Beer Garden

Anything goes here.. :) Now with Beer Garden for our smoking patrons.
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rev
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Re: Beer Garden

#3136 Post by rev » Mon Apr 06, 2020 4:07 am

how good is he wrote:
Mon Apr 06, 2020 12:14 am
I read an article that the coronavirus has cost (and China should be sued) for at least $6.5 Trillion for the damage it has done to the worlds G7 economies. Not sure if this is an estimate or the actual cost so far (with Australia’s Govt bailout at $130 billion so far). Btw, anyone know what China is “worth”? https://amp.smh.com.au/world/europe/chi ... 54h5b.html
$130 billion is the JobKeeper plan. What about the $750 payment, I think that was a total of $17billion.
Besides what governments have spent, what about all the lost economic activity? What about all the businesses that will be lost? What about the hit to everyone's superannuation, which is tied to the stock markets and the huge losses seen there?

China should be treated like a rogue state that is a threat to global stability. Because that's what it is.
We wouldn't have allowed Soviet spies to freely mingle in our midst, let alone rub shoulders with politicians. Why are we letting China get away with it?
We wouldn't have allowed Soviets tied to the regime buy up property and land and other assets, why are we letting China do it?

This is bigger then just a virus. This virus merely exposes what's wrong, and what we really should be doing.

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SRW
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Re: Beer Garden

#3137 Post by SRW » Mon Apr 06, 2020 9:30 am

The idea that China could or should be sued is a complete legal fantasy and moral deadend. Yes, the CCP fucked up initial containment, and there will be repercussions in international organisation. But we'll never see reparations especially given the culpability of our own governments. It's also a hard argument to make that we are owed any, particularly from a country that once had opium inflicted upon it.
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Re: Beer Garden

#3138 Post by Nort » Mon Apr 06, 2020 11:34 am

SRW wrote:
Mon Apr 06, 2020 9:30 am
The idea that China could or should be sued is a complete legal fantasy and moral deadend. Yes, the CCP fucked up initial containment, and there will be repercussions in international organisation. But we'll never see reparations especially given the culpability of our own governments. It's also a hard argument to make that we are owed any, particularly from a country that once had opium inflicted upon it.
Not fair, if you look at the history of the 20th century I think you will find out that imposing onerous reparations on a country never once backfired horribly.

The CCP is fucked, many aspects of their response to this situation were fucked.

Many other countries also fucked up their response. If the Ruby Princess had been a Chinese ship it would be held up by some as akin to an act of war, whereas right now it's just one more symptom of the global constant that bureaucracy often messes up.

Yet in all of this, the most fucked up thing is the way that some people want to take a global catastrophe and use it to further their long standing McCarthyesque agendas.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3139 Post by Norman » Mon Apr 06, 2020 12:12 pm

All countries are acting in their self interest when it comes to protective equipment. The US diverted masks destined for Germany and France when they were being transferred between planes in Thailand. So really, no-one can be trusted.

https://nypost.com/2020/04/04/us-accuse ... m-germany/

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Re: Beer Garden

#3140 Post by rev » Mon Apr 06, 2020 1:22 pm

Norman wrote:
Mon Apr 06, 2020 12:12 pm
All countries are acting in their self interest when it comes to protective equipment. The US diverted masks destined for Germany and France when they were being transferred between planes in Thailand. So really, no-one can be trusted.

https://nypost.com/2020/04/04/us-accuse ... m-germany/
Would any of that be necessary if China didnt use its state owned companies to raid countless countries medical ppe stocks?

Would any of this be happening of China was a responsible regime who didnt allow a global pandemic to start?


See, no matter how you try to deflect, it all comes back to them.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3141 Post by how good is he » Mon Apr 06, 2020 2:07 pm

I still can't believe they have been allowed to open their wet markets where it all supposedly started...

rev
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Re: Beer Garden

#3142 Post by rev » Mon Apr 06, 2020 4:07 pm

how good is he wrote:
Mon Apr 06, 2020 2:07 pm
I still can't believe they have been allowed to open their wet markets where it all supposedly started...
They let them flourish again after the 2002/03 SARS outbreak. Twenty years later and we have another SARS outbreak, this time much worse as it's gone global and turned into a pandemic.

These communist clowns have dreams of replacing America as the global leader, yet they have no intention of acting as a responsible global power.

The sooner the communists are cut down to size the better off our planet will be. For a multitude of reasons.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3143 Post by ml69 » Tue Apr 07, 2020 7:32 pm

how good is he wrote:
Mon Apr 06, 2020 2:07 pm
I still can't believe they have been allowed to open their wet markets where it all supposedly started...
There should be a worldwide ban on such markets authorised by UN and WHO, with enforceable sanctions against countries who defy these bans.

The majority of global pandemics since WW2 have originated in such markets. They must be completely outlawed. Once COVID-19 settles down, I can’t see why this wouldn’t be agreed upon by the countries of the world.

PS. I am of Chinese descent.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3144 Post by gnrc_louis » Tue Apr 07, 2020 8:16 pm

ml69 wrote:
Tue Apr 07, 2020 7:32 pm
how good is he wrote:
Mon Apr 06, 2020 2:07 pm
I still can't believe they have been allowed to open their wet markets where it all supposedly started...
There should be a worldwide ban on such markets authorised by UN and WHO, with enforceable sanctions against countries who defy these bans.

The majority of global pandemics since WW2 have originated in such markets. They must be completely outlawed. Once COVID-19 settles down, I can’t see why this wouldn’t be agreed upon by the countries of the world.

PS. I am of Chinese descent.
Ongoing habitat destruction will also mean that pandemics likely grow more regular in the future: https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... vid-19-aoe

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Re: Beer Garden

#3145 Post by rev » Wed Apr 08, 2020 9:07 am

ml69 wrote:
Tue Apr 07, 2020 7:32 pm
how good is he wrote:
Mon Apr 06, 2020 2:07 pm
I still can't believe they have been allowed to open their wet markets where it all supposedly started...
There should be a worldwide ban on such markets authorised by UN and WHO, with enforceable sanctions against countries who defy these bans.

The majority of global pandemics since WW2 have originated in such markets. They must be completely outlawed. Once COVID-19 settles down, I can’t see why this wouldn’t be agreed upon by the countries of the world.

PS. I am of Chinese descent.
The WHO has been complicit in allowing China cover up what's going on and lying about it.
The UN & WHO are the last ones who should be tasked with anything. They should be disbanded.
Since WW2? There's evidence that even the plague originated out of China.

But you're right, these types of wet markets need to be shut down. And they don't just exist in China.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3146 Post by rev » Wed Apr 08, 2020 9:18 am

Here's some food for thought, for all those who advocate the end of suburbia and promote cramming everyone into shoeboxes....
Right now, Australia is doing an enviable job of flattening its coronavirus curve. Experts have been quick to point to a variety of factors ranging from our world-leading testing regime to our ability, as an island nation, to screen out and quarantine new infections from overseas.

These explanations however omit another important piece of the puzzle. Namely, Australia’s relatively thin population density, which is providing us with an in-built social distancing mechanism that makes it harder for COVID-19 to make the jump from person to person.

It makes basic sense. Because all things being equal, a respiratory disease that is spread by being in close proximity with others will be more prevalent where there are a lot of other people.

And like cruise ships, tightly packed cities where people have very little personal space, live on top of one another, are constantly intermingling, touching the same surfaces, and breathing the same air are bound to be perfect incubators for the disease.

The numbers bear this out. A look at the number of infections by Sydney postcode indicates that the hardest hit parts of town are also some of the most closely populated.

The Waverley local government area, with over 100 infections, is home to over 7,000 people per square kilometre, making it one of the most densely populated council areas in Australia.

The 2088 postcode in North Sydney, with nearly 40 confirmed cases as of this writing, has a density of over 3,000 people per square kilometre.

Melbourne is the same: The council area with the highest number of coronavirus cases in Victoria is also one of the state’s densest, at 4,530 people per square kilometre.

A similar thing is happening in the United States.

As a native Manhattanite who emigrated to Sydney 20 years ago it gives me no pleasure to report that New York is experiencing horror show casualties – 2,500 deaths so far and climbing – as a result of the Wuhan coronavirus.

But sadly, it also doesn’t surprise me. New York City, as well as being burdened with a feckless socialist mayor whose health authorities told locals to get out and about and not be put off by coronavirus “misinformation”, is incredibly tightly packed.

Manhattan, where I grew up in a 37-storey apartment tower with a dozen units per floor and took the subway every day, is home to over 25,000 people per square kilometre, making it the most densely populated county city in the US.

Experts suggest a similar pattern is set to play out across the US in coming weeks. One analysis using New York Times and US Census data found that in America, densely populated urban counties had more than twice the coronavirus death rate per 100,000 residents than higher density suburbs in large metropolitan areas and four times higher than that of lower density suburbs.

It’s the same story in other countries that have been hard-hit. Lombardy, the Italian province that has been hardest hit by coronavirus, is relatively dense by European standards, and most Italians live in cities that are even more tightly packed than American cities.

Viewed in this light, it’s not only for reasons of aesthetics and comfort that we are lucky the density cult has not had more success in steamrollering suburbia. In a time of pandemics, it’s literally a matter of life and death.

Similarly, more space makes it mentally and psychologically easier to distance.
https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/rendezvi ... e54e25b583

I excluded the start of the article and the end as it's irrelevant.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3147 Post by rev » Wed Apr 08, 2020 9:42 am

ml69 wrote:
Tue Apr 07, 2020 9:46 am
I think it sort of resembles a dragon.

It could certainly be marketed to Chinese tourists as the dragon hotel.
http://sensational-adelaide.com/forum/v ... 71#p190771

Yeh nah, we need less Chinese tourism, less Chinese "investment". It's absolutely disgusting and disgraceful that Regent Arcade was sold to Chinese "investors".
Here, this is what we don't need.

https://www.liveleak.com/view?t=O5ob_1586169724

The pandemic is still on going..and this happens...

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Re: Beer Garden

#3148 Post by rev » Wed Apr 08, 2020 9:45 am

https://www.liveleak.com/view?t=kmgyo_1585580537

And westerners are wondering why medical supplies being sent over from China now (of course after they bought up all our supplies) are defective and don't work.

And people want more of them to come as tourists and what not? Yeh nah, no thanks, I think we will be just fine without them.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3149 Post by rev » Wed Apr 08, 2020 9:59 am




This virus should be the straw that breaks the camels back.
Right now all Chinese "investment" should be stopped as an immediate measure.
When this pandemic is under control or over with, that's the time to start kicking the ccp out of Australia and the West.
What gives them leverage over us is what they have bought up. Take it back.
Not only reduce reliance on their manufacturing, which is of a poor standard anyway, but eliminate it all together. Nothing sold in Western countries should be made in China ever again.

This isn't just about a virus. Most people haven't woken up to that little factoid yet.

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Re: Beer Garden

#3150 Post by rev » Wed Apr 08, 2020 10:04 am

Chinese State Infiltration: The Inside Story

More than 10 years ago, as a diplomat with China’s Consulate-General, I personally exposed the Chinese Communist Party’s intrusion on Australia’s sovereignty and publicly relinquished my post. In light of current media coverage of the same unresolved issues, I feel it important to revisit them again here. My hope is that all Australians will then be better equipped to resist the Chinese Communist Party’s insidious influence and to safeguard their people and all that they value before it’s too late. I see four broad categories of concern at play here: military/strategy, political, economic and cultural. The Chinese Communist Party has used these areas to intentionally corrupt Australia’s character and those things that make us proud: our sovereignty, our democracy, our fair go ethic and our freedom of speech. And all this for their own ends. It must be stopped.
Military infiltration: stripping sovereignty

China’s 13-year-long campaign to win Australia’s military compliance has succeeded. Its goal: strategic cooperation during conflict. Its method: diplomacy and territory grabs. The result: vast losses to security and pre-established international alliances.

Although China has strategic partnerships with numerous countries, many Western countries have not really engaged in practical strategic cooperation with it. However, China has made significant progress in this respect with regards to Australia.

Communist China’s strategic short-term goal has been to persuade Australia not to act on the US-Australia Security Treaty if there were ever war in the Taiwan Strait and to encourage Australia to be more independent in its military and foreign policies. The US-Australia Security Treaty has been largely marginalised and even former Prime Minister Paul Keating has suggested that Australia should be more independent in its foreign policy.

We have seen this “independence” play out already. In recent years, China has been in a territorial dispute with the Philippines to compete for marine resources and to strengthen its military forces in the Spratly islands and the South China Sea. The Philippines then filed a lawsuit to the International Court of Justice in The Hague for arbitration. China’s presence in Darwin during this conflict has posed a great threat to the US-Australia alliance and Australian national strategy.

A Chinese government-owned company gained the lease of Darwin Port for 99 years. Darwin Harbour and Cairns are the two most important military bases in the north of Australia, as Australia has a natural barrier in the south and only a few neighbouring countries in the north. Darwin Harbour is the most important passageway for foreign invasion, so whether in terms of traditional military strategy or modern strategy, the two harbours are extremely important as military bases.

It is thus very surprising that, when the Australian government and the Defence Ministry were consulted about the lease, they agreed without hesitation. However, when the media announced the deal, there was quite a big uproar in the Australian public. That a military base in Darwin Harbour could be so easily handed over is a fact that has touched the nerves of many Australian elites. They recognise that Australia’s most important national security interests have been sold off.

Ninety-nine years is more than a lifetime for humans. This means that a whole generation of Australian people will not see the return of Darwin Port in their lifetime or even the next one or two generations. For the Australian people, Darwin Harbour is no different to a sold asset. What makes Australians even more astonished is that the leasing company, Landbridge Group, has a Chinese military background.

In addition, Australia’s natural and energy resources would play a key role in providing steady supplies to China to guarantee its economic development for the next 20 years. China has already realised this fundamental goal. We can see huge amounts of resources, such as minerals from West Australia and South Australia, as well as large stretches of grazing land, have been purchased by Chinese government-owned enterprises and wealthy Chinese families connected with Chinese Communist Party power groups.
Political Infiltration: Stripping democratic integrity

China has bought off many Australian officials and politicians and the effect of such bribery has affected the normal operation of the Australian government – leading to policy and strategic mistakes. Both major parties in Australia are now seriously affected by political donations from China.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop was recently questioned in Parliament by Labor MPs as to why a company related to a Liberal Party political donor had set up a fund in her name titled “Julie Bishop Glorious Foundation”.

The political donor in question is mining giant Sally Zou, who developed four mines in Australia and signed a “potential $100 billion” agreement with China National Gold Group Corporation on 21 March 2017. According to The Australian, Zou donated $460,000 to the Liberal Party between 2015 and 2016.

Bishop admitted to meeting with Zou many times, but denied any knowledge of the Foundation. Labor backbencher Matt Keogh asked Bishop: “Does the Minister seriously expect the house to believe a Liberal donor who she knows well set up a company in the Minister’s name, the Julie Bishop Glorious Foundation, but never raised it with her on the many occasions that they met?”

On the other side of the political spectrum, former Secretary-General of the NSW Labor Party and Federal Senator Sam Dastyari has recently been revealed on ABC News as the key contact person for Chinese tycoon Huang Xiangmo.

Dastyari personally received money from Huang Xiangmo and so has the Labor Party. As a result, Dastyari spoke publicly in favour of China regarding territorial issues in the South China Sea and what he said was in direct contradiction to the Labor Party’s foreign policy and Australia’s national interests. Foreign Minister Bishop accused the Labor Party in Parliament on June 13, 2017, saying: “We now know that Senator Dastyari’s about-face on the South China Sea had a price tag attached to it – indeed, a reported $400,000 was all it took for Senator Dastyari to trash Labor’s official foreign policy position.”

Director-General of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) Duncan Lewis has tried to address this problem, but to no avail. He issued a secret briefing to senior officials of the three major political parties in Australia, with particular concern about two migrant billionaires from mainland China: Huang Xiangmo and Zhou Zerong (also known as Chau Chak Wing), who had donated approximately $6.7 million to Australian political parties. However, his warnings were ignored and the parties have continued to accept their donations: The Coalition has received $897,960 and the Labor Party $200,000.
Economic infiltration: Stripping our goodwill

Lured by power-for-money, the former Australian Trade Minister, Andrew Robb, signed the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

The China-Australia FTA is beneficial to Australia in trade; however, Australia has made several great concessions on national security and sovereignty: one is to allow a Chinese company to lease Darwin Harbour for 99 years; the second is to allow China’s equity capital to invest significant sums in Australia’s strategic industry, fragile agriculture and animal husbandry industries; and the third is to push Parliament to approve a bilateral extradition treaty. However, China and Australia have vastly different judicial systems and Australia would have to make significant concessions in jurisdiction in relation to the rights and interests of Chinese citizens in Australia.

The FTA brings with it many drawbacks: it allows China’s elite power groups to gain profits from investments in Australia while Chinese farmers and herdsmen suffer a devastating blow. As China’s agriculture and animal husbandry industries had already crossed their bottom line when China joined the World Trade Organisation, any further concessions made in the China-Australia FTA were seen as an opportunity for other countries to make the same requests of them and denied. Thus, elite power groups can make profits at the expense of the people, intensifying inequality and instability in China’s rural areas.

At the same time, China’s external military expansion and its intention to control Chinese citizens overseas is evident. Fu Ying, former Chinese ambassador to Australia, wrote a report to the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee and made a number of proposals about the FTA negotiations in early 2005. She estimated China’s economic loss, yet emphasised that political and strategic returns were so great for China as to make it worthwhile. With this understanding, the China-Australia FTA negotiations were initiated. They dragged on for 10 years and in the end, they put politics above economic gains and finalised the deal after Australia promised to make concessions in its jurisdiction.

The issue of the bilateral extradition treaty is another aspect of China’s interference with Australian policies. When China’s Premier Li Keqiang visited Australia, the Australian side promised to push the Parliament to ratify the bilateral extradition treaty, but many MPs, legal experts and academics believed that Australia should not sign this extradition agreement with China, because fairness and equality cannot possibly be guaranteed by combining the two judicial systems, and because it could be used by China to achieve its own ends. Australia is happy with the current arrangements in the bilateral judicial field so there is no need to sign any bilateral extradition treaty. Due to this strong opposition, Australian Prime Minister Turnbull eventually withdrew the proposal from Parliament.
Cultural Infiltration: Stripping freedom of speech

The Chinese Communist Party controls freedom of speech in Australia through its Chinese language media, international students and specially-created public education programs for Australian kids.

The Chinese media in Australia is equivalent to Hong Kong’s largest Chinese language newspaper, Sing Tao Daily, which fully cooperates with the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party.

Funded by ads from companies (usually extremely wealthy and Chinese), most Chinese media in Australia have become parasitic to the autocratic system of the Chinese Communist Party, even refusing to publish controversial topics for the Chinese Communist Party, such as the June 4th massacre at Tiananmen Square or pro-democracy arguments, for fear of bankruptcy.

Secretary-General of the Australian Defence Department Dennis Richardson warned before he retired that China was “very active” in espionage, that its monitoring and coercion activities in Australia were equally disturbing, and that it did control certain Chinese media in Australia.

The Chinese Communist Party also control Australia’s Chinese international students. In 2004, the Chinese consulate began to systematically register Chinese students and now own all students’ contact details. In essence, all Chinese overseas students are placed under the “protection” of the Chinese Consulate. Yet in fact, they need very little protection from the consulate because Australia has a very sound legal system in place.

When I worked at the Chinese Consulate, the Chinese Ministry of Public Security sent a notice to ask us to monitor local Chinese students so that they would not take to the streets. We felt very surprised, thinking: Australia is a country that allows free parades and assemblies, and yet the Ministry of Public Security in China told us to prevent such activities. My colleagues and I all felt it was a joke when we talked about the notice and yet this way of thinking is typical in the autocratic atmosphere and environment in China.

In fact, every Chinese student association was set up by the Chinese Consulate and they also hold their meetings in the Chinese Consulate. The Chinese students are very easy to control because they were all brainwashed in their formative years. They believe that loving the Chinese Communist Party is equal to loving China and a lot of them are very happy to serve the interests of the Party.

The Chinese Communist Party also controls students through Chinese government bureaucracy. For example, after students have graduated in Australia and want to go back home, their graduation certificates must be authenticated and stamped by the Chinese Consulate; otherwise, their certificates will not be recognised by Chinese employers.

The third method of cultural infiltration is in the classroom. China has established a number of Confucius Institutes in Australia and in recent years it has also set up numerous Confucius Classrooms in schools. It only needs to spend $10,000 to get one going because most resources are provided by the schools themselves, including classrooms, teachers and relevant materials. It is extremely cheap for China to set up Confucius Classrooms in Australia. If we allow this to continue to happen, every school will have a Confucius Classroom and this will be a very sad day for the Australian people, especially Chinese people in Australia. We do not need the Chinese Communist Party’s agenda to be fed to our children. I came to Australia with a very important consideration in mind: I do not want my children to be brainwashed like I was. I do not want them to have to go through the long struggle to break away from the control of the Chinese Communist Party like I did. Not many people have the opportunity I have had: to leave.

My hope is that Australia will hold on to the things that make it great and will truly value its sovereignty, democracy, fair-go ethic and the right to freedom of speech.

Yonglin Chen is a former Chinese diplomat who defected in 2005 from his posting as the consul for political affairs in the Chinese Consulate in Sydney. Factors contributing to the defection, according to Mr Chen, are the torture and death of his father during the Cultural Revolution, his witness of the Tiananmen Square Massacre and the persecution of Falun Gong by Chinese Authorities.
https://www.visiontimes.com/2017/10/09/ ... story.html

At least the military part has changed, with Australia playing a role in the freedom of navigation exercises in the South China Sea with the USA, France, UK etc.
The Chinese openly threatened to shoot our planes down (the Orions based here in Adelaide) and sink our navy ships.

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