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Anonymousllama , in Australia Indigenous referendum set to fail as support dips, poll shows

Most referendums usually end in defeat unless they start with overwhelming public support. The support has been lackluster from the very beginning so this isn’t surprising

_pete_ ,

I wish this was the case with Brexit…

Macaque , in Alabama cracks down on birth centers, leaving pregnant women with fewer options

Pro baby

Macaque , in Activists spray red paint over billionaire Walmart heiress's superyacht for a second time

All billionaires are ethically in the wrong.

PM_ME_FEET_PICS ,

Not really but this one in particular is the Michael Jordan of drunk driving and I believe got away with manslaughter.

Nalivai , (edited )

Yes, really. There are no ethically sound reasons for a person to have all this money when there is so much inequality. Moreover, there is no ethical ways to accumulate all this money. If you are billionaire either you or your daddy had to do a lot of explicitly unethical shit, and in order to retain it, you have to do unethical shit, actively, right now.

Illuminostro ,

Capitalism, no matter how benign, and well intended, is literally exploiting labor from those who are lesss fortunate. And thanks to that malignant leprechaun Milton Friedman, every MBA since thinks that they’re legally bound to maximize dividends for investors instead of compensating the people who do the actual production. It’s obscene, sociopathic, and literally evil. But if Jeebus didn’t want them to rich, they wouldn’t be, right?

Illuminostro ,

Expound.

Maajmaaj ,
@Maajmaaj@lemmy.ca avatar

How do those billionaire toes taste? Like the hope of financial freedom I’m guessing?

PM_ME_FEET_PICS ,

Bigot.

namelivia , in Spain's soccer chief Luis Rubiales quits in kiss scandal

About time!

athos77 , in Spain's soccer chief Luis Rubiales quits in kiss scandal

Archive version. I can't help but wonder if he negotiated a nice severance package to make RFEF's headache go away :(

13esq , in Suella Braverman pushes for ban of 'lethal danger' XL Bully dogs

Bengal cats ought to be banned too. They’re wild animals, not domesticated pets.

baruchin , in Spain's soccer chief Luis Rubiales quits in kiss scandal
@baruchin@lemmy.world avatar

Finally! He won’t be missed.

Gazumi , in Spain's soccer chief Luis Rubiales quits in kiss scandal

He pretty much embodies what needs to change and why.

broadacre_farmer , in Australia Indigenous referendum set to fail as support dips, poll shows

It’s been bungled pretty badly by the yes side, when you can’t actually say exactly what you want to change in our constitution it’s not a great sign of a decent change. If they could say exactly what they wanted to change (assuming it was reasonable) and Labor explained exactly what policy they wanted to back it up with I think they’d convince a lot of conservative Australians to vote yes as well. As it stands it isn’t likely to get through, I haven’t talked to an indigenous person who is going to vote yes for it yet either.

I also find it a bit ironic that Tasmania, the state that practically wiped out it’s indigenous population that they’re most in support of it.

krogoth ,
@krogoth@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I agree that it may have been bungled, but I think that some of what you said isn’t quite right.

The precise text of the constitutional amendment is already set forth. You can read it online. They put it in a physical booklet which was sent to every household in the country. You’re right that the messaging was far from perfect, especially near the start, but saying that the “yes” side can’t state what they want to change is a bit disingenuous.

Why I think it may have been bungled is that it’s the sort of change that needed to be made from a position of political strength, and I’m not sure that Labor were quite there. The “no” side was always going to have an advantage in that it’s usually easier to maintain the status quo than it is to change something.

This means that the “yes” proponents have to do a lot more work to argue their case, and when combined with the big problems that Australia is facing (cost of living, housing affordability, etc) I think a lot of folks who would be “in the middle” on the issue are understandably a bit irritated that the government can appear to be putting more work into this than those other issues.

broadacre_farmer ,

I agree that it may have been bungled, but I think that some of what you said isn’t quite right.

Fair point, I’d missed that in the pamphlet, it’s still a super vague change though. Where are the definitions of what this body will look like, what powers it grants to said body and how do they define ‘matters relating to indigenous australians’? Changes to our constitution can’t be vague, they have to be clear and concise in what and how they grant powers otherwise they’re ripe for abuse. I can think of about half a dozen ways it can be abused with the current wording.

The precise text of the constitutional amendment is already set forth. You can read it online. They put it in a physical booklet which was sent to every household in the country. You’re right that the messaging was far from perfect, especially near the start, but saying that the “yes” side can’t state what they want to change is a bit disingenuous.

I think my point above still stands, there is zero assurances or guarantees that ‘listening to indigenous voices’ and ‘giving recognition’ will lead to better outcomes for indigenous Australians, which is kind of the whole point of all of it.

Why I think it may have been bungled is that it’s the sort of change that needed to be made from a position of political strength, and I’m not sure that Labor were quite there. The “no” side was always going to have an advantage in that it’s usually easier to maintain the status quo than it is to change something.

They’re probably burnt for the next election cycle if the LNP get their act together honestly, assuming it doesn’t pass anyway.

This means that the “yes” proponents have to do a lot more work to argue their case, and when combined with the big problems that Australia is facing (cost of living, housing affordability, etc) I think a lot of folks who would be “in the middle” on the issue are understandably a bit irritated that the government can appear to be putting more work into this than those other issues.

Yeah that’s basically the nail in the coffin for them, it’s all well and good to do this but maybe don’t time it when a not insignificant chunk of our population is having to choose between a roof over their heads and being well fed.

krogoth ,
@krogoth@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I think my point above still stands, there is zero assurances or guarantees that ‘listening to indigenous voices’ and ‘giving recognition’ will lead to better outcomes for indigenous Australians, which is kind of the whole point of all of it.

The page I linked isn’t authored by the “yes” proponents, it’s just an objective description of the change that we’re voting on. So it doesn’t (and shouldn’t) attempt to describe what each side asserts that the outcome of the amendment would be.

For that you can check out the section that each side has in the booklet. There looks to be PDF of it on the AEC site. Outcomes that the “yes” proponents expect for indigeous folks which are listed there include increased life expectancy, improved education, reduced infant mortality.

Those aren’t ironclad assurances or guarantees but I don’t think we really get those with any legislative changes. Providing some kind of assurance on an outcome would require a much more radical amendment which would likely be fraught with problems

They’re probably burnt for the next election cycle if the LNP get their act together honestly, assuming it doesn’t pass anyway.

Yeah, I think you’re probably right. If the LNP had someone a bit more charismatic than Dutton then I’d be almost certain that you’re right. Maybe Labor will get lucky and there’ll still be enough lingering resentment against the libs, but they need to be a lot less feckless than the have been so far if they don’t want to rely on that.

At the same time it doesn’t look like the LNP have learned much from last time either. Really just a shitshow all round at a time when we need some good leadership.

Cleverdawny , in Cornel West for President announces the hiring of political activist, author, and adviser Peter Daou as Campaign Manager

Has he paid his back child support yet?

Edgelord_Of_Tomorrow , in Australia Indigenous referendum set to fail as support dips, poll shows

Blows my mind how long the “Yes” campaign waited to start campaigning.

The “No” campaign started as soon as the LNP sided against the voice last year. The “Yes” campaign only started a few weeks ago.

Letting the “No” campaign go unchallenged for months has had a predictable result and this will go down in history as a masterclass in snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

Orionza , in Phoenix breaks heat record as city hits 110F for the 54th consecutive day
@Orionza@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t think so. We had that “hurricane” in Calif that was mostly in Arizona. I have multiple friends there and I know the temps dropped that time a couple weeks ago. So it may have been 54 days this year, but not consecutive.

mob ,

Yeah, that’s strange. I’m not trying to pretend to be a weather expert, but a quick Google shows it’s been less than 110 a week ago.

www.localconditions.com/…/past.php

www.timeanddate.com/weather/usa/phoenix/historic

teydam , in California lawmakers vote to fast-track low-income housing on churches’ lands

yigby is a pretty funny play on the whole thing.

Lucz1848 , in Spain's soccer chief Luis Rubiales quits in kiss scandal
@Lucz1848@lemmy.ca avatar

What a fucking loser. Also, screw you to the RFEF for not having the spine to fire him.

JoBo ,

AIUI, they did not have the authority to fire him. He’s appointed by FIFA (who suspended him while investigating, as a prelude to firing him). The RFEF published some weird shit at his behest but his support within it evaporated pretty quickly.

Lucz1848 ,
@Lucz1848@lemmy.ca avatar

Thanks for the clarification.

bloopernova , in Spain's soccer chief Luis Rubiales quits in kiss scandal
@bloopernova@programming.dev avatar

I guess he scored an own goal.

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