Joshi

joined 11 months ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I dislike this idea that government run is bad.

I recently changed my name and had to call several government agencies and found them competent and helpful every time.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I'm a GP, here's my opinion

Can't have eaten/drank anything for the last half hour

  • in principle could alter your BP but I wouldn't worry too much unless it's quite a large meal

Feet flat on the floor

  • yes, this is important

Lying down but sitting up

  • for some purposes docs want lying/sitting/standing but for home measurements do them sitting

Back against the chair

  • yes

Don't cross your legs/ankles

  • yes, feet flat on the floor

Only use your left arm

  • myth, if there is a significant difference between your left and right arms there is something funky going on with your subclavian arteries

Hand facing upward/downward

  • not super important

Keep your arm down/raised

  • keep your arm relaxed, ideally resting on a table or desk at close to 90deg or hanging straight down

Most important is be relaxed, sit still, don't move your arm, if you get a high reading calm yourself and take it once more then leave it.

When I'm taking a BP in clinic the most important thing I do most of the time is distract the patient from the machine with some patter as for most people the biggest confounding factor is stressing about what the reading will be, I don't correct posture etc unless they are substantially moving their arm around.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

I have taken my own BP manually, it ain't easy

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 week ago

The guy at Jaycar reckons he's never seen anything other than MC4 and it was difficult to find anything different online

[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Living in a tiny home, yep, on the ground on a frame

 

So I can run an extension lead and get a few more hours of sunlight on the solar panels through the winter

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

You're probably talking about the Chinese social credit score, not a replacement for currency but is up and working.

 

Djeran sunrise

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

Ugh, that one and the cook one of everything have been staring at me for years. Maybe I'll try for those on my current playthrough

 

Measles was eliminated from Australia. Experts warn US and Asia outbreaks may bring back this ‘heat-seeking missile’

There were 18 cases in NSW in 2024 – up from six in 2023 – while in Victoria there have already been 13 cases so far this year, compared with 16 in 2024

 

JobSeeker has long been far below the Henderson Poverty Line.

...

Labor’s own Economic Inclusion Advisory Committee has again urged it to raise JobSeeker and other welfare payments ahead of the federal budget on March 25.

Its latest report was unambiguous, saying raising payments “remains the number one priority and that doing so would deliver significant economic and social benefits”.

 

Legal experts say Peter Dutton's proposal for a referendum to give ministers more powers to strip the citizenship of dual-nationals convicted of terrorism is unnecessary, as the court already has this power.

 

Peter Dutton has vowed to cut overall government spending if elected to government, reiterating his plans to scale back the public service. 

Labor has called on the opposition leader to reveal the details of his plan, warning that fewer public servants would mean longer wait times to access services.

Mr Dutton said he would not detail exactly where the spending cuts would come from until after the federal election.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I don't think the downvotes are because you're misgendering them. It's just baffling why you've gendered them at all. It's unfunny and out of place.

 

Have you ever walked into an outlet like OPSM, Specsavers, Bailey Nelson, or Laubman & Pank for an eye test and left feeling like you’d been gently pressured into spending $500 on a pair of glasses?

...

[B]osses impose onto optometrists a variety of targets – whether its “converting” eye tests into sales or increasing rates of certain types of tests.

This type of pressure is reportedly causing many optometrists “significant moral distress” and some are starting to fight back.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Good work comrade, this is the way to live.

 

The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) is among many who are condemning the Coalition’s plan to slash 36,000 public service jobs if it wins the federal election. 

The ACTU said on February 25 the cuts would mean one in five public sector workers would be out of their job, badly affecting services from pensions and veterans’ payments, to the operation of regional weather stations.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

The budget deficit has been reducing over time under the current government, the man promoting nuclear is Dutton the opposition leader, his plans for nuclear power are being criticized as expensive, he is being portrayed as stupid in promoting nuclear which would reverse the trend of reducing deficits.

It's a bit convoluted and not particularly funny but it does make sense.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

Modern guns a extremely precisely engineered devices that are incredibly easy to use, for better or worse. I know modern sporting bows are also but it's no contest in my opinion.

I've shot both, bows as a complete amateur and relatively competent with a rifle. There is no question that a modern gun is way easier to pick up as an amateur and hit what you want to hit and I cannot possibly believe there are anything other than extremely niche uses where a bow is superior.

 

In fact, virtually all significant economic indicators except gross domestic product (GDP) growth show Australia’s economy is among the world’s best-performed.

  • record employment growth;
  • record employment to population ratio at 64.6%;
  • record job participation at 67.3%;
  • inflation in the lower half of the RBA’s optimum band;
  • wages growth above inflation for five straight quarters;
  • median wealth per adult as the second highest in the world;
  • ASX200 above 8,000 since last September;
  • poverty and homelessness reducing, according to the Productivity Commission;
  • emergency calls to the National Debt Helpline declining,
  • record high new car sales in 2024;
  • record sales of new private aircraft;
  • overseas trips in 2024 at a new record high of 11.6 million;
  • enrolments in fee-paying private schools at an all-time high;
  • record manufacturing gross profits last financial year (2023-24) at $47.4 billion;
  • record construction profits last year, at $31.1 billion;
  • record profits in several other sectors;
  • household spending at a record high.
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

4 player map can be good to have segments of your farm for different uses. Although I've found it annoying as I found it hard to have a good flow to the morning.

 

The report’s central conclusions – rejected by the Coalition – are relatively unsurprising. It found nuclear power would be far more expensive than the projected path of shifting to mostly renewable energy. And delivering nuclear generation before the mid-2040s will be extremely challenging.

 

The Reserve Bank’s behaviour last week can only be described as bizarre. It’s a sign that it’s lost its bearings and isn’t sure what’s happening in the economy or where it’s headed. What has caused its befuddlement? Our unexpected return to near full employment.

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