Sam Ellioττ

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Sam Ellioττ

Sam Ellioττ

@SamElliotts

Katılım Ekim 2020
509 Takip Edilen219 Takipçiler
Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
@elonmusk Who's driving 5.3m miles in their Tesla to find this out?
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Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
@GadSaad @GadSaad They always say this but never completed the sentence. Number 1 threat to the Australian Government, not Australia.
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Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
Albanese is now voting for One Nation after today...
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
In the face of global instability, this government is acting to protect British interests abroad, and to protect people here from the cost of living.
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Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
2030 Ai Prediction: Men step into trades, women step back into motherhood. Ok Boomer 2.0 are born. Abundance for everyone.
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Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
@PierrePoilievre As a Brit who worked hard for a decade to migrate legally to Australia and finally be a citizen. I have zero interest in allowing in the degenerates that are destroying the UK. Yeah, Nah mate.
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Jim Chalmers MP
Jim Chalmers MP@JEChalmers·
BREAKING: New numbers show the strongest growth in our economy in almost three years. The Australian economy grew 0.8% in the December quarter, to be 2.6% higher through the year - this growth is much stronger, broader and very welcome. This is faster growth than any major advanced economy. Economic growth is picking up, business investment is strengthening, more than 1.2 million jobs have been created, unemployment is low, and participation is at near record highs, but we know there are big challenges too.
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Self Storage Ventures | Kevin
Self Storage Ventures | Kevin@Storage_Venture·
I knew it would happen at some point. Wife found a house she LOVES that is 5 minutes away from us. More land, bigger home. We have a 20 yr mortgage at 2.25% on our current house. Now what…
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Senator Babet
Senator Babet@senatorbabet·
Which party are you voting for at the next election? If your preferred party is not listed, goto the comments and write the name.
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David Pocock
David Pocock@DavidPocock·
I speak often about the crisis in men's violence against women & children in Australia and it's even worse for First Nations women who are 7x more likely to be the victims of intimate partner homicide. So I really welcome today’s release of the first ever dedicated plan to end violence against First Nations women and children. I look forward to seeing the details of the commitment of $218.3 million in new funding for Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations to deliver specialist support services & congratulate @tanya_plibersek for delivering this. abc.net.au/listen/program…
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albert
albert@albert12798·
DID I DO IT RIGHT????
albert tweet mediaalbert tweet mediaalbert tweet mediaalbert tweet media
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UmarAi
UmarAi@Umar__786Ai·
99.9% will fail..!! Tell me the number that is bigger than this..??
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Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
@bowtiedstocks Yes it actually is. Employers are out of touch on cost of living when they expense everything through their business and their staff pay everything after tax. I told my boss $100k is the same as $60k 5 years ago.
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BowTiedStocks
BowTiedStocks@bowtiedstocks·
I’ve got staff putting in business cases saying the market salary for their role has increased 25% since their last pay review 8 months ago Low level junior professional HR role Is Australia’s hyperinflation really that bad ?! Or are people embellishing the truth here…
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
No one pushed harder than me to have the Epstein files released and I’m glad that has finally happened. I had very little correspondence with Epstein and declined repeated invitations to go to his island or fly on his “Lolita Express”, but was well aware that some email correspondence with him could be misinterpreted and used by detractors to smear my name. I don’t care about that, but what I do care about is that we at least attempt to prosecute those who committed serious crimes with Epstein, especially regarding heinous exploitation of underage girls.
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DogeDesigner
DogeDesigner@cb_doge·
Elon Musk has always told the truth about his interactions with Jeffrey Epstein. In a 2019 interview, Elon said, “He tried repeatedly to get me to visit his island. I declined.” More recently, responding to misleading headlines on 𝕏, he posted, “Epstein tried to get me to go to his island and I REFUSED.” The DOJ release of the Epstein files contains zero evidence that Elon ever visited the island. Over 150,000 photos were released, and none include him. There are no flight logs, no visual proof, and no witnesses placing him there. In fact, a December 2012 email from the files further supports that Elon made it clear to Epstein that he did not want to visit the island, effectively turning down the invitation. The facts are clear. Epstein invited many powerful people. Elon Musk was one of them. He refused the invitation. He never visited the island. Legacy media continues to bend the truth to smear him. They keep repeating false narratives to push an agenda. Shame on them.
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Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
@aus_pill Got my citizenship on Friday. Out of 48 people, 14 were Kiwis, 9 were from the UK including me. This was a regional area, cities most likely very different.
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auspill
auspill@aus_pill·
The real invasion 😭🇦🇺
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Sam Ellioττ
Sam Ellioττ@SamElliotts·
@ArmstrongEcon Taxing unrealised gains proves money is not real therefore you cannot be asked to pay for what does not exist, Your Honour.
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Jacinta Nampijinpa
Jacinta Nampijinpa@JNampijinpa·
STATEMENT: Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill 2026 Yesterday evening, I was intending to vote NO to the government’s Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill 2026. I was waiting in the alcove outside the Senate chamber for the call on the final vote on the legislation, but there was an issue with the system upon which we rely. I was deeply disappointed to miss the opportunity to vote against the bill. It was a miserable end to two days of dealing with Labor’s rushed and reckless legislation. However, I am determined to continue to call out Anthony Albanese for the appalling way in which he rammed this shocking bill through the parliament without proper consideration or scrutiny, and for forcing ill-considered laws on the Australian people. My Coalition colleagues did their best, despite the time constraints, to improve the government’s shocking legislation. I admire and commend them for their efforts. At the very least, visa cancellation has been strengthened, and it will be easier to list and ban hate groups. But I could not, in good faith, support this legislation. The restriction on firearms is a distraction-by-design. Labor is only seeking to be tough on gun laws because it’s utterly weak in confronting the root causes of antisemitism – in particular, radical left protesters and Islamist extremists. The legislation unfairly targets law-abiding citizens who use firearms for work or recreation. What really needs to be addressed is stopping jihadists from accessing guns, legally or illegally. The legislation contains a flawed hate crime definition that is incredibly broad in scope. I’m concerned it could be weaponised. And I’m worried about the unforeseen consequences of this legislation and its ramifications for free speech. And there is no sunset clause – a safeguard that would time limit any damage from poorly conceived legislation. I have been contacted by many Australians of Jewish faith who had issues with all aspects of the Albanese government’s Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill 2026. They noted that the legislation failed to address the root causes of antisemitism and believed it would fail to combat antisemitism. Labor’s spin doctors are working overtime to portray the Coalition as weak for its response to this ill-considered and ineffective legislation. But I’ll tell you what is truly weak: a government that, for more than 800 days, lacked the moral clarity and political leadership to come down hard on the perpetrators of antisemitism. It’s scandalous that, despite so many crimes being committed, there have been so few arrests and so few visas cancelled. The problem isn’t so much that existing laws are insufficient, rather, the problem is that existing laws haven’t been enforced. The plague of antisemitism afflicting our nation is one that the Albanese government not only failed to stop, but also allowed to spread due to its inaction and moral confusion. Two questions linger in my mind: Why did the government rush to pass this legislation instead of taking the time to get it right? And given that rush, what is the government trying to hide? My view throughout this process is that, leveraging off the Bondi tragedy and using the justification of combatting antisemitism, the politically expedient Anthony Albanese has sought to ram through legislation to curtail and control speech because he wants to shut down debate on key policy issues, like mass immigration. This comes as no surprise. It’s exactly what we have come to expect from this Prime Minister. Since coming to power, we’ve seen the Albanese government’s socialist inclinations play out. It’s a government that mistakes control for governing well. A government that favours a state-directed economy over a free-market economy. And a government that prefers having power over citizens – who are dependent on the state – to empowering citizens.
Jacinta Nampijinpa tweet media
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