Victim of Communism

  • 7 Posts
  • 733 Comments
Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • I spend all my sick days and a non-negligible number of vacation days on the kind of chores you can only get done during work hours. Back when we had “Work From Home”, I would also squeeze these tasks in during my lunch break.

    I don’t want to burn sick time for a doctor’s appointment (I need to save those for when my kid is actually sick), and I sure as hell don’t want to use up a “vacation” day for it.

    Well, good luck with that. My retired mother-in-law helps a lot with my son when he’s ill. And we can juggle my son between our individual sick-day allotments such that I haven’t run out yet. But yeah, eventually they’re all just “hours to spend that my boss won’t gripe at me for when I use them”. That’s meant dipping into vacation days when I needed to justify not being on the clock.





  • I’ve also done reading about what else the CCP does to people it doesn’t like

    The US churns out propaganda by the bucket load. I’m sure you’ve heard all sorts of crazy shit.

    I do wonder if you’ve noticed how often organs like the Epoch Times and New York Post co-mingle reactionary takes against the Chinese government with Republican talking points.

    Being surprised at this is also like being surprised the Nazis used imprisoned Jews as slave labour.

    Believing a pro-Nazi media when they tell you who to hate is certainly a vibe








  • China is normalising its military presence in the Indo-Pacific Region

    What is “normalizing” supposed to mean within the context of a nation that borders this region and does immense amounts of naval trade through it?

    This is another example of China’s familiar tactic of salami slicing, seen also, for example, in its progressive attempts at dominating the South China Sea

    Again - the South China Sea - why do you think they call it that?

    Also, who has historically dominated the area? And why is this regional hegemon so incapable of playing nicely with it’s neighbors?



  • Over the pandemic, Australian Government gross debt increased from $534.4 billion in March 2019 to $885.5 billion in April 2022 and is now at the highest level relative to GDP (gross domestic product) since the 1950s when debt accrued during the Second World War was still on the Australian Government balance sheet

    Add to that, the economy is experiencing a prolonged “per capita recession” (where economic growth falls behind population growth, causing living standards to decline). A headline recession remains a rising risk as high interest rates, inflation, and a softening labor market squeeze households.