- 7 Posts
- 52 Comments
Zane@aussie.zoneto
Games@lemmy.world•What's your favorite car to drive and in which game?English
3·1 year agoThe Cayman GT4 in GT7 is just sublime. Pointy, but with great mid-corner stability.

Zane@aussie.zoneto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What resources do you recommend for an adult wishing to relearn math?
15·1 year agoI used Khan Academy when I reentered uni as a mature-age student and found it very helpful
I’m not a fan of ATHF and The Mouse and the Mask is still in my top 5 of all time. Production and lyricism are on another level.
Oh man, speaking of Kweli, his Black Star album with Mos Def needs a mention
Those Unkle and Jeru the Damaja albums are rock solid recommendations
Hip Hop: DJ Shadow- Endtroducing… Blues: RL Burnside- A Ass Pocket of Whiskey Psychedelic Rock: The Cambodian Space Project- Whisky Cambodia Dance/Electro: The Presets- Apocalypso
There’s a centre of mass joke in here somewhere
And only with consent
Zane@aussie.zoneto
Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics.@slrpnk.net•‘Wake-up call to humanity’: research shows the Great Barrier Reef is the hottest it’s been in 400 years.4·2 years agoIt is, but the great barrier Reef is within the tropics and so undergoes more of a wet/dry season instead of summer/autumn/winter/spring.
All day long on the chaise longue
If you haven’t heard it before, please listen to the song “The Band Played Waltzing Matilda” by Scottish-Australian songwriter Eric Bogle. That song, as well as “I Was Only 19” by Redgum, perfectly encapsulates the reason for the memorials.
The songs do not glorify our success as a military nation, nor do they portray the soldiers they are about as grand heros or defenders of freedom. They are about very young men, sent away by their country to experience unimaginable horror and suffering, only to return to a home with, at best, minimal support and, at worst, the shame of the community they once were a part of.
Each name on each of those memorials- thousands of them- represent an experience of the unimaginable, and a family irreparably changed. They are a reminder of what was taken, and of the sorrow that was caused. I do not see them as prideful, celebratory or reverential, and I do not know of anyone who does. They are a commiseration.
With regards to ANZAC, and it’s place in Australian culture, you are essentially looking at modern Australia’s foundational myth. In the 1950s and 1960s when Australia was having its own civil rights moment, the original foundation myth of terra nullius and the “brave”, white settlers conquering an untamed land finally began to feel too untrue to most Australians, too much like a myth. Colonial Australia needed a new explanation for its existence and it is around that time that the Gallipoli campaign started to be promoted by various historians and authors as Australia’s “coming of age” as a nation.
The intention was to give (white) Australians a point of reference for themselves, something they could point to and say “the things that we are, this is where they came to be”. Qualities like mateship, camaraderie, larrakinism, hard work, disdain for authority or aristocracy and resilience in the face of adversity. Those were the qualities promoted as being cemented in the national psyche at ANZAC Cove. It is a manufactured narrative, but those writers were very successful, as you can see.
There’s more that can be said for Australia treats it’s narrative history, especially that of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, but that’s better left for another (long) post. If you’re interested in how Australia viewed it’s two competing foundational stories in the 1990s and 2000s, and how it effects the way we talk about our history today, look up the History Wars. Let me know if you think there was a winner.
Zane@aussie.zoneto
Australia@aussie.zone•ADF whistleblower David McBride moved to maximum security and "has no access to natural light & restricted contact with his daughters."English
14·2 years agoRegardless of David’s original intentions, he is being victimised for exposing war crimes. There is nothing just in his incarceration.
At least in CWD-causing prions, plant accumulation is significant enough for the plants to be infectious when consumed by mice in a lab setting. So, maybe?
https://www.usgs.gov/publications/plants-vectors-environmental-prion-transmission
Zane@aussie.zoneto
Brisbane@aussie.zone•Former officers 'sickened' by video of Queensland police beating teen with baton in watch house
8·2 years agoAn internal police investigation, overseen by the Queensland Crime and Corruption Commission, found the force was lawful and reasonable.
We investigated ourselves and found that we did nothing wrong. Again. Fuck the QPS, I’ve seen batons used.
Treating somebody poorly, purely for spite or some form of retaliation, seems like a lot of unnecessary energy to expend on somebody who may not deserve that much space in your mind. The golden rule is not about whether someone has the right to be treated better than they have you, it is about discovering grace within yourself and extending it towards all others.
As to why you should, I could use another turn of phrase- “Lead by example”. You had a poor example in how to extend grace to others in the form of your teachers, and you have the opportunity to be a positive example to others in their place.
Zane@aussie.zoneto
Parenting@lemmy.world•How old are most first time parents where you live?
6·2 years agoPlenty of information on mums available in Australia, not so much for dads. The average age for first time mums in 2020 was 29.7, with the largest proportion (38%) between 30-34 years old. Anecdotally, I was a first time dad at 34, and my wife at 36.






That’s what I was thinking, either casing the place (but it is a secure apartment building) or will pressure for cash. I’m big and ugly enough to feel secure with a stranger, but you’re right, I’ll give the UK number a ring when they open this evening.