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Thread: VALE Tim Fischer

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by scarry View Post
    One of my sons has battled CML,a type of leukaemia since 2001.He is 34 this year.

    We are just thankful that he is still here,and leads almost a normal life,has a wife and two fantastic kids.

    But its a worry we will have for the rest of our lives,as it will never be cured,just controlled with drugs.

    As the youngest person in Qld to go on these new drugs,at the time,and not have a bone marrow transplant,no one knows the side effects over time,and as the body gets older.
    To have some one close to you very sick breaks your heart , all any one can do is wish you all the very best . And say a little prayer.
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  2. #12
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    Tim seemed to be a man of great forethought, I have his "Trains Unlimited" book and agree that even if we don't have the funds/concrete plans to build hi-speed rail at the moment, we should definitely be acquiring the land to do so.
    2005 D3 TDV6 Present
    1999 D2 TD5 Gone

  3. #13
    DiscoMick Guest
    Yes, he was a good bloke.
    We can easily afford high speed rail. Government debt is relatively low and governments can borrow at even lower rates. We need to invest in our infrastructure to make our cities work properly.

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by DiscoMick View Post
    Yes, he was a good bloke.
    We can easily afford high speed rail. Government debt is relatively low and governments can borrow at even lower rates. We need to invest in our infrastructure to make our cities work properly.
    Unfortunately governments are dead scared of running deficits these days to 'prove' they are better economic managers....
    We'll end up like Germany soon....

  5. #15
    DiscoMick Guest
    People have been sold the false idea that government budgets are like household budgets, when actually they are very different. Governments have to invest to support productivity gains for the future, which then pays for the costs. Governments don't have to pay dividends to shareholders, the shareholders are the people.

  6. #16
    JDNSW's Avatar
    JDNSW is offline RoverLord Silver Subscriber
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    That is right, but there have been quite a few examples round the world of governments accumulating a deficit so large that the interest became a major part of the budget. Australia risked this in the 1980s - even though the accumulated deficit was not all that high, interest rates were. But with current low interest rates, it seems now would be the time to run a deficit - but not too much or it will push up interest rates, and a combination of high deficit and high interest rates can rapidly get disastrous.
    John

    JDNSW
    1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
    1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol

  7. #17
    DiscoMick Guest

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