With the way Labor is spiralling out of control and self destructing the coalition does not need policies.And maybe one day Tony Abbott will have some policies to discuss.
I should go and find the joke I posted about this.Lets look at it from a different point of view. If the government were flying the airliner, there would be a struggle in the coughpit, with the appalled passengers listening over the intercom as the plane lurches across the sky.
"We have full tanks," says co-pilot Swan, "Plenty of reserves, everything's in good shape. Uh-oh!"
Is the consensus that the Gillard Govt has actually had good policy? I don't think NBN would have occurred with the Libs? Obvious that Libs are coming in though. I'm still not sure which way I will vote.
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The consensus is that the policies were mostly good, but the execution was poor and the marketing was woeful.
BTW - that's not the consensus on this particular forum, for obvious reasons ....
I wouldn't call NBN good policy. What will the average Australian use 200 Gb per month for?Is the consensus that the Gillard Govt has actually had good policy? I don't think NBN would have occurred with the Libs? Obvious that Libs are coming in though. I'm still not sure which way I will vote.
Actually that second paragraph demonstrates your inability to comprehend much of what has been said in this thread.
I wouldn't call NBN good policy. What will the average Australian use 200 Gb per month for?
Downloading video and playing games. It's senseless to believe that the average person in an average home in an average suburb is going to find a desire to build their own startup internet business, consult a doctor, educate the kids or go 3D shopping to the tune of 7 Gb a day.
If people used the Internet for such things, assuming that the experience came close to the real deal, then we would need to see changes in behaviour to justify the expense. People would have to sit in front of a computer to consume the bandwidth, rather than exercising, working, or socialising.
Not just a few people here and there, but everyone. And they would have to pay for it.
It's like the periodic calls for a high speed train to Canberra. To justify the expense, every single road and air visitor would have to take the train, and half of Canberra's population would have to make weekly trips to Sydney or Melbourne. And pay several hundred dollars for a ticket. That's the only way to have the thing make a profit.
I certainly have an inability to comprehend that comment. Could you expand on it or otherwise explain your meaning?
I wouldn't call NBN good policy. What will the average Australian use 200 Gb per month for?
Downloading video and playing games. It's senseless to believe that the average person in an average home in an average suburb is going to find a desire to build their own startup internet business, consult a doctor, educate the kids or go 3D shopping to the tune of 7 Gb a day.
If people used the Internet for such things, assuming that the experience came close to the real deal, then we would need to see changes in behaviour to justify the expense. People would have to sit in front of a computer to consume the bandwidth, rather than exercising, working, or socialising.
Not just a few people here and there, but everyone. And they would have to pay for it.
It's like the periodic calls for a high speed train to Canberra. To justify the expense, every single road and air visitor would have to take the train, and half of Canberra's population would have to make weekly trips to Sydney or Melbourne. And pay several hundred dollars for a ticket. That's the only way to have the thing make a profit.
And then there are the outright lies but which some here insist on calling 'the realities of a minority government'.
Abbots never been PM. If he's lied then they don't have any impact on me. Can't say the same for Gillard's lies.
Talk about double standards. Lying about his views now in order to get elected (saying anything to get power) will have an impact when he does the complete opposite once elected. If you can't understand the importance of Abbott's truthfulness at this point in time, and brush it off with such glib reasoning then I despair for Australia.
Medhead, you are not making sense.
Abbott isn't in power so he hasn't actually lied yet then, has he? You are simply assuming he will, prolly coz that's exactly what Gillard did. Sheesh.
One could argue that Gillard is yet to prove the same.The man is a walking time bomb. Who has yet to prove he is fit to lead this country.
One could argue that Gillard is yet to prove the same.