waitingman: (Australia)
Our local newsfeeds are full of stories about the drought(s) affecting the Northern Hemisphere...

So I wonder - during any of the long droughts we've experienced here in Australia - most recently 2017-2019 - did we receive the same kind of news coverage in America & Europe? I know we made a lot of headlines during the 'Black Summer' bushfires of 2019-20, but did the top half of the world know we'd been in severe drought for most of the 2010s decade (which is why everything burned so spectacularly!!)? And on the other side of the coin, are you aware of the severe flooding we've experienced in the last 2 years, which looks set to continue into a 3rd?

It could be argued that Australia's population has a huge proportion of migrants from the UK & Europe, so our interest in news from the Northern Hemisphere stems from that - lots of people want to see what's happening back 'home'... but you can also ask a lot of Australians about USA politics & they could give you a pretty decent rundown of what (the fuck??!!??) is going on over there & could certainly name not only the current President, but also at least the previous 4. Can any of my Top End readers name the current Australian Prime Minister without Googling? He's only been in the job a few months, so how about the one before that - he was there for a few years (too many!!)?

I'm not really complaining about us being forgotten, down here at the bottom of the planet, I'm just interested to know if the rest of the world uses the information super highway to visit us, as much as we do to visit you...
waitingman: (World Cow)
Every now & then, the Universe makes a little correction... Trophy Animal Hunter Shot & Killed

Unfortunately, the shooters had to leave the scene before they could remove his heart so they could eat it later, his genitalia so they could absorb his potency... & his head, so they could stuff & mount it on the wall of their lodge... & before they could take any selfies with the dead beast, to post on their social media about what badasses they are

And, when you come to Australia... be prepared to be sworn at... a lot!

We are, after all, the masters of subtle inflection. The word 'Mate' can be a genuine term of unending friendship, or a warning to shut up & get gone lest violence ensue, depending on how we say it... Same with the word 'Bastard'... About the only meaning it doesn't have in Australia is its original one - a child born of unmarried parents. It can, once again, be a term of endearment (Good to see you, you old bastard!), of envy (You lucky bastard!), an indication of one's lack of intelligence (You stupid bastard, what have you done?!?), all of which are relatively harmless & nothing to take offence at - but if you're ever called a fucking bastard by an angry Australian... & believe me - you'll know, be prepared to fight... right now!!
waitingman: (Australia)
Apparently, if not for some espionage & subterfuge, Australia's European settlers could have come from France & not Britain...

The British colonising fleet arrived in Botany Bay only a few days before 2 French ships turned up with the same idea. They had been delayed looking for some fabled 'treasure' islands that featured on a map of the South Pacific, but didn't actually exist. Turns out the British made them up to distract the French... who fell for it hook, line, sinker, rod, reel & first 3 issues of Anglers Weekly, to paraphrase Kryten from Red Dwarf...

The other interesting thing is that Britain initially wasn't keen on the idea of colonising Australia, as it was too far away & would be too expensive (today the reverse is true, travelling to Britain from Australia is too far away & extremely expensive!!), but one of their American agents got wind of the French plan to build a new 'empire' in the South Pacific &, well, we couldn't have that!! So using the transportation of convicts as a cover story, the British hurried down under as fast as the trade winds would carry them

Either way, it was bad news for our First Australians, who died by the tens of thousands in the first 50 years of colonisation... There's no way of telling if the French would have been any better in their dealings with them, but I somehow doubt it
waitingman: (Australia)
You Republicans with your bullshit... your chutzpah, your delusions of... well everything really... Your belief that guns make everything better

Choice quotes from an unfinished interview with Kari Lake, by Australian journalist Liam Bartlett

“What I don’t like is that people are being held in prison without being charged,” she said. “That’s unAmerican. Maybe they get away with that stuff in Australia.

“Perhaps in Australia, because you’ve given your rights away, you melted down all of your guns and you guys have no freedom, that you find that okay.


No... no we didn't. No we didn't. No, we have plenty of freedom - probably more than you do... okay?

“But here in America, we do things differently, we have something called the US Constitution and we have rights.”

Says the woman whose party is trying to make it harder for US citizens to exercise their democratic right to vote

Mr Bartlett asked whether Australia would be better off having more guns, to which Ms Lake said “you absolutely would”.

She said she felt sorry for Australians as they had no power.

“The only thing keeping us from being Australia right now is our second amendment, and we will never, ever let that go,” she said.


And that's supposed to be a good thing, is it - not being Australia... with our universal health care, our low rates of street crime & absence of monthly/weekly school shootings, our elections that don't turn into partisan bloodbaths sponsored by a foreign power?!?

“You have internment camps and people are being forced, if they’ve encountered anybody with Covid, to be locked into a quarantine camp, (which) is the most horrifying thing I think I’ve ever seen a government do.”

No. No we don't. No they're not. And yes, it must be terrible to be held in Guantanamo Bay without being charged by any law enforcement or Federal authority. At least you're right about that being horrifying... you're just looking at the wrong island...

Australia may not be perfect, but geez... fair suck of the sav lady. Pull ya bloody head in!!
waitingman: (Australia)
Another week, another 'Conservative' right-wing loony criticising Australia for our Covid responses. This one wants to send in the USA Army to 'liberate' us, because our government is apparently as bad as the Taliban, while noting that the USA lost the war in Afghanistan... I'm not sure why then, Candace Owens thinks sending US troops to invade Australia is a good idea - does she think it's time the USA had a win & Australia would be an easy beat?

Then again, Candace may be onto something there... we once sent our army out to tackle the rogue emu population in Western Australia. Much like the War on Terror, the birds proved hard to find & at one point, an average of 10 bullets were used to kill each bird. The 'war' stopped & started again, between 1932 & 1948, as the emus numbers constantly bounced back. Sound familiar?

So, US army - be careful before you get involved in another war in a mostly desert country... Your track record isn't good... but, judging by the amount of emus still around, neither is ours!!
waitingman: (Australia)
I'm sure the very notion of fact-checking Tucker Carlson of Fox News (in)fame(y) is akin to King Canute trying to hold back the tide... but sometimes these right-wing, ignorant fuckers just get under my skin with their inflammatory mis/dis-information

Take his latest reported outburst for example...

Fox News host Tucker Carlson has unleashed over what he’s dubbed Australia’s Covid-19 “totalitarianism”, accusing state and federal governments of mindlessly embracing martial law, shooting rescue dogs and lockdown lunacy.

“In Australia, the government has implemented total lockdowns nationwide, and imposed martial law to enforce them,”


Okay, just stop there FTucker - there are NO nationwide lockdowns, they are NOT total & there isn't the slightest whiff of Martial Law on the Spring breeze. Unarmed soldiers have been brought in to help with quarantine enforcement, but only for those meant to be isolating because they HAVE COVID, not for the general population. The lockdowns that are in place vary from State to State & different areas have different levels of restrictions. The whole country is NOT locked down & cowering behind its doors as the armed forces patrol the suburban streets in tanks, armed with flame-throwers & lasers...

“What’s the justification for this? Here are the numbers: from mid-July to last week, the entire country of Australia — a population of 25 million — has averaged about 1.5 Covid deaths per day.

Whoa there FTucker - this is blatant manipulation of numbers. It's not about national deaths per capita, it's about community infection rates &, more importantly, where the deaths are happening: mostly the elderly &, worryingly, it's getting into the indigenous communities. My home State of New South Wales is averaging over 1000 new cases per day & losing about 10 people per week, give or take. NSW's population is about 6 million, so if you now want to apply FTucker's version of mathematics, it paints a grimmer picture...

“That has been enough to justify the end of Australia and totalitarianism. In one recent case, authorities executed rescue dogs — shot them to death — to prevent Australian dog lovers from travelling to adopt them. Leaving your home is not allowed, so they just killed the dogs. And the population put up with it. They were told they had to.”

I can hear the rising tone of voice & blood pressure in this quote but, bad grammar aside, it's still inaccurate. This was a one-off, isolated incident, with the emphasis on isolated - the town that killed the dogs is hundreds of kilometres from anywhere else &, under current travel restrictions, assumed no one could come for the dogs, so euthanised them... by bullet sure, but the population has NOT put up with it, nor were we told we "had to". There is a government enquiry underway into the incident & the public response has been universally angry. So much so, that the town's Council are not returning any calls right now...

And what is it about every right-wing fanatic's fascination with "Totalitarianism"?? Is this the new boogyman who's taken over from Communism as the greatest threat to humanity since, well since Fascism - I'm sure FTucker knows all about fanatical nationalism, persecution of social & ethnic minorities & propaganda as fact

Here FTucker: I looked it up for you... does it sound like someone you know & probably voted for a few times?

totalitarianism
/təʊˌtalɪˈtɛːrɪənɪz(ə)m,təˌtalɪˈtɛːrɪənɪz(ə)m/

noun

a system of government that is centralized and dictatorial and requires complete subservience to the state.


All this, coming on top of Australia being called 'smug' about our previously enviable Covid situation, is a bit much... I mean, how much can a koala bear?!?
waitingman: (Australia)
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Not that I would expect any of my limited audience to be avid listeners, fans, or supporters of Joe Rogan, but a little fact-checking of his latest podcast about Australia's Delta variant experience...

“There’s some crazy shit going on right now where the army is trying to keep people inside in Australia. They have full on government lockdowns where the government is flying helicopters over streets saying ‘go back indoors, you’re not allowed outside’.”

No - helicopters with loudspeakers are not overhead as I type this. And you are allowed outside for a number of reasons - food & essentials shopping, exercise, home-schooling sanity breaks... & essential workers, which kind of includes me, in a limited capacity. We're certainly not talking about a Chinese-style operation where people were literally shut inside. The helicopters have been used over some beach areas to encourage those not in any of the above categories to go home, but it's not a constant thing, nor a Sydney-wide, nor indeed a nation-wide practice

As to the army forcing people to stay at home, well... only if you're supposed to be there...

From Monday, some 300 army personnel will help police go door to door to ensure people who have tested positive are isolating, New South Wales police commissioner Mick Fuller told a news conference.

The military personnel will not be armed and will be under police command, he said.


In summary: No, we have not become a heavy-handed, authoritarian police state, nor is there any danger of a military coup. The people who have complained loudest about these restrictions, are the first ones to break them, resulting in necessarily stricter enforcement measures, which, of course, they complain about as well. It's a looooong way from storming government buildings in 2nd-hand combat fatigues, armed with assault rifles, just because you can't get a haircut... & more of a storm in a takeaway teacup - oolong, with almond milk & a dash of manuka honey
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waitingman: (Australia)
There has long been a rivalry between Australia's 2 largest cities - Sydney & Melbourne, with each laying claim to be the best one because... well, insert your parochial pride reference points here...

Since the Plague began, that rivalry has largely been put aside, as the whole country mostly pulled together to bring the damn thing under relative control. No thanks here to the state governments of Western Australia & Queensland, who have used the Plague as an excuse to lock up their borders & then complain that the rest of Australia either ignores them, or doesn't take them seriously... then threaten to take their mines & reefs, go home & start rumbling about secession

Anyway, this is all a rambling introduction to an article about how the Plague has affected Melbourne more harshly than Sydney, with our Southern cousins going into another week-long lockdown, while we in Sydney go about life as (new) normal

I do have a vested interest in this, as not only do I have many friends in Melbourne, but the luthiers making my custom 12-string acoustic guitar are down there as well. Its completion has already been pushed back from May to July, due to the huge backlog caused by last year's long lockdown down south & I'm wondering if my 'Christmas' present for 2020 will be ready for this year... or not

Readers overseas will, of course have a different perspective on the article & wonder why we're getting so worked up about this latest outbreak when it hasn't killed anyone... yet, let alone a few thousand per day. The simple answer being that, as a country of only 25 million or so, we can't really afford to be losing thousands of people at all, especially every day!!

Snakes

May. 3rd, 2021 06:31 pm
waitingman: (Australia)
Once upon a long time ago, there was an Australian restaurant chain called 'Black Stump', who were pretty much a steakhouse. In fact, their advertising song was short, sharp & to the point - 'At the Black Stump, we're famous for our steaks'... So, not a haven for vegetarians, or even pescatarians. Not that there were many of either of those in 70s & even 80s Australia

Anyway, that little trip down Memory Lane was triggered by a couple of news stories I found today, concerning Australia's impressive collection of snakes & put me in mind of that jingle, albeit with a slight change - 'Beyond the black stump, we're famous for our snakes' Tiger Snakes love a boat trip!! Seemingly inspired by the book/film 'Life Of Pi' & every bit as dangerous!!... And - That's not a hair-clip!!. & not really the kind of accessory that's likely to catch on in trendy circles...

Should you find yourself with a snake in your boat, or in your hair, above all - don't panic... & don't do any of these things either...
waitingman: (Australia)
Here in Australia, we have a popular ice cream called the Golden Gaytime - vanilla & honeycomb-flavoured ice cream on a stick, covered in sugary crumbs. It was first sold in 1959 when 'gay' just meant happy...

Fast-forward to 2021 & there is a small, but vocal push to have the treat renamed, due to the name's connection to the LGBTQI+ community. Interestingly, most Australians spoken to & surveyed about this, were in favour of keeping the name... including an organisation representing the Australian Gay community

So I'm not sure if only 1100 or so signatures on a petition is a significant number, or if this is just being beaten up into a bigger news story than it really is, just to get the old outrage flowing from both sides. Given the way media works, I suspect the latter...

Even the manufacturer caught on to the connotations by the 1980s - The company appears to embrace the camp name by retaining the tagline from the 1980s, "It's hard to have a Gaytime on your own". The in-home boxes feature the words "4 delicious chances to have a gay time". I should mention that, despite the name, I can't think of any negative connotation from it being used against the LGBTQI+ community. Back when I was at school, there was never any kind of shame about having a Gaytime. The fact that it's a delicious ice cream seems to transcend any desire to make fun of people eating it... In fact, I could go one right now!!

Knowing my diverse readership, it's over to you. Should the name be changed? Sure, it originally meant just being happy, but now?

And therefore, should the words to the Flintstones theme song be changed as well? After all, when you meet the Flintstones, "you'll have a gay old time..."
waitingman: (Default)
... our snakes & spiders. they're having just as hard a time with the flooding along the east coast as the rest of us.... The Australian attitude to our venomous menagerie is evident in the captions to various photos mentioning 'cuties'... snakes!

Meanwhile, the road I prefer to use when crossing the Blue Mountains - the mountain range to the west of Sydney you need to get over to access the rest of the State, has been closed indefinitely, as landslides have weakened not only the road's structural integrity, but also that of one of the bigger mountains it snakes (sorry... that word again!) around!!

I prefer that road for 2 reasons: It's less crowded than the main highway route with all the tourist stops on it & for the twists, turns, sharp corners & much more dramatic scenery... including huge drop-offs that are often right outside the car door as you come around the corner. Which is probably why everyone prefers the safer highway. Well... that's going to be a busy road for the next little while, so maybe I'll have to take a leaf out of the white explorers of the early 19th Century who 'discovered' the way over the mountains that later became the highway (turns out all they did was follow existing aboriginal tracks. My favourite, now closed road, does the same. Credit where it's due!!) & 'discover' a new way over, or around, the western barrier walls of the Sydney Basin. At least I'll be honest about it & give any available credit to Google Maps...
waitingman: (Australia)
... but update your life insurance first...

Not only crocodiles & spiders & snakes, but dangerous surf, drownings, box jellyfish, lost hikers & whales big enough to capsize your boat...

I love my country
waitingman: (Default)
Just like anywhere else in the world, Australia has some rules. But a few you may not have heard of – until now...

1. Don’t underestimate the sun
We have one of the world’s highest incidence of skin cancer for a reason. And no, you’re not a golden bronze you’re neon red, like an embarrassed lobster.

2. Don’t forget the thank you wave
While Australian drivers are often quick to pull out the other one fingered salute, it’s imperative that you acknowledge when someone lets you into the traffic or exhibits other forms of road-based kindness. This can take the form of a raised hand so that the car behind can see it or a thumb up. The raised index finger from the steering wheel can also function as a rural greeting as other motorists zipping by.

3. Don’t call rocket ‘arugula’
It’s an Americanism and an ironic one because for a nation that’s at the forefront of space exploration, they can’t bring themselves to use the word rocket. And besides, arugula sounds like an old car horn.

4. Don’t order a cocktail when it’s someone else’s shout and they’re on beer
Pub etiquette is both complex and adhered to in Australia. If someone buys you a drink, you are obligated to return the kindness. With one of equal(ish) value.

5. Don’t attempt to climb the Rock (or any other similar objects)
It took way too long to stop Australians and visitors alike from clambering over sacred sites. Even if there are no signs, just don’t.

6. Yes, our hourly wage is better than that of many countries
But that doesn’t mean hospitality staff are raking it in as a result. If the experience has been worthy and you can spare the dollars, 10 to 20 per cent is the rough guideline. It won’t be assumed but it will be appreciated.

7. Don’t disregard warning signs (except one)
It’s not an ad for Lacoste. There are actual crocodiles in that water. And not the cute little ones. Ditto jellyfish that do way worse than just sting a bit. The only one to take no notice of is anything with the words ‘drop bears’.

8. Don’t ask someone ‘but where are you actually from?’
Assume they’re Australian and move on to a less clichéd discussion.

9. Don’t ask where the nearest Starbucks is
Unless you’re only hitting them up for Wi-Fi, Australia has better coffee to offer.

10. Don’t assume there will be a gas station every few miles
Once you hit the highway or any place that can be designated as the Outback, fill up where and whenever possible. Also don’t refer to them as gas stations or forget that we use kilometres not miles.

11. Don’t bag Vegemite
Unless you’ve had someone guide you through the basics of spread to bread ratio distribution. It’s not peanut butter – you only need a smear thinner than a motel cushion.

12. Don’t assume your sports are better than ours
Yes, the standard of certain games – like basketball in the US or soccer in the UK – may be superior but as far as actual toughness and skill goes you’d be hard pressed to beat, say AFL. No pads, no time-outs unless someone needs to be taken to casualty, no carrying on like a pork chop when you do something mundane like make a regular tackle and you can’t run out of play because the scary defender is about to monster you and still keep possession.

13. Don’t smoke weed in public
Unlike many countries, marijuana is not legal in Australia. Yet. And while certain police officers may be lenient when it comes to personal use, it’s probably not best to test tolerance levels when out and about.

14. Don’t “champ” anyone
It may have started as a compliment but in recent years, the tone has changed to one of ambivalence at best and condescension at worst.

15. Don’t call a walk a hike
A hike means a pack on your back, the high probability of an overnight camp ground and the necessity of an emergency GPS in case things go tits up. If you’re just doing the Bondi to Bronte trail, it’s a walk.

16. Don’t ever refuse chicken salt
You can keep your Pink Himalayan and fleur de sel. This is far superior to any salt you’ve tried before. Trust us.

17. Don’t wait for someone to pump your petrol
They ain’t coming.

18. Don’t do the Crocodile Dundee jokes
At this stage, we’re all just smiling politely as you say “that’s not a knife….” Ditto shrimps and barbies.

19. Don’t actually tell someone the truth when they ask ‘how you going’?
Despite how it sounds, this is not a genuine inquiry as to your emotional wellbeing. Unless it comes from an actual friend, the only acceptable answer is ‘good’.

20. Don’t assume you’ll see actual celebrities on TV shows with the words “stars” or “celebrity” in the title.
Our definition is very, very broad. Case in point, Lindsay Lohan as a judge on a singing show where Wendell Sailor is a contestant.

Nutbush

Feb. 14th, 2021 01:12 pm
waitingman: (Australia)
It may be a little old town in Tennessee, but Australians have adopted it - dancing to this song has become a rite of passage at any birthday, wedding, school dance... & now our not-so-secret has been discovered by Americans

Like most Australians, I had no idea this wasn't the actual dance everybody does when that riff starts up, but apparently, we are indeed alone in this. It's been a thing since at least the early 80s - when I first started going to those sorts of parties & even I was mystified by how everyone seemed to know the steps to it when all I knew was how to play the riff... Even then I was a player, not a dancer

I wonder if Tina is aware of the phenomenon... & I wish I could find some footage of her performing the song in Australia

'Til then, as Sean Barry Parsons says - "Fuck Cotton-Eye Joe... we gotta Nutbush!!"

waitingman: (Australia)
Summer is on holiday... here in Sydney, with temperatures in the low 20s centigrade, grey skies & constant, ground-soaking rain

Not that I'm complaining... I'll take the rain in this dry country as often as global weather patterns are willing to give it to us... We've all seen the alternative...

Just out of interest, can anyone point out where Sydney is on this map?

waitingman: (Australia)
A dream about work, with some driving &, no surprise, something going wrong... I thought dreams were supposed to have an element of fantasy about them?

For no other reason than I'm just curious about such things - here's an informative little article on Australia's ancient volcanoes...

I've been to some of these... others are now on the domestic travel list
waitingman: (Australia)
I'm still holding off on my own, personal, year-in-review, as I won't believe it's over until the clock hits 12.01am just under 2 weeks from now. But the Sydney Morning Herald's Peter Hartcher has chanced his arm & opts for praising, with faint damns...

5 Australian Lessons From 2020 )
waitingman: (Default)
2 images doing the rounds today on social media... that impeccably accurate source of news & information

A Bull shark swimming down a Queensland street? Well, it might not be the main street, but after extreme flooding, this IS what can happen

And in the wake of Sydney's Covid19 outbreak in the Northern Beaches area (MY area!!), an image of the Spit Bridge - the main route into & out of the area, alternately raised, drawbridge-style, or just closed off... Which is complete & utter bollocks, of course. Not only do we not live in North Korea, or any form of oppressive dictatorship, but the Bridge - which does raise, drawbridge-style - is not the only way in, or out of the region, so it's a bit simplistic & naïve to think that's the answer. Not to mention how simplistic & naïve you have to be to believe the photo is real. My sister did...

Neither Long-Suffering Partner, nor I have been in any of the identified hotspots, but the list is growing by the hour & now includes the Shopping Mall I usually go to for lunch when at work on the other side of town!!. Fortunately, the time period they've flagged is outside the time I would normally be there & they didn't specify the food court area... it's a biiig Centre, so it could have been anywhere in there

That said, L-SP & I were only talking the other day about how we didn't think Australia had experienced the pandemic badly enough. What we mean is, because we have been able to keep it relatively under control - flare-ups notwithstanding - we haven't even had 1000 people die from it over the whole time & while that's a good thing, it also means we've become complacent & kind of blasé about the virus... Masks are a rare sight, social distancing seems to now mean 15 centimetres instead of 1.5 metres & everyone is more concerned about their own wants, desires & agendas than about the need to take these basic preventative measures. It's kind of the opposite of the USA situation, where wearing a mask is a sign of your political beliefs & not wearing one is a declaration of some twisted personal freedom. Australia's not that belligerently partisan, but our casual laissez-faire isn't the best attitude either. It was only a matter of time before this laziness allowed the virus to break out again. Australia obviously needs things to get a lot worse before behavioural change takes a proper hold & we accept that there is no going back to the old normal
waitingman: (Australia)
... when I decided to opt out of further rants about the protests in America, I mentioned Australia was not without its own problems in that area, so I should stay quiet on this one

Enter our Prime Minister... who hasn't put a foot significantly wrong for a few months, so has obviously been itching for an opportunity to stuff things up

He claims there was no slavery in Australia. He is wrong

Says who? Says thousands of Aboriginal people, thousands of Pacific Islanders & thousands of Chinese, South-East Asian & Indian people, who were brought here to do all the work we once made the convicts do... for the same wage & conditions - basically nothing. So, any white Australian of convict descent should be just as insulted at this 'whitewashing' of our history, as any of the aforementioned others

They probably won't be though... in fact they're probably the ones who agree with him
waitingman: (Australia)
The Prime Minister has just shut & bolted the doors, drawn the curtains & left a note outside for the milkman... Australia is no longer letting anyone in - unless you're a resident, or direct relative...

There are plenty of refugees languishing in detention camps offshore, who may well argue that nothing has, in fact, changed... Except that this time they're checking planes as well (which is how most illegal immigrants have always arrived here, but now is not, apparently, the time to talk about that... when is it??)

Even our own individual States are raising drawbridges. Tasmania has imposed a 14 day quarantine period on any 'non-essential' travellers to the Apple Isle... which puts paid to potential travel plans we were considering starting to wonder if we could think about maybe tentatively & hypothetically, provisionally formulating...
waitingman: (Australia)
This morning, I listened to a radio current affairs program devote about 30 minutes to Chinese students complaining about Australia's bio-security measures to prevent the new Coronavirus spreading here. The students' gripe was that they have to be quarantined for 14 days, before they are tested again, screened & then will be allowed in to resume their studies here. It's apparently unfair that, given they've paid for their courses, Australia won't just open its gates & let them in, no questions asked &, especially, no health checks done

So, you have been living in the country that is the origin & epicentre of a global epidemic, with more diagnoses & deaths every day... & you think it's unfair we won't let you just walk back into our Universities without making sure you're healthy??

Fuck off... Seriously, just fuck off, you bunch of whining, self-entitled brats. To then compound your arrogance by claiming it's racist treatment, devalues the legitimate claims of racism that are, unfortunately, still occurring

Certainly, Australia has some pretty strict quarantine regulations... it always has - that's why we don't have rabies here, or foot & mouth disease, or Creutzfeldt-Jacob (Mad Cow) disease (All of which originated in Europe, not Asia... & we still don't let some Europeans give blood if they were in the UK at the time of CJD). It's why we were barely affected by the SARS outbreak in the early 2000s. It's why there was such a kerfuffle when Johnny Depp tried to bring his 2 dogs into the country without quarantining them... or even declaring they were coming with him. We are an island continent, which afforded us some natural immunity for a millennium or 60, but this modern world brings lots of stuff to our doorstep by plane, or boat... Not all of it is good for us, or our flora & fauna. Hence... Quarantine & lots of seasons of Border Security

Two things these students should know... Australia isn't China. And you're not special
waitingman: (Australia)
Tony Abbott wants you to get laid, get pregnant & have more babies, otherwise, there'll be too many 'welfare class' kids...

I just don't know where to even start... Okay, look, sure... the 'populate or perish' message is fine, as it goes, more kids = more consumers & that's good for the economy (Australia, for its size, is a very small market, globally-speaking), but... jesus Tony, do we have to denigrate anyone who doesn't live in your affluent, leafy former electorate, by labelling them 'welfare' people??!!

At least the rest of the article is what we've come to expect from you... & it shows you've learned nothing from the drubbing you received at the ballot box last year... still banging on about cutting immigration rates (from non-white, non-christian countries, presumably?) & supporting the coal industry. Just further proof that dinosaurs can't evolve & require a meteor strike to get rid of them. It's certainly clear that this particular Diplodocus will not go gentle into that good night. He's one of so many people I wish the media would just ignore & not give any column inches, or airtime to - in the hope he'll just wander off into a swamp somewhere, get stuck & make the ultimate contribution to the coal industry... in a couple of million years time

The irony of my bringing attention to his brayings, thus amplifying them further, is not lost on me...

Aside from all that... the last few entries I've done were typed on my phone & it's interesting to read back over them & notice how much more succinct I am, when using my thumbs, as opposed to the 6-7 fingers I use on a keyboard... As you can probably tell then - this was written on a PC, during early, quiet time at work
waitingman: (Australia)
Yesterday (26th January) was Australia Day, marking the day in 1788 the first European settlers turned up in Sydney Harbour, planted a flag & got down to business. This, of course, didn't go down too well with, or subsequently for, the indigenous people who have received the short & occasionally sharp end of the stick ever since

Certainly in my lifetime, there has been an increasingly visible & audible protest movement against the national day itself & its callous celebration of what the indigenous people refer to as 'Invasion Day'. Leaving aside the fiercely argued cases on both sides for a moment, I'm curious about what happens in other countries with similar origins - most notably the USA. How do the Native Americans feel about days like Thanksgiving, or Founders Day etc..? Is there, or has there ever been a protest movement about the whitewashing of indigenous history, similar to what I've seen over the last few decades?
waitingman: (Australia)
... fell like a net...

Last night was one of those real, sweltering, almost baking nights where you'd remove your own skin if it meant you could cool down a little more, or decide that sleeping in the neighbour's swimming pool would be worth the trespassing charge

And now - rolling storms across the city, but all I've seen is a little rain that dried on the windscreen almost immediately, leaving dirty marks from the smoke particles that were mixed with the water as it fell...

Summer in the city
waitingman: (Default)
Australia... land of extremes

How do you put out large fires? With large storms, of course...

Incoming!!

One of a couple of storm fronts that rolled across New South Wales yesterday, tearing roofs off buildings, uprooting trees, dumping golf ball-sized hail & not delivering as much rain as you'd expect... or like
waitingman: (Australia)
The morning after the night before - when all the votes... well, most of the votes were counted. And what we have is a Prime Minister returned for a 3 year term, whom nobody thought would win. I'm not even sure he did

Certainly not the Labor Party, who campaigned with a raft of policies, a united team, but a bit of a lame duck leader who struggles to communicate clearly across the social spectrum & has the electric personality of a used-up 9 volt battery. Compare this to the Liberal Party, who campaigned on little to no policy announcements, a fractured & disunited team who can't agree on anything, but a leader who put all the focus on himself & went at it like the Energiser Bunny, leading to speculation & cartoons about what he'd done with the rest of the team during the campaign...

One he couldn't control is Tony Abbott, who, let's face it, couldn't be controlled with a cattle prod. Facing a real struggle in his own Seat against a credible Independent opponent, he was vocal about all the things he believes, which were all the things that contributed to his electorate looking for an alternative - climate change denial, same-sex marriage opposition, his role in ousting Malcolm Turnbull & support for right-wing thug Peter Dutton to replace him, his support for convicted paedophile Cardinal George Pell... & when that didn't work, did what he does best - ran a negative campaign, claiming his opponent is a Labor Party stooge, despite all the evidence disproving it... Justifiably, he was the first MP last night to give a concession speech, having been emphatically dumped by the people of Warringah - myself included

But that's not really how the rest of the night played out. Where the Liberal Party were expected to struggle, they won. Where the Labor Party were expected to win, they didn't. While this morning, it's still unclear if the Liberal Party has won enough seats to govern in its own right, it's certain that the Labor Party can't - having fallen irretrievably behind during counting last night

There were some other bits of good news... Right wing racist nutjob Fraser Anning was booted out, Clive Palmer, a billionaire mining magnate who spent 80 million on election advertising for his own 'Party', but won't pay out his workers from a nickel refinery that closed down, did not win a single seat in either the Lower or Upper Houses... & the Legalise Marijuana Party are still out there trying to get a Senate seat, as they have been for as long as I remember.

Recent changes to the Liberal Party's rules, mean they can't knife another Prime Minister, so it looks like we'll have Mr Morrison for the next 3 years. The only problem with that, is we also get all those other Liberal Party guys he gagged & locked in a room during the campaign, in the hope we'd forget about them...

Best quote of the entire campaign came last night during counting. Liberal Party Senator Arthur Sinodinos was asked about his party's chances in some marginal seats & whether they had lost them. He replied, warning against "... premature extrapolation"

Arthur for PM!!!!

Standards?

Jan. 24th, 2019 09:26 pm
waitingman: (Default)
Just returned from 'date night' with L-SP - who would argue that, since we don't have children, every night is date night... We had a buffet meal at the Sheraton on the Park Hotel in the city - something that would normally cost $100 per person, but a voucher deal halved that for us & made it worthwhile indulging

Or did it? Arriving at 6.30pm to a quiet, 1/3 full restaurant, the first 2 trips to the seafood section were a definite highlight, though the crab selection really reminds you that those little sideways critters are a lot of hard work for not a lot of reward (certainly not a patch on the Alaskan King crab we had in a Shack in Augusta Georgia a few years ago, unlikely to be bettered!!), but the oysters, mussels & prawns were of superior quality, so plenty of those were eaten as well

By this time, the place had filled up considerably, so when the time came to investigate the hot foods, it was a bit of a zoo, trying to get around people & get to anything that looked appetising. This is where it all came unstuck, really... I don't know what it is about buffets that brings out the caveman in modern humans. People were stacking plates so high with food, things were sliding off, picking at things with their fingers, pushing in or through the semi-orderly lines... all for dishes that, sorry, weren't that great, really... Certainly not $100 per person great... & barely $50 if we're counting that way

And it's not as if there was any shortage of food - waiters & servers were constantly re-filling dishes, only for people to swoop down like seagulls & take waaay more than you'd consider polite & bugger anyone else...

So here's the rub - I'm all for social climbing, ambition & aspiration - hell, I've been doing it all my life - but whatever happened to the raising of standards as you go up in the world. I mean, here we were at one of the city's more expensive Hotels & there were people getting 'round in shorts, t-shirts, baseball cap & thongs - dressed more for the beachside pub than the Sheraton &, as mentioned, behaving like the seagulls you'd find in the beer garden there. L-SP & I had dressed 'up' slightly, for the occasion, but soon discovered we needn't have bothered, given the standards on display... And for god's sake, take your damn stupid cap off when you're indoors!!!!!!

Okay, so Australia prides itself on being egalitarian & 'classless' to a degree & I applaud that attitude to an extent... but whatever happened to the idea of being better, or at least seeming to be??? Or even just the notion that you put a little effort into your appearance if you're going somewhere a few pricepoints above the local RSL Club (in fact, I even dress smartly to visit the Club!). Just because we're a classless society, doesn't mean classlessness is acceptable...

... Or is it? Is this just another outdated aspect of my anachronism?
waitingman: (World Cow)
Or living the dream... Either way, I'm not sure where I am any more, as, according to some people on the internet (so it MUST be true!!)... Australia doesn't exist

Neither does Finland, apparently - along with various parts of Germany & Brazil

Could somebody please build a rocket ship, fly up above this flat earth & see if I really am standing in Australia or not?? It's easy to spot - it's the place that goes (from right-to-left) beach... mountains... nothing... nothing... BIG ROCK!... nothing... nothing... beach
waitingman: (Orang-Utan)
Well, that all just flew by, really - especially the last 10 days or so... Told you the regular posting would tail off by the end of the month. Doesn't feel like it's been more than a week though

January 26th is Australia Day. It's the middle of Summer & the middle of a heatwave too. Those of you who know what a typical Summer in Australia is like, may shudder at the thought of a heatwave ramping up the heat'n'humidity we normally get... It's been "Hot enough to boil a monkey's bum, Your Majesty". so, of course, everyone either hosts, or goes to a barbecue

Bunnings is a national chain of hardware stores. One of the good things about them is they help local community groups & charities to raise money, by having a 'Sausage Sizzle' outside their stores on weekends & public holidays. $2.50 gets you a sausage on 2 slices of bread, with optional onions & your choice of sauce if it's BBQ or tomato. If you're lucky, you can even get mustard. A friend of ours is riding in the 'Tour De Cure' in March & needed to raise enough money to help pay for support teams, accommodation, spare tyres, wheels, lycra shorts etc... & was doing so by having 3 or 4 Sizzles at various Bunnings locations. We agreed to help out at one of them &, as no good deed goes unpunished, our number came up for the Australia Day one down in the far south of Sydney (We live on the Northern Beaches - so it's quite a hike!). We thought it would be a quiet one, as it was a public holiday, the middle of Summer & school holidays... surely everyone would be at a beach somewhere, or in a pool, or just unwilling to get in the car & drive to a hardware store. I know I would have been one of those three things

Wrong!! We turned up at 9am, with extra drink stock, met up with our friend & his Dad, then it was on with the aprons & onto the front counter for Long-Suffering Partner & onto the gas barbecue for me. And it was like that pretty much all day 'til 4pm - there was an incredible amount of people who seem to think that a day off is the ideal chance to start that project at home you've been meaning to get 'round to for months, but need some esoteric power tool & sundry attachments to complete. Not that you'll complete it in one day... Maybe by next Australia Day... But everybody wanted a Charity Sausage - either to fortify themselves before they plunged into the store, or to recover once they'd emerged. Some did both

Our friend did at least 2 more supply runs, cleaning out the nearest supermarket's bread shelf as fast as they could re-stock it &, by the end of our day, we had maybe half a bag of sausages & one loaf of bread left over... as well as a box full of money!!

Collapsing back into the car & heading home, we soon noticed that everything in the car smelled like sausages & onions, but realised it was just us - clothes, skin, hair. The cats thought we were a walking, talking dinner when we got home... they loved the smell, but were annoyed that we both took thorough showers before getting their (chicken) dinners ready. So, a little karma earned & a tick on the wish-list... but I don't think either of us will want to even look at a sausage for a while, much less have them for dinner

Next post - we join 60,000 people in a giant stadium. In the middle of Summer. In a heatwave.
waitingman: (Australia)
Australia - First thing most people think of is kangaroos hopping down the streets of Sydney. Right?

But this never happens. Sydney is a modern, busy, thriving metropolis, with major highways, high-rise living & nowhere for kangaroos to live, except in zoos. Right?

Wrong!!

Okay, so it was a wallaby, not a kangaroo, but let's not quibble. The only way this could have been a more 'Australian' thing, is if the wallaby had been eating a vegemite sandwich & had a six-pack of Victoria Bitter in its pouch (Not even kangaroos will drink Fosters)

Meanwhile, on the streets of Canberra, the Nation's Capital...

The Urban Roo

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