arbilp3

joined 2 months ago
[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 3 points 5 days ago (7 children)

CF, please look at Zagorath's comment. Also, do some research and you'll find that these words and variations thereof have been used by Israelis as well for their purposes.

Palestinian use is about becoming free of oppression and genocide. Israeli use is about taking as much as they can from whoever they can with biblical justification which is more than questionable. Your slogan is plain provocation to violence and execution of a particular religious group.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 3 points 5 days ago

Zagorath, succinctly expressed. Thank you.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 6 points 6 days ago (9 children)

So why are you using it?

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

I am sorry you and so many others will be impacted.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 11 points 6 days ago (22 children)

Kudos to you, students 🩷

This whole situation is just ludicrous. We should all be wearing t-shirts with euphemisms like "From the puddle to the pond", "From the sink to the bathtub", "From the creek to the brine", "From the jug to the lake" (can you think of others?). See if they arrest us all.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 2 points 6 days ago (5 children)

Yeh, next to working class suburbs and the Blue Mts National Park. There were other choices (from memory). Kingsford Smith Airport (Sydney Internaitional airport) flightpaths don't operate 24/7. The curfew is from 11pm to 6am.

Can you imagine what it would be like to have the noise of planes every hour of every day? No curfew. Noise insulation grants will be available for some residents but nevertheless, it will result in health problems in vulnerable populations and will spoil the tranquil beauty of the BM Nat Park

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 1 points 6 days ago (7 children)

Many people living in the densely-populated areas around the airport and in the Blue Mountains would not be having a fun-run. They are going to be subjected to overhead noise 24/7. That is nothing fun or worth celebrating.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 11 points 6 days ago

Had a similar action happened at a Jewish event, the assailant would have been immediately arrested. Our authorities give lip-service to community cohesion but on the ground some communities 'are more equal than others'. We also need to call out how AI is being used to stir up social conflict wherever we see it.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 2 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

You're right. Thank you for that perspective.

Perhaps a lawful decapitation would be one like the bombing of Hitler's bunker, where the head of the state is leading annexation and occupation with no reason other than the desire to expand, and approving war crimes. Some further comment:

https://www.theguardian.com/law/2026/mar/02/legality-us-israel-attacks-iran-uk

https://verfassungsblog.de/the-unwillingness-to-call-this-illegal-is-a-terrible-mistake/

War, in my view, is an abysmal evil.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 2 points 1 week ago

One positive is that the research is now in the open so it will be easier to monitor the flow of money. However, how it will be turned around to become fairer is not clear. At least knowing it allows conservation and other environment organisations to keep asking questions and demanding change.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 12 points 1 week ago (2 children)

No matter what euphemism is given to our action in the Gulf, we are taking sides. We're taking the side of those who attacked and decapitated a sovereign nation unlawfully. Our actions will result in deaths, directly or indirectly, of many unarmed civilians because we are freeing up US/Israel aircraft to keep carpet bombing Iran. Same as sending F35 parts to Israel to be used on civilian Palestinians.

We are now (unofficially) taking part in the Middle East War which some are already calling the start of WW3. Australian government, you are making this nation a future target without our consent.

[–] arbilp3@aussie.zone 2 points 1 week ago

Or as Iran knows the war brought by the Epstein Coalition.

 

With the state of the world getting more challenging it is inevitable that food prices will continue to grow. Let that also be a challenge for you to grow some of your own food. It is possible, even if you don't have much space or money.

 

Policy changes introduced and maintained under Abbott's leadership [PM from Sep 2013 to Sep 2015] played a central role in driving that growth. The rate of growth in overseas student numbers from 2013 to 2019 is extraordinary (an increase of over 200,000 in just six years). These understandably fell during COVID and then increased even more rapidly after COVID due to further measures to accelerate the return of students implemented by the Morrison Government. These measures included unrestricted student visa work rights, fee-free applications, and a covid visa, which attracted huge numbers of students to switch to this cheap visa with unrestricted work rights and no requirement to study. The new Albanese Government was slow to tighten these policies.

 

For the first time, important Koala habitat corridors throughout Greater Sydney have been mapped... [It is] a cost-effective opportunity that allows Sydney’s critical Koala populations and other threatened species to persist amidst growing threats from development. https://www.tec.org.au/greater_sydney_koala_green_belts_corridors_of_survival

This is really positive news and needs to be done for all Australian cities. Wildlife corridors help animals survive through the ability to move, not caught in bush 'islands' where they are endangered by threats like fire and lack of food with nowhere to go.

 

This imposing bird has become rare because of loss of habitat. Last year it won Birdlife's Bird of the Year voting competition. Here's a little video but there's plenty more if you're interested. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ePEdJaD9KE&t=21s

 

There is growing momentum that the insanely generous capital gains tax discount needs to change.

Recent Parliamentary Budget Office figures show that more than 80% of the discount goes to the top 10% of income earners and if that was not bad enough almost 60% goes to the top 1% (those who earn more than $362,900).

That’s $13 billion a year going just to the top one percenters...

The Government needs to answer... Who should pay more tax on their extra income, those on the lowest wages, or those with the most? It’s over to you Prime Minister.

https://thepoint.com.au/opinions/260302-the-simple-question-at-the-heart-of-the-capital-gains-tax-debate-why-do-should-pay-more-tax-minimum-wage-workers-or-wealthy-investors

 
 

While we're on the topic of bees, let's see what is happening with honeybees (European bees) and the implications for big sectors of our cropping industry and our economy.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by arbilp3@aussie.zone to c/environment@aussie.zone
 

After Sammirr's great post on their bee hotel, here's some easy instructions on how to build bee accommodation. There's lots of videos on YouTube so you can get different ideas and become better informed. Some bee hotels, using bamboo stalks, are a fun project to do with children. https://www.aussiebee.com.au/bee-hotel-building-tips.html

Australia has close to two thousand species of bee. Some form hives but many are solitary. Some nest in a wall. Some nest in the ground.

 

This article is a visual feast. Even if you don't read it, the images shown will inspire you. Had to share it. Apologies if I'm putting up too many posts.

 

So, when someone is called a bush rat, we now know it's a compliment.

>Why are native rats so important?

Australia is home to about 50 living species of rats that have adapted to its environments over thousands if not millions of years.

These rats often perform essential roles in nature...

"We know them to be really good pollinators, especially of our banksias...," "They're good at moving seeds and eating seeds ... they're really good dispersers of fungi spores, the mushrooms that are so key to our ecosystems...

Bush rats have been shown to keep black rats from reinvading places the native species is re-established.

Black rats often like to nest in homes and eat your food, but bush rats prefer to avoid developed places.

"[Bush rats] tend to live in these dense, complex, vegetated, native bushlands," Ms Wauchope said.

Boosting bush rat numbers can also help feed native predators — like goannas, owls and snakes.

Without bush rats these predators sometimes will eat poisoned black rats and then die themselves.

 

I am truly worried that we will get caught up in yet another overseas war.

 

A chronic welfare crisis... has been unfolding quietly since the 1990s. The root cause? Rampant habitat loss and the relentless expansion of the blue gum plantation industry.

With their native forests destroyed, koalas are forced to seek shelter in blue gum plantations—a dangerous and temporary refuge. When harvesting begins, koalas risk being injured or killed as the trees they rely on are cut down. Those that survive are left homeless, with nowhere safe to go.

The landscape has now reached a tipping point. It simply can no longer support the koalas that depend on it.

Starving, emaciated koalas are falling from trees, being brought into care—many too far gone to be saved. And for those that survive, there is no safe habitat left to return to.

This travesty has been hidden behind closed doors for far too long. A comprehensive and transparent investigation is long overdue.

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