Paul (Human) 🇦🇺🇺🇸 🇺🇦

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Paul (Human) 🇦🇺🇺🇸 🇺🇦

Paul (Human) 🇦🇺🇺🇸 🇺🇦

@Ptyrrell

Tesla… car, bot, battery, solar, ai, fsd, dojo, event, storage. Retweets and likes are not endorsements.

Melbourne, Victoria Bergabung Ocak 2020
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Paul (Human) 🇦🇺🇺🇸 🇺🇦
It’s interesting all the talk about the earnings call for $TSLA In my list of catalysts the deliveries are not included, however I think they are extremely important for momentum and Wall streets confidence in Tesla. Model Y Compact will open TAM, Will at a minimum double demand maybe 3x to 4x. Ending $7,500 credit creates a massive moat for Tesla, it’s super bullish as every other EV in US is now retreating. And dumb hybrids may finally be bonked. Earnings matters. Catalysts that will step change $TSLA 1. Model Y Compact ~ $30k 2. V14 released wide 3. Supervisors removed 4. Ramp Robotaxi 5. Cybercab released into the wild 6. Unsupervised FSD released to drivers 7. Optimus v3 update with launch dates 8. First Optimus sales 9. Model Q deliveries All the above get us to $2,000 a share. Each is worth $150 a share within 3-6 months.
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Senator Gerard Rennick
Senator Gerard Rennick@S_GerardRennick·
Pauline Hanson, leader of One Nation, has reignited debate over foreign property ownership in Australia. She proposes a full ban on non-citizens buying homes, with some versions suggesting current foreign owners may be required to sell within a set timeframe or face government
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Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺@PaulineHansonOz·
Early voting for the Farrer by-election begins next week and One Nation are asking for your support in electing our candidate, David Farley. What's interesting in this by-election are the corflute signs that are popping up across the electorate. The Greens have erected the following signs, appealing to the Indian community in Punjabi. The Greens ignore the vital need to use English for those who want to call Australia home. English is critical for economic, social and practical survival, especially during elections where debate and policies help voters form a view on who is best suited to lead a community or region. Remember, the Greens stand for open borders, mass migration and further division in this country.
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Alexandra Marshall
Alexandra Marshall@ellymelly·
The CFMEU and its behaviour is the reason we can't afford to build anything. The unions are responsible for holding this nation back and destroying private sector competition - all while propping up the Labor Party. It's a disgrace that nothing has been done to reform this thuggish mess.
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Jayde "Hector" Herrick🇦🇺 🏏
We need a 30% haircut across all government sectors. It is not required we have some many glaringly obvious issues to fix and they would be an easy fix. By doing this we could turn our budget around and be in surplus. That doesn’t even include taxing and using our resources properly. I could turn around our economy, budget and our fiscal responsibility to our people in 6-12 months
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Restore Australia 🇦🇺
Restore Australia 🇦🇺@RestoreAussies·
There is a reason why we have a highly unproductive economy. The anchor of public sector employment and expenditure is dragging us down and holding us back from our potential. There is no need for 2,600,000 government funded employees, and for the 2024–25 financial year, the total cash wages and salaries for Australian public sector workers reached $249.5 billion (Australian Bureau of Statistics). Add in a $50 billion NDIS on top of this waste and you have a $300 billion black hole of wasteful public spending per annum.
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Lozzy B 🇦🇺𝕏@TruthFairy131

Public Sector Workers Australia is beyond a joke 😡

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🇦🇺Craig Tindale
🇦🇺Craig Tindale@ctindale·
342 workers hold the supply of 2% of global energy hostage , energy used in the production of fertilisers , herbicides and pesticides around the world , while we have a global famine heading our way .
Stephen Stapczynski@SStapczynski

Australian union votes in favor of strikes at a big LNG export plant 🇦🇺⚠️ Workers could begin strikes after May 15 at the Ichthys export plant, which provided ~2% of global supply last year The timing isn't great. Global LNG supply is tightening due to the Hormuz closure

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mark pg
mark pg@mark16pg·
If you clamped down on rorters in NDIS with a 20-year jail sentence, massive fines, and sell their assets as the proceed of crime, I'm sure it would stop. But because the majority of rorters are immigrants ( Labor Voters), they won't go there. Labor will blame participants.
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Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺@PaulineHansonOz·
Australia should be the richest country in the world. We should be completely self-reliant, not dependent on other countries. One Nation has been warning about losing our sovereignty for 30 years. It’s time to retake Australia and make sure it’s run for the benefit of Australians first.
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Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺@PaulineHansonOz·
I’m very sure the Australian soldiers who went ashore on that beach at Gallipoli in 1915 had little idea they were writing one of the most definitive chapters in the history of their young nation.   Although we had already been a country in our own right for a few years, it’s arguable Australia came of age on that very first Anzac Day.   Australians were a different breed in those days. In the early days of the Great War, many young men rushed to volunteer for king and country. They had little idea of the suffering and deprivation that lay ahead of them, but even when they experienced it they fought bravely and they fought well for years before that terrible conflict came to a close.   And they wrote a legacy which we still commemorate to this day. That’s an important point: Anzac Day is not a celebration. It’s a solemn commemoration; for me and many Australians, it’s the most important on our calendar.   I believe that as a nation we’ve lost some of the national spirit embodied by those young soldiers at Gallipoli, and embodied by all Australians who have served in uniform since the first Anzac Day.   Do many younger Australians today understand the significance of the sacrifices we commemorate? I don’t know, but what I am sure of is that many young Australians today have been taught the very existence of their country is a crime, an injustice, and something to be ashamed of.   It’s hardly a view that’s going to encourage someone to put on a uniform and serve. It’s not a view to which anyone would sacrifice something meaningful like their liberty or their life.   Fortunately it’s not a universal view. I’ve met many veterans of recent service. Some are carrying on family traditions of service; others are forging new traditions. That spirit I spoke of still defines them, and above all it’s this spirit which we acknowledge on Anzac Day.   I’m a proud Australian and proud to commemorate Anzac Day. I’m always proud of the national spirit which defines the service and sacrifice of our veterans past and present, but I’m worried it’s slipping though our fingers.   I believe that makes Anzac Day supremely important today: a solemn reminder that when the world was at its worst, the best of our country stood up united and defined what it means to be Australian.
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TRUE BLUE
TRUE BLUE@GregoryBenzmc·
We are lead by a Godless man, who loved the terrorist Yasser Arafat, who has been antisemetic his whole life, who has no practical understanding of anything at all, except how to be a puppet and a gutless weakling. He is a politician focussed on his own CV.
Paul (Human) 🇦🇺🇺🇸 🇺🇦@Ptyrrell

@senatorbabet Wong We are a communist country. Led by an atheist.

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Gerard Rennick
Gerard Rennick@RennickGBR·
Lest we forget. “On July 21, 1942, Japanese troops landed in the Gona-Buna area in PNG. They were met by Australia’s 39th Battalion, which was made up of untrained and untested troops who were initially deployed to PNG merely to assist with the building of an airstrip at Dobodura. These Australian soldiers were forced into a series of short, but critical engagements with the advancing Japanese troops, and they were pushed along the Kokoda Track. Throughout the next two months, the Australian units withdrew down the Kokoda Track and were joined by the 2/27th Battalion. They made further stands against the Japanese at Eora Creek, Templeton’s Crossing, Efogi, Mission Ridge and Ioribaiwa. During those gruelling days, Papuan men were employed as carriers and played a vital role in the battle. These courageous men carried supplies forward to the troops and ferried the increasing numbers of wounded and sick back to safety. They were affectionately known as the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels and became an icon of the track. Finally, by September 16, after more Australian troops had come from Port Moresby to assist, the Japanese were exhausted and were ordered to retreat. On 2nd of November, 1942, the Kokoda Village was finally retaken by the Aussie troops but they had one more tough battle to fight at Oivi-Gorari, where the Japanese were determined to make a final stand. By November 18, the Australians reached the Kumusi River, and the battle for the Kokoda Track was finally won! More than 600 Australians were killed and some 1,680 were wounded in what some believe was the most significant battle fought by Australians during World War II.”
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Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
Jihadist barbarian flares replaced with ANZAC fire at the Sydney Opera House. We are slowly taking back Australia. Gina Rinehart did a beautiful thing for the nation by funding this.
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Old Soldier
Old Soldier@OMGTheMess·
Am I the only one not defrauding the NDIS?
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Matt Barrie
Matt Barrie@matt_barrie·
10% of australias businesses are NDIS
ManDownUnder🐭@ManDownUnder76

@MadsMelbourne $2 mil in Fraud each for those 2500. And that's just the ones they have found. The 2500 represent <1% of the total provider count, and I doubt the Fraud is restricted to <1%.

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Old Soldier
Old Soldier@OMGTheMess·
Remember We STILL have no answers on the government travel fraud.
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that stock chick
that stock chick@ausstockchick·
Banks are quietly increasing interest rates. Westpac yesterday hiked its fixed home loan interest rates for the second time in three weeks. #ausbiz #auspol
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