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Reasons Why Australia Shouldn

25 reasons we shouldn't talk in class?

Really, this assignment is to make you think about why this is a problem. You're not really learning the point if you don't sit down and work the problem through yourself. Ask yourself questions about how you feel about the situation...

If you are concentrating on something, how do you feel if someone else is disrupting you? If you were the teacher and the students were ignoring you or unable to hear what you were saying because of someone else, how would that make you feel? If you were a parent and your child was not learning because of things happening in class how would that make you feel. If you had an assignment to make a presentation to a group of your friends and classmates to teach them something, and they were doing other things instead of paying attention, how would you feel?

Why Australia and New Zealand shouldn't become one country?

In many ways Australia and New Zealand are very similar - same timeframe for European settlement, both British settlements; similar flags; similar political structures; located in close proximity; similar values - culturally, politically, economically, religious etc; long history of working together eg ANZACs.

However, they are also very different. Geographically NZ is a very different country to mainland Australia - distance, natural environment, flora and fauna.
The original population is also very different - Maori (closey links to Pacific Islanders) in NZ are very different to the Australian Aborigine both in culture, way of life and how they were abosrb and treated by the colonising British. The NZ Maori and their culture is more part of NZ than the Aboriginal culture etc is in Australia (partly due to the diverse tribes in Australia).
Australia is also more tolerant of the US and nuclear weapons etc than NZ.
There is also a strong sporting rivalry between the two countries that would make it hard to see them coming together.

There is no economic need or cultural necessity for them to unite. They both enjoy close working relationships in economic terms, miltary terms and social terms.

Reasons why guns shouldn't become illegal?

Just because I'm in high school people (especially on this site) think I don't know anything about these kind of issues. I known alot about guns(I'm on several youth marksmanship programs, along with the NRA) and am aware of the affects of guns yet I'm a huge gun enthusist because believe it or not, not all gun oweners are crazy assassins. I don't see why people especially congressmen have a hard time seeing why people might find an assault rifle or military rifle fun? Any way, most criminals and gangsters usually have records making their guns illegal as it is. So banning guns won't effect them at all, just hurt law abiding citizens.
*** my point- do you want to live in a country/world where the only people with guns are criminals leaving you to defend yourself with sticks and stones.

p.s. gun lovers have a duty to stand up to the anti-gun lawmakers, because allowing them to chip away at the 2nd amendment little by little(i.e. assault rifles and .50cals) will eventually lead to the 2nd amendment saying I have the right to bear .22 rifles.

Three reasons why the U.S. shouldn't have enter WW1.?

1.War is always a lie, war begets more war. It gives banks & military weapon makers unprecedented powers and large salaries. They use science for war instead of human development and advancement like healthcare, food, travel & education.

2. The Great War began in 1914, Wilson (formed the Federal Reserve & income tax in 1913) was elected in 1912. He wanted to be President again and won re-election on the basis "He Kept US out of War" before setting in motion the advancement of pre-planned warfare in 1915 after the pre-planned Lusitania attack & Zimmerman Letter. Men were sent to die so our industry would rise & certain men profit.

3. It was not our conflict, so do you wonder what America might have been like if we had not entered?

The main reason why people of Australia have been able to develop industries on a large scale in spite?

a) because Australia has vast gasfeilds, oil reserves and ore deposits along with many other mineral deposits.

Yes we do farm sheep and we do grow crops suited to dry region but currently theire is ther worst drought in history and pretty much all of Australia is rethinking what they should and shouldn't grow given water shortages so technically a is the correct answer. Australia has a pretty poor record for growing climatically appropriate plants and animals.

Why aren't Australia and New Zealand one country?

Why aren't Australia and New Zealand one country?That used to be a good question. When I moved from Australia to NZ, it seemed to me that it would be a very good idea. The histories of the two countries are very closely interconnected, with many Australians prominent in early NZ history, and in the 1980s relationships across the Tasman were so close that I didn’t bother to get NZ citizenship. NZ would have benefited from the prosperity of the Australian economy, and at the time Australia was a more outward-looking and optimistic country.Since then, the two countries have diverged. Neo-Liberalism hit both, and it went further in NZ, because the Australian unions were better able to resist. But despite that, Australian politics seems to me to have got nastier, and Australia has got somewhat inward-looking and less open to the future. Whereas in NZ Neo-Liberalism has had some good effects—the country now is much more outward looking, and generally gung-ho, and less socially conservative. But because the economy has been so badly managed (chiefly by National politicians, starting with Muldoon), and because NZ has had no resource boom like Australia, living standards have diverged. Union would always have depended, in part, on Australia wanting it, but the treatment of Ardern by Turnbull, who is in many ways an improvement on Abbott, shows that there’s no enthusiasm there.Some answers rightly point to the different treatment of the indigenous peoples of Australia and New Zealand: systematic injustice is certainly better than genocide. But this has not prevented a very large number of Maori from going to live in Australia, where living standards are higher (and, dare one say it, they don’t have to be involved in Maori politics).

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