Hi All,
I have hated my tattoo for almost ten years and was looking at several options to get it removed. A friend suggested tattoo removal creams and I kept trying them one after another and ended up with bruised and pigmented skin. Thankfully, it was a small butterfly on my thumb, so it did not look ugly. However, it was wrong on my part to go ahead with the treatment without consulting anyone. So if you too want to get your tattoo removed, then avoid the extreme non-laser methods that can leave you with discoloured or damaged skin. Read the article shared below to know more about the side-effects of each technique. https://www.freshskincanvas.com.au/extreme-non-laser-tattoo-removal-methods-to-avoid/
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The “Australia–China–Papua New Guinea Pilot Cooperation on Malaria Control Project” is one of the most famous aid projects in the Pacific.
It is not a large project. Indeed, at $1.3 million per year it represents only about 0.2% of Australia’s bilateral aid spending in PNG. Its fame derives from the fact that it is the only Australian aid project being delivered in partnership with China. Having a “trilateral” project with China is a good look. Australian and Chinese officials often point to the effort to combat malaria as an example of how the two countries can work together, and to suggest that talk of strategic competition in the Pacific is overstated. Read more: https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/little-gain-linking-australias-aid-china-pacific As anticipated, the Australian government downsized a number of its economic forecasts in the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) released this week.
Also as anticipated, the federal government did everything it could to retain its forecast budget surplus for 2019-20. Having pinned its economic-management credentials to one single economic statistic – remember those hokey phrases from the May budget, “back in the black” and “back on track” – it was never going to be otherwise. One casualty of the updated numbers is the forecast, made in May, that Australia’s net government debt would be reduced to zero by 2030. MYEFO projects that net debt in 2030 will instead be about 2% of GDP. Read more: https://theconversation.com/vital-signs-australias-nation-building-opportunity-held-hostage-by-the-deficit-daleks-129000 As Australia is scorched by a record-breaking heatwave, rural parts of the country have experienced temperatures so severe that roads are melting.
Some South Australian towns tipped 50C on Thursday, with the mercury hitting 49.9C at Nullarbor - the state's hottest-ever December day. Watch the video above Ceduna, on the state's Eyre Peninsula, recorded its hottest day in more than 80 years, at 48.8. At Port Augusta, it was so hot the bitumen on some roads started to melt before residents' eyes, causing a driving hazard. Read more: https://7news.com.au/news/sa/heatwave-melts-roads-in-rural-sa-as-records-tumble-across-the-country-c-615419 The number of commercial property deals in 2019 has dwindled below the long-term average despite total transaction values looking set to eclipse those of the year prior, according to new figures.
In 2019, about 640 transactions were recorded in Australia, some 30 per cent lower than the five-year average of 983, preliminary figures from CBRE found. Total sales for the year are about $37 billion, which is just shy of the $38 billion recorded in 2018, CBRE head of capital markets research Ben Martin-Henry said. Read more: https://www.commercialrealestate.com.au/news/what-sold-and-where-the-biggest-commercial-property-transactions-of-2019-919641/ Hey People,
I was closely associated with a company as I had invested in it at the initial stage. I was starting to feel very bad about the decision as I had no clue about the finances of the business. The transactions were not being recorded in an organised manner and I had no idea about the financial well-being of the entity as there was no qualified bookkeeper taking care of the finances. So I asked them to outsource bookkeeping to a credible company in Australia and it helped in getting things in order. If your company is still deciding whether to outsource or not, then read the article shared below. https://www.agibookkeeping.com.au/benefits-outsourcing-bookkeeping-services/ An author of an international report that found Australia was ranked last or near last on a range of climate change measures has rejected Scott Morrison’s claim their work is not credible, saying the assessment was based on scientific criteria and official data.
Germanwatch, a non-government organisation and one of the authors of the 2020 Climate Change Performance Index, said the rankings were developed using an independent monitoring tool that had a detailed and transparent methodology. Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/dec/13/author-of-report-ranking-australia-worst-on-climate-policy-hits-back-at-pms-claim-its-not-credible Almost all of mainland Australia will be roasted in a huge heatwave next week, with the mercury likely to nudge 50 degrees in parts of the south.
Perth is in the midst of a four-day scorching as it plays host to the first day-night cricket Test between Australia and New Zealand. Read more: https://www.smh.com.au/environment/weather/like-a-furnace-massive-heatwave-could-roast-australian-records-20191213-p53jps.html The Morrison government has rebuffed a recommendation that it establish a legislated code of conduct for ministerial advisers, professing itself happy with the status quo.
The recommendation to bring ministerial advisers into a clearer accountability framework is contained in the long awaited Thodey review of the public service, which was released by the prime minister, Scott Morrison, on Friday. The review also recommended that the government set guidance for ministerial offices to have at least half of ministerial policy advisers with public service experience. Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/dec/13/coalition-rejects-code-of-conduct-for-ministerial-advisers With New South Wales and Queensland enduring months of bushfires, and smoke now blanketing towns and cities, many people are asking a simple but hard-to-answer question: how long will this last?
The Bureau of Meteorology’s seasonal outlook, covering January to March, says the weather is likely to be drier than average, and warmer than average. Only one part of Australia – north-west Western Australia – has increased odds of rain. Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/dec/13/australias-bushfire-crisis-how-long-are-the-fires-and-smoke-expected-to-last |
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