Youtube comments of ChineseKiwi (@ChineseKiwi).
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11:39 - As a dirty Kiwi immigrant to Australia, that animation jumping to Australia - WEEEEEEEEEEE đ€Ł
And my parents were skilled immigrants to New Zealand!
But yes, others reading this, there are around 550,000 New Zealand citizens living in Australia, while only 60,000 Australians live in New Zealand despite Australia having over 5 times the population.
Why? A key factor is wages, being you are often paid 40% or more for the same exact job while living expenses are similar overall, with Australia allowing New Zealand citizens to live and work indefinitely within Australia, similar to the Schengen Area for a lot of EU nationals.
Due to these good wages, Australia has among the least brain drain out of any country, being only 0.8% of Australians live outside Australia.
For me it was this and life opportunities for everything due to economies of scale, due to a bigger population, like more entertainment options and job options.
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Ahhhhhhhhh.....I'm the dude version of you. This entire video is me and my thoughts.
The mid 30s solo in another country bit. The 'friendship grind', the thoughts about love, that lack of support, it feeling more than heavy at times. All of it.
All my closer friends have other commitments and are geographically far away. Sure I can call them or social media message them, but it isn't the same.
This got so bad that I flew 3 1/2 hours, with little notice, to some friends for their '20th relationship anniversary' - they celebrate that more than their wedding date - to attend it over a weekend. The other party guests were surprised I would do that just for a weekend. But It was just very much to see them again because like you, I feel deprived of those deeper connections where I live.
My best closest friend is in another country too. We talk and message often, when I fly back to the place I grew up in, I see him and it's great, but yeah, it's not the same. That 'solo life' eh.
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A Kiwi here now living in Melbourne. I was 3 years into a 4 year undergrad, majoring in geography when mental illness got too much for me at the time and I dropped out. I have an alright career now in my mid 30s so I feel itâs too late to finish it, but weâll see. I appreciate your videos showcasing Australian geography!
I watched your Melbourne earthquake video and knew it was an existing slip fault line going by what I looked up, but lacked the knowledge to know which one, so thanks for explaining it!
Iâm from Christchurch, and in an ironically way, the Feb 2011 earthquake hit just before my first lecture of the year there! Everyone got a strong education on earthquakes after.
And also, well, knowing Melbourne and Victoria is more earthquake active than other parts of Australia, and with this yearâs and the Mansfield earthquake, Iâve realised unfortunately Melbourne is woefully underprepared for them, both in a public education stance and building protection compared to it being drilled into your head from a young age with earthquake drills etc back in NZ.
But thank you for your videos! A reminder of what I could have been in another life but hey, you carry on!
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Yep, it is ALL about the stylist, not the place. I've been going to mine for around the same amount of time. I know I pay extra for mine vs your cheaper places - but I know it is 'not f it up insurance' as he always styles it right and even 3 weeks after, with my admittedly bad hair styling maintenance, it still looks good, even straight out of bed. I literally asked him once 'I'm a blank slate. Do what you think would look good on me' and he more than delivered on that blind trust, so I forever trust what he does to my hair. Too many in the past have messed it up due to my hair (many don't know how to style Asian hair properly) and how it grows. I could never produce the magic he does and thus I pay the man that extra. If he moves somewhere else, I'm going to that other place and I don't care where it is in the city, I ain't letting go of him. Alex, my man, I need to see you soon for that magic again!
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Yes and no. In Australia here. Many young Australians are in reality a lot wealthier than a lot of counterparts their age due to their mandatory, on top of wages (currently at minimum 11%), pension fund contributions, which are invested. Most, if not all, Australian workers are indirectly owners of Youtube in reality via this. The only issue for many is that (rightfully) it is very hard to access that money until you are 60. Also, the infrastructure and healthcare system is not as bad. The reason why it isn't as bad is due to strong unions in healthcare and a Western European-like system of wage negotiation and standards, it increases wages that in reality attract FAR more overseas health professionals and hardly any of them leave Australia. For example, a FY1 junior doctor gets paid 59% more than one in the UK. Not a typo. Fifty-nine percent. And that isn't including that 11% on top I mentioned earlier. Yes, Australia has a notorious housing crisis, but it isn't worse than Ireland in other factors objectively. It doesn't mean Australia does not have problems, It does. But you just don't see the human brain drain flight from Australia like from Ireland and New Zealand. Ironically, they often go to Australia, because of said wages.
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I work in IT and procure too. 1) High end laptops can easily surpass many gaming setups, yes, including the GFX chip. NVIDIA always have their laptop chip version of the seperate GFX card version 2) There are many layered ways around the security issue, gees, Bitlocker for a start? 3) Good luck using a desktop in meetings and with SLAs and even user damage insurance, the repair issue is far cheaper than you think and much faster as well. 4) good luck in Post COVID hybrid working from home environment. Sure, you could use virtualised desktop technologies, but the tech regarding that just hasnât caught up yet, particularly on the graphics emulation front, not to mention a lot of software, particularly legacy, does not play ball well with them. It is actually the OP who knows little corporate reality.
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 @BlackHawkDown2 A few things: New Zealand and France dominate the Australian diary industry, American and British interests dominate mining, Americans and British own FAR more land in Australia, American and British banks own the most out of the Big 4 banks out of foreign interests, Americans dominate forestry, Optus is 100% owned by the Singaporean government, an American-Australian consortium lease the biggest port in Australia, a German supermarket chain actually sells the most Australian made products and pays their workers the most, AND WE LITERALLY SPY ON BEHALF OF A FOREIGN POWER (THE US) IN PINE GAP. Yes, no doubt China is trying to influence Australian politics (Sam Dastyari and Gladys Liu come to mind) and the Australian economy is heavily reliant on China (the stats Wendover uses is outdated, it is closer to 40% of exports now) but the "ChiNa Is BuYiNg EvErYthInG" hysteria is a joke. Less Murdoch BS gullibility eh.
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11:52 - Yeah, China really isn't. There have massive systematic problems there as well, such as the current ponzi scheme of real estate "investment" collapsing. Evergrande was the biggest but definitely not the only one, and the over reliance on Australian natural resources to fuel this real estate bubble and to literally power homes as most of China's electricity is still coal and global coal prices has rocketed this year, compounded by politically motivated banning of Australian coking coal, used to make steel, grinding the Chinese economy to a halt as electricity generators were designed to only process this Australian coal as Australian coal is the most refined and best quality in the world. Within China, despite the system, there are many protests about this, out of desperation, such as a massive loss of money in these failed real estate 'investments' or well, people are cold and can't afford heating.
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**Economics Explained could have explained so much more on the economic history of New Zealand how neoliberalism destroyed the country in the 1980s and early 1990s!!** I've posted this in another video trying to explains NZs economic history so read below here: >>> He failed to mention the wholesale sale of nationalised assets during the Rogernomics period such as telecommunications which meant the growth of monopolies and duopolies that rule the nation (and still do). For a long time, getting a phoneline took MONTHS under privatisation of Telecom NZ, because they controlled both the infrastructure and retail telecommunication sectors, while it reapt shareholders massive dividends to detriment of the people and it was only government intervention that broke up Telecom NZ and created separate companies for the infrastructure (Chorus) and retail (Spark NZ). This MASSIVELY increased competition in the telecommunications sector and now NZ has one of the best telecommunications sectors in the world. (You can easily get residential 1 GIGABIT Internet connections).
He failed to mention the destruction of labour unions under the Employment Relations Act 1991 which resulted in the 'low wage' economy, meaning a massive 'brain drain' to other countries with greater wages which EE touched on here. I'm here in Australia earning 50% more for the same job. In other sectors, this is bigger. He also failed to mention the lack of intervention in the housing market by both major parties, combined with the duopoly in the supermarket industry, both resulting in NZ having the greatest increase in cost of living in the OECD the last 20 years. This has resulted in the last few years a MASSIVE skyrocketing in the amount of homelessness. NZ's growth is a total bubble because so much of the money is locked into housing speculation. Rogernomics was disastrous for the country because it was rushed. I am in Australia because I see FAR more opportunities here in life. It wasn't the NZ I grew up in.
Rogernomics, combined with the neoliberal policies of Bolger and Shipley in the early to mid 1990s killed the country that only now is beginning to try to fix. NZ's health sectors is MASSIVELY under resourced, particularly in mental health, with all the district health boards in MASSIVE debt and people in the public system dying because they cannot see a specialist in time, and it is under resourced because there is not enough tax revenue coming in due to all the money being locked up in housing and somehow, moronically, having no capital gains tax. Also why bother working in NZ as a health specialist when in Australia you can get 2x or more (not lying) as much?
Combine this with underfunding of road and public transport infrastructure in NZ's largest city, Auckland, due to buying votes via rural areas, you have a MASSIVE storm brewing and it isn't good. <<<
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What you failed to mention is that, although yes, Twitch needs to get more profitable, their older strategies got strong backlash and thus they have been smarter about monetising it more - e.g the later developments of offering quite good deals with manually running ads, that pay based on your audience, that the streamer can specify when and how much they run. The more they run the ads, the more they get paid byt that is up to the streamer to decide. This pushes people who are annoyed by the ads to subscribe to the streamer to avoid them, giving both Twitch and the streamer far more revenue from that viewer.
Also Twitch will be launching a platform for all streamers to get sponsored streams directly from them. As you know being a YouTuber, you often have to navigate through these sponsorships to see if they are legit or pay well. Twitch will do this for the streamer and will help a lot of "mid tier" and below streamers who can't afford managers to do this. Not to mention likely better vetting processes. It lacks details at the moment, like Twitch's cut of it, but all this indicates a shift towards a more balanced approach while monetising Twitch more.
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â @LogicallyAnswered What you failed to mention is that, although yes, Twitch needs to get more profitable, their older strategies got strong backlash and thus they have been smarter about monetising it more - e.g the later developments of offering quite good deals with manually running ads, that pay based on your audience, that the streamer can specify when and how much they run. The more they run the ads, the more they get paid byt that is up to the streamer to decide. This pushes people who are annoyed by the ads to subscribe to the streamer to avoid them, giving both Twitch and the streamer far more revenue from that viewer.
Also Twitch will be launching a platform for all streamers to get sponsored streams directly from them. As you know being a YouTuber, you often have to navigate through these sponsorships to see if they are legit or pay well. Twitch will do this for the streamer and will help a lot of "mid tier" and below streamers who can't afford managers to do this. Not to mention likely better vetting processes. It lacks details at the moment, like Twitch's cut of it, but all this indicates a shift towards a more balanced approach while monetising Twitch more.
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In regards to building wealth for workers, this is why you have *mandatory* pension contribution funds such as in Singapore, Australia, Netherlands and Denmark. Here in Australia, these contributions are tax free, *on top* of wages. Currently it is minimum 10%, going up 0.5% each year until 12% in 2025. This is then invested with an investment company and portfolio of your choice and there are many options. Sure, you could do it yourself, but the market is so developed this is getting less and less needed. You can contribute more as a tax rebate as well. For example for me, I have mostly international equities but have mine invested into unlisted infrastructure as that is much more stable in downturns so good luck getting that without an investment company. This industry is highly regulated and there is literally shaming by the government if the returns aren't good enough and if you don't fix it, they will force you to write to your customers stating you are low preforming and recommend you switch amongst other things.
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[ Americans: Get Australia's freedom back!111!! ] <<------>> [ Also Americans: Gerrymandering, lack of womens' rights to abortion (they decide, not you), closure of voting booths, **actual voter ID laws**, the police stealing from citizens' more than actual blue collar crime in 'civil fortfeiture', school 'active shooter' drills, lack of universal healthcare or paid holiday leave, lack of mandated minimum wage increases yearly, worst social mobility in the Western world, only 'developed' country whose life expectancy trended DOWN..... Australia is FAR from perfect, but the Americans 'forgetting' about their bigger issues is laughable. ]
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Ash, you have a way with words and strong introspection that is for sure. Iâm in a very similar life circumstance as you but the male version: mid to late 30s, still figuring it out later than others, wanting love but likely there is a element that is also afraid of it, considering moving cities again but unsure if that would help address any inner feelings about things. The ironic thing is that I am currently in London on holiday as part of a personal healing journey.
The Netherlands was the main part of that before me being currently in London.
I do like that in your videos you do show a âquiet confidenceâ about you. It isnât fake, it isnât bravado, it is quiet confidence in all of yourself, whether being optimism of things or recognition of your vulnerabilities and saying them out loud to strangers on the Internet. All that requires confidence.
Like you, I feel the most freedom when I am alone, particularly when travelling, but as I think you have touched upon in your past videos, that is often juxtaposed from that wanting of love someday.
It also helps, like others have said, that you do have a calming voice to complement and convey your words.
Iâm glad I found your videos and Iâm glad you have the confidence to allow others to see into your life in this way. I guess this is just video journaling in a creative way right? I kind of do that with my Instagram stories while travelling. It is only ever to a small group of max 60 viewers, but like for you I guess, it is a fun outlet of creative expression.
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Oh, we know the Aussie tourist stereotype *cough* Bali *cough* The schoolies, the bogan with the Bintang singlet, the sexpat, the 40 followers Instagrammer, the 'find yourself' 'spiritual' white girl (who couldn't afford India or Nepal) like in this vid, the 'my first overseas family trip', all in the same place (Bali), all from the same place (Straya!). Although with the cheap flights to Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia, this is changing LOL
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habadashery2009Â the science is true, however it is FAR easier to get excess sugar in the diet than excess saturated fat which negates the biological efficiency of processing fat vs sugar. Also fat isn't an chemically addictive as sugar, which has proven to be one of the most addictive substances on the planet, more than cocaine and close, if not, as addictive as heroin.
"Overall, this research has revealed that sugar and sweet reward can not only substitute to addictive drugs, like cocaine, but can even be more rewarding and attractive. At the neurobiological level, the neural substrates of sugar and sweet reward appear to be more robust than those of cocaine (i.e., more resistant to functional failures), possibly reflecting past selective evolutionary pressures for seeking and taking foods high in sugar and calories." -Sugar addiction: pushing the drug-sugar analogy to the limit.
Ahmed SH, Guillem K, Vandaele Y.
Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2013 Jul;16(4):434-9. doi: 10.1097/MCO.0b013e328361c8b8. Review.
PMID: 23719144
But basically, I've read plenty of academic studies (none of this sourcing from fad-diet sites, yay for Google Scholar) and to nail it down to one sentence it's: calories in - calories out.
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 @jLL-r9s your grandfather has a far different horizon than a 25 to 30 year old. In his situation, a financial adviser of the pension fund company would have helped him though it, not to mention the wide open "loophole" tax breaks he gets in Australia on his pension fund contributions when he hits 60. Or that for people retiring now, they only withdraw a small amount for everyday living (typically 3-4%) and change it to a more conservative portfolio.
Unfortunately your grandfather didn't have a mature industry surrounding this to assist him like the modern Australian system.
As stated, I love how your ignore the fact of, once again, Australian pension fund "high growth" portfolios averaging 8.9% pa returns over 29 years, including a -21% return in 2008.
Is 29 years not a decent sample size, particularly as the (US) deregulation started in the early 90s, helped cause the GFC, then it got re-regulated.
Also they are not all in equities, unless you customised it and want to be.
Not to mention the vast amount of shifting goalposts you have done throughout this.
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 @Psych2go My experiences on single session, high dose psilocybin was life changing. I accidentality miscalculated how much I needed and took the equivalent of about 90mg to 150mg of it (recent studies has stated 30-60mg is beneficial for PTSD and depression) - and it was the best miscalculation of my life.
I know I have deep seated trauma and that helped address that FAR more than any conventional therapy ever has, like a full course of CBT or EMDR.
However I know my conditions well and for example, I will not ever recommend it to someone with bipolar or schizophrenia.
I know it has helped me bring clarity to my life, however what I do miss is the serotonin boost in the days after it gave me in which I finally felt 'normal' - meaning I could perceive social cue skills better and I was more social, I was more organised naturally, I felt calmer, I didn't do 'brain chemical' boosting behaviours like doomscrolling social media etc. I am diagnosed with ADHD and I felt this helped address those executive functioning issues FAR more than stimulants ever have and without the negative higher cortisol effects.
As you can see, I do read up on the science of my conditions as much as I can and there is plenty of evidence for all that I have said. It also helped restore my circadian rhythm issues that I have for those few days after and I felt tired at the right times. That is tied in with serotonin (which helps produce melatonin). As much as people dislike ChatGPT, if you ask the right particular questions, 'Dr ChatGPT' can give a good bit of insight like this that is backed up if you look it up separately.
I plan to do another one a couple of months from now as there is strong evidence single session, high dose psilocybin is more effective for PTSD and depression than microdosing and the recommended break period between sessions is 3 to 6 months. It is legal via truffles in the Netherlands.
For those, it is important to let go and not resist it and to go in with a goal in mind e.g. addressing trauma. I did trip (I thought I was a cat, I do remember that LOL) but also I cried and I cried ALOT. Writing down or voicing your trauma and 'letting it out' helps and psilocybin helps unlock that FAR more.
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â @Funkteon Kiwi in Australia here. This is a highly incorrect figure, on both the number and where most Kiwis live. Most Kiwis as per the latest census live in Queensland and the number is closer to 550,000 Kiwis born in New Zealand, living in Australia, with up to 650,000 New Zealand citizens in Australia at any one time. the difference is them visiting or staying less than 6 months. This is equal to about 8-10%, depending on what figure for the NZ citizen population you use. Also, the figure for most jobs, using real job ads and converting for exchange rates, is closer to 35-40% more, excluding Super. Including Super and income tax differences, this is around 45-50%.
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 @oliverstianhugaas7493 they arenât. Blackrock is private equity, while the others are asset management.
Private equity tends to wholly buy companies.
Asset management tends not to.
All Vanguard, Blackrock and State Street do is invest other peopleâs money on behalf of them via various portfolios.
You can even get them to invest your money by buying into their ETFs.
Blackstone you can buy shares in too but they more wholly own assets as said.
If you look at the % of a company the likes of Vanguard, State Street and Blackrock own, they are often less than 5% of the company.
Not to mention this isnât even factoring in that often the founders rig the voting rights.
E.g. Facebook/Meta shares are 1:1 voting rights.
The non public Class B shares have 10:1 voting rights, being they have 10x the voting right.
Guess who owns most of the Class B shares? The Zucc.
Blackrock and the like donât control shit.
Centre left here, but a lot of the left are financially ignorant as well, historically and even now, as there was no strong implementation of wealth creation via equities for the common person in the US, Canada etc vs other countries, thus wider incentive to learn about this stuff.
Ignorance of a thing or subject isnât just a right wing MAGA conspiracy theorist thing.
E.g. In Australia, at least 11% on top of wages is paid by the employer to your â401kâ, called âsuperannuationâ or âSuperâ for short. This is by law and mandatory.
And it is tied to you and not the employer. And you can switch investment companies or portfolio makeup anytime. And it is deliberately hard to access without strong proof of hardship to save you from yourself and losing it all in a shitcoin.
Therefore a lot of supermarket workers would in fact indirectly own shares in the same supermarket. The modern âowning the means of productionâ.
Iceland, Netherlands have similar strong schemes.
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having talked to drivers here in Melbourne, Australia, where we have strong rideshare competition (Uber, Didi, Ola, traditional taxi companies), it is less black-and-white than that. It depends on essentially how much money you make for them, your driver rating, how exclusively you ride for them vs the competition. and yes, ironically, Didi and Ola used the same tactics vs Uber to get into the market. Many companies, including McDoanlds for example, use Australia as a testing ground for itnernational expansion / or the test products before a wider release. See my post below as well.
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Americans: [ Get Australia's freedom back!111!! ] <<------>> [ Also Americans: Gerrymandering, lack of womens' rights to abortion (they decide, not you), closure of voting booths, **actual voter ID laws**, the police stealing from citizens' more than actual blue collar crime in 'civil fortfeiture', school 'active shooter' drills, lack of universal healthcare or paid holiday leave, lack of mandated minimum wage increases yearly, worst social mobility in the Western world, only 'developed' country whose life expectancy trended DOWN..... Australia is FAR from perfect, but the Americans 'forgetting' about their bigger issues is laughable. ]
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All are a factor but so is the Trumpism factor, and like in Canada, but not to the same extent, Potato Temu Trump (Dutton) did have association and shades of Trumpism, and like in Canada, tried to distance himself from it when Mango Mussolini went a bit too crazy, even for old mate Potato Temu Trump. But the public see through that. The big question is not if the left will win, but by how much, and how much the Greens and the independents, who mainly lean left, get. Labor played the political game better and Potato had weaker second party support. Even the independents are making headway into regional seats for example. Most of the Teals are just Tree Tories in reality.
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 @caesumcrimson6381 I was literally pointing out other countries are literally bigger factors. Also If you wanna tally the total, ya the one doing the majority of the name calling for ego purposes. And you fully know you are misrepresentation my points too LOL. As stated, this below literally implies they are mostly to blame, when, as stated, in reality, it is other countries, Australians themselves to blame, and government policy via lack of housing supply I literally commented only on this part, and this part alone, but you went on a tangent for your own rather laughable ego reasons. *"Don't even mention the fact that Australia has been selling its most valuable resource (houses and land) to China / Asia for a premium locking out its own people"* - Also at least come up with some original insults my man.
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