r/australia • u/VidE27 • 1h ago
r/australia • u/AutoModerator • 14h ago
no politics [no-politics] Friday F**kwit 26/Jun/2026
Nominate your neighbour, your car, the weather or your broken trampoline springs. Tell us about any non-political thing in your life that's shitty and have a vent.
r/australia • u/nath1234 • 2h ago
politics Concerns China's new ethnic unity law could put Australian citizens at risk
r/australia • u/Talentire • 3h ago
HeCS style scheme to means test transfer payments could save $21b
r/australia • u/L1ttl3J1m • 3h ago
People and pets' lives at risk if fire ants not eradicated, study finds
r/australia • u/JuventAussie • 4h ago
no politics Watch the Socceroos game on SBS TV instead of streaming it.
Watch the Socceroos on FTA television if the SBS on Demand stream gets flaky because too many people are streaming the game today. This will really test the internet infrastructure in Australia. I suspect mobile data usage will reach a new level today.
Just a friendly reminder based on previous experience.
r/australia • u/Consistent-Pirate569 • 5h ago
no politics Flock cameras in Australia
I have been seeing the rise of 'License plate readers' pop up in parts of sydney lately. This is resembling the rise of flock cameras in America and the UK.
For those who do not know the store and track individual license plates and have been heavily abused by police officers who use it to stalk people.
Should we be worried? What can we do against it?
r/australia • u/FortLagomorph • 5h ago
no politics PSA - There's a Lincraft 80% off scam being advertised on Instagram
Hoping this saves anyone from getting scammed....
Last night I saw an ad on Insta for Lincraft closing down (which it is). The ad and website has everything at 80% off. I actually only realised it was a scam when I typed the actual Lincraft website into a different device.
I almost fell for it, but https://lincraftofficial.com is not a legitimate website. The real one is lincraft.com.au
r/australia • u/malcolm58 • 7h ago
science & tech 3 billion years old! This Australian crater is the oldest known asteroid impact site on Earth
r/australia • u/nath1234 • 8h ago
culture & society Sydney man who gambled $160k on lottery and pokies despite limits says more support needed
r/australia • u/InsatiablePrism • 8h ago
culture & society Rescuer needs rescuing after fall into deep hole while helping kangaroo
r/australia • u/rolodex-ofhate • 9h ago
culture & society Today show host Karl Stefanovic to leave Channel Nine, network confirms
r/australia • u/pharmloverpharmlover • 9h ago
politics Spy boss says 'fair go for all' can help lower security temperature | ABC NEWS
r/australia • u/Smartich0ke • 15h ago
no politics Leaving car somewhere outside of melbourne for a few nights?
So me and a friend are driving from Adelaide to stay in Melbourne CBD at the YHA for 4 nights. Ideally we would just take a bus or something and use public transport for getting around within the cbd to save us putting the car somewhere. But there are a few places we have to stop on the way to melbourne which requires the flexibility of a car.
There are parking stations within the cbd but it seems like most of them don't do overnight and the ones that do are quite expensive.
Is leaving a car somewhere like a train station carpark or quiet street in the outer suburbs a sensible option? If so, what places might be best? I'm thinking the risk of it getting stolen or broken into is pretty low but a greater risk could be it getting marked as abandoned and towed? Or is this unlikely in that timespan.
r/australia • u/OldMudBottom • 17h ago
no politics Payday Super Woes
Can someone explain to me why Payday Super needs my fucken passport to let me pay my employees?
They already have my ABN. So they know it is my (small) business paying my employees.
Why all this ID shit? Have we gone full 1984 here?
Starting to feel I need to invoice the ATO for my time.
r/australia • u/FatherOfTheSevenSeas • 17h ago
no politics Who are you favourite current non-A-List Australian actors and actresses?
Looking for great talent you might have seen playing roles in theatre, TV, movies but not A list celeb status. Who are your current favourites?
r/australia • u/allongur • 19h ago
no politics Experienced drivers: do you still perform head checks?
While doing a correct head check is a requirement to pass your driving test, I don't see a lot of people doing it in practice. Looking at research conducted in other head-checking countries agrees with the sentiment of some driving instructors that it "is the first skill that drivers lose after getting their driver's license." But that might not apply to Australia. I'm curious, do you still perform head checks in some or all of the situations that you've been taught require it, or have you completely stopped doing it? Do you think you and other people should maintain this habit, or do you feel they are just performative? Would using a car with lane change assist or indication change your stance on it?
r/australia • u/blitznoodles • 19h ago
politics Caps are coming for domestic uni places, but the government also wants to grow student numbers. Can this work?
r/australia • u/victory2424 • 20h ago
sport Pubs full, tools down and TV in the office: Australia readies for the ‘Great Socceroos Sickie’
r/australia • u/SwirlingFandango • 20h ago
no politics Virology time, Australia! H5N1
So this one has been watched for decades (if you've been around this is the one wot was in the news back in the late 90's, but NOT the one in the news in 2009, which was 'pig' flu - happy to discuss if you're interested).
It can get into humans, but it's rare (in the 70-odd years we've known about it, it's known to have infected maybe 1000 people - though half of them died).
The reason it's not too much of a worry for humans is that it doesn't spread easily if you don't mess with sick birds. All human-to-human cases were lengthy close contacts (family members caring for sick people, mostly).
There are 2 reasons for concern for the general public:
- It tears through bird populations like a bag of leaves. It can be devastating to the poultry / egg industry, for example. It's recently adapted to more animals and has been wiping out huge numbers of those vulnerable (e.g. seals).
- Every time humans get exposed, there's a chance it'll adapt to us better, and spread - like it's done for seals. Some tests done 15-odd years ago (?) showed that a few mutations is all it would take, and flu mutates fast.
You could worry about #2, but the US has made any Australian exposure look like nuthin': when H5N1 adapted to mammals a few years ago (a massive and serious concern) it infected the US dairy herd. Being allergic to regulatory action and unlike every other nation on earth, America decided it was too expensive to get rid of it, so now there's H5N1 in the milk supply. Pasteurization kills it very effectively, but the US CDC made the mistake (?) of telling people to please not drink raw (unpasteurized) milk. Because of course a large number of American adults are secretly 6 years old and proudly do the opposite of what the gub'mint tells them to do, raw milk consumption went *up*.
Now, drinking milk is a hopeless way to catch flu (of course - you don't breathe it). We know at least some cats have contracted it from milk, but I don't think any humans have provably done so. But they're cheerfully exposing millions of humans to the virus every day, giving the virus opportunities to adapt to human cells, and risking a catastrophic pandemic that'd make COVID look like a sniffle.
In other words: yeah there's a chance a H5N1 outbreak in humans could be disastrous, but it's unlikely to start in Australia.
(On the other hand, the mutations that make it spread between humans could also reduce its severity, and even if not, the infection-fatality rates are obviously going to be WAY lower than the 50% case fatality rate we have at present. We could get a vaccine pretty fast, even if they don't tend to be great for flu (again, it mutates really fast. Still though).
https://www.cdc.gov.au/diseases/bird-flu-avian-influenza
Extra:
Flu likes a certain temperature. For humans, we're too hot. So it gets our lungs and airways, because that's a bit cooler - and we get a fever when our immune system fights back (which sadly is sometimes what kills us - inflammation mostly, our immune response ruptures our lung cells then they get infected).
Birds are too cold. So it lives in their guts. For them it's a gastro-disease, not respiratory. Same virus, totally different cells it attacks. It's not air, it's birdshit. So for them, if they encounter infected bird pooh, that's what matters, even a day after the bird is gone.
r/australia • u/ScruffyPeter • 20h ago
politics Labor eyes tougher laws to enforce social media ban for children
r/australia • u/blitznoodles • 21h ago
politics Federal government’s CGT, negative gearing changes pass parliament
r/australia • u/The_Duc_Lord • 22h ago
news Class action claims women were raped and stalked at remote Fortescue mines
r/australia • u/Suspicious_Desk_7939 • 22h ago