on 25-01-2015 04:38 PM
A reminder of the debt that Australia has, while Labor can bury their heads and deny it exists the fact remains we have a huge problem with debt and sooner than later the chips will fall, no business, no state and no country can keep operating in the red, eventually those we own the money to will own us. Who will own us?
The state of Qld has debt of $80 billion dollars, Labor are saying they don’t think it’s that bad, Bill Shorten on Australia’s debt, there is no debt crisis, there is a crisis and we are in this situation because of Labor, no one else and the bottom line is Labor can’t fix this problem, their speciality is creating debt not fixing debt.

Solved! Go to Solution.
on 25-02-2015 05:28 PM
Gosh! I almost feel sorry for some people ![]()
it is a top rating show, so I guess a large percentage of the population have a warped sense of humour, better than not having one at all imo ![]()
on 25-02-2015 05:29 PM
on 25-02-2015 05:49 PM
It's just over the head of a few.
Might be good iviewing after the extreme hearings we've had this week.
Lucky for me, I'm the boss and it's my choice what we watch or listen to.
Some good comedy will go down well tomorrow.
on 25-02-2015 05:53 PM
on 25-02-2015 08:21 PM
@myoclon1cjerk wrote:
Well,if they don't get it,there's always Big Bang Theory on the other channel. Boom tish.
It's not a matter of "not getting it'. More a matter of finding it stupid.
Some ppl find stupid funny, fair enough.
on 25-02-2015 11:34 PM
on 26-02-2015 08:23 AM
Ahhh ! Scabby, the beloved mascot for Labor
on 26-02-2015 09:13 AM
on 26-02-2015 09:24 AM
Nah, just your beloved Labor mascot.
on 26-02-2015 12:19 PM
There are three possible replacements for Tony Abbott should he eventually fall. How they are making their case for leadership speaks volumes.
One the one hand there are Scott Morrison and, now making a more subtle pitch, Julie Bishop.
On the other there is Malcolm Turnbull.
Morrison and Bishop are making their respective cases by performing as brilliantly as they can as Ministers in the Abbott Government. In doing so, they also maximise the Abbott Government’s chances of survival. Their self-promotion is at the same time loyal - both to their leader and their party.
Turnbull, in contrast, makes his own case not by performing well but behaving badly - by sniping and sneering at Abbott in a clear attempt to tear him down. In doing so, he minimises the Abbott Government’s chances of survival. His self-promotion is disloyal - both to his leader and his party.
Turnbull’s false and offensive insinuation that Abbott is forgetting the children and is being too aggressive is portrayed by journalists of the Left as the true measure of the sentiment of most Liberal MPs.
In fact, if Turnbull were leader, I suspect most Liberal MPs would chafe at Turnbull’s support of a Leftist bureaucracy that has gone to war against them and one of their greatest achievements in government to date - and one of Morrison’s, too.
Liberal MPs should consider well that contrast.
Do they want as their next leader a man who, like Rudd, would seek to destroy their own in a bid to grab power? Who sides with the Liberals’ natural enemies?
Or do they choose instead a colleague who has performed best in the service of the government, and discomfited its foes?
The answer is becoming more obvious by the day. Time is the friend of Morrison and Bishop, and I expect Turnbull to step up his destabilisation of Abbott as he realises that, too