Urban Cruise

1.6K posts

Urban Cruise

Urban Cruise

@UrbanHubbard

Katılım Kasım 2009
28 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler
Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@ZuveleLeschen @TheKouk given your money to people who spend money like drunken sailors does not make you a patriot, it makes you an idiot
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Zuvele
Zuvele@ZuveleLeschen·
@TheKouk Always amazes me. Of course, true patriots pay tax. True patriots realise that that supports the country they love. And if they're not true patriots, then they're welcome to go to another country.
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Stephen Koukoulas
Stephen Koukoulas@TheKouk·
It remains an odd human characteristic that some people would prefer to unnecessarily throw money away & dislocate their lives all to cut their tax obligations by a few dollars. And Australia should not be worried, for everyone leaving, there is a queue of thousands wanting to live here
Adrian Cartland@taxinator

Shocked - but not surprised - at the number of clients who are planning on moving overseas as a consequence of the budget changes to CGT and trust taxation. I am fielding daily calls from HNW clients. And this isn't an emotional outburst: you call your tax lawyer to plan, not to vent. There is going to be a massive capital outflow from Australia.

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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@JT3228440527570 I left years ago, moved my workshop to Thailand leaving just skeleton staff in Aus. I was predominantly exporting Not only has my business thrived, my personal tax situation has improved and my cost of living has dropped to the point where I am 5 times better off in only 5 years
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JT_3
JT_3@JT3228440527570·
“Do you still want to stay”? The word of the day is TAXES (& yes he probably hasn’t covered them all) Crd: Theunfilteredpodcast
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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@tim_blee WTF? They left because the unions broke their back? Had nothing to do with the libs ffs
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tim blee
tim blee@tim_blee·
Hockey predicting mass unemployment. Well, Joe is an expert. He dared Holden to leave, they did, then Ford, then Toyota. He destroyed entire communities in Elizabeth,Geelong, Altona, generations of workers suddenly on the dole. And all the companies supplying parts? Piss off Joe.
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DragonX ⌛☯️
DragonX ⌛☯️@RhodesianAussie·
@AntiFeminismAU Blame the 10s of thousands of beta males married who are on grindr. Footy on the couch, beer guts, piss weak men. Men who have lost their Masculine energy. Your post says alot about your attitude to women. There are many great women out there.
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Anti-Feminism Australia
Anti-Feminism Australia@AntiFeminismAU·
Entitled British woman is upset that Aussie men aren’t chivalrous. “Australian men wouldn’t piss on you if you were on fire.” Keep up the good work Aussie men!
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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
housing bubble? They are basically given homes. Singapores taxes are lower, yet their younger people have programs that put them into the most expensive real estate in the world for next to nothing.
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Chrome Crumpet
Chrome Crumpet@ChromeCrumpet·
Have you ever been to the Philippines? If not, why not? You’re missing out! 😉
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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@endofmarx @YBCTooCold "Hey guys I am going to randomly brag to strangers about what a desirable sex god I am on the internet. Its all true too!"
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2nd Renaissance ☦️
2nd Renaissance ☦️@endofmarx·
@YBCTooCold Not sure which women you know but that sure hasn’t been my life experience. Maybe it’s a “you” issue.
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YBCTooCold
YBCTooCold@YBCTooCold·
The reason women are so picky is that evolution and biology has made them as close to asexual as possible. Women feel 0 attraction for most men not because most men are objectively ugly, but because the amount of estrogen they have makes their sex drive so low that it takes a lot for a guy to incite any feelings of attraction. If they had even 1/10th of the testosterone men had, they would be horny animals and the average man would have no issues getting laid. But the truth about women no one wants to admit is that they’re closer to asexual than they are to heterosexual. They basically have 0 sex drive unless it’s a very specific guy they REALLY find attractive. Women who sleep around a lot do it as an act of leveraging their bodies to obtain some kind of outcome (resources, protection, etc) rather than because they enjoy the act of sex itself. It is not in a woman’s nature to enjoy sex with many different men.
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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@spicy_bagz it would be a massive upgrade to India, and Indians would be fighting to move into their neighborhoods within a decade
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Zero
Zero@spicy_bagz·
reverse this, what if white and black Americans moved to India en mass, became CEOs, started taking over neighborhoods, refused to learn the language, preferentially hiring their friends and family. erected massive Christian churches and statues, would Indians stand for that?
Hugh@HMBrough_

The whole point of being in America is that we don’t do the blood and soil sh*t. There are a ton of Old World countries you have to do that sh*t in. Why can’t we just have one place to be a land of opportunity?

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Post 30
Post 30@Post_Thirty·
10 Nationalities of women I notice are into Indian men the most: 1. Colombian 2. Venezuelan 3. Ukrainian 4. Russian 5. Serbian 6. Filipina 7. Morroccan 8. Egyptian 9. Brazilian 10. Argentinian
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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@AvidCommentator Your mistake is thinking that housing affordability matters more than retaining political power AND ensuring they cozy up to the right WEF power brokers for nice paying role after they exit Australian politics.
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Tarric Brooker aka Avid Commentator 🇦🇺
If the Albanese government can even cut migration to what its own agencies data suggests is viable to end the housing deficit inside this decade, we could be on a path to affordable housing prices and given a long enough timeline affordable rents. Time to push that button.
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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@pushpendrakum Yes but what would India gain with all this knowledge? Why should America deprive India of these wonderful gifts when they dont appreciate it?
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Pushpendra Singh
Pushpendra Singh@pushpendrakum·
If every Indian disappeared from America tomorrow: ✅ Thousands of doctors would be gone ✅ Silicon Valley would lose countless engineers ✅ Major tech companies would lose key leaders ✅ Thousands of businesses and jobs would vanish For just ~1% of the US population, Indian Americans have had an outsized impact on technology, healthcare, entrepreneurship, and innovation. Agree or disagree: Indians are one of America’s most successful immigrant Community
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Urban Cruise
Urban Cruise@UrbanHubbard·
@TobiSkovron There was no point anymore, you just bleed money with endless taxes and red tape. Over 20 years fought to build a business and eventually just had enough. Grown more in the last 5 years than I did in the previous 15. Australia is for holidays to see family now, Im done!
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Tobi Skovron
Tobi Skovron@TobiSkovron·
That is exactly the warning sign people keep ignoring. When a business owner moves operations offshore, it is rarely because they wanted to abandon Australia. It is because the numbers stopped making sense. And the cost is not theoretical. That is 33 Australian jobs gone from one business alone. Less local capability. Less tax paid here. Less training. Less manufacturing knowledge. Less economic resilience. People can argue politics all day, but business owners make decisions from reality. If Australia becomes too expensive, too slow, too regulated or too unpredictable, capital moves. Jobs move. Production moves. Then we end up importing the very work we used to do here. That should concern everyone. Because once those jobs leave, getting them back is a much harder game.
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Tobi Skovron
Tobi Skovron@TobiSkovron·
There is a quiet frustration building across Australia’s business community. Not because people are against paying tax. We pay tax. We employ people. We carry payroll. We absorb rising costs. We sign personal guarantees. We keep going when the spreadsheet says, “maybe don’t.” But when policy starts making risk feel unrewarded, we have a problem. Capital gains are not magic money. In business, they often represent years of pressure, sacrifice, reinvestment, missed weekends, personal exposure and decisions made without a safety net. So when CGT changes are framed as “fairness”, business owners hear something very different. They hear: Take the risk. Build the value. Carry the burden. Then hand over more when it finally works. That does not inspire investment. It does not encourage productivity. It does not make Australia more competitive. It tells the builders, founders and employers of this country to keep running harder while the finish line keeps moving. If we want a stronger economy, we need to reward productive risk - not quietly punish it. Because without people prepared to build, back themselves and employ others, there is no growth story. Just more policy written from the grandstand by people who have never had to take the shot.
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flowersun88
flowersun88@flowersunn88·
“It’s hard to imagine modern Australia without the contributions of our Indian community”
flowersun88 tweet media
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sage.
sage.@sageandsabre·
You know what’s truly terrifying about the current Indian influx to the West? This is only the top 1% of them. The ones that can afford to travel. To migrate. The ones that are supposed to be sophisticated. Imagine the other 99%. It will only get worse.
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O.Horvath
O.Horvath@OHorvath2·
@BrianMcDonaldIE He is neither a virologist not an epidemiologist so he should shut tfup about flu. He probably never heard about Carlo Urbani and SARS from 2002 (was the first cov-1 virus)...
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Brian McDonald
Brian McDonald@BrianMcDonaldIE·
Russian futurologist Sergey Pereslegin says Covid was a critical turning point for humanity, insisting that the pandemic response amounted to a vast social experiment rather than a normal public-health intervention. Pereslegin claims Covid was “a flu like any other,” more serious than the Hong Kong flu but less severe than the Spanish flu, and that previous pandemics never led governments to “shut down the whole world” or confine people to their homes. He says the lockdown era revealed two things: first, that new industries such as remote work had become powerful enough to make mass shutdowns physically possible; and second, that many freedoms associated with the industrial era, including democratic rights and freedom of movement, could be suspended “with one stroke of the pen.”
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