Take a breath matey, try not to get to stressed about the situation - these things are mostly and ultimately out of our hands
Have a good weekend

by scoob » Fri Jul 15, 2011 6:13 pm
by cripple » Fri Jul 15, 2011 6:22 pm
by redandblack » Fri Jul 15, 2011 6:40 pm
scoob wrote:One of the more negative effects of this carbon tax seems to have been ignored by most posters - I am beginning to worry for the wellbeing of our good mate R&B... Poor fella has gone non stop for the last week - including starting 4 varying threads... Hasn't Julia thought of old R&B???
Take a breath matey, try not to get to stressed about the situation - these things are mostly and ultimately out of our hands
Have a good weekend
by fish » Fri Jul 15, 2011 7:15 pm
Yeah I was thinking the same thing scoob.scoob wrote:One of the more negative effects of this carbon tax seems to have been ignored by most posters - I am beginning to worry for the wellbeing of our good mate R&B... Poor fella has gone non stop for the last week - including starting 4 varying threads... Hasn't Julia thought of old R&B???
Take a breath matey, try not to get to stressed about the situation - these things are mostly and ultimately out of our hands
Have a good weekend
by redandblack » Fri Jul 15, 2011 7:19 pm
by fish » Fri Jul 15, 2011 8:01 pm
TB I agree with you about the petrol but I reckon it's been excluded because it is already taxed pretty heavily and also to ease the transition to a low carbon economy. I would expect that it will not be excluded from a global emissions trading scheme when we finally get one.Tassie Blues wrote:Approximately 35% of the average Australian household’s carbon omissions come from driving a car so why has petrol been exempt from this carbon tax? If they are serious about cutting carbon why not put the tax on petrol and offer a rebate if you have a hybrid or other form of low omissions car. Maybe even electric cars but I guess oil companies contribute to much money to politics for that to ever happen. I don’t understand how a low income family with a late model V8 car not have to pay carbon tax but I have a low omission car and I do have to pay the tax. I think I already pay more than my share of taxes.
If carbon omissions and the environment is the real issue here why collect a carbon tax from everyone and then give it back to 90% of them. Any chance that the politicians and government departments could start driving hybrid cars or even car pool. Maybe catch a bus to parliament house?
I wonder what peoples reaction would be if the carbon tax was as simple as putting the GST up 2%. Wouldn’t that be a much fairer way to raise money for the environment?
by fish » Fri Jul 15, 2011 8:52 pm
Not so Ronnie - the tax and subsequent emissions trading scheme will see Australia's 2020 carbon emissions reduced by 5% from the level they were in 2000. This is the same target as the Coalitions "direct action" plan. Whilst 5% sounds like a pretty small target it is more significant when you consider that we are currently emitting over our 2000 levels so we have to bring them down to par and then down by another 5%. The carbon tax gets us started on that path and then the trading scheme ensures we meet it by restricting the amount of "permits to pollute carbon" that are issued - reducing the amount or permits issued each year so that we meet the 2020 target.Ronnie wrote:One massive problem with all this, this tax will achieve, as an outcome... absolutely nothing!
by redandblack » Sat Jul 16, 2011 10:31 am
by Sky Pilot » Sat Jul 16, 2011 12:20 pm
by Tassie Blues » Sat Jul 16, 2011 8:29 pm
scoob wrote:One of the more negative effects of this carbon tax seems to have been ignored by most posters - I am beginning to worry for the wellbeing of our good mate R&B... Poor fella has gone non stop for the last week - including starting 4 varying threads... Hasn't Julia thought of old R&B???
Take a breath matey, try not to get to stressed about the situation - these things are mostly and ultimately out of our hands
Have a good weekend
by Sky Pilot » Sat Jul 16, 2011 8:31 pm
Tassie Blues wrote:scoob wrote:One of the more negative effects of this carbon tax seems to have been ignored by most posters - I am beginning to worry for the wellbeing of our good mate R&B... Poor fella has gone non stop for the last week - including starting 4 varying threads... Hasn't Julia thought of old R&B???
Take a breath matey, try not to get to stressed about the situation - these things are mostly and ultimately out of our hands
Have a good weekend
should be right next weel i belive he is joining the Juliar Gillard tour to sell this tax.
by Sojourner » Sat Jul 16, 2011 10:04 pm
by Cambridge Clarrie » Sun Jul 17, 2011 1:20 am
Sojourner wrote:What happened to "Grocery Watch"? My understanding was that the ALP were immediately going to take action to ensure that grocery prices would not keep on increasing, yet here we have the prices banged right up with the Carbon tax???
by southee » Sun Jul 17, 2011 1:23 am
Cambridge Clarrie wrote:Sojourner wrote:What happened to "Grocery Watch"? My understanding was that the ALP were immediately going to take action to ensure that grocery prices would not keep on increasing, yet here we have the prices banged right up with the Carbon tax???
They really can't get a thing right, can they...?![]()
It would be funny if it wasn't our money they were wasting...
by Gozu » Sun Jul 17, 2011 2:32 am
by Sojourner » Sun Jul 17, 2011 5:59 pm
Cambridge Clarrie wrote:Sojourner wrote:What happened to "Grocery Watch"? My understanding was that the ALP were immediately going to take action to ensure that grocery prices would not keep on increasing, yet here we have the prices banged right up with the Carbon tax???
They really can't get a thing right, can they...?![]()
It would be funny if it wasn't our money they were wasting...
by Gozu » Sun Jul 17, 2011 6:37 pm
by mick » Mon Jul 18, 2011 7:28 am
by Tassie Blues » Mon Jul 18, 2011 9:26 pm
southee wrote:Cambridge Clarrie wrote:Sojourner wrote:What happened to "Grocery Watch"? My understanding was that the ALP were immediately going to take action to ensure that grocery prices would not keep on increasing, yet here we have the prices banged right up with the Carbon tax???
They really can't get a thing right, can they...?![]()
It would be funny if it wasn't our money they were wasting...
Can anyone tell me what result we got out of the 20/20 summit??? This is a serious question![]()
I would love to know.....
by dedja » Mon Jul 18, 2011 10:42 pm
Sky Pilot wrote:According to the 'believers' the CO2 in air has
risen from .034% to .038% in air over the last
50 years.
To put the percentage of Carbon Dioxide in air in
a clearer perspective;
If you had a room 12 ft x 12 ft x 7 ft or 3.7 mtrs x
3.7 mtrs x 2.1 mtrs, the area carbon dioxide would
occupy in that room would be .25m x ..25m x ..17m
or the size of a large packet of cereal.
Australia emits 1% of the world's total carbon
Dioxide and the government wants to reduce
this by 20%t or reduce emissions by 0.2 % of
the world's total CO2 emissions.
What effect will this have on existing CO2 levels?
By their own figures they state the CO2 in air has
risen from .034% to .038% in 50 years.
Assuming this is correct, the world CO2 has increased in 50 years by ...004%.
Per year that is .004 divided by 50 = ...00008%. (Getting confusing -but stay with me).
Of that because we only contribute 1% our emissions would cause CO2 to rise .00008 divided by 100 = ..0000008%.
Of that 1%, we supposedly emit, the governments
wants to reduce it by 20% which is 1/5th of .0000008 = ..00000016% effect per year they would have on
the world CO2 emissions based on their own figures.
That would equate to an area in the same room, as
the size of a small pin.
For that they have gone crazy with the ridiculous trading schemes, Solar and Roofing Installations, Clean Coal Technology. Renewable Energy, etc, etc.
How ridiculous it that?
Competitions SANFL Official Site | Country Footy SA | Southern Football League | VFL Footy
Club Forums Snouts Louts | The Roost | Redlegs Forum |