 .
the greatest tragedy is inaction and apathy by the australian public to be more tuned in politically and active in voting . when there was a boom in independent political parties the main parties got really upset and scared . it had a effect . so it's up to firebrand independent senators and the australian public to change the current status quo. it's probably easier to sit at home and watch netflix for most
bigrich wrote:noneyabussiness wrote:
(sarcasm font)
But how dare you think of someone else but yourself... sheesh you must be one of those loser broke people...
I think it's fuc#ing hilarious when the " older " generation rant on, on how much it was better in the old days... then why the fuc# did you change things... oh wait, greed...
very short sighted of you to brand a whole generation as being of the same mind and screwing the younger generation. definitely not a situation of my making or any of the other senior members of this forum or general public , "Mr broadbrush"
the current situation hasn't come about by the older generation mate , it's due to successive governments of both sides of politics failing to act in the national interest against big corporations and doing away with import tariffs to protect local industry and manufacturing, courtesy of john howards free trade agreements in 1996 .
the greatest tragedy is inaction and apathy by the australian public to be more tuned in politically and active in voting . when there was a boom in independent political parties the main parties got really upset and scared . it had a effect . so it's up to firebrand independent senators and the australian public to change the current status quo. it's probably easier to sit at home and watch netflix for most
noneyabussiness wrote:bigrich wrote:noneyabussiness wrote:
(sarcasm font)
But how dare you think of someone else but yourself... sheesh you must be one of those loser broke people...
I think it's fuc#ing hilarious when the " older " generation rant on, on how much it was better in the old days... then why the fuc# did you change things... oh wait, greed...
very short sighted of you to brand a whole generation as being of the same mind and screwing the younger generation. definitely not a situation of my making or any of the other senior members of this forum or general public , "Mr broadbrush"
the current situation hasn't come about by the older generation mate , it's due to successive governments of both sides of politics failing to act in the national interest against big corporations and doing away with import tariffs to protect local industry and manufacturing, courtesy of john howards free trade agreements in 1996 .
the greatest tragedy is inaction and apathy by the australian public to be more tuned in politically and active in voting . when there was a boom in independent political parties the main parties got really upset and scared . it had a effect . so it's up to firebrand independent senators and the australian public to change the current status quo. it's probably easier to sit at home and watch netflix for most
I'm not going to argue too much, but if you read what you wrote, you actually ended up agreeing with me... That generation LET this happen ( how and why is partly what you wrote and a heap more) , so the blame is squarely on THAT generation... simple fact ..
If you don't agree, doesn't matter, look around and tell me it's " better" than say 20 years ago... or heck 2 years ago.. The younger generation NEEDS to step up and do something, but as you said, most would rather be home watching netflix. Which again is a result if the " parenting " skill ( or lack thereof) of that generation, kids raised by tv etc...
bigrich wrote:noneyabussiness wrote:
(sarcasm font)
But how dare you think of someone else but yourself... sheesh you must be one of those loser broke people...
I think it's fuc#ing hilarious when the " older " generation rant on, on how much it was better in the old days... then why the fuc# did you change things... oh wait, greed...
very short sighted of you to brand a whole generation as being of the same mind and screwing the younger generation. definitely not a situation of my making or any of the other senior members of this forum or general public , "Mr broadbrush"
the current situation hasn't come about by the older generation mate , it's due to successive governments of both sides of politics failing to act in the national interest against big corporations and doing away with import tariffs to protect local industry and manufacturing, courtesy of john howards free trade agreements in 1996 .
the greatest tragedy is inaction and apathy by the australian public to be more tuned in politically and active in voting . when there was a boom in independent political parties the main parties got really upset and scared . it had a effect . so it's up to firebrand independent senators and the australian public to change the current status quo. it's probably easier to sit at home and watch netflix for most
Wapiti wrote:Exactly. All too often, at the country's expense (re: Everyone in it), people suck up the lies they are told even though their own experiences tell them there's something wrong.
We seem obsessed with, and agree with, the need to appease overseas interests or "we won't buy your iron ore, coal, lobster or wine", to accept shoddy goods in return at cheaper prices that do NOTHING for our country.
EVERYTHING affordability wise here is tied to energy availability and COST, yet we fall over ourselves to vote for scum that are intent on ticking the boxes of the liars who are invested in taking our wealth.
Unless you are stupid, you know SUPPLY AND DEMAND drive up house prices. Yet we chop off our noses in destroying the businesses that supply the building materials of ALL TYPES that are needed. Again, energy costs hold this back.
Whinging idiots blame investors for this.
Then again, overseas interests that supply the cheap rubbish to make our infrastructure hold us to ransom with inflated prices and trade threats.
As has been rightly said here by those with wisdom, we HAVE EVERYTHING here to make anything here and power it too, but we close down our timber forests, steel making, coal mines, power generation, restrict gas supply to ourselves whilst selling it so cheap other countries buy it and re-sell it to others.
Then, the morons the people vote in do NOTHING to lure the skilled young people in to become the tradespeople we desperately need to build these homes, mines, infrastructure, everything, and APPLAUD those freaks that want to change gender, live in perpetual victimhood and suck the blood of the rest of us who have the skills to build for all.
In summing up, if I was El Presidente tomorrow, I would put a virtual "fence" around Australia, turn off all this trade and monetary criminal bullsh*t and tell everyone overseas that if you want our unique products and services, come and discuss it. Until then, go and f*** off with your demands that we drive the people here in the best country on earth that has EVERYTHING in natural resources to make everything we need, and all the SKILLED and willing trades and engineering, and everyone else that supports the country, to make it back into the best country in the world again. And these germs will come crawling back, desperately wanting negotiation for our products which we will sell to them at the prices that WE DECIDE are best for us. Then, immediately afterwards, start building reliable energy supply using our incredible natural resources and make Australians wealthy.
You people do have the options in this deliberately restrictive "free voting system to totally change this, yet Aussies would rather wring their hands and complain about the (deliberately manipulative) past rubbish instead of blaming their own ignorance in what's happening.
bigrich wrote:noneyabussiness wrote:bigrich wrote:noneyabussiness wrote:
(sarcasm font)
But how dare you think of someone else but yourself... sheesh you must be one of those loser broke people...
I think it's fuc#ing hilarious when the " older " generation rant on, on how much it was better in the old days... then why the fuc# did you change things... oh wait, greed...
very short sighted of you to brand a whole generation as being of the same mind and screwing the younger generation. definitely not a situation of my making or any of the other senior members of this forum or general public , "Mr broadbrush"
the current situation hasn't come about by the older generation mate , it's due to successive governments of both sides of politics failing to act in the national interest against big corporations and doing away with import tariffs to protect local industry and manufacturing, courtesy of john howards free trade agreements in 1996 .
the greatest tragedy is inaction and apathy by the australian public to be more tuned in politically and active in voting . when there was a boom in independent political parties the main parties got really upset and scared . it had a effect . so it's up to firebrand independent senators and the australian public to change the current status quo. it's probably easier to sit at home and watch netflix for most
I'm not going to argue too much, but if you read what you wrote, you actually ended up agreeing with me... That generation LET this happen ( how and why is partly what you wrote and a heap more) , so the blame is squarely on THAT generation... simple fact ..
If you don't agree, doesn't matter, look around and tell me it's " better" than say 20 years ago... or heck 2 years ago.. The younger generation NEEDS to step up and do something, but as you said, most would rather be home watching netflix. Which again is a result if the " parenting " skill ( or lack thereof) of that generation, kids raised by tv etc...
Again mate , you’re tarring a whole generation as being responsible for this country’s current situation. Does that mean your current action/inaction is going to be responsible for a bleak future for the next generation ?
Me personally, I’m an old school blue collar tradie who’s voted for independent parties and the like for the last 20 years. Saying that me personally and others of my generation are responsible is a very simplistic view, hence the “Broadbrush “ comment
I welcome your views and opinions mate but there’s more to this story than I think you realise. Stereotyping a generation, or indeed a minority , like gun owners are by politicians and the general population, is a little bit naive. I don’t mean to be insulting or condescending, but I am trying to get my views across in the politest way possible. Cheers
noneyabussiness wrote:
Again, I won't bother to go any further as it's always the same BS it wasn't me, it was everybody else at that tme..
I'll use the common example used here.. 1996 ... now in that year I was only just a teenager... when those laws were tabled, I was still only a teenager, those laws were voted in, again I was still a teenager... I wonder who voted them in... oh wait it was THAT GENERATION, the ones that royally fuc#ed us...
You personally might make up the .1 % at the time, good for you, but let put the blame of the current s**t show where it belongs, on the generation that DID it...
To fix it, it will take a lot of rooting out of those old fudds in entrenched positions of oversight... then we actually might see some improvement.. I do believe Australia could be a superpower, we have the resources and go, but how many times has progress been hindered by political doublespeak??
mickb wrote:My take is rich very powerful people, and I dont mean some shady cadre of fellas wearing dark robes and doing sacrifices to satan, I mean just big business itself corrupted or got out of control and thats responsible for a lot our checks and balances failing. Currencies being sold to other countries, powergrids going private, market gouging, manufacture being given away, we are also now breaking all the rules we put down after the great depression and stock crash of 87 regards short selling and complex derivatives and every other shakey financial product. Its open slather again.
The whole generation vs generation thing is yet another distraction. You blame me and I blame you, while we both get poorer and the fellas at the top go on Ellen bragging they are hundred billionaires. FFS . I was never a conspiracy whacko, most of my career was either military or government work. But how much BS has to occur before you need to start asking questions? or do we wait until the cost of eggs, a loaf of bread and mens deodorant double again to $20 each?
The other thing is this is worldwide. People arguing labor vs liberal , albanese, resource policies when the other 30x 1st world countries are doing exactly the same thing. Its like ignoring the elephant in the room, 30 other elephants in fact
mickb wrote:My take is rich very powerful people, and I dont mean some shady cadre of fellas wearing dark robes and doing sacrifices to satan, I mean just big business itself corrupted or got out of control and thats responsible for a lot our checks and balances failing. Currencies being sold to other countries, powergrids going private, market gouging, manufacture being given away, we are also now breaking all the rules we put down after the great depression and stock crash of 87 regards short selling and complex derivatives and every other shakey financial product. Its open slather again.
The whole generation vs generation thing is yet another distraction. You blame me and I blame you, while we both get poorer and the fellas at the top go on Ellen bragging they are hundred billionaires. FFS . I was never a conspiracy whacko, most of my career was either military or government work. But how much BS has to occur before you need to start asking questions? or do we wait until the cost of eggs, a loaf of bread and mens deodorant double again to $20 each?
The other thing is this is worldwide. People arguing labor vs liberal , albanese, resource policies when the other 30x 1st world countries are doing exactly the same thing. Its like ignoring the elephant in the room, 30 other elephants in fact
bigrich wrote:mickb wrote:My take is rich very powerful people, and I dont mean some shady cadre of fellas wearing dark robes and doing sacrifices to satan, I mean just big business itself corrupted or got out of control and thats responsible for a lot our checks and balances failing. Currencies being sold to other countries, powergrids going private, market gouging, manufacture being given away, we are also now breaking all the rules we put down after the great depression and stock crash of 87 regards short selling and complex derivatives and every other shakey financial product. Its open slather again.
The whole generation vs generation thing is yet another distraction. You blame me and I blame you, while we both get poorer and the fellas at the top go on Ellen bragging they are hundred billionaires. FFS . I was never a conspiracy whacko, most of my career was either military or government work. But how much BS has to occur before you need to start asking questions? or do we wait until the cost of eggs, a loaf of bread and mens deodorant double again to $20 each?
The other thing is this is worldwide. People arguing labor vs liberal , albanese, resource policies when the other 30x 1st world countries are doing exactly the same thing. Its like ignoring the elephant in the room, 30 other elephants in fact
you are spot on mick , i agree whole heartedly .
in a few more years when a loaf of bread is $15 , they'll probably have us start calling each other "comrade" ya know there are a few similarities to the era just before the french revolution and our current social situation , ignorant elites getting richer while the poor get poorer . the current housing and cost of living status is a disgrace . "vive le revolution..."
Oldbloke wrote:bigrich wrote:mickb wrote:My take is rich very powerful people, and I dont mean some shady cadre of fellas wearing dark robes and doing sacrifices to satan, I mean just big business itself corrupted or got out of control and thats responsible for a lot our checks and balances failing. Currencies being sold to other countries, powergrids going private, market gouging, manufacture being given away, we are also now breaking all the rules we put down after the great depression and stock crash of 87 regards short selling and complex derivatives and every other shakey financial product. Its open slather again.
The whole generation vs generation thing is yet another distraction. You blame me and I blame you, while we both get poorer and the fellas at the top go on Ellen bragging they are hundred billionaires. FFS . I was never a conspiracy whacko, most of my career was either military or government work. But how much BS has to occur before you need to start asking questions? or do we wait until the cost of eggs, a loaf of bread and mens deodorant double again to $20 each?
The other thing is this is worldwide. People arguing labor vs liberal , albanese, resource policies when the other 30x 1st world countries are doing exactly the same thing. Its like ignoring the elephant in the room, 30 other elephants in fact
you are spot on mick , i agree whole heartedly .
in a few more years when a loaf of bread is $15 , they'll probably have us start calling each other "comrade" ya know there are a few similarities to the era just before the french revolution and our current social situation , ignorant elites getting richer while the poor get poorer . the current housing and cost of living status is a disgrace . "vive le revolution..."
Is that dry humour again?
You really can't compare then with now. Our living std is waayy better.
However, I agree that the trickle up effect ( or is that flood up) is definitely in full swing. And getting worse.
I've talked about this many times over the years. Often laughed at.
The money is now very concentrated, the rich are getting richer the poor, poorer.
The US is much worse, than here, there is a gulf between the upper and poor, lower class.
Happened in the UK in the abt the 1850s, too.
Oldbloke wrote:1.1% own 45.8% of global wealth.
https://www.visualcapitalist.com/distri ... lth-chart/
Oldbloke wrote:bigrich wrote:mickb wrote:My take is rich very powerful people, and I dont mean some shady cadre of fellas wearing dark robes and doing sacrifices to satan, I mean just big business itself corrupted or got out of control and thats responsible for a lot our checks and balances failing. Currencies being sold to other countries, powergrids going private, market gouging, manufacture being given away, we are also now breaking all the rules we put down after the great depression and stock crash of 87 regards short selling and complex derivatives and every other shakey financial product. Its open slather again.
The whole generation vs generation thing is yet another distraction. You blame me and I blame you, while we both get poorer and the fellas at the top go on Ellen bragging they are hundred billionaires. FFS . I was never a conspiracy whacko, most of my career was either military or government work. But how much BS has to occur before you need to start asking questions? or do we wait until the cost of eggs, a loaf of bread and mens deodorant double again to $20 each?
The other thing is this is worldwide. People arguing labor vs liberal , albanese, resource policies when the other 30x 1st world countries are doing exactly the same thing. Its like ignoring the elephant in the room, 30 other elephants in fact
you are spot on mick , i agree whole heartedly .
in a few more years when a loaf of bread is $15 , they'll probably have us start calling each other "comrade" ya know there are a few similarities to the era just before the french revolution and our current social situation , ignorant elites getting richer while the poor get poorer . the current housing and cost of living status is a disgrace . "vive le revolution..."
Is that dry humour again?
You really can't compare then with now. . Our living std is waayy better.
However, I agree that the trickle up effect ( or is that flood up) is definitely in full swing. And getting worse.
I've talked about this many times over the years. Often laughed at.
The money is now very concentrated, the rich are getting richer the poor, poorer.
The US is much worse, than here, there is a gulf between the upper and poor, lower class.
Happened in the UK in the abt the 1850s, too.