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20.01.2022 Fun and sexy for when you are feeling fun and flirty....



18.01.2022 The Greens said they will vote against the stimulus package. Labor will vote with the LNP. It will go through but the Greens are selfish scumbags. Source: PML SKYThe Greens said they will vote against the stimulus package. Labor will vote with the LNP. It will go through but the Greens are selfish scumbags. Source: PML SKY

17.01.2022 Pretty key rings...funky cosmetic cases and the amazing 11 piece makeup brush set.....Need Want Luv

17.01.2022 There's more to Queensland than that south-east corner. The KAP has called for the Palaszczuk Labor Government to move towards decentralising its Brisbane-based... public service. The move away from the public Brisbane behemoth would reduce red tape, stimulate regional economies and help mitigate the divide between the capital and the rest of the state, KAP Leader Robbie Katter has said. Mr Katter said the process was long over-due and would be key to the future of a prosperous Queensland. According to Queensland public service workforce statistics from 2019, more than 53 per cent of state’s government jobs are based in the south-east corner (including Brisbane, Toowoomba and the Gold and Sunshine Coasts). An incredible 45,864 (almost 20 per cent) full-time equivalent jobs are located in the Brisbane CBD area, representing the huge number of desk jobs as opposed to frontline workers needed to service the large critical mass of people in the area that could be located to the regions. It is the KAP’s position that we should be seeing these government departments moving out to the regions, and the process of centralisation that has crept up on us for decades needs to stop," Mr Katter said. We are now calling on the Palaszczuk Labor Government to start working towards this. A major virtue would be that having the departments, or sections of the departments, in the regions would mean the public will deal directly with people who are embedded in their area and who know local issues firsthand, Mr Katter said. Untold problems are caused when government decision-making gets lumped on some bureaucrat located thousands of kilometres away, and this is one way to address that. This situation is why you always get so much backlash from places like North Queensland where decisions are often made against them in the negative, because they feel removed from the government processes around topics that directly impact them. The KAP is advocating for an incremental process of decentralisation, and in the first instance is calling for sections of the mining, agriculture and fisheries departments to be relocated to places like Mount Isa/Mackay, Townsville and Cairns respectively. The key point to acknowledge is what we are calling for has been happening gradually in the reverse for many years; for example, years ago the Department of Mines ceased its operations in Mount Isa, Mr Katter said. This has happened time and time again across rural and regional Queensland to the point we have an extremely centralised and I would argue at times, very out-of-touch, public sector that is designing Queensland’s future with little to no understanding of life outside of the south-east corner. I am repeatedly told of the frustration felt by constituents when they call up government hotlines to enquire about something, and the person on the end of the phone hasn’t even heard of the place they are calling from. The Premier now needs to defend why she wouldn’t do this. #KAP #KAPteam #Australia #Queensland #government #jobs #decentralisation



14.01.2022 Let’s not forget this d#ckhead, pledging $500m to the United Nations and increasing refugee intake? Has this moron not seen the state of our people? Poverty eve...rywhere and what does he do? Bring in more people to feed and throw away a half billion dollars to a criminal one world government. Source: https://www.smh.com.au//bill-shorten-pledges-500-million-t

09.01.2022 Coronavirus Australia: Tony Abbott calls on MPs and mandarins to share recession pain Former prime minister Tony Abbott calls on MPs and top bureaucrats to tak...e a pay cut. (AAP Image/Joel Carrett) NO ARCHIVING Former prime minister Tony Abbott calls on MPs and top bureaucrats to take a pay cut. (AAP Image/Joel Carrett) NO ARCHIVING EXCLUSIVE RICHARD FERGUSON 11:54AM JULY 16, 2020226 Former prime minister Tony Abbott has called on MPs and top bureaucrats to share the pain of the COVID-19 recession and take a temporary 20 per cent pay cut. In a series of podcast interviews with the Institute of Public Affairs and an opinion article in The Australian, Mr Abbott has spoken about the need to better define the nation’s values in a post-coronavirus Australia. The former Liberal leader told IPA director John Roskam the federal government should start by following New Zealand’s lead and cut the pay of public servants and politicians earning above $150,000. One of the most grating phrases of this whole pandemic has been we’re all in this together because frankly, we haven’t been in it together, he said. We have a private sector calamity happening. And again, as much as I respect the professionalism of the public service, no public servant has lost his or her job, no public servant has had his or her pay cut. I’m not normally a big fan of the New Zealand Prime Minister (Jacinda Ardern) but as I understand it, members of parliament and senior public servants in New Zealand have taken a 20 per cent pay cut for six months. READ MORE:Now is a good time to reassess what it means for us to be Australian|Big cities our big losers|Victoria records 317 new virus cases|Contact tracing teams swamped as count surges In this instance, following Jacinda Ardern in temporarily reducing the salaries of MPs and, say, public servants earning over $150,000 a year would be a sensible thing to do. Scott Morrison has frozen the pay of MPs and bureaucrats in the fallout of the pandemic, but has refused several calls to slash public pay packets. Mr Abbott writes in The Australian that the nation’s post-pandemic recovery will be held back if it cannot have more open debates about its values. He highlights the Black Lives Matter protests and left-wing objections to the phrase all lives matter, used by some far-right groups, as a sign of the intolerance of the talking class and the inability of the Australian political system to lead reform. There will be a fierce dispute, of course, about whether it is possible even to have ‘Australian values’, let alone to specify what they are, but that has been part of our recent problem an unwillingness to argue about the things that really matter lest someone, somewhere, be upset, Mr Abbott said.

09.01.2022 Check on those who seem the strongest



06.01.2022 This one by Knight is as good as anything produced by Johannes Leak.

02.01.2022 Thoughts? No prizes for guessing who they were. Hint: Ch-n-s-

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