Tim V

233 posts

Tim V

Tim V

@VMagpieTim

Katılım Kasım 2024
4 Takip Edilen4 Takipçiler
Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@rabbitholebot Except your prisons are jammed packed, your country is run by pedophiles, your government poisons your food, spies on you and your police kill your citizens daily. You have school shooting and mass shootings where the people with guns never ever do anything. All talk, no action.
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@JohnSmith28378 @Real_King_Elvis You’ve got a worrying obsession with little boys going on. You’re a grown man. Should be a pedo watchlist by the sounds of it.
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John Smith
John Smith@JohnSmith28378·
@Real_King_Elvis What's predictable/boring are you little boys... Waaah, me wanted big CGI explosions Waaah, the show *suddenly* went woke Waaah, they were making fun of us all along Waaah, I was rooting for the insecure, pathetic, psychotic, murderous rapist Waah, I didn't get the whole premise
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The People's King Elvis
The People's King Elvis@Real_King_Elvis·
The Boys finale has fans straight-up raging, and honestly, I get it. That ending felt weak, safe, and deeply unsatisfying. So let’s be real: Would you have preferred a brutal, scorched-earth alternate ending where Homelander actually wins? Where the bad guy gets everything he wanted and the world burns? What ending did you want to see? Drop your version below. No holding back. How did you want the series to end?
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@AshPolitik You’re the dumbest cunt Alive. Legit your children will be ashamed be associated with you. It’s embarrassing how fucken stupid you are pedo
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Ash
Ash@AshPolitik·
The irony of One Nation supporters existing to rail against the establishment and status quo, yet their backer is an elitist billionaire. Yet, It is Labor who delivers intergenerational game changer budget for young people, workers, and families.
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@DrCraigEmerson @AlboMP Yes the privileged few aka hardworking few, will help the lazy, bottomfeeding few by paying more on their share investments. I know economics is hard for the mentally retarted so plase sit this one our unless youd like me to school you
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Craig Emerson
Craig Emerson@DrCraigEmerson·
Yes, stand firm ⁦@AlboMP⁩ Without these changes the privileged few will lock young working people out of owning their own homes forever - which is exactly what the Liberals and Nationals want. smh.com.au/politics/feder…
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@angelar68197975 Albo delivering 4 home per state isn’t doing a thing. The labor bootlicking is setting young people back 17.4 years. That’s a proven fact.
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angela rubin
angela rubin@angelar68197975·
Labor is helping young people get into their own homes.. He’s heard their despair and unlike LNP Albanese is acting on the hopeless situation many face by encouraging the building of new homes which benefits millennials and investors
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@colonelhogans Little pedo Rick is rattled. Stay calm you little fuckwit. Nobody took you seriously before and nobody takes you seriously now fuckwit
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Rick
Rick@colonelhogans·
Dave Hughes is a first class FUCKWIT. He doesn’t give two fucks about young people buying a home. Just FUCK OFF you knob! “No one is going to want to invest in Australia”. What the Fu.k are you doing”. This insane CGT, which will destroy aspiration and ambition in Australia must be STOPPED. Every Australian must stand up.”
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@AshPolitik Ash your insecurities come across as both deep labor bootlicking and a passion for pedophelia. You’re everything that’s wrong with this country and that needs to be removed for us to move forward
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Ash
Ash@AshPolitik·
One Nation can't run a press conference, let alone a country. Attacking the free press is the first sign of fascism and erosion of Australian freedom and democracy. #auspol #politics #news #Australia #PaulineHanson
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@AshPolitik @Intern07_ Hahahaha “there is no rapid increase”. You’re a legit fucken moron. Wild someone can be so stupid. I’d love to debate you.
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Ash
Ash@AshPolitik·
@Intern07_ There is no rapid increase Governments deficit is not the boogie man here It invests in services, infrastructure and the economy. That gets returned with low unemployment, increased gdp, well being of the community. Aus govt debtvto gdp ratio lowest in the OECD
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Ash
Ash@AshPolitik·
Labor released once in a generation budget. A budget that smashes the status quo A government finally brave to make big change. Despite the frothing derangement of right whinger sphere spewing tears and disinformation Labor leads 54 to 55 vs conservative parties.
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@AshPolitik Brave to make big change? Too cowardly and gutless to tax the gas companies though? Wild you talk about others spewing disinformation when literally all your “stats and facts” are proven wrong under any scrutiny You’re a special type of leftard. Must be that boot you deepthroat
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@PitchsidePub @FansAgainstVAR_ I’m not on the America ruining sports through tech bandwagon (plenty of countries use it). I think the diff is tennis, NFL, cricket etc all have build in breaks naturally for replays and reviews to work. Football & other sports that dont it becomes an atmosphere killer.
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The Pitchside Pub
The Pitchside Pub@PitchsidePub·
@FansAgainstVAR_ Your argument makes no sense. Corporate or not we’re not the only country using replay in our sports. Tennis has automated review. Cricket has replay. It’s everywhere. But the Americanization of replay could actually help you. Our NFL does replay exceptionally well.
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Fans against VAR
Fans against VAR@FansAgainstVAR_·
VAR has been a total unmitigated disaster for football. We could just turn it off. It's not that hard. Why don't we? We have to reclaim our sport from being Americanised dirge.
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PolicyTalk
PolicyTalk@SwingRequired·
@ArrowInvestor As always, the whinging is coming from a very vested interest.
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Arrow Investor
Arrow Investor@ArrowInvestor·
How dumb is this tool. Chalmers asked why are they changing the tax on shares not just property? He says because shares have been under compensated for the past 2 decades. So he will now compensate them by increasing tax on them?
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@Bgee12345 @bowtiedstocks People do deserve to earn that much because they put in the effort. A foreign concept to those who leech of the system without contributing I’m sure. Lazy slobs just need to actually start putting in effort rather than being envious fat cunts.
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BowTiedStocks
BowTiedStocks@bowtiedstocks·
In 2009 Australia’s top marginal tax rate of 45% kicked in at $180k If this had been properly indexed to inflation, today it would kick in around $280k Instead, it hits at $190k This is a dishonest and stealth form of theft We don’t hate these politicians enough !!
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@oliverjanik @RightisRight___ That’s the whole point of the post. People getting taxed into oblivion are being taxed unfairly. How do the top 10% of taxpayers pay 60% of the income tax collected? You want people to pay their fair share? The bottom 90% better start coughing up a whole lot more then.
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Oliver J
Oliver J@oliverjanik·
@RightisRight___ Do you like balanced budgets? How about we stop stealing from future generations? Pay your fair share.
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Ted Bullpitt 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
Labor says Angus Taylors plan will cost $32 billion over 4 years to index the tax thresholds to inflation. Another words that's how much Labor plans to steal of you over the next 4 years $ 32 billion dollars. But it's ok that are going to give you back 68c a day 🤦‍♂️
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Joel Jenkins
Joel Jenkins@boganintel·
@markbouris This is what many think of your take. You should come onto the @Boganintelpod to discuss.
Joel Jenkins@boganintel

This bloke doesn’t recognise that he’s a part of a generation that has never or will never exist again. A generation with cradle to grave prosperity. Never before in history has a generation benefited so much from the hard work of their parents and the economic circumstances of their adulthood. Bouris has less in common with his hard-working father than a young Australian trying to make ends meet in uncertain times. He speaks of the accumulation of property as some form of human right, that it’s some form of Australian story, but it’s really a situation and a mindset that has only been enjoyed by a small group of Australians. Bouris literally made his fortune giving Home loans away in the first homebuyer grant period of the early 2000s, and he helped to contribute to an industry that is the most overinflated economic property Bubble on the planet. Bouris probably doesn’t remember Australia, whereby governments build houses as a human right, where Menzies era governments of both persuasions owned the lions share of rentals in the country. Not rich immigrant property magnates, not money obsessed Australian entrepreneurs. The only reason this fellow can talk like this, it’s because his lived position allows him to do so. A point not lost at all on the people who can’t really do anything right now.

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Mark Bouris
Mark Bouris@markbouris·
My first thoughts on the Treasurer’s budget last night. I’ll be sitting down with highly renowned economist Chris Richardson today to break it all down. The conversation will be available on all podcast platforms tonight
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@Hasten_Jason @boganintel By who? The younger generation would see the stairs and consider it to be too much work. Too lazy and weak to do anything.
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Hasten Jason
Hasten Jason@Hasten_Jason·
@boganintel He and his contemporaries will eventually be dragged crying, screaming and soiling themselves up a flight of short stairs to meet their end via a guillotine, and quickly forgotten.
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Joel Jenkins
Joel Jenkins@boganintel·
This bloke doesn’t recognise that he’s a part of a generation that has never or will never exist again. A generation with cradle to grave prosperity. Never before in history has a generation benefited so much from the hard work of their parents and the economic circumstances of their adulthood. Bouris has less in common with his hard-working father than a young Australian trying to make ends meet in uncertain times. He speaks of the accumulation of property as some form of human right, that it’s some form of Australian story, but it’s really a situation and a mindset that has only been enjoyed by a small group of Australians. Bouris literally made his fortune giving Home loans away in the first homebuyer grant period of the early 2000s, and he helped to contribute to an industry that is the most overinflated economic property Bubble on the planet. Bouris probably doesn’t remember Australia, whereby governments build houses as a human right, where Menzies era governments of both persuasions owned the lions share of rentals in the country. Not rich immigrant property magnates, not money obsessed Australian entrepreneurs. The only reason this fellow can talk like this, it’s because his lived position allows him to do so. A point not lost at all on the people who can’t really do anything right now.
Mark Bouris@markbouris

My first thoughts on the Treasurer’s budget last night. I’ll be sitting down with highly renowned economist Chris Richardson today to break it all down. The conversation will be available on all podcast platforms tonight

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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@AshPolitik Defending a leader of breaking an election promise and lying, you void the right to have an opinion. You’re a coward.
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Ash
Ash@AshPolitik·
Criticising a leader for altering decisions based on the circumstances of the day, you void the right to lobby for change.
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@AlboMP Thanks for the $250 albo. Now can you just ensure it’s not wiped out immediately by yet another interest rate rise?
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Anthony Albanese
Anthony Albanese@AlboMP·
We’re making sure hard work pays off and everyone has the opportunity to get ahead. Giving young Australians a fair go at buying their first home. And putting more money in your pocket with tax cuts. Our Budget delivers for you.
Anthony Albanese tweet media
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@MikeCarlton01 Mike she would walk rings around you. You prove on here daily that you’re living in a fantasy land and genuinely might be mentally retarted. Every single one of your opinions is destroyed when facts are applied. Every. Single. One.
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@Ben_Davison1 Those 10% of people subsidize 95% of social welfare, Medicare, childcare subsidies. Shouldn’t the 90% start doing some of the lifting instead of consistently taking a free ride?Surely if we wanted equality then those who historically have not contributed financially,should start
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Ben Davison
Ben Davison@Ben_Davison1·
80% of Capital Gains Tax discount benefits the wealthiest 10% of people That means 90% of us have been subsidising the wealthiest people to turn our homes into unproductive tax write offs Labor’s budget is trying to fix this inequity
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Tim V
Tim V@VMagpieTim·
@JEChalmers Why didn’t you tax the gas? Why did the PRRT income go down from what was forecasted?
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Jim Chalmers MP
Jim Chalmers MP@JEChalmers·
This is the most important and ambitious Budget in decades. Important because the world is throwing a lot at us – and this Budget is about helping Australia deal with these challenges. And ambitious because we have so much going for us – and this Budget is about Australia seizing those opportunities. This Budget is ambitious in the face of adversity. It’s a responsible Budget, and a reforming Budget, which builds resilience and bolsters our economy. There is more cost of living relief, more Medicare and more aged care, and more housing. It makes the tax system fairer and stronger for workers, businesses, first home buyers and future generations – Responding to the pressures of the here-and-now while embracing our intergenerational responsibilities. We are responding to the biggest oil shock in history with a comprehensive $14.8 billion plan to secure more fuel, strengthen our supply chains, build resilience, and take the sting out of prices. Immediate relief from the fuel crisis is coupled with lasting and responsible cost of living measures. Tonight, we are proud to be delivering another round of ongoing tax cuts for Australian workers. We will put more money into the pockets of 13.3 million workers with a new $250 Working Australians Tax Offset. It will begin from the second half of 2027 and be paid each year, ongoing and automatically in your tax return just like the instant deduction we’re rolling out as well. The $6.4 billion tax offset is the biggest cost of living measure in this Budget – But it’s not all we’re doing to support families under pressure. As a Labor government, we will always invest in Medicare, cheaper medicines and public health so Australians get the care they need, when they need it. Australia’s longstanding housing shortage is making homes unaffordable. This challenge hits young workers and families hard and we’re addressing it from every responsible angle. The reforms in this Budget will lift our total investment in housing to a record $47 billion. We’re levelling the playing field for first home buyers with 5 per cent deposits and tax reform to help more young Australians into their own home. These housing reforms go to the core of our Budget strategy. Dealing with the very real pressures on people right now – While taking responsibility for the challenges facing the next generations. The challenges coming at us, the opportunities ahead of us and the better future that Australians deserve, will not wait for a time when all is quiet in the world. That’s why this Budget invests in resilience and reform, to grow our economy the right way and lift living standards over time. This productivity package will help us attract and absorb more investment, make it easier and quicker to build, and slash compliance costs. This Budget includes the most significant tax reform package in more than a quarter of a century. This is about tax relief and tax reform to make our economy work for more Australians, businesses and future generations. We’re delivering a fairer tax system for workers, first home buyers and young people. We’re building a better tax system for businesses, with over $3.5 billion in new measures that lower taxes, to encourage investment and innovation. Our tax reforms will help workers, create a fairer housing market, and drive more productive investment across our economy. Debt is lower and the budget position is stronger in every year of the medium term because of our savings. The medium-term budget position is much stronger and more sustainable as a consequence, creating more room for future tax relief. Against a backdrop of global uncertainty, this Budget invests in Australia’s resilience, economic sovereignty and national security. At a time when Australians are under pressure, this Budget delivers more help with the cost of living and new tax cuts for workers. And in an era where people feel like the system no longer works for them, this Budget doesn’t just acknowledge that – it acts on it. No other budget in the 2000s has set out this much responsible Budget repair and this much economic reform. These are difficult decisions to ensure a stronger bottom line every year, to give us greater insurance in uncertain times. At the same time as we build a more resilient, productive and competitive economy. This is a strategy which helps shield people from the harshest consequences of a global oil crisis – Stabilises our economy and our Budget at a time of extreme uncertainty and volatility in the world – And strengthens Australia for the next shock. Tonight, we choose the hard road of reform, not the path of least resistance. By responding to the pressures Australians confront today. And fulfilling our obligations and responsibilities to the generations to come.
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