Frank Kidenya

361 posts

Frank Kidenya

Frank Kidenya

@fkidenya

Sydney, New South Wales Katılım Nisan 2009
738 Takip Edilen136 Takipçiler
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺@PaulineHansonOz·
Today I announced One Nation's policy to get Australians a better return on the Commonwealth's gas and oil, our natural resources at @au_energy_prod We want more gas extracted and more money given back to Australian's future wealth. One Nation would partner with the oil and gas industry rather than treating it as an enemy, with the aim of increasing exploration, development and production of oil and gas Under the policy, the party would introduce a 30 per cent rebate for genuine oil and gas exploration in Commonwealth waters, while giving the Commonwealth Government the option to take up to a 30 per cent equity stake in any production licence. This would mean real ownership of Australia's natural resources by the Australian people. Rather than acquiring ownership by force, the government would pay its share of costs as a joint venture partner and receive a corresponding share of production. To manage these interests, One Nation would establish a special investment vehicle called the Australian National Wealth Investment Corporation (ANWIC), which would hold the government’s resource stakes and be tasked with making decisions for the greatest benefit of Australians. Government would receive their proportion of oil and gas which could then be directed to the domestic market, used to support critical industries such as fertiliser, energy and smelting, or sold into export markets to help reduce government debt. ANWIC would be overseen by a board made up of people with proven oil and gas industry experience, rather than career bureaucrats, and the Commonwealth would remain a non-operating partner while private-sector experts continued to run projects. The policy would also allow ANWIC to invest in existing projects, but only on commercial, arm’s-length terms, with the government paying its way as in investment rather than taking over projects. In return, the Commonwealth could choose to receive either its share of profits or physical gas supply, giving it the flexibility to support domestic manufacturing when needed or benefit from selling at high international prices. One Nation argues this approach is even better than a domestic gas reservation policy, which can be blunt and inefficient. We also reject proposals for a 25 per cent gas export tax, because this measure is purposely designed to kill the gas industry. Alongside these structural changes, One Nation would cut “red, green and black tape” to speed up project development and set a target of deciding on projects within six months. We would abolish net-zero policies and the Safeguard Mechanism, while also having government help fund gas exploration. In taxation, the party would replace the failed Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) for offshore gas with a simpler Commonwealth royalty based on wellhead values. This new royalty system would apply only to future projects, with existing PRRT arrangements grandfathered. Overall, One Nation's policy is designed to deliver greater returns to Australians, encourage oil and gas production, strengthen fuel security, lower power prices, reduce government debt and give Australians real ownership of our natural resources.
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet mediaPauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet mediaPauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet media
English
411
777
5.4K
91.5K
Easy To Learn
Easy To Learn@EasyToLearrn·
I wish I knew why math teachers didn't teach us this in school.
English
65
285
983
197.6K
Frank Kidenya
Frank Kidenya@fkidenya·
@LouStagner Course 1 scratch golfer would actually play off a 3 and course 2, +2. See ratings.
English
0
0
0
5.3K
Lou Stagner (Golf Stat Pro)
Lou Stagner (Golf Stat Pro)@LouStagner·
Who is the better golfer? Below are the last 20 scores for each golfer. They both played all 20 of their rounds on the same course. The details of course are listed. Who has the lower handicap index?
Lou Stagner (Golf Stat Pro) tweet media
English
153
3
105
260K
Bob Rolltella
Bob Rolltella@TheStroker83·
@jturner1001 @LouStagner Sorry mate, This is just factually incorrect. SCRATCH is a special designation — it refers to players who shoot ‘Even Par.’ Every. Single. Time. Cheers
English
4
0
8
1.9K
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺@PaulineHansonOz·
Can you believe the government is profiting $300 million a month from the spike in fuel prices while you’re struggling? As the pain at the pump increases, so does the government’s GST take on every litre. We need to cut the fuel excise to give Australians immediate relief. Minister Chris Bowen needs to declare a fuel emergency so we can force supplies to the regions who are growing food and stop the price gouging.
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet mediaPauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet mediaPauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet media
English
573
1.7K
7.6K
136.2K
Frank Kidenya
Frank Kidenya@fkidenya·
@cjoye We need to amend our consitution to include "bill of rights" that define us a people and nation. Rights that are above political ideology. Especially a nation that is built on immigration. The values, like fairness, are a nice to have, not engaved in stone!
English
0
0
0
654
christopher joye
christopher joye@cjoye·
Given the response, I am lifting my column out of the paywall… 1/2 This evil is driven by envy In the context of the Bondi tragedy, let me start by saying that Australia is not the country I once knew. The Australia I remember during my youth bears little resemblance to the nation that now exists. I am not sure you can even describe us as a nation – we are more like a heterogeneous agglomeration of vested and frequently colliding interests. I think there is a fair case to be made that we have traded away our soul. There is no cohesive national identity. There was, once upon a time, a demonstrably visible national character. We knew what it was to be Australian. We loved our country. Our flag. Our history. Our entrepreneurial and iconoclastic verve. Our disdain of centralised authority. Our willingness to give every person a fair go. Our characteristically intense competitive streak. And our eccentric and larrikin heroes. From Don Bradman to Kerry Packer. But today it is difficult to discern a unifying crusade or common community. There are, to be sure, redoubts here and there. But across this sunburnt land we have emerged as a nation divided. Many will claim that their vision of Australia best represents a universal mission. That they know the true Australia. And that there is a silent majority that agrees with them. But I do not see it. Right now, Australia is a battlefield bloodied by conflicting interests, which this column belaboured seven days ago. The lucky country has become the lazy land, spoilt by endless resource riches and the seemingly bottomless pit of public money that this has bestowed. Our wealth has been relentlessly wasted on pet political projects that serve only to perpetuate the reign of those in power. Financially corrupt the voters to win the next election and then rinse and repeat. Until the money runs out. Australia has become obsessed with the public sector providing answers to its problems. Obsessed with centralised control. Remember the world’s worst lockdowns? Obsessed with censorship: eviscerate parental responsibilities and ban children from access to the internet. Obsessed with revisionism. We don't even give our kids an opportunity to learn from our historical wins and losses. It is airbrushed in the name of trying to create an alternative political reality. Obsessed with cutting down tall poppies. That is, we don't just want equality of opportunity, which is a crucial ideal—we increasingly seek equality of outcomes. A huge amount of the secular racial prejudice projected against Judaism by other creeds and cultures can be attributed to the fact that the Jews have been consistently one of the most successful communities in the countries they have lived in. The intelligence, innovation, and unmatched professional intensity that Judaism nurtures has been a persistent source of envy and polarisation for as long as the faith has existed. Whatever academic pursuit or vocation you inspect, you will find Jews dominating. This is true by design because the community defines itself through a purity of purpose that advocates intellectual and professional excellence. It is a self-selection process that attracts and spawns world-class talent. Yet in a society where you are constantly seeking to manipulate and sate the masses, the ever-tempting reflex is to focus on persecuting the difficult-to-understand anomalies. The exceptions. Those that rank in the 99th percentile. Accordingly, we fall back on handicapping success. We want to regress everyone back to the mean to create an egalitarian world. The Jews are to blame. It’s the "great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity" as Goldman Sachs was once described. Of course, Goldman was founded as a Jewish partnership. Cont’d 1/2 afr.com/markets/equity…
English
261
356
2.2K
209.1K
Gerard Rennick
Gerard Rennick@RennickGBR·
“Australian superannuation funds will double their investments in the United Kingdom and European Union over the next decade to more than $660 billion, as homegrown opportunities max out, new projections show. The research highlighting the surge in Australians’ nest eggs being invested offshore is being released ahead of fund chiefs gathering in London next week to drum up interest in the opportunities the nation’s superannuation pool can offer to build or renew infrastructure for cash-strapped governments.” And “The Federal and Queensland Governments will provide a $600m support package to maintain operations at the Mount Isa copper smelter and Townsville copper refinery. The agreement will allow the smelter — which provides half of Australia’s copper smelting capacity — and the refinery to continue operations until the end of 2028.” ••••••••••••••••••••••••• The madness never ends. It’s not just the USA where you super money is going. It’s building infrastructure in the U.K. as well. On the other hand, the government is using your taxpayer dollars to bail out Glencore, a notorious foreign owned multinational known for tax evasion. Why couldn’t the government help Australian Super Funds to recapitalise Mt Isa mines so that it comes back into Australian hands. It’s just so typical of how the Australian government puts the foreign interests in front of Australians. If you want to see Superannuation and Foreign Investment reformed in this country then please consider signing up to vist.ly/4bfeu
English
105
270
1.2K
29.1K
MYGOLFSPY
MYGOLFSPY@MyGolfSpy·
You have to get rid of ONE of these forever. Which you pickin'? - 60° wedge - Driver - Putter - Hybrid
English
823
8
294
185.3K
Frank Kidenya
Frank Kidenya@fkidenya·
man, this was hosted with good intentions but turned to be another snooze fest.... no actually ideas! Here is one - remove franking credits. Companies will re-invest profits back into their business instead of paying cash to retirees - TAX free...= higher share prices - win for people (jobs). win for young people's as they can grow their wealth. win for retires - higher super (spend more) and win for gov will will get to tax higher super balances...the circle of life that keeps on giving!!
English
3
0
0
202
Perplexity
Perplexity@perplexity_ai·
Comet for Enterprise is here. Comet is an AI-powered browser agent that thinks with you, linking tools for streamlined workflows and trusted answers. Enterprise Pro users maintain the security, privacy, and compliance standards that come with an Enterprise subscription.
English
57
69
626
130.5K
Frank Kidenya retweetledi
Mutant Hounds: Inscriptions
Mutant Hounds: Inscriptions@MH_Inscriptions·
Looking for a chance to win BTC? Enter our new Hashrate Hackers giveaway: 🔺Follow @MH_Inscriptions & @hashratehackers 🔺Like & Repost this post 🔺Reply with your MH//I wallet 3 lucky winners will be selected in 48 hours.
Mutant Hounds: Inscriptions tweet media
English
105
98
155
7.3K
Ansem
Ansem@blknoiz06·
highest positive impact job on society
English
462
22
381
369.7K
Bridgestone Golf
Bridgestone Golf@bridgestonegolf·
Quick… what is the best golf ball you’ve every played?
Bridgestone Golf tweet media
English
116
11
89
73.6K
Frank Kidenya
Frank Kidenya@fkidenya·
@elonmusk Maybe. Absence the WILL to address deficits, govts will always get funded either by printing and/or higher taxes on the rich (middle class). We are in the world of monetary debasement. @LynAldenContact says "Nothing stops this train".
English
2
0
3
962
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Interest payments already consume 25% of all government revenue. If the massive deficit spending continues, there will only be money for interest payments and nothing else! No social security, no medical, no defense … nothing.
Wall Street Mav@WallStreetMav

Our annual US budget deficit is going to be over $2 trillion per year going forward. We pay over $100 billion per month in interest on the national debt. $1.2 trillion per year. That is about 25% of all government revenue going to pay interest on the debt.

English
12.8K
27.6K
143.1K
26M
ram jr.
ram jr.@ramonos·
If you had $12.7M in crypto, how would you cash it out without paying any taxes? Asking for a friend ofc.
English
1.7K
276
7.3K
1.7M
Frank Kidenya
Frank Kidenya@fkidenya·
If you see it, you see it....
Frank Kidenya tweet media
English
0
0
2
22
Peter Dutton
Peter Dutton@Hon_PeterDutton·
Thanks to everyone who tuned into the debate tonight. It was a pleasure to answer your questions and share my vision to get Australia back on track.
Peter Dutton tweet media
English
728
218
3.1K
113.1K