Mike

4.5K posts

Mike

Mike

@Mal78Cho

Cricket, geo-politics, ME history

Katılım Mayıs 2011
663 Takip Edilen50 Takipçiler
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@Michael89529595 Keep doing tour ‘own research’ or start your own paper - ‘obsessed with the left’
English
0
0
0
35
Michael Barclay (nom de plume)
Michael Barclay (nom de plume)@Michael89529595·
Grace Tame is now a 'journalist' for Crikey. That tells you everything you need to know about Crikey.
English
41
41
437
5.4K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@aimeeterese Aimee naively thinks the white man really cared about Indigenous people instead of just building their own empire for resource extraction and more land. How stupid can you get?
English
0
0
0
146
Aimee Terese
Aimee Terese@aimeeterese·
No, the white man federated this great nation, because when they got here the indigenous didn’t have a single fucking building on the entire landmass. They were ridiculously backward primitive peoples with shockingly low IQ’s and a tendency toward cannibalism. Their lives were uncivilised and brutally violent. They were conquered, having been totally unable to govern or defend their territory. Pretending we did something wrong by bringing them into modernity is fucking ridiculous. Next.
Angela@AngieCrid

@ScaleyRick @aimeeterese No one is disputing Australia is a sovereign nation. It is also true that Worimi people are custodians of their lands, with an unbroken connection spanning thousands of years. This is recognised by State and Federal govenments and the Australian system of law.

English
18
48
539
10.9K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@sloth_fren Sloth is now also an expert in migration economics (reading the largest number) as well as the rise of Nazism. Keep doing your own research champ
English
0
0
0
20
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@DrewPavlou At least he grew up You have a long way to go
English
0
0
0
140
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@mark16pg Too difficult for your rigid and bigotted mind to understand such business incentives. Stick to race politics and poor numeracy - your bread and butter
English
0
0
0
12
mark pg
mark pg@mark16pg·
How is it fair that PNG new NRL players get tax-free money? Isn't this a huge disadvantage to all other NRL clubs struggling to sign players. I'm sure at some stage this will be tested in court.
English
3
2
18
492
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@DrewPavlou Watch out everyone Drew is angling for an anti anti-semitism gig? He has focused his razor sharp mind and ability to distill complex issues into a Wikipedia paragraph. He is so underrated
English
0
0
3
407
Ryan Dally
Ryan Dally@Ryandally08·
#BREAKING Liberal MP, Andrew Hastie, who informed on Ben Roberts Smith says he deals with the fallout from it by “marrying really well” “Family is what matters to me” Apparently the Military brotherhood doesn’t.
English
235
86
466
41.2K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@JimThom90458694 Unless you studied law and practiced as a barrister don’t pretend you understand what a war crime is
English
0
0
0
5
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@Paul__Templeton History start 1788 and ends 1950s. Selective nostalgia - a very common condition these days
English
0
0
1
3
Paul Templeton
Paul Templeton@Paul__Templeton·
A lot of people are getting upset by these posts, so let me be very clear. This is not about Left versus Right. This is about two completely different philosophical positions that cannot coexist: * One side believes the state is sovereign and can redefine the nation, its identity, and its people at will. * The other side believes the state exists to serve the historic Australian people under the original constitutional compact. These are not political disagreements. They are fundamentally incompatible views of reality. Only one of these philosophies can ultimately prevail. The state has spent decades pushing its version without ever asking the Australian people for their consent. That’s why the tension is growing. This isn’t about “left-wing” or “right-wing.” This is about whether Australia still belongs to its own people — or whether the managerial state now owns the nation. There is no middle ground between these two positions.
English
79
131
532
7.5K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@DrewPavlou Bro is wit his ear mate and still thinking about ‘the Left’. Hitler lived pets too bro.
English
0
0
0
67
Dingleberry888
Dingleberry888@Dingleberry888·
@Jane02822979 @ExposingNV @HumanSoTired 2009 he and his wife established the IDF Training gym in Melb. 2019 charged 2 counts unlawfull assualt and 1 count of breach AVO, pled guilty. 2022 denied entry to NZ due to criminal background. Yep he a good fit for PHON.
English
1
0
5
162
Vaxatious Litigant 💉⚖️👨‍⚖️
Avi Yemini has plans to register a new political party in Victoria: the “Free Palestine Party” The strategy? Exploit Vic’s group voting ticket system by directing preferences to OneNation, while relying on the party name itself to mislead pro-Palestine voters into backing it…
English
257
276
964
203.6K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@DrewPavlou ‘Undoubtedly’ is doing a lot of work here Drew
English
0
0
0
44
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
Australia allowed Chinese People's Liberation Army veterans to participate in ANZAC Day ceremonies on April 25 - some of these PLA veterans would have undoubtedly participated in the massacre at Tiananmen We are a cucked nation
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet mediaDrew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet media
English
81
110
647
22.1K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@Dani_Blek @DrewPavlou Dani calls himself a nomad but then has a crack at the original nomads who migrated to a country he migrated to. Can’t make this level of self awareness up.
English
0
0
2
189
Dani Blekman
Dani Blekman@Dani_Blek·
@DrewPavlou Turks will deflect responsibility for the atrocities they committed for centuries and still commit today, until their last breath. The question should be, why are there Turks in Australia to begin with?
English
4
2
20
1.4K
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
Why was there a ''Turkish veterans'' contingent at ANZAC Day in Melbourne? They literally killed Australian soldiers while carrying out massive genocides against Armenians, Assyrians, Greeks, Christians
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet media
English
230
162
1.7K
90.5K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@MyStep60669153 @DrewPavlou You do know the Anzacs invaded Turkey right? What should they have done - stepped aside?
English
3
0
242
4.2K
Chris Para
Chris Para@MyStep60669153·
@DrewPavlou I am so glad you say this, Drew. Not many do. The Turks killed the ANZACs. Where are the apologies and compensation for the Ottoman Empire's killings, oppression, and Christian slavery—which the ANZACs tried to break at Gallipoli? And they still occupy illegally a part of Cyprus.
English
193
3
45
188.2K
Scalito
Scalito@Legally_Italian·
@mehdirhasan @Danielsrotaryo1 LMAO. Of all the things to criticize Israel over, here we have this Pakistani Muslim, who moved to America ten years ago, complaining that Indian Jews don’t belong in Israel. Can we apply your standard to America, you pedophile-worshiping inbred fuck?
English
9
5
97
2.3K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@Bryan_APDS Mate, he has forgotten more than you’ll ever know. He’ll run rings around you even when he is drunk. Plus collect the rent you owe him champ.
English
1
0
0
20
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@realRick_AUS Rationalising guilt through fantasy - very grown up of you! If we didn’t do it, someone else would have!
English
0
0
0
7
BroBro🇦🇺🏇🏻
BroBro🇦🇺🏇🏻@realRick_AUS·
People think if the British empire didn’t conquer Australia, Indigenous Australians would still all be telling their dream time stories around a fire. Fact is, They would’ve been wiped out by Chinese or French without hesitation. Something the left can’t understand.
English
205
244
3.9K
54.4K
Mike
Mike@Mal78Cho·
@DrewPavlou This is investigative journalism at its best! They should be getting pissed at a pub instead! Deport them now
English
0
0
0
36
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
A Chinese night club in Melbourne is hosting a special Chinese rave night to mark ANZAC Day. I cannot even begin to fathom this level of disrespect - this is a day where Australia honours and marks its war dead. Imagine carrying on like this as a foreigner in another country. If an Australian acted like this in China on their most important sacred national day, China would immediately deport them. And they would be right to do it. Nobody should act like this as a guest in another country. We simply demand a basic level of respect, a basic level of reciprocity. Don't come to our country and spit on us.
English
245
172
1.1K
53.6K
reasonablextremist
reasonablextremist@reasonable8888·
@DoctorLemma If the mother had actually bothered looking she would have found him. One child dead by a train the other missing. Most likely departed ON a train. Find out which trains went where during the time he would have been able to board a train. Start looking THERE.
English
5
0
1
2K
Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
In 1986, a five-year-old boy in India fell asleep on a bench at a train station while waiting for his older brother to come back. His brother never returned. The boy wandered onto an empty train carriage, thinking his brother might be inside. He fell asleep again. When he woke up, the doors were locked and the train was moving. It didn’t stop for nearly two days. When it finally did, he was in Kolkata, nearly 1,500 kilometres from home. He was too young to know his surname, couldn’t read, and had no idea what his hometown was called. He survived alone on the streets for weeks, sleeping under station benches and scavenging scraps of food, before eventually being taken to an orphanage and declared a lost child. No one could trace where he came from. He was adopted by a couple from Tasmania, Australia, who gave him a loving home and a new life. His name became Saroo Brierley. He grew up on the other side of the world. But he never forgot. He held onto fragments: the image of a bridge near a train station, a water tower, a neighbourhood layout, the faces of his family. In his mid-twenties, he discovered Google Earth. He calculated the rough distance the train could have covered based on how long he remembered being on it, drew a circle on a map around Kolkata, and began searching along every railway line within that radius. Some weeks he spent 30 hours scanning satellite images of towns across central India, looking for landmarks that matched his childhood memories. His family in Australia didn’t even know. They thought he was just browsing the internet. In 2011, after years of searching, he found it. A water tower. A bridge. A ravine past a station. It was a neighbourhood called Ganesh Talai in the city of Khandwa. He zoomed in and recognised the streets he had walked as a small boy. He flew to India and walked through the town until he found his family’s home. The door was chained shut and he feared the worst. Then people came out. One of them led him to a woman down the road. It was his mother. She had never stopped looking for him. After 25 years, they were standing in front of each other. What he didn’t know until that moment was that his brother Guddu, the one he’d been waiting for at the station that night, had been struck and killed by a train. His mother had spent 25 years searching for both sons. She learned what happened to one. She never stopped praying for the other. His story became the book “A Long Way Home” and was adapted into the film “Lion,” which received six Academy Award nominations.
Dr. Lemma tweet media
English
513
6.1K
60K
3.2M