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Dreamworld owner Ardent Leisure set for board shake down

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-13/dreamworld-owner-ardent-leisure-set-for-board-spill/8615218

Interesting note:

"Ariadne approached Ardent in March requesting board positions for Dr Wiess and Mr Seymour, which Ardent made public in May when it also revealed it was considering either selling Dreamworld or turning it over to housing to stem losses."

&

"The move comes just days after former chief executive Deborah Thomas agreed to leave the company, with a $731,000 exit payment."
 
REBEL won, of course - now to judgement, please bankrupt the trash mag, they are likely close to dying anyway.
Why do people pay for the trash when you can get all the trash you want free online???
 
Highly flammable crap killed too many poor victims.

NO EXCUSE for anything flammable anywhere near big high rise buildings, idiots covered a building in flame starters.
WTF

GO REBEL
All that trash is connected - bankrupt them all, please Judge:)
 
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Mum Natasha Elcock told how she saved her family — by running a bath and flooding the floors http://thesun.uk/60188mdz2

On the 11th floor and stuck right in the middle, wow, clever - and now I will remember this forever
 
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-...ire-repulsive-bigoted-comments-autism/8640328

I have to say I agree with Pauline. Autistic children, and I am assuming she means the ones down the lower functioning end of the spectrum, with their myriad of problems, are a strain on teacher's resources and time. And the teachers in the mainstream education are not often equipped to handle a child with autism. Therefore it would be better if they were placed in special education where they can get the support they need.
 
Trump babbles in the face of tragedy
By Michael Gerson
Opinion writer
August 12 at 10:17 PM

One of the difficult but primary duties of the modern presidency is to speak for the nation in times of tragedy. A space shuttle explodes. An elementary school is attacked. The twin towers come down in a heap of ash and twisted steel. It falls to the president to express something of the nation’s soul — grief for the lost, sympathy for the suffering, moral clarity in the midst of confusion, confidence in the unknowable purposes of God.

Not every president does this equally well. But none have been incapable. Until Donald Trump.

Trump’s reaction to events in Charlottesville was alternately trite (“come together as one”), infantile (“very, very sad”) and meaningless (“we want to study it”). “There are so many great things happening in our country,” he said, on a day when racial violence took a life.

At one level, this is the natural result of defining authenticity as spontaneity. Trump and his people did not believe the moment worthy of rhetorical craft, worthy of serious thought. The president is confident that his lazy musings are equal to history. They are not. They are babble in the face of tragedy. They are an embarrassment and disservice to the country.

The president’s remarks also represent a failure of historical imagination. The flash point in Charlottesville was the history of the Civil War. Cities around the country are struggling with the carved-stone legacy of past battles and leaders. The oppression and trauma that led to Appomattox did not end there. Ghosts still deploy on these battlefields. And the casualties continue.

But Trump could offer no context for this latest conflict. No inspiring ideals from the author of the Declaration of Independence, who called Charlottesville home. No healing words from the president who was killed by a white supremacist. By his flat, foolish utterance, Trump proved once again that he has no place in the company of these leaders.

Ultimately this was not merely the failure of rhetoric or context, but of moral judgment. The president could not bring himself initially to directly acknowledge the victims or distinguish between the instigators and the dead. He could not focus on the provocations of the side marching under a Nazi flag. Is this because he did not want to repudiate some of his strongest supporters? This would indicate that Trump views loyalty to himself as mitigation for nearly any crime or prejudice. Or is the president truly convinced of the moral equivalence of the sides in Charlottesville? This is to diagnose an ethical sickness for which there is no cure.

There is no denying that Trump has used dehumanization — refugees are “animals,” Mexican migrants are “rapists,” Muslims are threats — as a political tool. And there is no denying that hateful political rhetoric can give permission for prejudice. “It acts as a psychological lubricant,” says David Livingstone Smith, “dissolving our inhibitions and inflaming destructive passions. As such, it empowers us to perform acts that would, under normal circumstances, be unthinkable.”

If great words can heal and inspire, base words can corrupt. Trump has been delivering the poison of prejudice in small but increasing doses. In Charlottesville, the effect became fully evident. And the president had no intention of decisively repudiating his work.

What do we do with a president who is incapable or unwilling to perform his basic duties? What do we do when he is incapable of outrage at outrageous things? What do we do with a president who provides barely veiled cover for the darkest instincts of the human heart? These questions lead to the dead end of political realism — a hopeless recognition of limited options. But the questions intensify.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...7211ba-7fbb-11e7-9d08-b79f191668ed_story.html

These are your people, President Trump
Opinion
By Colbert I. King
August 12 at 7:55 PM

President Trump’s mealy-mouthed mutterings on the terrorism let loose in Charlottesville on Saturday are worthy of the hypocrite and instigator of hate that he has proved himself to be. Trump knows what was at work on those streets and who was behind it. As well he should. They are some of the same forces that helped to put him in the White House.

On hand giving the clan of white nationalists a verbal boost was former Ku Klux Klan leader and preeminent white nationalist David Duke. Just as the bigoted Duke was on hand on election night exclaiming on social media that Trump’s victory was “one of the most exciting nights of my life.” Duke tweeted at the time, “Make no mistake about it, our people have played a HUGE role in electing Trump.”

And Duke’s people — Trump’s people, also — were out in force in Charlottesville with their hate-filled minds, their guns, and a weaponized automobile.

That was your crowd down there in Old Virginia, Donald Trump.

They were speaking your language, vomiting your sentiments, acting out what animates you from within.

Don’t act as though you don’t know them. They believe and expect you are working to “take back America” for them, because you are of them, just as just they know — as do you — that they gave their all for you.

So why are any of us the least bit surprised that Trump’s devoted clan of white nationalists would be so emboldened as to brazenly emulate their klan forbears and take it to the streets? One of their own reached the White House, with their help. It’s enough to make an old Confederate proud, and a present-day white nationalist as arrogant, reckless and dangerous as can be.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/blog...sville-attackers-put-trumps-words-into-action
 
TATTS - SIDE EFFECTS.....Thought they were harmless didn't you

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Royal Prince Alfred doctors warning on tattoos after woman found with lumps caused by 15-year-old ink
A SYDNEY woman feared she had cancer after finding large lumps under her armpit, only for doctors to discover something far weirder.

DOCTORS are warning Aussies to check their tatts in the wake of a disturbing case of a woman who turned up to a Sydney hospital with large lumps under her armpits — which they discovered filled with black ink from her tattoos.

The 30-year-old woman was tested for cancer at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital at first, with doctors suspecting lymphoma, but after a biopsy found black pigment had collected in a cluster of cells.
...............................................................................

How gross...................and also, some pigments found linked to cancer, especially whites used in tatts
 
Time for city planners to get busy, our cities need new protective measures.
Wheel traps if your vehicle tries to mount pedestrian areas, high gutters, spikey art installations, moat like gutters, come on planners get creative and constructive, quickly.

And also put it to car manufacturers to design cars incapable of mounting footpaths.
And maybe it is time for most big cities to become car less?
Only programmed electric non driver transport allowed???
 
Have been concerned about vehicles smashing into buildings for a long time, this never used to happen, now happens every week.
And considering recent tragedies....
DO SOMETHING THIS IS NOW UTTERLY CRAZY.......posts from last year

Every week at least one car smashes somebody's house, usually more than one, it is an epidemic, people can't drive & they give them a license anyway.
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'Drunk' van driver wakes shocked residents after crashing into Aubin Grove home

http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/d...ng-into-aubin-grove-home-20161017-gs3tsp.html

1476664783243.jpg

Yep it is a frightening epidemic, @buck07 , 2 or 3 is commone every week - and we don't have a fence, eek.
But we have many trees should be enough buffer.

Clearly there needs too be a scenario in driving tests you must pass to avoid smashing up houses.
I find it weird nobody else is focusing on this problem.

It is long over due......that:
Make getting licenses include, SWERVING TO AVOID HITTING PEOPLE AND BUILDINGS
More drivers and cars on the road, ensure they know how to react in crisis
Around 20 years old, a woman stopped in an intersection she should have given way to a STOP sign, I saw her
OMGing, with her hands in the air, before I flew through the windscreen of the vehicle with right of way.
 
To me, there are several different causes for this kind of accident, going on past observations.

1. Drug impairment - mostly alcohol, I would conjecture

2. Inability to react quickly/decisively/appropriately (excluding point 1 above) - whether experience, familiarity (with the vehicle) or cognitively impaired to some extent

3. Distraction - any source, phone, radio, other occupants, external or even a lack of care (sheer negligence).

People need to understand that their vehicle can easily kill and an appropriate alertness, ability, and responsibility comes with the privilege of driving - NO it's not a right, you're licensed to drive.

Makes news stories like this make my blood run cold: :rage:

Perth truck-driving school busted for handing licenses to unqualified drivers

As part of the investigation, the Department conducted a review of licences obtained by people who went to the Mines West facility to complete their PDA.

It suspended the licence of 678 licence holders, and re-tested 370 of the suspended licence holders.

Disturbingly, 201 applicants failed.

http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/p...s-to-unqualified-drivers-20171102-gzdivv.html

EDIT:
Oh, and swerving to avoid people and buildings is only appropriate if you've been concentrating enough to know where it's save to swerve to. Sometimes swerving is NOT appropriate if it's between hitting a car and a bus-stop full of people. In that instance, hitting the other car is probably the better option, IMHO

And, swerving to miss a kangaroo and 110Km/h can kill you - better to hit the roo - you'll most likely survive.

There was a case locally of a driver whose windscreen was hit by a golf ball. They swerved and rolled the vehicle and subsequently received fatal injuries.
 
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