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#easy migration australia
beadnstich · 1 year
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Get Your Conferral Of Australian Citizenship With Migration Agent Australia
A migration agent is a professional who helps people migrate to Australia. They can help with everything from finding the right visa to preparing documents, arranging flights, and even applying for Conferral Of Australian Citizenship, in case you’re seeking permanent Australian citizenship. They can also provide advice on things like culture and language in the new country.
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Migration Agents In Perth play a very important role in the process of migrating to a new country. They help connect potential immigrants with the right resources and guide them through the process of obtaining the right visas and paperwork. They can also help immigrants find jobs and housing in their new country.
How Can Migration Agents Help You Achieve Australian Citizenship?
There are many benefits to obtaining Australian citizenship, including the right to vote, access to social security and health care, and the ability to travel freely in and out of the country. Obtaining citizenship can be a complex process, however, and many people choose to enlist the help of the Best Migration Agent Perth to ensure the process goes as smoothly as possible.
Migration Agent Australia is a certified expert in Australian immigration law and can help you navigate the complex process of obtaining citizenship. They can help you prepare the necessary documents and submit them to the relevant authorities. They can also provide advice and support throughout the application process.
If you are considering applying for Conferral Of Australian Citizenship, it is important to consult with a migration agent to ensure you have the best chance of success. Remember, choosing the right migration agent is an important decision when it comes to applying for citizenship in Australia.
How To Choose The Right Australian Migration Agent?
When you are looking to migrate to a country like Australia, where laws regarding Visa and citizenship are quite strict, it is important to choose the Best Migration Agent Perth. There are a lot of agents out there, so it can be difficult to know who to trust. Here are some tips to help you choose the right agent:
1.There are a lot of agents out there, so it is important to do your research before choosing one.
2.Make sure the agent is qualified to help you with your migration. They should be registered with the Migration Agents Registration Authority (MARA).
3.Ask about the experiences of the Migration Agents In Perth. Ask the agent how long they have been working in migration and what kind of experience they have.
4.Make sure the agent is licensed to practice in your destination area.  Also, ask for a copy of the insurance policy of Migration Agent Australia.
Concluding, migration agents have the experience and expertise to help you navigate the complex process of obtaining the Conferral Of Australian Citizenship. With their help, you can be on your way to becoming a proud Australian citizen.
For more details visit our website modernmigrationaustralia.com.au/.
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dragonthunders01 · 8 months
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Spectember D15: Posthumans
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5 million years has been since the last human being die on earth, but is a world still ruled by humans, or what descended from them.
All started for the struggle for a civilization that collapsed in a cataclysmic event of interplanetary scale that annihilated the biosphere and a good chunk of the human population, for sure it was not pollution or the man’s hand, or even something like an asteroid, maybe was an extraterrestrial invasion? A supernova? Whatever was this event, it was strong enough it pulled out a civilization that was already on their early steps on traveling to star systems and already was settled across the solar system, it was the endgame for all of them.
The last remaining survivors did the best to stand and find ways to perpetuate the species, but when options at short term turned useless there was a last hope to humanity to survive until the world they live on would recover, they focused the last resources on build a vault designed to last until the habitable conditions of earth returned and repopulate the planet thanks to thousands of human specimens samples that could be born and reclaim the world in the future helped by the synthetic hands of long term lasting artificial intelligences.
Though whatever happened in the planning, something went wrong, something caused to make those restored humans to be shaped into what was sort of similar to them but more ape like, was this deliberated or if it was an inconvenient? if it was ideal for mankind to rise like their ancestors or if this “devolution” was something sketched for the artificial systems as a way to secure their offspring for a systematic failure? Is another question which will likely have no proper answer, but the result of this turned at the end successful for the survival of the biological lineage of humans.
When that humanity arose of the ruins of the again habitable earth, they sort of resembled lanky shorter versions of a chimp, brownish, with a more developed diet thanks to a modification in their digestive system and dentition allowed them to exploit every resource available as generalist omnivores. These creatures which could be called the "woodland dwellers" conquered most of the continent in matter of centuries, they did not need transport or technology to do it, they just traveled, wandered like their ancestors although they no longer were bipedal.
They started somewhere in Eurasia, eventually crossing to new regions and in a thousand years the majority of the world that was easy to access through routes was filled with these, all of them started to establish wherever food was easy to find, then came those that started to venture in new environments, new climates, migrated across continents.
In 50 thousand years, there were new populations that isolated themselves and became adapted to their respective environments: Tundra, Grasslands, canopies, the deserts, the coasts and seas, rivers, etc., all product of constant migration and colonization of new terrains.
100 thousand years, few ice ages went and came, they have turned the balance of diversity further towards speciation at a rhythm that only will benefit those species that can be flexible to change, they manage to colonize America, as well expand towards Africa and many of the island regions across the pacific ocean somehow reaching up to Australia, and so conquered most of the planet with exception of Antarctica.
1 million years, many of those ecologically adapted or regionally isolated populations have turned into different species, they still resemble the woodland dweller to a degree but they have changed considerable depending of their environment, with new behaviors, sizes and faces.
3 million years, the world was starting to see the new men shapes, some robust, some more slendy than their ancestors, some agile, some slow walkers, bipedal, facultative bipedal, quadrupeds, a lot of them took advantage of being the only dominant megafauna to reign as only a handful of small surviving mammals, resilient birds and many reptiles and amphibians represent competition, some have started to take over but it will be a long time until the posthumanity is dethroned from their state, meanwhile the oceans and rivers are dominated by shark and fishes, though there were already the start of a branch of the human dwelling species that became semiaquatic, their evolutionary path is increasingly fast.
And now 5 million years hence, a lot of these new posthuman species have specialized and turned even more different of their ancestral form, many look like an amalgamation between different animals with features of many of their gone monkeys and ape relatives. For things of natural selection and that speciation the new species that evolved of the isolation for the last 2 million years have migrated and now claimed another place on other continents, especially in America which in these million years saw a wave of posthuman species that replaced many of the endemic species, and some of those moved towards Asia. These ecosystems have one of everything, browsing or grazing herbivores, specialized prey eaters (insectivores, mollusk eaters, scavengers), varied lineages of omnivores, and full carnivores.
Specifically one of the carnivore lineage that evolved of the original "Woodland dweller" came from a specialized form reduced in size, adapted on hunting small animals and after millions of years these started to increasingly expand their prey range, growing in size as they replaced previous predatory forms that became stagnated. With the new diversity of the posthuman formed ecosystem growing in complexity, the new predatory forms could rise to hunt these down. Some are fast small prey hunters, some became more arboreal, some are more prominent on the grassland or mountains, all of them came in a considerable range of sizes from the extinct domestic cat to a panthers, but upon the appearance of large herbivores, a new more formidable and heavier predator evolved, this was the Spiketooth.
Spiketooths are among the largest terrestrial carnivores of earth, with a height of 2.3 meters tall and weight some 300 kg, their range extend across Eurasia, coming on the most temperate regions, they are heavy predators adapted for ambush and wrestling their prey into submission rather than fast hunt and kill. They hunt down large posthumans like the Eurasian slothmen, heavy descendants an arboreal heavy species from Africa that resemble a ground sloth, though formidable fighters with their long hand claws, or the armored species like the Temperate Lockskin, fatty and hairless posthumans that are semi bipedal, descendants of the tundra species that moved to the tropics and lost their fur due to the climate they live on, turning their skin very robust made against medium size predators, they often hold a handful of small sized gibbon like posthumans that feast on parasites and live in sort of symbiosis with their host Lockskin, often even being able to warn these of the incoming attack of a spiketooth.
This large carnivore evolved specifically to deal with the thought skin of these animals, with hypertrophied conical incisive that often pressure and cut through the hardest epidermis and are capable to pierce any defense of the large forms, with their carnassial teeth they are capable of tear down and cut with quite efficacy the meat of their prey, often taking also chunks of bones if they are capable off.
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hussyknee · 5 months
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If y'all want to feel sympathy for the Israelis, you better have it for every single genocider. Slavers and settlers that scalped Natives and Nazis and Imperial Japan and Stalinists and Serbs and the British East India company and white nationalists and Islamic fundamentalists and Hindutvas and Assad's forces and and and.
People do not become genociders because of victimhood. The majority of the worst colonial empires were people who hadn't been oppressed themselves in centuries. Groups become genocidal because they have power and want to take their trauma or paranoia out on someone weaker than they are. Even the ones who aren't gleefully enthusiastic go along with it because the benefits and risks of dissent outweigh your moral conscience. You're not forced to make those choices. That's not what indoctination is. Indoctrination helps dehumanization. It's making it easy to silence every doubt and qualm and instinct for empathy and compassion. But you still choose. You make a conscious decision to see a human being as a vermin to be eradicated. It's easy to do that when you have no incentive to see them as human and no consequences for treating them accordingly.
For fuck's sake, stop using the Holocaust as an excuse for Zionists. Half of them are converts or the children of converts who never lived the Jewish generational legacy of persecution. Most of their families migrated from places where they had a perfectly comfortable lives, and the other half was born in Israel and never knew what being a marginalized minority was like. Israelis are literally the least oppressed Jews in the known world. They victimize Palestinians because colonizers and oppressors live in mortal fear of the people they colonize and oppress, because they KNOW that they're crushing them and have to manufacture all sorts of narratives to rationalize and justify that they're actually the good guys.
Colonization and genocide is a result of power. I and a lot of other BIPOC have been traumatized by Zionists before we ever knew the word for them, because they keep taking out their paranoia of Jewish hate on Black people, Natives, immigrants, Muslims and Arabs and every kind of racial minority that have no systemic power to hurt them. They have such a foothold in the Jewish communities of Europe and its settler colonies (Australia, the Americas), because white Jews have assimilated into whiteness. However conditional their acceptance among white Christians, they have the same racial and institutional power over Black and brown colonized people. Which makes it easy for them to choose Zionism— the legitimizing of white colonial anxiety in place of fear of their oppressor. Antisemitism is their ready and convenient way to rationalize the racism and Islamphobia and racial superiority they already have.
Do you think Jews are the only people who have ever been genocided? The Holocaust was not exceptional, it was exceptionalized by the Western powers to launder their own atrocities that far outstripped Nazi Germany. Look at what they're doing with Ukraine. They're being genocided and colonized and they deserve empathy and help against Russia. But the West isn't concerned about Armenia the same way even though it's also an Eastern European country. They definitely weren't concerned about any of the other countries Russia has attacked or helped genocide (like Syria). Including Ukraine itself before all this. Putin has been attacking Donbas since 2014.
So why now? They care about who's genociding Ukraine, not about Ukrainians. Russia under Putin is very much a threat to NATO and Ukraine is bordered by NATO countries. The Western PR machine still had to make Ukrainians white, because Slavs are ethnically marginalized in Western Europe, and even North America to a lesser degree. They have white privilege over all Asians and Africans and Indigenous people because the colour system of race is based on European colonization, but they have only conditional whiteness in the imperial sphere of both the US and Russia. But because they're ethnically European, the US and Western Europe was able to launch a PR "Look They're Just Like Us!" campaign to elevate them to full whiteness, so that their own citizens would actually give a shit about this country they'd barely heard of before. That's why we're all more concerned about Ukraine than any other Eastern Europeans (we're all conditioned into white supremacy). After that, the US went around thumping its own chest for a full year and half, trying to launder its military image after the twenty year Muslim genocide that was the War on Terror (still ongoing).
This is exactly what they did with European Jews. High-ho, somebody victimized by the Enemy! Dust them off and lookie! They're European! People will give a shit that we liberated them if we make them all white! But uh, do we really want five million Jewish refugees in here? Oh I know, we'll thrown in with those crazy Jewish terrorists that were giving the Brits so much trouble, and give them a state! They're also from Europe after all, and Civilized™, unlike the savages!
And then the liberated Jews accepted doing exactly what the Nazis did to them. Not because they had to! They could have just lived in Palestine, that whole region of the Levant was pretty secular and multicultural. But they didn't see Arabs as human beings! Because Europeans are taught to see Black and brown people as servants and savages! They massacred Palestinians and took the place over because they could and then called it the War of Independence. The first people they victimized after that? Were Arab Jews. They colluded with Arab nationalists to have them ethnically cleansed entirely out of their countries and scooped them up to create a labouring underclass! Put them up in such squalid conditions that scores died!
And did those people look around and realize white Jews were their oppressors and they had far more in common with Palestinians? No. They threw in with their oppressors to help make Palestinians lives a generational nightmare. Because power and assimilation! This is the exact same reason why Zionists has been trying to cosy up to Nazis since before Hitler.
(Oh and by the way? Germans never regretted the Nazis or the Holocaust. The Americans "denazification" was a dead fail. They just used Israel to make a whole dog and pony show of how very sorry they were and how it was a Dark Moment in Their History™ (because nothing they've ever done to colonized people counts). They paid reparations because the West made them, but they never got over the massive post-war genocide the Allies subjected their people to, or the way they carved up the country like a Christmas turkey. But again, did they hold Britain, France, US and Russia responsible for it? Did they acknowledge that the most severe cases of post-war violence came from American GIs? Of course not. Obviously the biggest threat was...the Poles.)
If you really see all those TikTok videos of families dancing to their genocide songs, taunting starving and dehydrated Palestinians and teens lampooning Palestinian mothers grieving their dead children and think "they're also victims because Western imperialists exploited their fear and made them into monsters" then I don't even know what to say to you. That level of infantilization, wilful ignorance and need to turn sadism into victimhood is breathtakingly racist and paternalistic. Even if you believe #Not All Israelis, the point is there's enough Israelis. Also what is even there to feel sorry for?? Are Israelis about to be turned out and shot in the streets? Starve to death? Have their limbs amputated without anesthetic and still die of sepsis? Literally what??
Emotions are signifiers of your own internal biases and perspectives. They aren't indicative of justice or morality. We can't move through a deeply unequal world and believe that compassion is having the same responses, judgements and feelings for everyone. It's not empathy you're feeling for Israelis, it's conditioned philosemitism and casual racism against Palestinians. If you actually followed the videos and images and news coming out of Palestine, you would feel about as sympathetic towards them as Nazis. You would understand that this kind of atrocity doesn't come from trauma or having been victims. It comes from having zero consequences for doing them. It comes from unchecked, gleeful, sadistic power.
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magnoliamyrrh · 6 months
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the more the years go by the more i become insanely fed up w the concept that modernity is some sort of evolution. not even from some sort of anthropological decolonial perspective or whatnot not even my own desire and preference for traditional life nah bro just like in the simples terms. for the 99.8% of human history we kept to hunter gathering, nomadicism, and small settlements, and even bigger cities and empires and we didnt fuck up NEARLY as bad as we have in the last few hundred years
this is not to say before the industrial revolution everything was dandy and humans always lived in perfect balance w the rest of nature bc it wasnt and we didnt. we have drastically changed the enviornment in many places where we have been (like native americans w burnings and whatnot drastically changing the american landscape, or domestication of animals changing the landscape in the near east and other places). and since the first migrations out of africa, our efficient hunting was part of what lead to megafauna going extinct (everywhere outside of africa and parts of asia [asian elephants], those things dissappeard after we showed up :( rip giant cool animals in australia)
...... but like..... theres a massive difference between what native americans did in the americas, or domestication of grazing animals in the "old world," human hunting making megafauna go extinct (which weve realized, was unfortunately easy to do with what was not a large amount of hunting bc of how long it takes them to grow), or the noticable changes in the atmosphere seen with asian rice farming, or other things........... and managing to IN A FEW HUNDRED YEARS absolutely decimate massive amounts of forests, cause a fucking global mass extinction, essentially a genocide of biodiversity and billions of non-human souls, disregulating the entire god damn fucking climate, poison everything absolutely Everything including the god damn botton of the fucking ocean with microplastics, chemicals, and radiation, and another million other fucking things
""""evolution"""" """better"" ""progress""" my god damn fucking ass we lived without ruining the planet for HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF YEARS without destroying the planet and we have done so in LESS THAN 500 WITH MODERNITY
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beardedmrbean · 3 months
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Canada has long been a draw for people from India's Punjab province seeking new opportunities elsewhere. But has the Canadian dream soured?
It's hard to miss the ardour of Punjab's migrant ambitions when driving through its fertile rural plains.
Billboards promising easy immigration to Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the UK jut out through ample mustard fields.
Off the highways, consultancies offer English language coaching to eager youth.
Single-storey brick homes double up as canvasses for hand-painted mural advertisements promising quick visas. And in the town of Bathinda, hundreds of agents jostle for space on a single narrow street, pledging to speed up the youth's runaway dreams.
For over a century, this province in India's northwest has seen waves of overseas migration; from the Sikh soldiers inducted into the British Indian Army travelling to Canada, through to rural Punjabis settling in England post-independence.
But some, especially from Canada, are now choosing to come back home.
One of those is 28-year-old Balkar, who returned in early 2023 after just one year in Toronto. Citizenship was his ultimate goal when he left his little hamlet of Pitho in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. His family mortgaged their land to fund his education.
But his Canadian dream quickly lost its allure a few months into his life there.
"Everything was so expensive. I had to work 50 hours every week after college, just to survive," he told the BBC. "High inflation is making many students leave their studies."
Balkar now runs an embroidery business from a small room on one side of the expansive central courtyard in his typical Punjabi home. He also helps on his family's farm to supplement his income.
Opportunities for employment are few and far between in these rural areas, but technology has allowed entrepreneurs like him to conquer the tyranny of distance. Balkar gets the bulk of his business through Instagram.
"I have a good life here. Why should I face hardships there when I can live at home and make good money?" he asks.
The BBC spoke to at least half a dozen reverse migrants in Punjab who shared similar sentiments.
It was also a common refrain in the scores of videos on YouTube shared by Indians who had chosen to abandon their life in Canada and return home. There was a stark difference one young returnee told the BBC between the "rosy picture" immigration agents painted and the rough reality of immigrant life in Toronto and Vancouver.
The "Canada craze" has let up a bit - and especially so among well-off migrants who have a fallback option at home, says Raj Karan Brar, an immigration agent in Bathinda who helps hundreds of Punjabis get permanent residencies and student visas every year.
The desire for a Canadian citizenship remains as strong as ever though among middle- and lower middle-class clients in rural communities.
But viral YouTube videos of students talking about the difficulty in finding jobs and protests over a lack of housing and work opportunities has created an air of nervousness among these students, say immigration agents.
There was a 40% decline in applications from India for Canadian study permits in the second half of 2023, according to one estimate. This was, in part, also due to the ongoing diplomatic tensions between India and Canada over allegations Indian agents were involved in the murder of Canadian Sikh separatist leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
There are also hints of deeper cultural factors at play, for a waning Canadian dream among an older generation of Indian migrants.
Karan Aulakh, who spent nearly 15 years in Edmonton and achieved career and financial success, left his managerial job for a comfortable rural life in Khane ki Daab, the village where he was born in 1985. He told the BBC he was upset by LGBT-inclusive education policies in Canada and its 2018 decision to legalise recreational cannabis. Incompatibility with the Western way of life, a struggling healthcare system, and better economic prospects in India were, he said, key reasons why many older Canadian Indians are preparing to leave the country.
"I started an online consultancy - Back to the Motherland - a month and a half ago, to help those who want to reverse migrate. I get at least two to three calls every day, mostly from people in Canada who want to know what job opportunities there are in Punjab and how they can come back," said Mr Aulakh.
For a country that places such a high value on immigration, these trends are "concerning" and are "being received with a bit of a sting politically", says Daniel Bernhard of the Institute of Canadian Citizenship, an immigration advocacy group.
A liberalised immigration regime has been Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's signature policy to counter slowing economic growth and a rapidly aging population.
According to Canada's statistics agency, immigration accounted for 90% of Canada's labour force growth and 75% of population growth in 2021.
International students contribute to over C$20bn ($14.7bn; £11.7bn) to Canada's economy each year, a bulk of them Indians who now make up one in five recent immigrants to the country.
India was also Canada's leading source for immigration in 2022.
The numbers of those leaving are still small in absolute terms with immigration levels at all-time highs in Canada - the country welcomed nearly half a million new migrants each year over the past few years.
But the rate of reverse migration hit a two decade high in 2019, signalling that migrants were "losing confidence" in the country said Mr Bernhard.
Country specific statistics for such emigrants, or reverse migrants, are not available.
But official data obtained by Reuters shows between 80,000 and 90,000 immigrants left Canada in 2021 and 2022 and either went back to their countries, or onward elsewhere.
Some 42,000 people departed in the first half of 2023.
Fewer permanent residents are also going on to become Canadian citizens, according to census data cited by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship. In 2001, 75% of those eligible became citizens. Two decades later, it was 45%.
Canada needs to "restore the value of its citizenship," said Mr Bernhard.
It comes as Canada debates its aggressive immigration targets given country's struggle to absorb more people.
A recent report from National Bank of Canada economists cautioned that the population growth was putting pressure on its already tight housing supply and strained healthcare system.
Canada has seen a population surge - an increase of 1.2 million people in 2023 - driven mostly by newcomers.
The report argued that growth needed to be slowed to an annual increase of up to 500,000 people in order to preserve or increase the standard of living.
There appears to have been a tacit acceptance of this evaluation by policymakers.
Mr Trudeau's Liberal government recently introduced a cap on international student permits that would result in a temporary decrease of 35% in approved study visas.
It's a significant policy shift that some believe may end up further reducing Canada's appeal amid a wave of reverse migrations.
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idsb · 11 months
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bestie why am I seriously considering a working holiday in australia next year? you're so convincing that now I feel like I simply have to try it sjdgkdh. did you spend the most time in melbourne?
Do it!!!!!!!!! I spent the most time in Melbs in 2018 and 2019, so I’m going to start my WHV there because I know it very well - but I do also want to experience something new, so I’m considering migrating to somewhere in Queensland (Brisbane if I want a city, Sunshine Coast if I wanna retreat into nature and die; tbd) once I get my bearings. I LOVE Melbourne though and I cannot speak highly enough of it. I think it’s the absolute best city in the world in terms of food, coffee, vibe, public transportation, ratio of city and stuff always happening (I would even die by the fact that t there’s far more accessible “always happening” stuff there than in NYC) to drop dead gorgeous + varied nature within very easy driving distance, all of it!
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axvoter · 1 year
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Blatantly Partisan Party Review XV (Victoria 2022): Sustainable Australia Party—Stop Overdevelopment/Corruption
Prior reviews: federal 2013, federal 2016, VIC 2018, NSW 2019, federal 2019, federal 2022
What I said before: “I have a very hard time finding their ‘we need a smaller population’ talk to be anything but eugenicist and racist. I have an even harder time accepting their absolute claptrap that Australia’s sprawling, low-density cities are overdeveloped.” (federal 2022)
What I think this time: It’s always a bad sign when a party tries to shoehorn a slogan into their registered name. Amazingly, this isn’t even the worst sin Sustainable Australia (SusAus) has committed against party names: they once had a hashtag at the start of their name.
This party has a habit of scooping up some votes from people who see the name and think “oh 'sustainable' sounds good!” They gain the rest from anti-immigration NIMBYs, at least some of whom think that their weird phobia of apartments is environmentalist praxis. SusAus have realised that people on the left are increasingly calling them out, so they try to claim they are pro-immigration and that they are jUsT aSkiNg QuEsTiOnS about migrant numbers. It’s rather easy to pick holes in their rhetoric and expose it for what it is: racist bullshit that won’t make Australia any more sustainable.
SusAus can’t even be bothered providing an actual policy platform for Victoria. Their page for the 2022 election just links to their generic policy platform, as if a suite of national policy priorities is in any way suitable. Each state has its own pressing issues, and state and federal governments have different powers. If you’re a serious party, you’ll provide a proper platform for each election you contest. SusAus are not a serious party.
So, their policies are just the same shit that I’ve reviewed before. Sometimes I’m even on the same page! Clifford Hayes, their member in the Legislative Councillor, voted to support trans people self-identifying their gender on documents without having had surgery. They really aren't all bad. But, especially on policies regarding the environment, heritage, housing, and migration, SusAus have deeply unpalatable motives that are at best conservative and often racist. Moreover, some of their objectives would prolong environmentally destructive car-dependent suburban sprawl rather than do anything positive for sustainability.
(I keep waiting for them to add a policy of removing “we’ve boundless plains to share” from the second verse of the national anthem…)
Oh yeah, and of course SusAus are one of the parties to have profited from the anti-democratic system of Group Ticket Voting. At the last election, Hayes got into the Legislative Council off 1.32% of the vote in Southern Metropolitan. This was one of the most egregious distortions of the GTV system: the Greens polled 13.46% but did not reach the threshold of 16.7% for a seat because GTVs harvested almost all relevant above-the-line preferences away from the Greens and towards SusAus in a manner that would literally never be replicated if above-the-line voters controlled their own preferences.
My recommendation: Give Sustainable Australia—Stop Stupid Party Names a weak or no preference. Remember to vote below the line on the large ballot for the Legislative Council so that your preference goes where you want it to go; all ballots with 5 or more preferences marked below the line are valid votes.
Website: https://www.sustainableaustralia.org.au/vic
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indizombie · 1 year
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There's no point in having just a migration program. You actually need a more holistic approach where the government, state and federal, are committed to making all small towns, liveable, vibrant and attractive places. It's not as easy to find somebody who can be a broker between you as a new arrival and different parts of your community. People are more likely to stay and contribute to that community that they've just arrived in, if they feel welcome. One of the best ways of expressing that is a willingness to listen to the experiences of people that have come from another place. Ideally, a willingness to share some of those experiences and partake in some of those cultural activities.
Kim Houghton, chief economist, Regional Australia Institute (RAI)
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kiunlo · 1 year
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Bird Identification guide for beginners!
Hello there! My name is Ash, and this is my guide to identifying birds as a beginner! Please keep in mind that this is not THE ultimate best ever way of figuring out how to identify birds, these are just the things that have helped me personally as someone who has only been identifying birds for about a year/two years (I didn’t bother to count okay?), and who was very recently also a beginner and having a hard time trying to figure out which birds are what! This goes over pretty much EVERY single little thing that’s helped me, so this might be a long post lmao. I hope it helps somebody out!
Also, as a note, I’ve mostly used Australian birds as examples because I’m Australian and most knowledgeable about Australian birds, however there is no reason that these techniques can’t work for birds all over the world!
Step 1: Getting to know your local birds!
The first step to being able to identify birds that you see in your daily life, is to first understand what birds actually live near you in the first place! This can be a bit tricky at first, because not every single town in the world is going to have a 100% accurate list of birds that live in the area, and some places might not even have a list at all! The best thing for you to do is to start reading books or articles about birds that live in your state, country, city etc. This means going to the library and finding some bird field guides, or perusing through bird lists online (searching up “birds of new york” for example, is a great start). For an example of what I personally did, I borrowed a book from my local library called “Readers Digest: Complete Book of Australian Birds” that had a MASSIVE list of most birds that live in Australia, and I wrote down all of the birds that I definitely recognised as birds that I had seen before in my area, including the super common and easy to spot birds such as magpies, crows and kookaburras!
I would usually recommend a bird field guide as a physical book, ebook, illegally downloaded pdf or whatever if you can, because most of those field guides will have maps attached to every single bird, showing you exactly where their usual range is, which if you went for a country-wide bird book like I did, is very helpful in narrowing down which birds most likely live in your local area, that you can eventually look out for! These books also tell you what they eat, where they nest, when they migrate, etc. which can be helpful if instead of trying to ID a bird, you are actively searching for a specific species of bird to take photos of!
Step 2: Have a camera and/or notepad on you at all times
If you are super duper determined to identify a bird, the best thing you can do is take a photo or video of the bird. Videos are usually better because if the bird decides to make a sound, that will be an extra piece of information that you can use to better identify the bird. The second best thing, if you are too poor to own a camera or you have other reasons for why having a camera on you is unfeasible, is to have a physical small little notepad on you with a pen or pencil, to write down the the things about the bird that you’re seeing, or if you feel like it, to draw a little doodle of the bird you see (no matter how “bad” the drawing is!)
And when I say keep a camera or notepad on you at all times, I really mean it! Because the times when I have seen or heard a strange ass bird that I have struggled to identify, I have never had a camera on me, and it has ALWAYS been to my detriment when it comes to attempting to identify a bird. Again, the second best thing to do is to draw the bird the moment that you see it! It doesn’t have to be perfect, as long as you get the general shape of the body and beak relatively close, it’s better than no picture at all!
Do not beat yourself up about not being able to follow this step, or deciding that TODAY you will not see a cool bird and also you are busy and therefor you won’t need your camera or notepad on you when you go out (the time that you will usually see a cool bird lmao), because we have all been there (me included....so many times). It just means that identifying the bird will be a bit more difficult- BUT, it is not impossible!
Step 3: So you saw a bird...what now?
If you saw a bird in your local area, you may be entitled to financial compensation. Haha just kidding. Those birds aren’t going to pay for the emotional damage you took trying to identify its ass.
But for real. What now? Well, if you took a photo and/or video of it, or you drew a basic drawing of it, congratulations! You just skipped the really fucking hard part. If you didn’t take a photo or video, or was unable to because it was too fast or you didn’t have your camera or notepad on you (again, don’t beat yourself up about it), the second best thing you can do is observe and memorise it’s most basic features and behaviours. This will help you figure out what type of bird you have.
WHAT KIND OF BEAK IS THAT?
The beak is one of the most important parts of a bird, because it uses that thing to eat and stuff. The shape of a birds beak can tell you what type of bird it is and what it eats, and this piece of information alone can literally tell you SO much about the bird, without even having to properly identify it. The picture below will help you to understand the different types of bird beaks and what they’re used for.
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IS THE BIRD IN THE WATER?
If the answer is yes, you have just narrowed down your bird by a shit ton. Whether it’s just a wader or a full time water-loving bird, you’ll find that searching through a list of waterfowl that live in your area is a lot easier than searching through every single bird that lives in your area ever.
WHAT COLOUR IS IT?
Now, you don’t have to memorise every single colour that is on the body of the bird, especially with a bird that has 5 or more colours on its feathers, but memorising the most prominent feather colours, the beak colour, and the leg colour will be very helpful! If you can see the eyes of the bird, memorising the eye colour could be very helpful too, as birds can sometimes have very unique eye colours not seen in most other animals, which can significantly aid in bird identification- especially if its eyes are a bright blue or a red colour!
SHAPE AND SIZE?
Is your bird big or small? Is it fat or skinny? Does it have a weirdly long neck? Did you see its neck stretch out like crazy and then it went back to its normal size like nothing ever happened? Does it have long legs or short ones? Are its feet fucking weird? These are the questions you have to ask yourself when observing a bird.
WHAT WAS IT DOING?
Did you see it eat something? Was it doing a weird mating dance in another birds general direction? Was it swooping or hunting another animal (or another bird)? Did it display any odd or unique behaviours? Write that down! That’s seriously important information! Especially the eating part!
DID IT MAKE A NOISE?
If it didn’t, then you can skip this part! If it did, however, and you did not get a recording of it, that’s okay. But you will need to use your ultra super duper brain powers and do everything in your power to remember that shit to the best of your ability (which can be tricky as hell and can lead to you misidentifying a bird if the bird call is all you have to go off of).
Step 4: Research time!
Now that you have taken the photo/video of your bird, done a little doodle, or simply memorised and written down everything you can about your birdy, now it’s time to get down to business and actually do some research.
The first thing you need to do is the most simple thing ever, which can be done for most well recognised birds: Type in the description of your bird into google. Yes, I am serious. Sometimes typing in “black bird with red eyes and red beak waterfowl [STATE OR COUNTRY NAME]” is all you need to do to find the identity of your bird! If this worked for you, congratulations! You were lucky this time....but you might not be lucky next time! If this fails to work, there are still plenty of other options, and while these can be kinda tedious and time consuming, it is worth it in the end!
There are two websites which can be really helpful if you have some type of idea of what bird you’re looking for, but simply looking up the description didn’t work: Wikipedia, and Xeno-Canto. These are especially helpful if you use them together.
Wikipedia is good because it will have a huge list of all birds that are known to live in your country. Xeno-Canto is good because it is a website dedicated to bird calls all over the world, of every single bird to ever exist (and even ones that are extinct!) And it MOST IMPORTANTLY, has a map of where the bird can be found, which is helpful when ruling out birds that are somewhat similar to the bird you’re looking for, but actually live on the other side of the country (therefor, it’s not your bird!)
The first step towards figuring out the specific species that your bird belongs to, is to figure out what type of bird it is, which you can do by observing the shape and size of the bird, alongside it’s beak shape (which we took a small look at in step 3). Here are some silhouettes of different bird types.
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And now, below is an example of how I would find a specific bird through trail, error, and ruling out birds that are NOT the bird I’m looking for.
Lets say that the bird I’m looking for was in the water, and was clearly some type of duck or goose, but I couldn’t really tell which one because it was a bit far away. That means that I’m looking for SOME type of waterfowl. I will then go to Wikipedia to look up a list of ALL birds in Australia, and then go down into the “ducks, geese and waterfowl” section, where I will find a list of all waterfowl in Australia. I will then click on each link for each waterfowl, to get a quick look at the image of the waterfowl. If it looks nothing like my bird, I rule that bird out. If I do find a bird that looks very similar to the one I saw or took a photo of, then I will type in the name of the bird into Xeno-Canto, and look at the map area section, to see exactly where this birds natural range is. If it’s shown to be in an area that is nowhere near where I saw the bird, then I rule that bird out too! If I find a bird that matches what I saw, and it’s in the same area that I live in, then, if I heard the bird make a sound, I will usually listen to the bird calls found beneath the map section, and see if it matches. If not, then I will continue to listen to that birds calls, because guess what, birds can and do make a variety of different sounds based on the situation! Once I’m truly sure this bird is not making the correct calls at all, then I will tentatively rule it out.
If, after all of this, I finally find a bird that seems to match the look, area and sound of the bird I initially saw, I will write the name of the bird down and KEEP GOING down the list of waterfowl until I reach the end, because there is always a chance that there is a bird that better matches the appearance, sound and location of the bird I saw. Once I have 1 or more bird names written down, then it’s up to me to chose which bird best matches the bird that I saw.
You might not get a 100% for sure identification, especially if some of the birds in your local area are sorta similar to each other, and that’s okay, but going through this whole process will help you to improve your birdy research skills, and you’ll get faster and faster at it over time, and you’ll start to memorise common birds often found in your local area by during this research.
IMPORTANT NOTES BEFORE I CONTINUE
Sometimes, female birds and male birds look different to each other! Sometimes, young birds look different to adult birds! Sometimes a bird in breeding plumage looks different to a bird that isn’t in breeding plumage! You might even get lucky and see a bird with a rare colour mutation, meaning that the bird does not look like how the rest of the species normally does! You must keep this in mind when trying to identify a bird, because sometimes these birdies will throw you these types of curve-balls at you without you even knowing. Here are some examples below of some birds that look different to each other, despite being the same species!
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Step 5: If all else fails, ask somebody who knows stuff about birds
Sometimes the best way to figure out the identity of a bird is to ask somebody else who knows more shit about birds then you do! For me, I usually ask my mum since she knows a lot of stuff about birds. For you, that could be somebody on the internet, or a friend you know who is a birdwatcher, or some blog on tumblr that specialises in knowing shit about birds. With more people and more perspectives at your disposal, you are a lot more likely to get the true identification of the mysterious bird you are trying to identify! Just don’t be pushy, rude or demanding! Always be polite :)
Step 6: I am going to make you identify a bird now. LOOK AT MY BIRD, BOY (gender neutral).
I bet you didn’t think I was going to quiz you on the knowledge I just imparted onto you, but I absolutely am going to do that. I will be using “obscure” Australian birds that most non-Australians won’t know about, since I know that most people that’ll read this will probably not be Australian, therefore you will likely have never seen these birds before, meaning that you will actually have to use the techniques I have told you about. If you are Australian and are into birds, you will have an advantage over everyone else (lmao). The only hint you will be given is that...these birds are found in Australia :)
DO NOT go looking into the notes for answers unless you truly are having a tough time, I really want you to try and figure this out on your own! But also I can’t tell you what to do lol. I just want you to give it your best shot, alright? Are you ready? Okay, here we go!
BIRD NUMBER 1
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BIRD NUMBER 2
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BIRD NUMBER 3
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Did you manage to identify the birds? If so, congrats on using your newly acquired bird researching skills! If not, that's okay. After all, it's a skill that must be honed, not one that you automatically gain!
The End!
I hope you enjoyed my beginners guide to identifying birds! These are not the only techniques you can use to identify birds, there are plenty of websites, tools, books etc. that can help you out with identifying birds, but these are the ways that have best helped me out when I’ve been confused about the identity of a bird. If you’re better than me at identifying birds, feel free to add your own additions that have helped you to become better at IDing birds! The more information the merrier <3
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eb-5 · 2 years
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Why High Net Worth Immigrants May Be Neglecting America's EB-5 Program
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According to expert migration consultancy Law Firm, 38,000 high-net-worth individuals will abandon China and Hong Kong this season, and almost 22-25,000 are predicted to depart Russia. The New York Times in addition to Sky News reports, may take with these people vast amounts of dollar assets, with England, Singapore, and some Caribbean countries among the particular top destinations, thanks to generous housing or easy citizenship. According to an expert migration consultancy Law Firm, the United Kingdom and the US have lost their appeal as locations for millionaires to reside, while Singapore, Israel, Australia, and the UAE, among other places, have become more interesting. The report provides that America is remarkably less suitable for migrating millionaires today compared to the way before the pandemic, perhaps to the menace of higher taxes. That indicates it is falling behind as being the top destination in attracting buyer immigrant wealth, position in apparent purchase of priority, Typically the top 10 nations around the world in terms involving net inflows involving millionaires this coming year may be the UAE, Australia, Singapore, His home country of Israel, Switzerland, the INDIVIDUALS, Portugal, Greece, North America, and New Zealand. The question is whether this is a long-time trend or momentary. Therefore what exactly has changed, especially given the current durability of the U.S. dollar, America’s growing GDP, and even the many work job openings inside the U.S. economy nowadays. The answers may be found by reflecting on just what happened in the last several years to the EB-5 foreign investor migration program in the United States.
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visacollect · 1 day
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List of Countries that Offer Easy Work Visas to Indians
In today's interconnected globalised world, the thought of working abroad has become a sought-after option for many professionals, including those from India, with career advancement and exposure to diverse cultures being the primary motivators. However, negotiating the hurdles of obtaining a work visa can be challenging and scary. Nonetheless, several countries having bilateral agreements with India, or those seeking to recruit foreign talent, have simplified their work visa requirements to make international employment more accessible to Indian experts and encourage the influx of talented workers.
Canada Canada is a popular choice for Indian people because to its flexible immigration regulations and Express Entry system. The country offers work permits and programmes such as the Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) and the Provincial Nominee Programme (PNP) to recruit qualified professionals.
Eligibility: Skilled individuals who have received employment offers or are contemplating the Provincial Nominee Programme. A Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) measures abilities, work experience, language competency, and education.
Australia
The General Skilled Migration (GSM) programme in Australia uses a points-based method to assess applicants based on age, language competence, job experience, and qualifications. With decreased quotas for skilled workers, Australia provides attractive work visa possibilities for Indian professionals seeking overseas career advancement. The country's citizenship rights, safe environment, and high living standards make it a desirable location. Australia's strong economy and broad work market offer several chances for professionals to prosper and succeed.
Eligibility: Skilled professionals who meet points-based system requirements such as age, English proficiency, job experience, and qualifications under the General Skilled Migration (GSM) programme.
Germany Germany has a significant demand for talented individuals in IT, engineering, and healthcare. It attracts many Indian students because to its cheap tuition fees and many work visa alternatives, as well as the EU Blue Card for highly trained individuals, making it a viable option for many.
Eligibility: Highly qualified workers in engineering, information technology, and medicine with a university degree and a job offer that meets the EU Blue Card's minimum income requirements.
New Zealand The Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) in New Zealand is designed for persons with in-demand talents and requires an Expression of Interest (EOI) submission for residency consideration. With expedited immigration processes and minimum requirements, New Zealand stands out as an attractive option for Indian professionals. The country's spectacular natural scenery and modern conveniences make it an enticing place to live. New Zealand's liberal immigration policies provide numerous opportunities for job advancement and personal development.
Individuals with in-demand talents and certifications can apply for the Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) and get a residency invitation.
Singapore Singapore is known for its robust economy and hospitable environment for foreigners. It offers a variety of work visa alternatives, including the Employment Pass, S Pass, Work Holiday Pass, and Training Employment Pass. The work culture is expat-friendly, and English is widely spoken, therefore it is a popular choice for Indian nationals.
Professionals, managers, executives, and experts with employment offers, relevant qualifications, and field experience can apply for the Employment Pass. Singapore, known for its easy work visa process, welcomes Indian professionals from a variety of fields, including teaching, computer technology, and hospitality. As a global financial hub, the city-state provides numerous job prospects and a favourable business environment. Singapore's pleasant temperature adds to its attraction, making it an appealing destination for individuals looking for career advancement in a dynamic atmosphere.
Ireland The Critical Skills Employment Permit in Ireland intends to attract qualified individuals in important areas without requiring a labour market needs test, while also providing a path to permanent residency.
Eligibility: Highly skilled professionals in IT, engineering, and health areas are eligible for the Critical Skills Employment Permit, which provides a pathway to permanent residency without a labour market needs test.
United Arab Emirates
Leveraging its strategic location and tax benefits to attract international talent, the UAE remains a prominent choice for Indians looking to relocate and work abroad, issuing work and employment visas relatively easily with the implementation of visa reforms, such as long-term residency visas for skilled professionals.
Eligibility: As a result of visa modifications, skilled professionals are now eligible for long-term residency permits, drawn to the UAE for its strategic position and tax benefits.
The Netherlands
Indians like the Netherlands for its work-life balance, ease of acquiring a work permit, high quality of life, future growth potential, and lower taxes.
Eligibility: Foreign nationals seeking work visas, entrepreneurs preparing to start a firm, and professionals looking to develop in a technologically innovative environment with high living standards.
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom is a varied and cosmopolitan Western European country renowned for its historical landmarks, dynamic cities, and world-class education and healthcare. With its diversified culture and robust economy, the United Kingdom has numerous immigration programmes that allow uncomplicated work visas for Indians to enter and work there. As a powerful global economic force, the United Kingdom provides numerous opportunities for Indian people seeking to work abroad. Various visa options, like the Global Talent Visa and the Skilled Worker Visa, make it easier for skilled professionals to enter the nation. The UK's thriving economy and sturdy infrastructure provide an ideal environment for furthering one's career.
Eligibility
The eligibility requirements vary by immigration programme. Some of the most important eligibility criteria are as follows:
70 points under the point-based immigration system Job Offer English Language Proficiency Undergraduate-level educational qualification Salary threshold of £25,600 annually
The parameters are subject to change depending on economic situations. As a result, it is critical to understand and prepare for the precise requirements outlined in the immigration programme.
These are some of the best countries for working professionals in India who want to work overseas, completing thorough research, preparing effectively, and matching their abilities to the destination criteria are critical stages towards a successful application. These countries offer several opportunities for people to grow in their jobs while also experiencing different cultures and lifestyles. However, it is critical to stay up to date on visa laws by reviewing official government sources to obtain accurate and current information before going on an overseas career adventure.
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beadnstich · 1 year
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Essential Facts You Must Know Before Applying For Australian Citizenship Conferral
If you are interested in becoming an Australian citizen, there are a few things you need to know. In this blog post, we will outline the process of becoming a citizen, as well as the benefits and responsibilities of citizenship. We will also answer some common questions about the Australian Citizenship Conferral.
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Understanding The Basics Of Australian Citizenship
Australia is a country that is well known for its diverse culture and welcoming attitude toward immigrants. To become a citizen of Australia, there are a few basic requirements that must be met. These include being of good character, demonstrating an understanding of the English language, and demonstrating an understanding of Australian values and ways of life.
The Process Of Applying For Australian Citizenship
Applying for Australian citizenship is a process that takes several months to complete. The first step is to gather all the required documents, which can be found on the Department of Home Affairs website. Once you have all the documents, you can begin the application process. You also can take the help of Migration Expert Australia to ease the process.
The application process is online, and you will be required to provide some basic information, such as your name and date of birth. You will also need to provide passport-size photos, as well as copies of your passport and visa. You will also need to provide proof of your income and your address. Ask an expert Partner Visa In Australia to assist you throughout the process.
The application process can be a little complex, so it is important to read the instructions carefully and ask questions if you are not sure what to do. The Department of Home Affairs website has several resources that can help you through the process, including an online application guide and a list of frequently asked questions.
The Department of Home Affairs will review your application and will contact you if they need any additional information. If your application is approved, you will be qualified for Conferral Of Australian Citizenship and you will also be invited to attend a citizenship ceremony, where you will be sworn in as an Australian citizen.
What Are The Benefits Of Having Australian Citizenship?
There are many benefits to Australian citizenship. Australian citizens have a say in how their country is run. They can also stand for election to parliament. Another benefit is that Australian citizens have the right to travel and work in any country in the world. They can also access government services and benefits in other countries.
Other perks of having Conferral Of Australian Citizenship include voting in federal and state/territory elections, serving on a jury if called to do so, and obeying the law. You must also pay taxes and rates on your income and assets, and follow the customs and values that underpin our society.
For more details visit our website modernmigrationaustralia.com.au/.
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iraimmigration1 · 3 days
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migrationagentwa · 16 days
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4 Easy steps to get Australian student visa
Navigating the process of obtaining a Australian Student Visa Subclass 500 can be complex, but with the assistance of experienced Migration Agents in Perth, it becomes simpler. These professionals guide you through each step, from completing the application to gathering necessary documents. By ensuring compliance with visa requirements and offering expert advice, Migration Agents in Perth streamline the process, making it easier for students to pursue their academic goals in Australia.
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coolyturtles · 24 days
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Embark on an Oceanic Journey: Whale Watching Gold Coast Highlights
If you're seeking an adventure that connects you with the majesty of the ocean, look no further than Whale Watching Gold Coast. Nestled along the stunning coastline of Australia's Gold Coast, this experience promises unforgettable moments as you witness the awe-inspiring beauty of these magnificent creatures in their natural habitat.
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Witness Nature's Spectacle
Whale Watching Gold Coast offers a front-row seat to one of nature's most breathtaking spectacles. From the months of June to November, humpback whales migrate along the coast, passing by the Gold Coast on their journey. Imagine the thrill of spotting these gentle giants as they breach and play in the sparkling waters of the Pacific Ocean.
A Thrilling Adventure
Prepare to be captivated as you set sail on a whale watching tour. Knowledgeable guides provide fascinating insights into the behavior and habits of humpback whales, enriching your experience with valuable information. Whether you're an avid marine enthusiast or simply seeking a thrilling adventure, Whale Watching Gold Coast offers an experience that appeals to all.
Up Close and Personal
One of the highlights of Whale Watching Gold Coast is the opportunity for up-close encounters with these magnificent creatures. Feel the excitement build as you catch sight of a whale's spout or witness the powerful flick of a tail as it dives beneath the surface. Every moment spent in the company of these majestic animals is a reminder of the wonders of the natural world.
Conservation and Education
Beyond providing unforgettable experiences, Whale Watching Gold Coast is committed to marine conservation and education. Tours are conducted with the utmost respect for the whales and their environment, ensuring minimal disturbance to these incredible creatures. By participating in a whale watching tour, you not only create lasting memories but also support efforts to protect and preserve marine life for future generations.
Planning Your Adventure
Embarking on a Whale Watching Gold Coast excursion is easy and convenient. Numerous tour operators offer a range of options to suit your preferences, from intimate sailing experiences to larger vessels equipped with viewing decks. Advance booking is recommended, especially during peak season, to secure your spot on this unforgettable journey.
Conclusion
In conclusion, Whale Watching Gold Coast promises an oceanic journey filled with wonder and excitement. From the thrill of spotting a breaching whale to the educational insights provided by knowledgeable guides, every moment spent on a whale watching tour is an opportunity to connect with nature in a profound way. So why wait? Start planning your adventure today and embark on a journey you'll never forget.
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primewebshosting · 1 month
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Unveiling the Best Australian Web Hosting Companies: A Comprehensive Guide
In the vast landscape of the internet, choosing the right web hosting provider is crucial for the success of your online presence. Whether you're a blogger, an e-commerce entrepreneur, or a small business owner, selecting a reliable hosting company is paramount to ensure your website's performance, security, and accessibility. If you're targeting the Australian market, finding a local hosting provider can offer several advantages, including faster loading times for your Australian visitors and better support tailored to your region's needs. In this guide, we'll explore some of the website hosting Sydney that can elevate your online presence to new heights.
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Top Australian Web Hosting Companies
HostGator Australia
HostGator, a renowned name in the global web hosting industry, offers its services tailored specifically for the Australian market. With data centers located in Sydney, HostGator Australia provides fast and reliable hosting solutions to businesses and individuals alike. Their plans come with a range of features, including unmetered bandwidth, 24/7 support, and a user-friendly control panel for easy management of your website.
VentraIP Australia
VentraIP is a leading Australian-owned and operated web hosting provider known for its exceptional customer service and cutting-edge technology. With state-of-the-art data centers in Melbourne and Sydney, VentraIP ensures optimal performance and reliability for your website. Their hosting plans cater to various needs, from shared hosting for small websites to enterprise-grade solutions for large businesses. Additionally, VentraIP offers free website migration services, making it effortless to switch to their platform.
SiteGround Australia
SiteGround, although headquartered in Europe, has a strong presence in the Australian market with servers located in Sydney. Renowned for its top-notch performance, security, and customer support, SiteGround offers a range of hosting solutions suitable for different website types and traffic levels. Their managed WordPress hosting is particularly popular among bloggers and online entrepreneurs for its speed and reliability.
Why Choose Australian Web Hosting?
Opting for a hosting provider based in Australia offers several benefits:
Faster Loading Times: Hosting your website on servers located in Australia ensures faster loading times for your Australian visitors, resulting in a better user experience and improved search engine rankings.
Local Support: Australian web hosting companies often provide support tailored to the needs of local businesses, offering faster response times and better understanding of regional requirements.
Data Sovereignty: Hosting your website with an Australian provider ensures that your data remains within the country's jurisdiction, offering greater control and compliance with local regulations.
Further Learning
To delve deeper into the world of web hosting and enhance your knowledge, consider exploring the following topics:
Server Technologies: Learn about different server technologies, such as Apache, Nginx, and LiteSpeed, and understand their impact on website performance.
Security Practices: Explore best practices for securing your website and protecting it from cyber threats, including SSL certificates, firewalls, and malware detection.
Scalability and Growth: Understand how to scale your hosting infrastructure as your website grows, including upgrading to VPS or dedicated servers and implementing content delivery networks (CDNs) for global reach.
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