BellaK has sent in this one from outside the Wanniassa Superbarn.
Sour grapes can have a terrible lingering taste.
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BellaK has sent in this one from outside the Wanniassa Superbarn.
Sour grapes can have a terrible lingering taste.
(Got an image of Canberra you want to share with the world? Email it to images@region.com.au )
21 year old.. 9 years his junior? High five!
I heard a rumour that Peter Ashton left his ex because of her question mark phobia.
chewy14 said :
KB1971 said :
People are funny with age gaps. My wife and I have been together for 14 years, I was 25 & she was 17 when we got together. I had a pretty good group of friends, some of whom were also neighbours that knew us both well (she was the girl next door) who dropped me around the same time.
No one has really said anything but the way it all happened was too coincidental.
The thing is, for all of their judgement, we have made a great life together, have 3 kids & are very happy. People can be odd sometimes.
By any chance, did you used to play AFL for St Kilda?
Nope, why?
Skidbladnir said :
Wait a second, you’re agreed that gays deserve the same rights as people who spawn without a piece of paper, further, that they should be able to adopt? If you’re already saying de factos, civil unions, and marriages are equivalent in all ways except name, then you’d support the sharing of that name. Less is hypocrisy.
Also, subsidies for married & de-facto people is mostly to encourage staying together and further building wealth, but also to incentivise having a _clean paper record of union_…
Dissolution of de-facto and unmarried childed couples penalises individuals through the costs and hasle of seperation of assets, and puts an undeserved portion of it back in the hands of lawyers. 🙁
I didn’t say that they are all equivalent, but nor did I say that they aren’t. My point is about those whose living arrangements shouldn’t be subsidised by the state, and those whose possibly should. The absence or presence of children being the determining factor.
alaninoz said :
Give them the benefits if they%u2019ve got kids, If not, not. The fact that you%u2019re married/de facto/civil partnership/whatever is no reason for the taxpayers to subsidise you. Supporting future citizens might be.
Wait a second, you’re agreed that gays deserve the same rights as people who spawn without a piece of paper, further, that they should be able to adopt? If you’re already saying de factos, civil unions, and marriages are equivalent in all ways except name, then you’d support the sharing of that name. Less is hypocrisy.
Also, subsidies for married & de-facto people is mostly to encourage staying together and further building wealth, but also to incentivise having a _clean paper record of union_…
Dissolution of de-facto and unmarried childed couples penalises individuals through the costs and hasle of seperation of assets, and puts an undeserved portion of it back in the hands of lawyers. 🙁
georgesgenitals said :
alaninoz said :
Break the nexus between benefits and marriage and put it where it belongs.
Haven’t we already done that? De facto and gay partnerships get the same legal rights as marriage anyway, I think.
Maybe so, but misses the point. Give them the benefits if they’ve got kids, If not, not. The fact that you’re married/de facto/civil partnership/whatever is no reason for the taxpayers to subsidise you. Supporting future citizens might be.
alaninoz said :
Break the nexus between benefits and marriage and put it where it belongs.
Haven’t we already done that? De facto and gay partnerships get the same legal rights as marriage anyway, I think.
KB1971 said :
People are funny with age gaps. My wife and I have been together for 14 years, I was 25 & she was 17 when we got together. I had a pretty good group of friends, some of whom were also neighbours that knew us both well (she was the girl next door) who dropped me around the same time.
No one has really said anything but the way it all happened was too coincidental.
The thing is, for all of their judgement, we have made a great life together, have 3 kids & are very happy. People can be odd sometimes.
By any chance, did you used to play AFL for St Kilda?
People are funny with age gaps. My wife and I have been together for 14 years, I was 25 & she was 17 when we got together. I had a pretty good group of friends, some of whom were also neighbours that knew us both well (she was the girl next door) who dropped me around the same time.
No one has really said anything but the way it all happened was too coincidental.
The thing is, for all of their judgement, we have made a great life together, have 3 kids & are very happy. People can be odd sometimes.
I see nothing wrong with the age difference, it would be different if she was a teenager, and he was 30.
I always preferred older men then myself, when I was younger, (not too old), but these days I seem to attract younger men, it’s great.
Mr Gillespie said :
A bit of an age difference there. Typical cradle-snatching 30-year-old guy.
Yep, we’re buggers like that, better lift your game and compete mr g.
A bit of an age difference there. Typical cradle-snatching 30-year-old guy.
Captain RAAF said :
1. It’s wrong,
2. See point 1.
Well, it’s hard not to be overwhelmed by the logic and well thought out ideas behind that comment. Still, it’s the most convincing argument against gay marriage that I’ve seen.
R. Slicker said :
Oh yes, and could someone again take us through all those reasons why gay marriage shouldn’t be allowed?
Don’t care if gays get married or not. What I object to is the state benefits, for anyone, that go along with marriage. The only legitimate interest the state should have in the living arrangements of its citizens is the welfare of its future citizens – that is, children. Anything else is prurience. Break the nexus between benefits and marriage and put it where it belongs.
Captain RAAF said :
R. Slicker said :
Oh yes, and could someone again take us through all those reasons why gay marriage shouldn’t be allowed?
1. It’s wrong,
2. See point 1.
I think we should ban heterosexual marriage.
R. Slicker said :
Oh yes, and could someone again take us through all those reasons why gay marriage shouldn’t be allowed?
1. It’s wrong,
2. See point 1.
Oh yes, and could someone again take us through all those reasons why gay marriage shouldn’t be allowed?
Doens’t Peter know the rule for acceptable younger partners is half your age plus seven?
Assuming they are both exactly 30/21 years old, they needed to wait another two years before their nine-year gap was acceptable.
This chart should help.
(Also, male marriage-delay vs female early-engagement creates a complementary Nash equilibrium. There’s an entire field of study into this effect. Basically, you can break society’s rules and suffer consequences, or play in accord with them, and you get the benefits without even trying.)
EvanJames said :
Disapproval of partners having big age gaps is a very old thing indeed. In European mediaeval times, when an old man took a very young wife, the locals would express their disapproval in a Charivari, a rowdy parade burlesquing things they didn’t like or wished to pour scorn on. They’d act out the thing they were featuring, with people dressed up in exaggerated costumes acting (in exaggerated fashion) the activity.
It was for things like spouses whose ages were too far apart, spouses indulging in excessive violence on the other spouse (and in those days it was often the woman beating up the man too much), excessive nagging, a tradesperson or merchant overcharging, excessive brutality to apprentices, cheating on spouses, impiety (working on the Sabbath etc) and the list goes on.
I guess the aggrieved party who posted that notice would love to organise a charivari!
Sounds like one of the Public Service Agencies that I am far too familiar with……………………
pity the young lass, too – baggage like that, can’t see it lasting. get out now, wee lassy…
Mysteryman said :
I can see why he left her. What a psycho!
Yep. Run the f*** away.
BellaK has sent in this one from outside the Wanniassa Superbarn.
Bella K is the woman abandoned for a younger model, I claim my $10.
Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned,
Nor hell a fury like a woman scorned.
The Mourning Bride by William Congreve
Disapproval of partners having big age gaps is a very old thing indeed. In European mediaeval times, when an old man took a very young wife, the locals would express their disapproval in a Charivari, a rowdy parade burlesquing things they didn’t like or wished to pour scorn on. They’d act out the thing they were featuring, with people dressed up in exaggerated costumes acting (in exaggerated fashion) the activity.
It was for things like spouses whose ages were too far apart, spouses indulging in excessive violence on the other spouse (and in those days it was often the woman beating up the man too much), excessive nagging, a tradesperson or merchant overcharging, excessive brutality to apprentices, cheating on spouses, impiety (working on the Sabbath etc) and the list goes on.
I guess the aggrieved party who posted that notice would love to organise a charivari!
I reckon Peter posted it himself, bragging about having a girlfriend 9 years younger than him. Legend!
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