
good on you sherlock

Bart wrote:![]()
carl/brock/borns gets around the sick fk![]()
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If the media is correct, it looks as though we're averaging a murder a day. Someone is always getting stabbed or shot and considering we have a small population in comparison to America - we're catching up quickly.Neferti~ wrote:Murders are HUGE news in Australia, they are so relatively rare .... do they do a running count in Sydney? How many did they have in 2011? Was the "count" down from 2010?![]()
In the good ole US of A, there is a murder every few minutes. They have even made lots of money out of Murder by creating a variety of programs on the Criminal Channel. If Oz is going to win this challenge we have to start being more American and everyone get hand guns and if you can't work out your problem, shoot the person! No death penalty in Australia. Not that has made any difference in the USA.
Really? I don't watch the TV News but have a look at the Sydney newspapers online. Maybe I just don't notice the murders?mantra wrote:If the media is correct, it looks as though we're averaging a murder a day. Someone is always getting stabbed or shot and considering we have a small population in comparison to America - we're catching up quickly.Neferti~ wrote:Murders are HUGE news in Australia, they are so relatively rare .... do they do a running count in Sydney? How many did they have in 2011? Was the "count" down from 2010?![]()
In the good ole US of A, there is a murder every few minutes. They have even made lots of money out of Murder by creating a variety of programs on the Criminal Channel. If Oz is going to win this challenge we have to start being more American and everyone get hand guns and if you can't work out your problem, shoot the person! No death penalty in Australia. Not that has made any difference in the USA.
Murders aren't rare in Australia.
It has even raised the possibility that it might bar content from its joint venture partner, the Seven Network, if Yahoo!7 management thinks it will act as a lightning rod for abusive comments.
The portal, which attracts 7 million users a month, will also try to promote ''good news'' stories about former asylum seekers living in Australia as part its ''responsibility to educate the community''.
The chief executive of Yahoo!7's, Rohan Lund, said: ''We still believe in post moderation but our philosophy is evolving …
mellie wrote:http://www.actmhcn.org.au/about-us/our-committee.html
Mantra, do any of these people in this panel look familiar to you?
The one sitting down........
re- Cracker
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