Haakon
has an accommodating arse
Thats fine. The mongrels are best anywayThey do the same thing as bikes from the dog pound the grubs, anything remotely looking pure goes in seconds.
Thats fine. The mongrels are best anywayThey do the same thing as bikes from the dog pound the grubs, anything remotely looking pure goes in seconds.
So fuck PB’s, go for a mutt with great character.They do the same thing as bikes from the dog pound the grubs, anything remotely looking purebred goes in seconds.
I’m growing accustomed to your face...Thats fine. The mongrels are best anyway
Yes and no. Yes because you get an enormous sense of well being from saving a dog and giving it a second/third chance (parklife!). On the other hand, you had no part in its upbringing so you're left to discover it's interesting personality traits.Best.
Dogs.
Ever.
Not to resell them after they go through a vetting process so that the dogs don't end up in the hands of grubs again.Thats fine. The mongrels are best anyway
The majority are backyard flogs with no idea out for a quick buck. Scum of the earth.I reckon 'breeders' are like bike shop mechanics, there is a lot of them, but only a handful that are actually worth using
Having said that, I have a purebred Kelpie, not so trendy and not so many $$$$ (She's not from working lines)
In all seriousness, I'm concerned that these 'Covid Tax' price trends are actually the first signs of hyper-inflation caused by money printing. This might be more appropriate for the Nerfonomics thread, but we are seeing a very weird disconnect between the basket of goods that economists use to measure inflation and all of the other shit that has basically gone through the roof price-wise in the last 12 months.Inflation is a wonderful thing!
Yeah, you got to do your research, there are associations that won't register arsehole breeders, but they still find ways around it.I reckon 'breeders' are like bike shop mechanics, there is a lot of them, but only a handful that are actually worth using
Having said that, I have a purebred Kelpie, not so trendy and not so many $$$$ (She's not from working lines)
I wonder how much of it was caused from the Govt stimulus package, 132 billion spent on jobkeeper alone.In all seriousness, I'm concerned that these 'Covid Tax' price trends are actually the first signs of hyper-inflation caused by money printing. This might be more appropriate for the Nerfonomics thread, but we are seeing a very weird disconnect between the basket of goods that economists use to measure inflation and all of the other shit that has basically gone through the roof price-wise in the last 12 months.
Indeed. I think they pretty much printed all of that - https://www.theguardian.com/busines...lias-economy-by-extending-quantitative-easingI wonder how much of it was caused from the Govt stimulus package, 132 billion spent on jobkeeper alone.
I don't think it's that bad, more that circa $55 billion that normally wanders overseas on holidays per annum is currently staying put burning a hole in our collective pockets coupled with delays and shortages in literally every supply chain currently in existence = prices go up.In all seriousness, I'm concerned that these 'Covid Tax' price trends are actually the first signs of hyper-inflation caused by money printing. This might be more appropriate for the Nerfonomics thread, but we are seeing a very weird disconnect between the basket of goods that economists use to measure inflation and all of the other shit that has basically gone through the roof price-wise in the last 12 months.
Quote from above article would suggest its not going to turn around any time soon.If you want to get freaked out about something consider why Australia's housing prices are going through the roof when 12% of Australia's housing stock is currently sitting vacant and our population declined last year (for the first time in a century).
He said the RBA would not increase rates until wages growth, which has been less than 3% for almost seven years, was “materially higher than it is currently”.
“This will require significant gains in employment and a return to a tight labour market,” he said. “The board does not expect these conditions to be met until 2024 at the earliest.”
I like sausage dogs. we have had one move in next door and he is a very personable creature.Not to resell them after they go through a vetting process so that the dogs don't end up in the hands of grubs again.
I had a Corgi x Sausage dog as a kid. The only thing we spent money on was worming and feeding him, no diseases or illness of any type. He lived to reach 12 years old and passed away from a dog fight with two other dogs up the road.
Australia needs to encourage investment in local manufacturing again instead of closing up shop and letting it move off shore.I think we probably will see some kind of pressure on the wage stagnation we've had for the last millennia as the immigration tap Governments have had happily turned on full for many years now has been slowed to a drip thanks to COVID. Less workers for jobs means collective bargaining should improve and lead to wages growth.
(in theory)
On a bun?I like sausages. we have had one move in next door and it was a very tasty.
No, he is way too cute. You big meanyOn a bun?
Agree 100% - especially manufacturing. No idea why the former Holden site hasn't been used yet, most of the tooling is still sitting there apparently.Australia needs to encourage investment in local manufacturing again instead of closing up shop and letting it move off shore.
Would hope the Gov would encourage this with incentives for business rather than screwing the worker on wages and rights.
At the end of the day, Aussies working, buying local and paying Tax and not claiming benefits will offset any incentives given to business.
Also make those mining chunts pay tax instead of writing off everything as a loss and raping the Aussie continent of its mineral and resources.