GP, Farmer, Radical Progressive
- 30 Posts
- 41 Comments
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Private health insurance offered little relief for my dental woesEnglish
29·7 days agoIt is absurd the Medicare doesn’t cover dental. I see a patient once or twice a month delaying dental care because of cost.
I kind of understand the government being cautious about controversial reforms but the libs had literally nothing to say about the recent GP bulk billing changes as it’s just popular. Medicare covering dental care and increasing school funding to meet Gonski targets are almost opposition proof.
Incidentally I am a doctor and I don’t have insurance. I don’t wear glasses, I don’t play sports that ruin my joints and I’m not getting pregnant. There is literally no benefit. On top of which, when I was a junior doctor it wasn’t uncommon for us to have a private patient transferred to the public system when the private physician realised they were actually sick and not just a pay day, the public system treats sick patients, the private system has nice carpet and nurses that smile. We need to remove Medicare payments to private providers and invest properly into public healthcare.
Sorry for the tangentially related rant.
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•In light of recent events and on behalf of its 8,400 farmer members, Farmers for Climate Action points out some key facts.English
2·10 days agoUnfortunately it seems to have been taken down. Not sure what happened there. If it shows up again I’ll repost it
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Chinese companies are largest shareholders in two Australian mines producing minerals vital for Beijing's hypersonic missiles, helping China to access key resourcesEnglish
71·12 days agoI wonder if this could convince right wingers that it’d be good to nationalise the mines?
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Pay per shower: fully-funded aged care turns market-driven aged support - Michael WestEnglish
3·12 days agoAnd here I thought the the Labor Party didn’t really believe in anything, but they sure do believe in capitalism…
Fixed it for you.
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Green Energy@slrpnk.net•'Forget subsidies': Solar-battery hybrids can deliver 'incredibly competitive' power for big industry
3·13 days agoHaha, yeah hybrid projects, not a hybrid product.
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Australian governments ‘turning their backs’ on soaring Indigenous incarceration, former minister saysEnglish
2·14 days agoIn other news, water is wet.
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Books@lemmy.ml•Are you reading Nobody's Girl by Virginia Guiffre? How are you doing it?
3·16 days agoI’m not reading Nobodys Girl but I had a similar experience.
I read Lolita in my 20s and found it a beautifully written text. I reread it in my 30s and couldn’t get through it because of the subject matter. I guess I developed empathy.
I don’t think you’re dishonoring the author by giving up if its a bit too much
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Socialism@lemmy.ml•Any good resources for arguments for and against accelerationism?
11·21 days agoAny ideology that proposes deliberately making peoples lives worse is not worth discussing.
If I’m playing devils avocado I guess rapid technological and economic growth gives us more value to appropriate in the name of the proletariat?
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Australia has amongst the highest teacher shortages in the OECDEnglish
3·21 days agoI agree that both
- teachers are underpaid
- pay is not remotely the main reason teachers leave
Higher pay would help attract more teachers and therefore could help reduce workload if public schools were given the funding to employ them. But low pay is not a major reason why people leave the profession.
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Australia has amongst the highest teacher shortages in the OECDEnglish
3·22 days agoBe wary of people applying Econ 101 concepts where they aren’t applicable.
Education is a public good and the market will never provide adequate supply. It requires public policy to provide it. You’re right that if public schools made teaching an attractive option there would be more teachers, but then that’s the point of the article.
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Warning over deadly virus after bat bites Pilbara womanEnglish
3·26 days agoTake a glance at the honorable Senator’s comment history. That comment word for word shows up fairly often… Maybe they can explain why @SenatorCollins
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Health funding is one of our trickiest issues – here’s a politically sweet fixEnglish
6·26 days agoThere’s nothing inherently wrong here. Taxing gas exports is certainly something we should be doing and allocating the additional funds to the states is clearly a good idea.
Only thing I’d say is that this is kind of a kick the can down the road as eventually gas export revenues will decrease also.
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Warning over deadly virus after bat bites Pilbara womanEnglish
4·26 days agoTreating bat bites as serious in areas with lyssavirus, which is incurable once it starts showing symptoms, is very typical. Transmission to humans is uncommon but ruling it out is literally deadly serious.
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Warning over deadly virus after bat bites Pilbara womanEnglish
19·26 days agoWe all know that we don’t have rabies in Australia, but Australian bat lyssavirus is rabies(almost), the symptoms, transmission, treatment and prevention are all identical to rabies.
On top of this bats carry Hendra, Murray valley encephalitis, coronavirus and god knows what else.
Just stay away from bats everyone, especially in northern Aus.
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Australia's baby recession deepens, new ABS data saysEnglish
11·1 month agoA few months ago John Quiggin posted this and I find his argument pretty compelling
Are pronatalists living on the same planet?
But even in this extreme case, world population in 2100 only falls to 6 billion, the same as in 2000. I was around at the time, and did not feel as if there were too few people about.
What about the need for workers? One unsatisfactory feature of long-running projections like this is the use of outdated statistical concepts such as the “dependency ratio”, that is, the ratio of people aged 15-64 to everyone else. That made sense 50 years ago, when this range represented the period between leaving school and retiring in most industrial societies. But these days (and it will be even more so in 2100) education continues well past 20 and retirement is often deferred to 70 or more. A look at the age group 25-69 shows that it is going to remain more or less stable in absolute numbers declining only marginally relative to the growing population
Also followed up with this
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•The highlighted division and factions of Lemmy.English
2·1 month agoI’d like to share my offline perspective here. All online spaces are kind of heightened versions of the discourse, Lemmy less so than other places but it’s still there.
In the real world leftists are generally kind and empathetic people who genuinely want to do good. It’s nice when you find another leftist, I have friends who are various flavours of anarchist and socialist and even some real life, genuine, aging commune hippies now living in town. There is no animosity and we would basically all agree on local direct action or local politics. In my experience even most liberals are just naive rather than genuinely holding counterproductive political beliefs.
It can feel very lonely but you’re not alone.
Joshi@slrpnk.netto
Green Energy@slrpnk.net•What fuel will ships burn as they move toward net zero?
5·1 month agoThey don’t really talk about using hydrogen directly, just as past of the process of producing other fuels. I assume it boils down to the fact that hydrogen requires all the infrastructure associated with high pressure storage and transport. Methanol/ammonia can be transported as liquid in much the same way as other liquid hydrocarbon fuels, you can carry it in a bucket if you needed to.
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Tawny frogmouths take patience to appreciate. They will reward you with insights into their remarkable lives | Stephanie ConveryEnglish
3·1 month agoI love a curlew! such dopey looking things
Joshi@slrpnk.netOPto
Australia@aussie.zone•Albanese invites Arab 'hypermarket' to compete with Coles and WoolworthsEnglish
1·1 month agoIf you can’t afford the time or travel costs to travel between distant supermarkets, just buy a new house…
















Yeah, a lot of good cardiology and vascular work gets done at the mount hospital in Perth, it’s not that they’re literally useless all the time. Just most of the time.