Mardoo
Noob What Craps On A Bit
If your going to try to sink the opposition, be SURE you have the opponents measure.
Right, eh? Clearly they couldn’t even find the tapes in their own stores
If your going to try to sink the opposition, be SURE you have the opponents measure.
Well most stores were opened close to the opposition, so you could have cracked it with the sausages.
Could sink Bunnings if they don't get the English mustard to go with the snags.But they didnt. And thats what sank them
Free sausage sizzle. Bunnings would have been toastCould sink Bunnings if they don't get the English mustard to go with the snags.
the idea was fine, it was the implimentation that sucked, it beggers beleif that they couldn't turn a profit selling hardware, mostly non perishable goods at huge markups.Not sure I gots the feels for them based on their Masters ******, That was an idiotic idea from the get go.
IGA still sell a range of Laucke flours and I'm sure I've seen Wallaby in there.
For a perfect flour, try Kialla Mills stone ground if you can get it locally.
The major problem in Australia is real estate expense..
I liked Masters but the problem was they couldn't decide whether it was a hardware store, a Spotlight or a Good Guys minus the Televisions. So it fell between several stools. The plants section was crap compared to Bunnings, the fridges and washing machines were ok (bought my washing machine there) but they didn't offer any real advantages over going to Good Guys or Bing Lee in NSW who would deliver. The arts and crafts section again was reasonable but again nothing that you couldn't find at Officeworks or Spotlight.the idea was fine, it was the implimentation that sucked, it beggers beleif that they couldn't turn a profit selling hardware, mostly non perishable goods at huge markups.
correct.I've long felt that we've been enjoying a standard of living in this country to which we weren't quite entitled. That is, paying ourselves too much for what we put in, in comparison with the rest of the world with whom we trade. And we've got used to it! Now, the hard economics are hitting home.
Cheaper to import cars than pay the high wages we demand to make them here. We used to make tv sets, and radios, etc, here, but no longer viable to do that. Reduce our working hours, have more holidays, take sickies at will, demand even higher wages, etc - blind Freddy could see that this is an unsustainable situation.
Now, we amuse ourselves with SSM debates, citizenship squabbles, change the flag, become a republic, and any other non-productive pastime short of actually working smarter and/or harder.
Clever, clever country...
correct.
Why is it that on my drive to work every car I pass is a swanky new model. Where is the money coming from? Industry? Products made locally?
No. Rents.
I see it every week, apprentices rocking up to training in their $50K utes. What happened to buying a shitbox as your first car? My first car (bought for $200 at 15) was a 1962 XK Falcon that I completely stripped, repainted inside and out (with a little beaver), changed engine and gearbox and had it roadworthy and registered by the time I was 17. Then sold that for $400 and upgraded to a newer model 1964 EH ute, which was traded in for a 1979 XD 351 FMX ex highway pursuit, to save my licence I then bought a bongo van for driving to work, which was traded for a 1966 HR Ute.correct.
Why is it that on my drive to work every car I pass is a swanky new model. Where is the money coming from? Industry? Products made locally?
No. Rents.
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