Toxic Factuality

14.1K posts

Toxic Factuality

Toxic Factuality

@lattenomics

"I would rather be governed by the first 2,000 people in the telephone directory, than by the Harvard University faculty". - William F. Buckley

Katılım Mart 2017
652 Takip Edilen3.1K Takipçiler
Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
The fetish for diversity and mass migration have led to a situation where topics like what precise ethnic makeup and skin tone makes someone a true Australian or British are now openly discussed by fairly mainstream people. The establishment keeps pretending everything is fine.
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@MarkoMatvikov 100% agree. As Angus Taylor pointed out, they stopped being the party of conviction and became the party of convenience. Impossible to lead if you don’t have a compass.
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Marko Matvikov
Marko Matvikov@MarkoMatvikov·
@lattenomics They're reactive because they're not proactive. This sounds like an obvious statement, but there's depth to it - the fact that they're not properly formulating their own vision and plan to deliver it means they're allowing Labor to lead the discussion on reform.
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Marko Matvikov
Marko Matvikov@MarkoMatvikov·
The Liberals are about to get wedged by Labor. Again. Labor will put its WATO, 1k expenses deduction, NG and CGT changes into a single bill to ram through parliament. The Liberals outright opposed the latter two changes in its budget reply speech - this was already a misstep. Labor will now play the game of ‘you denied worker tax cuts’ if they vote no for opposing the bill - even if it's only part of it. This is what the Liberals need to learn to do: • Support any steps in the right direction – and double down them • Oppose any steps in the wrong direction – but propose alternatives If I was them, I’d be laying out the following conditions for support: • Indexation of income taxes • CGT floor rate of 30% to revert to the marginal tax rate • Allow income splitting for parents without trusts Then let Labor explain why they oppose these amendments.
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
Australian immigration and citizenship settings are still stuck in the era before air conditioning and passenger jet. Back then the remote country with brutal climate was desperate to attract immigrants. Now it’s oversubscribed. It makes sense to make immigration a lot harder.
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
Australia’s two right wing parties are polling a combined 51% primary vote. The more right wing of the two is polling 28%. Australian MSM take: Liberals are too right wing… 🤡🌏
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Reserve Bank of Property
Reserve Bank of Property@RBASHAGGER·
Foreign students love Australia so much that they wait everyday in a line for free food from the food bank.
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@BWJacksonX @OtherSideAus 100%. Our citizenship laws are still stuck in the era where the main problem was to entice people to come to Australia. This is no longer the case. The laws around permanent residency and citizenship have to become much tougher. Longer waiting periods and tougher assessments.
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B.W.Jackson
B.W.Jackson@BWJacksonX·
@OtherSideAus "Your Australinness is in how you behave and how much you honour the VALUES of this nation". So how do you measure that? This is certainly not measured by a piece of paper. Until we stop throwing out citizenship certificates like confetti, this debate will continue.
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Toxic Factuality retweetledi
The Other Side (Australian Vodcast)
This “white Australia” skin colour BS has to stop. NOW. I’m 3rd generation Australian. I’m of half Celtic and half Lebanese descent (and I don’t know what’s Arab, French or Phonecian even in that half). My kids have Spanish, Filipino, and even possibly a tiny bit of Chinese added to the mix. Seriously. Racist childish BS is beneath us all and is grossly UNAustralian. The fact is: what matters is our values and philosophy and worldview are ONE AND SHARED enough to be a united people advancing positively and building greatness together. Australia IS a nation of Anglo-Celtic British religious and philosophical foundation which itself emerged from Greco-Roman European history it also has Nordic aspects… the Angles, the Saxons... on and on it goes. Multiculturalism is wrong and a destructive nonsense. BUT We don’t devalue assimilated Aussie citizens and have categories of “Australianness” based on racial origin (including Aboriginal origin). EVER. PERIOD. Your Australinness is in how you behave and how much you honour the VALUES of this nation and Western European Judeo-Christian civilisation upon which the NATION was built. Not where your ancestors came from. (And yes, it is *Judeo*-Christian - pick up a Bible and note where the first 2/3 of it came from) @ProfJoannaHowe and @OzraeliAvi are as Australian as Sam and MORE than a lot of traitorous leftist and “far right” “white” people I know. So… as Bob Katter would say… “don’t say that!!!…”
Dr Joanna Howe@ProfJoannaHowe

These two guys @OzraeliAvi and @2worldsPodcast are fighting over whether I am Australian. Born in England, I emigrated here when I was 4 and have lived here ever since. My parents originate from India and Portugal. I've visited India once. I have brown skin. What do you think?

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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@TMFScottP Please explain to me like I am 10 year old how are Teals centrist if their voting record is closer to Greens than Labor, and closer to Labor than LNP? Teals have voted in agreement with Greens: ~73%, Labor: ~40% and Coalition ~33% of the time.
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Scott Phillips
Scott Phillips@TMFScottP·
This was unexpectedly timely. My timeline this morning is full of: - Hanson can't win! (See: Trump, D.) - Teals aren't centrist! People talking from their own perspective and own experience, failing to see their own bias and others' worldviews and beliefs/frustrations.
Scott Phillips@TMFScottP

The people in the centre and on the left dismissing/misunderstanding the rise of One Nation are making the same mistake as those on the right dismissing/criticising the Teals. If you can only see the world through your own lens, you're missing the bigger picture by a *lot*.

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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@TMFScottP They are so centrist that they’ve voted in agreement with Greens: ~73%, Labor: ~40% and Coalition ~33% of the time. Not fooling anyone. Australia doesn’t need another far-left Green party.
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Scott Phillips
Scott Phillips@TMFScottP·
It's easier, ideologically and pragmatically, to be entirely independent - no party lines, no party structure. Electorally, a party gives centrist voters a home outside just the current Teal seats. But the journey is risky and uncertain. I *think* it's the right move.
Scott Phillips tweet media
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@Booners05 @AvidCommentator They are so centre-right that they have voted in agreement with Greens: ~73%, Labor: ~40% and Coalition ~33% of the time. Not fooling anyone. Australia doesn’t need another far-left Green party.
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BoonboonA
BoonboonA@Booners05·
@lattenomics @AvidCommentator Left wing- the teals are all centre right, what used to be Liberal Moderates in the vain of Turnbull, Peakcock, Costello, Frydenberg,
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@sandylanceley Indians barely have to give up their citizenship because they can immediately get the Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI) which is basically an Indian PR and pathway back to Indian citizenship if they ever want to. Not such a tough choice.
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Sandy Lanceley
Sandy Lanceley@sandylanceley·
Odd article Examples used complain that they’d need to give up their citizenship of India and Netherlands to access benefits, but Taylor was clear it wouldn’t apply to any permanent residents already here. Anyone impacted by this policy would be able to make an informed choice
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼@DrewPavlou

The Guardian Australia has a new article about Australia being mean to non-citizens by not giving them enough money. ''Angus Taylor’s claim support is a ‘privilege of citizenship’ leaves Deepa and others with an impossible choice'' When Deepa Chaudhary’s newborn slept, she used the time to find out what support she could get as a permanent resident in Australia. The answer was: not very much. Chaudhary moved here from India four years ago and worked until her baby was born in January last year. She describes the stress and mental health issues of being a new mother in Australia. “You’re supposed to get a maternity payment, but I didn’t meet the residency test so I didn’t get it,” she says. She does get the Family Tax Benefit now. Chaudhary says surviving the wait to get any support is hard enough, let alone the difficulties getting citizenship. “My husband has to work two jobs, three jobs, so you don’t have support from your partner either. As much as he wants to, he has to pay the bills,” she says. Taylor used the popular rightwing slogan “mass migration” three times in his speech, in which he pledged to slash immigration and strip non-citizens’ access to supports, including the national disability insurance scheme, jobseeker, youth allowance and the Family Tax Benefit. To become an Australian citizen, most people must have been a permanent resident for four years. After that, the application and processing time can take more than a year. Two of Australia’s biggest groups of immigrants are from China (732,000 people) and India (more than 970,000 people), neither of which allow dual citizenship (although Indians can get an overseas citizen registration). That means migrants wanting to become an Australian citizen also have to give up their homeland citizenship. That could make it harder to visit friends and family, and could rob the new citizen of property, investments and pensions in their homeland. In many countries non-citizens can’t own property or assets and won’t get pensions. Chaudhary says it would be an emotional and economic blow to give up her Indian citizenship. “I have my roots there. I have my parents there. My husband has his parents there. We have ancestral property, houses, land. We’d have to give that up.” Migrant scapegoating Eric Ma came from China to study at the Australian National University in 2010. A newspaper article on the deadly 2009 bushfires prompted him to study environmental science, which led to a long career – all while a permanent resident. Now that he’s no longer a Chinese citizen, he would have to apply for a visa to visit his parents (China has suspended this visa requirement for the moment, but the suspension is only temporary). “It’s a tough situation, the older people begin to perish … you can’t wait 26 days for a visa to be issued,” he says. Last year, Ma became an Australian citizen. He now works in the legal sector with people injured in the workplace, and can see the necessity of programs like the NDIS. “Mr Taylor’s grand policy … shows how tough he is on new migrants, but it does not help anyone,” he says. “I think politicians across the spectrum need to see migrants as people, as humans.” He says politicians often ignore the contribution of migrant communities, who come, work, pay tax, and often bring family wealth with them. The Chinese Community Council of Australia says the move came “amid a broader trend … of increasingly negative rhetoric surrounding migration, including narratives that unfairly blame migrants”. Anneke van Mosseveld arrived in Australia from the Netherlands in 1971. She is now 79. She spent decades completing her doctorate in business history, working as an academic and running her own business. “I came here originally as a backpacker, but I soon found work. I’ve been working all my life, paying tax,” she says. The Netherlands, with some exceptions, does not allow dual citizenship. “It means I will lose my Dutch government pension, which we get automatically in Holland.” That pension, unlike the Australian pension, is not means tested, and she would be eligible for about 20% of it, for her life spent there up until the age of 24. “It’s quite a lot of money,” she says. As a permanent resident, she doesn’t have an Australian passport, which means she can’t use some of the Australian Taxation Office’s online functions.

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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@MarkoMatvikov 100%. I’ve been saying for a while that both Liberals and Labor are cooked, except Labor don’t know it yet.
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Marko Matvikov
Marko Matvikov@MarkoMatvikov·
Don’t get me wrong - the federal budget was way off the mark. But I think part of why it’s the most unpopular budget in over three decades is because of the context. Aussies lost faith after 9 years with the Liberals. Labor failed in their first term after that. And still walked all of over them at the next election. But the problems continue to compound. Hope continues to evaporate. Most people think the country is heading in the wrong direction. Labor has 94 seats. The Liberals face extinction. Inflation is back up. There’s a new global supply shock. This was THE budget for big decisions. Two years before the next election. Plenty of time to reform the system. Even those who didn’t vote for Labor thought they may finally do what needed to be done - and they told us pre-budget that they’d make the necessary changes. But they didn’t. The big issues aren’t being addressed. Small token changes were offered to manage political risk. They calculated plenty without solving anything. Now they’ll roll out a propaganda campaign to manage the fallout. Probably start waving the Medicare card around. Bribe their way through the next election. But the damage is done. What happened to the Liberals can happen to Labor. It seems they both have to learn the hard way.
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@SharriMarkson We are constantly told to trust the authorities but it’s clear they can’t track everyone. Does it make sense then to let in more people from the regions where we know a significant percentage will harbour extremist beliefs? For example 80%+ antisemitism in parts of ME & Pakistan.
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Sharri Markson
Sharri Markson@SharriMarkson·
EXCLUSIVE: Australia’s top spy agency’s assessment of the alleged Bondi attackers in 2019 demanded travel alerts be placed on them and their file revisited if they associated with extremists - but in a catastrophic failure, the men were able to move freely through known terror hotspots. An investigation has uncovered a series of failures that meant the Akrams slipped through the cracks of law enforcement and security agencies prior to the Bondi terror attack on December 14, 2025. In a critical lapse, the Australian Federal Police and Border Force, which sits within Home Affairs, were aware of Naveed and Sajid Akram’s travel to known terror hotspots but did not pass the intelligence onto ASIO or NSW Police, which issued the gun licenses.  It can be revealed that the Akrams travelled to Uzbekistan - a known gateway to terror hotspot Afghanistan - in late 2022 or early 2023. The investigation, conducted for the upcoming book Bondi Terror, also discovered that ASIO’s travel alert was only placed on the Akrams' first port of call, rather than their final destination. This is a matter that is likely to come under scrutiny by the Royal Commission this week. Full story here: skynews.com.au/australia-news…
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Ben Beattie
Ben Beattie@EnergyWrapAU·
Narrative: industrial wind projects displace high emissions coal Reality: industrial wind often also displaces zero emissions hydro and low emissions gas before coal Why would you justify building wind projects in Tasmania to reduce emissions? That can only increase emissions. Why is that? Because Tasmania runs from old hydro and the emissions are already done long ago. New wind can’t offset any Tasmanian emissions because there are none. So the emissions from new wind - copper, plastic, steel, concrete - are all new and can’t be offset.
Ben Beattie tweet mediaBen Beattie tweet mediaBen Beattie tweet media
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
This is exactly the kind of story that will strengthen belief in the conspiracy theory that Jews are deliberately importing and promoting the most dysfunctional and radical elements of Islam into Western societies.
Toxic Factuality tweet media
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Toxic Factuality
Toxic Factuality@lattenomics·
@MarkDiStef @dannolan Funny how according to Albo, the One Nation surge is a vindication of Labor policies. We just need more “energy resilience” which in Labor land means more expensive unreliable renewables, and less “intergenerational inequality” which means spending more and tax harder. Insane.
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