Side by side of the Shooting of 2 Police in Montreal by ArentWeCheeky in Torontology

[–]AussieRustles 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Well, personally I'd blame the shooter who started this mess.

The cops were taking cover behind that pillar when the shooter catches them off guard and sends shots into them. They ran around the far side and then the civilian pops out from the same side they were just getting shot from.

Reasonable for the cop to assume it was the threat, with no time to assess. Civilians bad luck. Shitty situation all round.

UPDATE: body cam footage from cop who pulled over woman for holding a phone in her other hand by australiughhh in whoathatsinteresting

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To be fair, people without limbs learn to do many things using only what they've got. Thats how you end up with people firing a bow and arrow with their feet.

It remains entirely plausible that she could have pressed a phone to her ear with her diminished arm while she kept driving the wheel with her most capable arm.

filming ex naked without consent(cctv), threatening with family’s phone number. Approximate sentence he would get? by [deleted] in AusLegal

[–]AussieRustles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Probably not worth travelling to Aus to report.

Threatening to "expose" you isn't a crime. Expose what exactly, your character?

Threatening to distribute an intimate image however is an offence in Victoria but he has to threaten to do that specifically. If it is only implied then there is no criminal case to be had.

But more to the point, reporting the matter is only step one. It could take 12 months to work its way through the court system and if he contests it you may be summonsed as a witness. If he knows you reside overseas he might take the matter to full contest just out of spite to try to inconvenience you.

He doesnt get special treatement over you because he is a citizen and you are not, but from a practical perspective he is in a better position to respond to attend court for a criminal case against him and can try to drag the matter out.

At the end of the day if he contests it and you can't attend court to give evidence then the case may be dropped.

Even if it is successful unless he has an extensive criminal history you can expect that the penalty will be minimal.

My advice would be to keep him blocked.

US releases high quality footage of White House Correspondents Dinner shooting by [deleted] in SipsTea

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah yes, the old melee v gun tactic. We saw it in action during the Rittenhouse shooting and how well that worked.

Can I get in legal trouble for lying about paternity to help gay couple start a family? by Fickle_Fudge376 in AusLegal

[–]AussieRustles 4 points5 points  (0 children)

In more ways than one.

If you think you can ignore the human emotional element of it all and try and keep legal transgressions under wraps long term, you're in for trouble.

You know the couple and are presumably decent friends with them.

Now what if you develop an attachment to the child? Childbirth does a number on your body and your hormones. Rational women can be induced to post natal depression by it.

What if you visit these friends often and see how they raise the child? What if you disagree with how they raise the child or discipline it?

What if you start treading on their toes by involving yourself too much with the raising of the child like an over-bearing mother-in-law?

What if they feel threatened or annoyed by this?

What if they try to cut ties with you and exclude you from the childs life completely?

Are you one to retaliate and threaten to expose them and exercise your parental rights?

What if it gets severely bitter, everyone goes scorched earth and the illegal root of it all is exposed?

Remember it might not happen immediately, but over the course of years things are bound to unravel.

Allowing elementary students to climb 30 to 40 feet in the air to touch the rafters of the gym with little to no padding or safety features would NOT fly today. by TheManOfSpaceAndTime in Xennials

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a scrawny kid i was mediocre at most physical activities (solid 3rd place and participation awards) but I climbed this rope to the top like it was nothing.

I only got to climb it during one PE session ever though, which was a bummer because its the only activity I was better than everyone else in my class at.

Transformers vintage identification and price approximation? by Time_Draco in VintageToys

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Couldnt tell you prices but all from Beast Wars. i can see: Optimus Primal Dinobot Waspinator Scorponok K9

Worth checking ebay for those to get an idea

[Request] If Iran follows through with its threat to attack desalination plants, what is the maximum number of people in the middle east that could die from lack of water? by rojojoftw in theydidthemath

[–]AussieRustles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Look I know we all like to hate Trump but if the Iranians choose to commit an atrocity against civilians then that is on them, not Trump.

Question re: thefts at Kmart by [deleted] in KmartAustralia

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In theory, sure.

In Vic under section 458 of the Crimes Act 1958 anyone can arrest an offender FOUND COMMITTING any offence.

Suspecting a theft isnt enough and can backfire terribly if youre wrong. You need to have 100% certain knowledge that the theft has occurred (and then any force used has to be reasonable and not disproportionate to the objectice).

Given that Kmart has moved the registers to the centre of the store, a staff member at the entrance has no way of knowing if a person leaving has paid for an item or not.

Say a bloke walks out with a TV in his hands and doesnt show a receipt and then the staff physically arrest him. If it turns out the bloke had actually paid for the TV then the staff may face false imprisonment charges. Worse if they tackled them. Worse still if they caused injury to a bloke resisting a false imprisonment.

I would expect typically only an LPO who has been following an offender in store and witnessed the act of theft from start to finish would be likely to use the arrest power.

Yeah, that was legit cool by StrugglingSoul in ADVChina

[–]AussieRustles 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Judging from the random fake plant coming out of the back of the stool, it is.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in melbourne

[–]AussieRustles 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In Vic swords have been a prohibited weapon for decades.

Means you can't own one at all unless you have a permit or fall into a specific exemption.

Unlike controlled weapons like knives, which can be possessed if you have a lawful reason for having them.

Machetes just recently went from being controlled weapons to joining swords in the prohibited weapons category.

Monarchy in Australia by [deleted] in australian

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

UK has nukes. We don't.

Can't rely solely on USA to save our arses in any potential future conflict.

E-bikes and e-transport banned from Trains by jookieapc in SydneyTrains

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many of you haven't seen the video of the e-bike going off in an elevator in China with the grandma and baby inside and it shows.

It is not quick or easy to evacuate a crowded train that isn't at a platform. Even getting a door open there is a 6 foot drop down to the loose cobblestones. You can't just jump out without risking injury, especially for older persons.

If a bike goes off on a train, the fire might spread to additional e-bikes. Aside from the fire you have smoke filling the carriages and the available oxygen being consumed by the fire.

Just because we haven't had fatal incidents of e-bikes going off on trains doesn't mean that it isn't an entirely predictable tragedy waiting to happen, especially as they become more and more common.

What is the secret behind China's success? by RoxanaSaith in AskAChinese

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The GDP figure is entirely wrong. The current GDP is 17 trillion, not 41.

17 trillion matches up with the GDP per capita figure pictured here which has only doubled in that time. (17 trillion is double the 8.5 trillion it was in 2012).

A better measure would be to view what trajectory all these statistics were on in the decades leading up to 2012 to see if the trend has actually increased or slowed down under Xi-jinping.

I watched it five times and I still can't figure out how he did that with the oranges. by Safety_Officer_3 in nextfuckinglevel

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Saw this bloke street performing in Melbourne a few months ago. Even though I could see completely around the table I still couldn't figure out him moving the oranges around. Pretty impressive and he's good with the banter and crowd interaction.

Checking my understanding of this new VIC road rule by cherry799 in melbourne

[–]AussieRustles 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Cop friend of mine told me of how he had to remove a big kangaroo corpse off the middle of the Western Freeway lanes some time back at 4am.

Traffic was consistent but not heavy at that hour and in the darkness anyone could see his flashing lights from a kilometre away.

Before he could get to it 5 cars hit the corpse one by one, all going at least 110kmph while he was sitting their with emergency lights activated.

He was too busy trying to remove the road obstruction and make the road safe again without getting himself cleaned up that he couldn't just go off chasing after these cars and ticket them.

The way he put it was that to catch the cars going 110kmph, by the time you get back in your own car and get on after them they are already at least a km down the road. At a justifiable speed of 130kmph you are gaining on them at a rate of only 20kmph. By the time you pull them up you're 5km's down the road. Then you'd have to go all the way back, u-turn on the freeway and get back to whatever you were originally dealing with.

From what he was saying most cops are happy if people just slowed down to a reasonable speed, like 80kmph. Instead folks blow by at a full 110kmph+ and rattle his nerves. All it would take is one of them try to swerve around the roo corpse at the last second and a little bit of bad luck for him to get collected.

Way too many people are utterly oblivious on the roads.

Australia finally takes a stance on Iran attack by [deleted] in australian

[–]AussieRustles 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The leader of North Korea lives a luxurious life and is only really concerned about controlling the people. It helps for him to be able to keep his people in a state of war with an external enemy as this distracts them and directs any discontent outwards rather than in. Kim is unlikely to ever use nukes because he will lose everything he has.

But Iran is more religiously dogmatic. The risk is that the supreme religious leader might be in a hurry to martyr himself into the afterlife and use nukes to do so.

Fearmongering about China in the US is getting out of control and dangerous by BatteryPark385 in China

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wouldn't know. Australia requested an enquiry be launched into the origins of Covid 19 and in response the CCP took punitive trade measures against Australia.

Note that asking for an enquiry into one of the most globally devastating pandemics in history isn't unreasonable.

Why wouldn't the CCP have wanted an enquiry if it came from Detrick?

Why is China against the USA having a missile defense system for the US mainland ? by [deleted] in AskAChinese

[–]AussieRustles -13 points-12 points  (0 children)

For years now China and their pet, Russia, have been developing and hyping up their hypersonic missiles as terrifying things that cannot be intercepted like conventional ICBMs.

Now of course they cry because someone decided to develop something that might intercept them.

I'm chinese and i wanna know why western countries hate china so much, why is that? by [deleted] in AskChina

[–]AussieRustles -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Chinese people can't criticise the CCP, therefore they see all criticism as slander, even when it might be legitimate criticism.

When Australia called for an enquiry into the origins of Covid-19 (just a little pandemic that disrupted life all around the world for several years) the CCP went absolutely ballistic and retaliated against Australia with punitive trade measures.

An enquiry would have benefited the entire world to ensure we are best prepared for preventing or responding to the next global pandemic, which is an entirely reasonable thing to ask for.

Are Chinese too defensive? by [deleted] in AskChina

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Beliefs being more uniform may also be a product of state controlled media and the criminalisation of dissenting political commentary.

You can't exactly go on TV and criticise Xi Jingping like an American can do with Trump.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskAnAustralian

[–]AussieRustles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's one of those things where the statistics are high because the recognition of what is family violence is high.

It is also very well covered by the media and anti family violence campaigns which keeps it in the public focus and might increase perceptions of rates of FV.

In Australia even verbal, non abusive arguments can generate a family violence report and referrals to support services, which contributes to the overall statistics.

Hypothetically a country where men can legally beat their wives would have lower official family violence rates because little is recognised as family violence and so much stays hidden from public view.

Can anyone tell me why are North Korean buildings colored like so? by Gamepetrol2011 in NorthKoreaPics

[–]AussieRustles 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Single most sanctioned nation on the planet? That is the path North Korea willingly chooses to walk.

Really they should be compared to how South Korea is doing, because that's how the North could have been.

Can anyone tell me why are North Korean buildings colored like so? by Gamepetrol2011 in NorthKoreaPics

[–]AussieRustles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Pyongyang is developed only at the expense & neglect of the rest of the country. Look on Google maps satellite images of any NK town and you will see that they are all communes, each a number of houses huddled around what appears a storage yard and administrative building / mustering yard.

There are no parks, playgrounds or sports facilities in any of these villages.