hitmyspot
We had some bugs that we didn’t have room on the table for. We kept them for supper and I mixed some dill, cucumber, spring onion and mayo with some Dijon mustard, lemon juice and seasoning for delicious open sandwiches, in a Swedish Aussie mix.
I think it’s going to depend on if he’s just about deregulation. The over regulation was causing problems. Inflation is still ridiculous. The priority is to stabilize and allow trade internally and internationally.
I think it’s more a political gamble at this point. For instance, winding back trial periods from 3 months to 8 months will only affect a small sunset of workers, so it’s not a huge economic risk, but it might give businesses more certainty to hire. So it’s not completely loopy, but if it’s all deregulation and no plan, with no future, better regulation, it’ll become more of a banana Republic.
Just a heads up that liftoff no longer works as it has not had necessary upgrades to be co patibke with 0.19
It is now end of life unless the dev returns. There have been no updates for a few months.
Do that have obligations not to. What I mean, is that for doctors, psychs, dentists etc there is an obligation of privacy. Do pharmacists not have that? Do corporate healthcare providers not have that? If they do, have they just created billions in damaging lawsuits?
It could be her bowing out as they fired her Co star for voicing support for Palestine. It was called anti semitic but from what I’ve seen it wasn’t.
It could also be that Ortega has made supportive comments and prefers to walk than be pushed. Or was pushed, but has better PR.
Timing is certainly odd.
To be fair, she was already doing well from TV, and scream was a big win, but Wednesday made her a household name. If it really was scheduling, it still makes sense. The timing of the announcement makes that super unlikely.
Not necessarily. The passport office is publicly owned and we pay some of the highest fees for passports.
The nbn is publicly owned but seeks to make a profit.
Anything that is government owned is paid for by us all anyway, through taxes. That’s not necessarily a bad thing. But, when things are more expensive to use, but not used by all, it’s fairer. However for essential service, spreading the cost by how much people can afford is also good.
It’s not a case of public good, private badz but there is nuance and pros and cons.
Privatizing infrastructure is not necessarily a bad thing. Competition in telecoms is a net benefit to society. However, there needs to be minimum service standards.
For instance, with telephones, there was redundancy for electric failure. However with nbn there isn’t. It’s especially a problem where you have outages like Optus where someone might rely on them for phone, internet and mobile service, in face being incentivised to do so. At least with mobile, there is redundancy of 000 calls through any network. We should look at how we can do similar. For instance, in the event of an Internet outage, a code could be entered into eftpos terminals to accept offline payments for 24 hours or similar. Sure, there is a higher risk of fraud for this period, but that’s better than no commerce.