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Old Koreelah

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Posts posted by Old Koreelah

  1. 13 hours ago, willedoo said:

    On another note, soccer is such a low scoring game that you can duck away from the TV for a minute and miss the only goal in the entire match. I think the difficulty in scoring is what builds the tension. Tension = excitement = fanatical fans.

    Rugby League games have enough violence on the field, so the fans tend to go home peacefully. Soccer games build up so much frustration that, on their way home, fans sometimes trash the town.

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  2. 5 hours ago, Jerry_Atrick said:

    It's called indoctrination - aka brainwashing...

     

    I remember the first time I went to a local college basketball game in Bismarck, BD. I struggled to contain my laughter when they all stood up and put their hands on ther hearts…

    We once had a pair of German exchange students who had a similar reaction to our school’s Monday morning ritual of playing the National Anthem (a ceremony imposed on us around the time of Howard’s enthusiastic embrace of Bush’s disastrous Iraq War.)

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  3. 1 hour ago, willedoo said:

    There's a lot of unrealised potential out there. Unfortunately sometimes life gets in the way.
    …But to pay the bills, he has spent most of his life welding, fitting and turning.

    A common story, Willedoo. Maybe when his kids leave the nest he can pursue his real life passion.

     

    I knew a bloke who taught himself to build Baroque keyboard instruments.

    After spending time sneaking close-up inspections of historic spinets and harpsicords in museums across Europe, he came home and built a couple of his own, in his dad’s woolshed. Later, a few if us helped him build a proper workshop and his reputation spread.
    His instruments are now found all over the world.

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  4. Jerry I agree totally. I usualy switch channels when sport comes on, but women’s teams like soccer and cricket are far more interesting to watch than the men. Real sportsmanship when you see them help a fallen opponent (and our girls have been supportive of all women being paid what they’re worth).

    The teams defeated by our Matildas can go home with their heads held high. 
     

    Another thing: lets stick it to the evil Taliban, who grind down their womenfolk at every opportunity. Australia hosts the Afghan Women’s team, who should be recognised by FIFA.

    https://www.smh.com.au/sport/meet-the-women-who-escaped-the-taliban-and-now-play-for-melbourne-victory-20230608-p5deys.html

     

    https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/afghan-womens-football-team-a-symbol-of-resistance-against-taliban-repression/

     

     

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  5. 7 hours ago, red750 said:

    59-22.thumb.jpg.34d7a46f603dab2e21521c0f62e400df.jpg

    No, Red, we became more open and honest.

    The bloke in shorts does not appeal to me, but I bet he is more honest about his identity.

    Marion Morrison was not the big macho he-man that we see in the movies.
    A persona created to sell more movie tickets.

     

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  6. 20 minutes ago, kgwilson said:

    Absolutely fantasic achievements from some brilliant scientific, engineering and chemical minds but none will be of any use when the destruction of our environment occurs from our obsession with endless economic growth and wealth. 

    KG is dead right about addiction to growth. Our leaders are running scared of the masses; a year or so of economic inconvenience could bring down a government. Our lifestyle depends on us borrowing from our children.

     

    Despite Australians being swamped with news about how unsustainably we are living, many are adopting some of the worst ideas from America.

     

    https://www.news.com.au/technology/motoring/on-the-road/stupid-american-trucks-aussies-erupt-as-hated-us-trend-takes-over/news-story/7d27bb85b33782ab28acfd18d29bda2d

     

     

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  7. 9 hours ago, onetrack said:

    And then there's the bottom line that Christianity has spread to almost every corner of the Earth and impacted many societies with its accent on love for your fellow man, and a guideline for acceptable human behaviour, in 12 short Commandments (10 via Moses, and 2 via Jesus Christ).

    Christianity has no monopoly on teaching good behaviour; it could be argued that, compared to many other religions, the Bible’s Ten Commandments are quite deficient in this regard. Most of those ten rules are about a jealous god.

    9 hours ago, onetrack said:

    The part that gets me is the more highly educated people become, the more they appear to totally reject any idea of an omnipotent God existing - yet, just examining a small number of the amazing complexities in human systems, in physics, in Nature in general, indicates to me that Evolution is an extremely poor explanation of how these incredibly complex systems originated and developed.

    That line of reasoning is core to the Intelligent Design philosophy, but contains a monumental flaw.

    Modern life forms sure are incredibly complex and impressive, but why did it take the great creator so long?

    The fossil record shows numerous design dead-ends. We probably find only a tiny fraction of the prototypes that were discarded. In our own species, the great creator made lots of design errors, which modern medicine is still battling to overcome.

     

    By way of comparison, our own humble species took only half a century to develop fragile box kites into supersonic jet planes. A couple of decades to go from room-sized computers to iPhones. 
     

    Many doubters seem to have no idea of the unimaginably long time frame over which life has been evolving. The mechanisms are mostly understood. Indeed, science is often surprised at how quickly life forms evolve to cope with changing environments.

     

    Evolution has not been a steady, gradual progression towards more complex species; life on Earth has been all but wiped out a number of times. Life has bounced back, evolving fast enough to rebuild whole new classes of life forms in just a few million years.

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  8. In the 70s my wife’s family moved to a new subdivision that contained a drive-in theatre. Before trees grew up to cut the view, the kids could watch all sorts of very explicit stuff happening a few streets away. 
     

    In a slight change of character, the place has been replaced by a Bible-Belt church. It went from showing soft porn to supression of human instincts.

     

     

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  9. Bluddy Murphy! The bugger has been running my life lately.

    Every time I start work on my plane (maintenance and some improvements) something torpedoes my deadline.

    I had hoped to get it ready for OME’s event in May, but no luck.


    Last week my dodgy knee got attacked by a big lump of firewood.

    That cost me a week.

     

    Back working at the airport, but the plurry epoxy resin won’t set properly!
    Spent up large on a heat gun; even that won’t set the resin.

    Maybe the scales are reading wrong.
    Ripped it apart, did another job using volume measurements. Lots more heat. Setting like rubber.
    Rang the manufacturer. One of their workers had added the wrong component to a big mix. They thought they had traced all of that faulty batch. 

    That’s another week lost.

    They’re sending me a replacement, but it will take another week.

     

    I sure hope businesses appreciate the good staff they have, because there’s no shortage of dunderheads!
     

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  10. How do we stop government decision-maker, elected or public service, from being bribed by the cashed-up army of lobbyists who are given freedom to roam the halls of power? 

     

    Perhaps they should have their personal finances (and even those of their close family members) subject to investigation for at least a decade after they leave office. The Feds could promise to guarantee their privacy, just like they do with little people like me.

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  11. Fascinating to see such a huge, torquey engine driving cheesecutter tyres.

     

    This Merlin installation was found at Narromine one year; every time he started the engine, people came running.

     

     

    image.png

  12. 56 minutes ago, old man emu said:

    Yes free BUT, you have to complete the course of study within a reasonable timeframe, eg three years for an Arts or basic Science degree. If you don't meet the schedule, you can complete what you had not, but you pay for those parts. Once completed to overdue work, then you can jump back on the scheduled service. That even allows for part-time study.

    Menzies saw the value of a well-educated nation, but recent governments only see the cost; Australia is already suffering the cost of public education being neglected.


    image.thumb.jpeg.f1f116956d70d62adec8d3b3c6f3c3e3.jpeg

     

    56 minutes ago, old man emu said:

    And I would like to see the emphasis taken off obtaining a university degree. We should be exalting the gaining of qualifications to carry out useful functions in Society. I reckon that if high schools turned their attention towards things practical, the problems that we are trying to help our young people with would diminish. 

    I agree 1,000%!

     

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