Beer Garden

Anything goes here.. :) Now with Beer Garden for our smoking patrons.
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Llessur2002
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Re: Beer Garden

#2761 Post by Llessur2002 » Thu Nov 16, 2017 3:12 pm

Looks like someone has fallen from one of the walkways inside down onto the ground floor next to the sunglasses concession. The ambos weren't working on him anymore, quite a lot of police presence.

Ben
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Re: Beer Garden

#2762 Post by Ben » Thu Nov 16, 2017 4:24 pm

Thats sad. I would think its unlikely you would fall though, probably more intentional... :?

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Re: Beer Garden

#2763 Post by Nort » Thu Nov 16, 2017 5:57 pm

The fact it hasn't been picked up by the news confirms we should probably stop talking about it.

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[Shuz]
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Re: Beer Garden

#2764 Post by [Shuz] » Thu Nov 16, 2017 6:02 pm

Suicide?
Any views and opinions expressed are of my own, and do not reflect the views or opinions of any organisation of which I have an affiliation with.

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Re: Beer Garden

#2765 Post by Goodsy » Thu Nov 16, 2017 6:22 pm

[Shuz] wrote:
Thu Nov 16, 2017 6:02 pm
Suicide?
according to witnesses from a now deleted thread on reddit, unfortunately yes

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Matt
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Re: Beer Garden

#2766 Post by Matt » Thu Nov 16, 2017 6:49 pm

Maximus wrote:
Matt wrote:
Wed Nov 15, 2017 10:04 pm
So 61.6% of Aussies are selfish, hypocritical, morons and/or twats?

100% of states and territories voted yes.
89% of electorates voted yes.
That's some interesting maths you have going on there, Matt (and everyone else who is celebrating an "overwhelming majority"). So, 61.6% becomes 89% or 100%, depending on which way you slice it? We all know statistics can be used to 'prove' anything, but the simple fact is, of those who voted, 61.6% voted yes and 38.4% voted no.

There is absolutely no way the results of this survey can be compared to the results of an election. In an election, your vote reflects your views on hundreds of different issues, and many people who vote for the same candidate or party will have wildly differing views on many of those issues. It is entirely reasonable, therefore, to expect quantitatively close results, where the difference between a couple of percentage points can be the difference between 'falling over the line' and 'a landside'. In this survey, however, your response reflected your view on a singular binary issue. For all its faults, and with a statistician's hat on, this postal survey was a remarkable exercise in that respect. It is extremely rare to gain such an insight into the entire population's view on a singular issue.

In any case, more people believe that SSM should be legalised than not. And I have not heard one single person suggest that this result shouldn't be respected. Even the man so many of you love to hate, Tony Abbott, stated yesterday, "I congratulate the yes campaign on their achievement. The people have spoken and, of course, the Parliament should respect the result." But the simple, unarguable fact is that 38.4% of Australians will be unhappy about SSM being legalised. No one is suggesting this is 'right' or 'wrong', but it's a simple fact.

Respect is a two-way street. We respect the results of the survey and therefore legalise SSM, but how do you respect the views of the 4.87 million people who voted no? I'm sure many of you would argue that the no voters don't deserve respect, but not everyone feels this way. I was pleased to see that Labor's Jason Clare, who holds the seat of Blaxland, where the no vote was highest, said yesterday, "Good people with good hearts can have different views on this important issue." Many of the no voters (and we will never know how many) voted no for reasons that have nothing to do with homophobia or intolerance or bigotry. They simply have a different belief -- whether that is based on religion or something else. I think the religious and other protections being debated now are probably a reasonable way to respect the no vote as we move to legalising SSM.
Ben wrote:
Wed Nov 15, 2017 9:00 pm
Give it a break rev. Move on. You lost. Find something else to troll about now.
I actually think Rev has made more sense than most in recent times. Which part of:
rev wrote:
Wed Nov 15, 2017 4:04 pm
Bottom line, for me anyway as has been my stance throughout ... is not whether it gets legalized or not, but if it does get legalized, will there be sufficient protections in place for religious institutions (and their schools), and anyone else, to refuse services to same sex weddings.
...don't you understand? He's only stated it about hundred times or more. Perhaps you could try 'winning' with some dignity (although I didn't realise this was a competition).
The maths isn’t ‘interesting’ - it’s entirely unremarkable. It’s just basic maths.

Parts of the ‘no’ brigade tried to push for referendum rules, where a majority in a majority of states was needed to change the law - every state voted yes.

Parts of the ‘no’ brigade were looking to sink it by encouraging MPs to vote according to their electorate rather than by the total votes cast - 89% of electorates voted yes.

On any measure it’s a comprehensive result.

61.6% of a yes or no question is not close.

As for respect, my reply was in response to the words selfish, hypocritical, moron, and twat being flung.

Spare me.

For the 38.4%, their lives go on unchanged.
When I do eventually get married, none of them will even know about it, much less have their lives somehow lessened by it in any way whatsoever.

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Re: Beer Garden

#2767 Post by timtam20292 » Thu Nov 16, 2017 6:52 pm

Well said Matt :applause: :cheers:

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Re: Beer Garden

#2768 Post by timtam20292 » Thu Nov 16, 2017 7:00 pm

Nort wrote:
Thu Nov 16, 2017 5:57 pm
The fact it hasn't been picked up by the news confirms we should probably stop talking about it.
7 news briefly mentioned it. :cry:

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Re: Beer Garden

#2769 Post by Matt » Thu Nov 16, 2017 7:09 pm

timtam20292 wrote:
Nort wrote:
Thu Nov 16, 2017 5:57 pm
The fact it hasn't been picked up by the news confirms we should probably stop talking about it.
7 news briefly mentioned it. :cry:
As sad as this is, it’s something of a relief that events like this are so rare that they do still make news.

People are so immune to the regularity of people jumping in front of tubes/trains here that the reaction is often just annoyance at the disruption caused to public transport services.

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Re: Beer Garden

#2770 Post by timtam20292 » Thu Nov 16, 2017 7:21 pm

I would think that most people's attitude would change once they realised the reason of the train delay. Mine certainly would.

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Re: Beer Garden

#2771 Post by Goodsy » Thu Nov 16, 2017 7:51 pm

timtam20292 wrote:
Thu Nov 16, 2017 7:21 pm
I would think that most people's attitude would change once they realised the reason of the train delay. Mine certainly would.
suicides are kept under wraps for a good reason, it's actually against media guidelines to report on them

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Re: Beer Garden

#2772 Post by Matt » Thu Nov 16, 2017 8:30 pm

GoodSmackUp wrote:
timtam20292 wrote:
Thu Nov 16, 2017 7:21 pm
I would think that most people's attitude would change once they realised the reason of the train delay. Mine certainly would.
suicides are kept under wraps for a good reason, it's actually against media guidelines to report on them
I thought it was more the details of the method itself that were against guidelines?

Saying that, “a person under a train” is the reason given for suicide related transport delays over here. You hear it so often you tend to remember the wording.

Grimly specific.

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Matt
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Re: Beer Garden

#2773 Post by Matt » Thu Nov 16, 2017 8:32 pm

timtam20292 wrote:I would think that most people's attitude would change once they realised the reason of the train delay. Mine certainly would.
Mine always does, it’s hideous.

To a lot of people it’s such a regular occurrence that they don’t seem to be bothered.

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Re: Beer Garden

#2774 Post by Maximus » Fri Nov 17, 2017 10:35 am

Matt wrote:
Thu Nov 16, 2017 6:49 pm
The maths isn’t ‘interesting’ - it’s entirely unremarkable. It’s just basic maths.

Parts of the ‘no’ brigade tried to push for referendum rules, where a majority in a majority of states was needed to change the law - every state voted yes.

Parts of the ‘no’ brigade were looking to sink it by encouraging MPs to vote according to their electorate rather than by the total votes cast - 89% of electorates voted yes.

On any measure it’s a comprehensive result.

61.6% of a yes or no question is not close.

As for respect, my reply was in response to the words selfish, hypocritical, moron, and twat being flung.

Spare me.

For the 38.4%, their lives go on unchanged.
When I do eventually get married, none of them will even know about it, much less have their lives somehow lessened by it in any way whatsoever.
Matt, I never meant to suggest your maths was wrong; it's clearly correct. I was simply making the point that statistics can be used to 'prove' anything, and in this case I think "89%" or "100%" is misleading with respect to the base 61.6% vs 38.4% result. I also never said this was a "close" result; simply that it wasn't an overwhelming majority and I don't believe it's statistically valid to analyse the result in the same way as that of a general election.

My comments about respect were not directed at you. They were general comments about needing to respect the views of the 7.82 million people who responded yes and the 4.87 million people who responded no. There is clearly disrespect on both sides of the debate. On this forum alone, the words/phrases "beyond pathetic", "ranting drivel", "lame as fuck", "intolerant, violent thugs" and "are you being stupid on purpose" have all been used by yes campaigners in relation to no campaigners. Clearly, similar things have also been said in the opposite direction.

This is clearly a very personal issue for you, but I don't understand why you need to be quite so aggressive about it. All I have ever tried to do over the past couple of weeks is ensure open-minded, factual and respectful debate. Yes, I have my own point of view about things, but I'm not trying to change your mind or tell you or anyone else that you are wrong. I'm happy for you that it now looks like you will achieve the outcome you had been hoping for, and I hope you have a wonderful wedding and marriage, whenever and wherever that may occur.
It's = it is; its = everything else.
You're = you are; your = belongs to.
Than = comparative ("bigger than"); then = next.

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Matt
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Re: Beer Garden

#2775 Post by Matt » Fri Nov 17, 2017 9:30 pm

Maximus wrote:
Fri Nov 17, 2017 10:35 am
Matt, I never meant to suggest your maths was wrong; it's clearly correct. I was simply making the point that statistics can be used to 'prove' anything, and in this case I think "89%" or "100%" is misleading with respect to the base 61.6% vs 38.4% result. I also never said this was a "close" result; simply that it wasn't an overwhelming majority and I don't believe it's statistically valid to analyse the result in the same way as that of a general election.

My comments about respect were not directed at you. They were general comments about needing to respect the views of the 7.82 million people who responded yes and the 4.87 million people who responded no. There is clearly disrespect on both sides of the debate. On this forum alone, the words/phrases "beyond pathetic", "ranting drivel", "lame as fuck", "intolerant, violent thugs" and "are you being stupid on purpose" have all been used by yes campaigners in relation to no campaigners. Clearly, similar things have also been said in the opposite direction.

This is clearly a very personal issue for you, but I don't understand why you need to be quite so aggressive about it. All I have ever tried to do over the past couple of weeks is ensure open-minded, factual and respectful debate. Yes, I have my own point of view about things, but I'm not trying to change your mind or tell you or anyone else that you are wrong. I'm happy for you that it now looks like you will achieve the outcome you had been hoping for, and I hope you have a wonderful wedding and marriage, whenever and wherever that may occur.
My point was that these were the parameters that various people on the 'no' side had suggested be used to gauge the result of this thing. Polling as a straight 'yes' vs 'no' has been pretty steady at roughly 60% for years now, so the Lyle Sheltons of the world had suggested splitting by electorate (or state, referendum style) in the hope of finding another way of sinking it.

We didn't ask for the worth of our relationships to be 'debated' and it's been a pretty unpleasant experience for many.
You're right, it is deeply personal and my fuse is admittedly short.
I've spent a couple of decades being on the receiving end of needless aggression (actual, real-life aggression - not arguments with strangers online) for merely existing, which may go some way to explaining why my tolerance level to this issue is extremely low.

I appreciate your well wishes and respect your taking the time to try to understand another point of view.
As for my wedding, it'll certainly be over there when (if) it does occur. (I continue to wait impatiently for the proposal...) :cheers:

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