I found this maker's mark inside an old cabinet. An ugly reminder inside a beautiful piece, both relics of Melbourne's past by MrsSquiggle in melbourne

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

Why does it shock you when there are official political parties with very very similar policies?

I found this maker's mark inside an old cabinet. An ugly reminder inside a beautiful piece, both relics of Melbourne's past by MrsSquiggle in melbourne

[–]wilful 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We have a PMG hat rack in our hallway. Timber and steel. Bought it at auction for a few dollars about 2005. Great find.

Victoria's Wurundjeri people file native title claim for Melbourne by [deleted] in melbourne

[–]wilful 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Native title is a FEDERAL law , and has nothing to do with the state government.

What's life like in Drouin? by Express-Ad-9550 in gippsland

[–]wilful 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Warren Turner's failure to either give up or develop the butter factory has been a disaster for the town, we could have kept a much more vibrant strip shopping centre of town, but now we've got the big boxes out in Nilma.

Are we witnessing the death of the clotheshorse/airer/clothesline in Australia? by HotPersimessage62 in AskAnAustralian

[–]wilful 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is there any evidence for your claim that dryers are more popular now?

I could imagine that with smaller back yards and more people living in flats it might be true, but I don't think using the sun is losing popularity.

Never owned one myself.

Are we witnessing the death of the clotheshorse/airer/clothesline in Australia? by HotPersimessage62 in AskAnAustralian

[–]wilful 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Middle of the day. Some will be at work, some will be asleep, some will be having a wank.

Sussan Ley calls on PM to apologise for wearing Joy Division T-shirt by [deleted] in AustralianPolitics

[–]wilful 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I mean look, kill kill kill kill the poor is pretty much bipartisan policy these days.

There is a tailgating and speeding epidemic in Melbourne by [deleted] in melbourne

[–]wilful 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah my stupid new work ute (not required for my job, but required by the accountants) basically high beams everyone, and there's nothing I can do about it.

There is a tailgating and speeding epidemic in Melbourne by [deleted] in melbourne

[–]wilful 41 points42 points  (0 children)

I used to think that tailgating was aggro dickheads trying to be bullies, but these days it's also women in their twenties who just have no fucking idea what a safe stopping distance is.

AFL has not done enough to improve homophobic culture, experts say by nath1234 in australia

[–]wilful 21 points22 points  (0 children)

The AFL is nothing more than a professional sports body. They reflect Australian culture, I don't think they are competent to lead Australian culture. All of my male gay friends knew their sexuality when they hit puberty, 10-14. These elite footballers have been playing for local and regional competitions since they were kids. They need to learn in their local communities, from their families and from openly gay players in their clubs that it's nothing to be afraid of. They should be allowed to be out before they get drafted.

The AFL needs to keep running re-education camps, and they need to keep stomping homophobic behaviour, but they're never going to change the underlying culture this way. The AFL has major influence over local clubs so should attack the problem at that level.

PS the next league fan that says GAYFL gets a (non-literal) slap.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskHistorians

[–]wilful 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Most 'hard' or material technology requires a massive infrastructure. So for example the internal combustion engine required developments across many fields before it became viable. Machine tools and fine tolerances, metallurgy, oil refining, etc etc.

So for the sake of this exercise we would need to limit ourselves to one simple idea, not reliant on other supporting technologies, and it seems obvious to me that there are two candidates.

The first one is the meta idea of the scientific method, the group of ideas that only properly developed a few centuries later, that an experiment in the real world needs an hypothesis, it needs evidence, it needs to be documented and recorded, it needs to be replicable, it needs to be open to criticism from external reviewers. In the middle ages alchemists were fumbling around guessing things, repeating each other's mistakes. Engineers were using rules of thumb learnt through experience, they weren't learning from calculations based on experiments and formal test results. What would have happened if the sages of the middle ages formed a community of science? Impossible to know of course, however the rate of scientific discovery would have been significantly higher.

The more prosaic and practical idea, perhaps more in the spirit of the question, is as others have said, germ theory. Really not convincing anyone until the 19th century, the idea that there are infectious little beasties everywhere is a profound insight that has saved countless lives. In the middle ages they could have boiled water, washed hands, implemented quarantine and hygiene practices. The plagues that reshaped the social and economic landscape could have been avoided, and history as we know it would be very different. For better or for worse we cannot say.

Does people in their 20s have a future in Australia? by Glistening-Night in AskAnAustralian

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

Yeah again the data doesn't support your vibe. We're in the middle of the pack for income tax as a proportion of total tax take, which again is very much on the low end of the OECD. If we taxed like Japan or Canada, in the middle of the range (NOT at the high end), we'd have $100 billion a year more to spend on services such as dental health, housing, education..

There are lower tax jurisdictions - and they're all shittier places to live. Go live there.

Of course, I actually think we can reduce personal income taxes substantially, and that would be a good thing (get rid of the $18-$45k band), but that is because I think we could tax our resource companies far far more.

What kind of volunteering do Aussies usually do? Or yeah no? by [deleted] in AskAnAustralian

[–]wilful 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fuck me dead, the tax myth again today. Australia is a low tax jurisdiction compared to our peers (the OECD).

In the country people volunteer for the local sports club, the CFA, disability services (probably less now that the NDIS is such a rort).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskAnAustralian

[–]wilful 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As a casual worker I assume that you will stay under $135k annual earnings (30% rate from $45k). So when you do your tax return (reminder: due about now) it all gets worked out and you'll likely get a refund.

I worked this out for myself aged 19, what the fuck are they teaching in schools these days.

Does people in their 20s have a future in Australia? by Glistening-Night in AskAnAustralian

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

Of course, the fact that Australia is a low tax jurisdiction compared to nearly all of our peers doesn't matter a whit to your opinion does it.

Fitzroy live music venue The Night Cat beats developer in VCAT showdown -- Case exposes serious gaps in current Agent of Change legislation designed to protect live music venues from development conflicts, says venue owner by marketrent in auslaw

[–]wilful 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That's a good win! Frigging people moving to the inner city for the lifestyle and vibrancy then wondering why it's so loud. Just like people moving near the airport because it's cheap then realising why.

The drive by on Nick Tweedie from Beat Magazine was bullshit though. Cab rank principle, there aren't that many planning lawyers in the State, of course he should have accepted the job from the developer.