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Tau Taufa 380x260 News: They lost 11 members from one family. Now, hope.

Tau Taufa

Out of the ashes springs hope … and a home

They lost 11 members of the one extended family. It all happened in one night, in one horrific house fire. But now the survivors of the Brisbane family have been given hope and a new home, built by some 150 volunteers and 40 companies like Mirvac and Hutchison Builders in the suburb of Slacks Creek on the same parcel of land which last year carried so much heartache.

Brisbanetimes.com.au reported:

Tau Taufa said he felt they were still with him in spirit.

‘‘My family are very much alive here. Thank you to all you guys,” he said.

”You drive away all my sadness and fill me with gladness.”

Tau lost his wife, daughter and three grandchildren in the August 24 blaze which also took another six relatives. He said although they had been taken, their spirits were ‘very much alive here’.

The home features 11 columns and 11 trees planted in the backyard.

Corby 380x260 News: They lost 11 members from one family. Now, hope.

Schapelle Corby

Will Schapelle Corby gain clemency?

There are reports out of Indonesia that the President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is considering a clemency application regarding convicted Australian drug smuggler Schapelle Corby. If granted, it could halve her 20-year sentence and make her eligible for release in 2014. Possibly immediately if previous sentence reductions (traditionally small reductions are given around holidays in Bali).

News.com.au reported:

“While details of the recommendation from the Justice and Human Rights Ministry have only just emerged, a senior official confirmed the final report was handed to … [the President] months ago.”

Those granted clemency in Indonesia are usually required to confess to the crime, something Schapelle Corby has never done.

Corby last night said she was too scared to get her hopes up.

Women lose out on superannuation … mostly thanks to babies

The average amount of superannuation a man between the age of 58 and 62 has is $210,000. For women? $95,000. So why the huge difference? A report for the Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees says the major discrepancy is mostly due to the time out of the workforce mothers spend having and raising kids.

Now, the figures are for those nearing retirement age so they’ll be different – hopefully much closer to parity – for women just entering the workforce today, but it’s still a shock to see, especially for the women who are newly single and approaching retirement with no financial backing.

CEOs deserve praise for high pay too, says ANZ chief

The CEO of ANZ bank Phil Chronican has lamented the prevailing attitude in Australia which lauds athletes and entertainers for earning the big bucks but ladles scorn on business executives for running complex ventures.

“We seem happy and even proud when our sportspeople make it onto the list of the top 20 paid people, or similarly when our entertainers make it on Hollywood’s best paid list,” told the American Chamber of Commerce in Australia yesterday.

“Yet for some reason when people are managing large complex businesses it (remuneration) is seen as excessive.”

Mr Chronican said it wasn’t right because CEOs had careers that ended abruptly, too. He attributed the attitude to the national pastime of ‘bank bashing’.

Judge says shock jocks help keep crime sentencing ‘real’

Senior Supreme Court Judge, Justice Peter McClellan, said tabloid newspapers and reactive talkback radio provided an insight into what many Australians were thinking.

‘My partner and I were robbed in our apartment only last year,” he said. ”But we do not live where drive-by shootings have occurred or gang activities put people in fear. It is thought to be safe to walk our streets in the evening and to use public transport at night over the short distance from the city to our home.

”As a consequence, I ask myself: do I understand the reason for community concerns about crime reflected in the tabloid media?”

Jenna Talackova729 420x0 380x542 News: They lost 11 members from one family. Now, hope.

Miss Universe contestant Jenna Talackova

Transgender Miss Universe contestant allowed to compete

Billionaire property mogul Donald Trump, who owns the Miss Universe pageant, has allowed a transgender woman to compete. The oganisation says 23-year-old Jenna Talackova, who underwent a sex change four years ago, can compete in the 2012 competition to become Canada’s pageant contestant.

But it’s not a clean start. Ms Talackova had originally been disqualified because the competition’s rules state contestants need to be born a woman. She was hours away from launching legal action based on discrimination when the new decision to allow her to compete was made. But it was based on her proving she met the legal gender requirements from her home country.

“I am a woman. I was devastated .. I have never asked for any special consideration, I only wanted to compete. I saw the statement by Mr Trump’s representative and I found it quite confusing,” she said.

“I wish Mr Trump would just say in plain words whether or not I would be allowed to compete and, if I win, whether I will be allowed to represent Canada in the Miss Universe competition.”

Housing report dire for under 35s

The report Houses for All shows around 22 per cent of Australians own 55 per cent of the residential property market … and you guessed it, it’s worst in Sydney which has a ratio of median wage to house price greater than New York and London. 30 years ago the average home was three times the median wage, now it is nine times. Perth and Melbourne are building twice as many homes per 10,000 people than Sydney. The report also shows around 70 per cent of under 35s in Sydney will be excluded from home ownership if they stick around.

What’s it like where you live?

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54 Comments so far

  1. Catch 22

    I bought my first townhouse 4 years ago when I was 22 and the market was down. I often regret buying it, not because of the mortgage repayments but all the other costs! I pay approximately $3,000 in body corporate fees each year, the same on council rates, plus the water bill. I find that those extra expenses each week hurt my back pocket more than the mortgage does! My husband and I are looking to move closer to the city as the commute is horrendous but we are finding that a 3 bedroom stingy house is no less than $450 per week – which is more than I pay on my mortgage each week! We have a small dog and a baby so we can’t live in a unit but the rental house prices are just atrocious. Its a catch 22 for many people and I do think myself lucky for having the luxury of being in the property market at such a young age.

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  2. amyintheworld

    My fiancé and I are very fortunate to be renting a (very very tiny!) granny flat (actually a rumpus room with a bathroom and sink put in!) while I was finishing Uni. We’re getting married at the end of the year and I’m currently undergoing the soul crushing task of applying for jobs. I’m certain that we will never be able to afford to buy. My fine has a young son to provide for already, and we once I find work it will be his turn to finish his degree!

    I recently accepted that we may rent forever – I’m certain many people have no other option. I’d live to own, particularly a house, but I’m just grateful I can at least rent!

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  3. Lil

    Why is everyone so hard on Shapelle? Ten years is a huge price to pay and she will hardly be getting off lightly. I have no idea if she is innocent or guilty but if she is guilty then ten years is more than she would serve in western countries. In fact ten years in Australia is a sentence more likely to be associated with murder. She will never return to the life she had before she was arrested and will continue to pay dearly for the rest of her life. People who make mistakes deserve a second chance in life.

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  4. Janed

    Sorry people but we are going to have to let go of our love of the big sprawling enviro unfriendly city centers and go country/regional. Refocus on the important things like family and a healthy lifestyle rather than the house in the city, furniture, car and material possessions and commuting hours each day! Buy to live rather than make money I think…

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    • Lulu

      Unfortunately the cities are where the work is.

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      • Janed

        Yes you’re right but I guess only because that’s where the people are. There should be business/work opportunities elsewhere with the right support from State and Federal Government who would recognise the importance of decentralising. There is an unbelievable amount of land in this country. I’ve just driven around the East coast and Qld NSW Vic country for 6 months from Maryborough Qld to Swan Hill Vic and I saw endless town after town with closed down shops and abandoned farm houses surrounded by paddocks with a few straggly sheep and a half starved horse…and the urbanisation of the whole East coast and around Victoria with endless brown brick housing developments is more than depressing.

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      • Nicki

        I can’t believe no-one has anything to say about Superannuation, especially if parenting reduces super funds for so many women. Isn’t it time parents divided work and child-rearing EQUALLY? Sure, there’s birth recovery and breast feeding considerations, but they shouldn’t make over $100K difference in super funds.

        Yes, there’s gender wage gap, too. But guess what: my partner earns more than me, but I have $20K more in my super

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    • Anonymous

      I think the opposite. The problem isn’t that people are in the city, it’s that they are in the city in a 3-4 bedroom house with a big backyard. Australian’s need to embrace the idea of living in apartments. People in other countries manage it just fine, I don’t know why we feel we are entitled to take up so much space in Australia. Stop spreading outwards, and start building upwards.

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      • Janed

        Absolutely. Rezone and build above shops and make cities more livable and sustainable. Downsize living spaces- smaller fridges/ kitchens and more frequent shopping from food shops you can walk to! No more unsustainable MacMansions. Shared zones for bikes, wider footpaths, more trees and get rid of parallel parking and get it off the street. More green places, pocket parks, rooftop gardens and community gardens to replace the backyard. US author James Howard Kunstler predicts living in the suburbs where you have to drive to schools work and shops will be the worst place to be when there is no more oil.

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  5. Lu

    House prices are ridiculous. My husband and I hope we are in the position to help our children when the time comes for them. We considered upgrading our family home a few years ago. We decided not to because we would prefer to put that extra money into something to help our kids have a good start. Cant see the point of having them grow up in an amazing house if they cant even afford to buy a dog box for themselves.

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  6. elle

    Yes very concerning about housing prices :( My family lives on the Northern Beaches and have had their house for 50+ years which is the only reason they were able to afford it. There is NO way I could afford to buy here where the average house is in the MILLIONS ! Even renting is average $250-300 a week for a bedroom in a sharehouse! : ( Quick! How do I get rich!!?

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  7. Anon

    A round of applause for all involved in building this house and supporting this family. Well Done!

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  8. savannahofaus

    I’m not sure I’ll ever be able to buy property in Sydney. I’m 28, on a reasonable salary, but with rental costs/electricity/health insurance etc going up and up all the time it makes it near impossible to save, especially since salary increases never seem to match cost of living increases.

    As others have pointed out, owning your own home is becoming an impossible dream for many.

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  9. maggie

    I just bought my first house and have my first re-payment in 2 week.

    My partner and I are very fortunate to be in the Oil and Gas industry and working at home, to be able to afford to do so.
    We both also just got payrises.

    I know the first year will be hardest to adjust to all the bill paying and such, but I count myself very lucky to get a house in Perth!

    Prices just went up again and we cant find anything under $450k in the area we wanted! We were SO lucky to get something under that!

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  10. MissV

    I have no sympathy for Shappelle or any drug traffickers. You have to be an idiot to not know how tough the laws are.

    As for the housing, I”m scared I’m never going to be able to afford to buy a home. What you need for deposits seems to go up more and more and I just can’t keep up. I’m lucky that I have a partner that I’m wanting to buy with so it cuts my amount by half but honestly, I have no idea if i’ll ever be able to buy.

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  11. Anon

    I have no compassion for Shapelle Corby. I don’t know why as I’m generally an empathetic and caring person. Maybe I feel that she and her family were having a lend of Australian’s good nature when she was arrested and charged? I don’t know really.

    On the other hand, Scott Rush and his family touch me and I would be happy to see him serve a reduced sentence in Australia. As a mother who has raised teenage sons I know they can make very bad decisions and I think Mr Rush did everything he could to stop his son from doing it.

    I guess you’d have to be very hard hearted to wish more than ten years in an Indonesian prison on anyone.

    My good side says ‘enough, just let her out now,’ but my bad side says. ‘I just don’t give a sh*ite, if it wasn’t her then it was one of her family and they tried to frame innocent baggage handlers for a crime they didn’t commit. Leave her there until she or her family tell the truth and stop taking the Australian public and the Indonesian people for mugs.’

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    • F

      My brother used to play rugby with Scott rush’s older brother. He always said they were a lovely family and everyone in the team was very shocked when they heard that Scott was arrested.

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    • Sue

      What an amazing double standard. (At least you’re aware of it.) It’s not Schapelle’s fault that she was a member of her particular less attractive, less media-friendly, possibly criminal family, and that Scott grew up in a nice, middle class appealing family. They both made the same mistake. Teenage girls can make mistakes too, you know. It could even be argued that Scott had every advantage in life because of his lovely family, whereas Schapelle was probably given far less moral guidance and opportunities, and had little chance of escaping the lifestyle of her family.

      Having said that though, I feel enormous compassion for both of them, because teenagers do make errors of judgement, and even if they’re both guilty, the punishment is far, far too severe for the crime. I think you’d have to be pretty hard-hearted to wish more than 10 days in an Indonesian prison on anyone.

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      • Diamond

        Schapelle wasn’t a teenager at the time of her arrest.

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    • Another Jay

      I agree and I guess the reason I don’t have sympathy is because she took a lot of people for a ride with her tears and calls for sympathy and help from Australia. All the bad publicity that bali got from her and the tension it put between the countries was unnecessary. I have always thought she was guilty or covering for someone from her family but I’m sure she will never admit it unless she gets out and can make some more money from Australians who believed in her. I don’t think she deserved to lose her life or spend as long as she has in jail but she should have thought about that and been aware of the consequences.

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  12. Anon

    Agree with Mr Chronican re wages for actors. How in heaven’s name can someone be paid over ten millions dollars for a couple of months work as an actor? I find it repulsive.

    I also loathe the lifetime pensions for our politicians, most of whom aren’t worth feeding.

    And Anna Bligh’s very ‘working class’ ethics shown when she renewed her husband’s public service contract!

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    • Lulu

      “How in heaven’s name can someone be paid over ten millions dollars for a couple of months work as an actor?’

      It is directly related to customer demand. If a film sells a lot of tickets, the actor is paid well. If an album or concert sells well, the singer is paid well. When entertainers don’t sell product in high volumes, they aren’t paid as much.

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      • Anon

        Der. If only I was paid per patient.

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        • Lulu

          Huh? What’s your point? Mine was that Chronican is wrong comparing himself to actors.

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        • Anonymous

          Do you ever go to the movies or buy music? If you do, then that money is going to someone.

          As Tom Hanks said about his salary for The Da Vinci Code, if he refuses to take such a large amount, he’s basically just giving millions of dollars to Rupert Murdoch.

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      • Makale

        A bank CEO also drives the profits of the company…most banks make billions in profit…therefore the CEO shares in that in the form of a large remuneration package.

        If the bank doesn’t perform, his bonus is not as high or he faces being replaced – like that of an actor (they get replaced with the current most popular actor).

        So I think they are alike in some ways – they are tied to performance of their underlying product.

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  13. Sharon

    I don’t fully agree. I am so against drugs and in particular dealers and traffickers. Shapelle did the crime, do the time. If only our drugs laws were as harsh!
    I’m also speaking from experience my uncle went to prison for drug trafficking and while he is a lovely man who got caught in a bad situation, I had no sympathy for him. If you do something illegal, you have to deal with the consequences. You’re old enough to know better.

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  14. The wounded Bull

    The media coverage and support for Schapelle is out of all proportion when compared to coverage (and sympathy) for other australians abroad.

    The lesson…if you get get caught with drugs overseas, make sure you are an attractive, anglo, hetro girl.

    Lucky the Indo judges were not taken in by the whole ‘poor pretty white girl’ act.

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    • Nicki

      You forgot to mention all the crocodile tears, WB ;)

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    • jec

      Can you imagine the media frenzy if/when Schapelle gets released and returns to Austraila?! She will be hounded 24/7 wherever she goes. I’d move to another country, change my appearance and my name – especially the name, Schapelle is quite a distinctive name. I said this to my husband this morning while reading the article about her in the newspaper. His comment was he wonders how long it will be until she is on Dancing with the Stars :)

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      • Anon

        OMG. I fear your husband can foresee the future. Yep, I’ll put money on it.

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      • Siobhan

        I’m sure Dancing With the Stars will be just the beginning… She’ll make an absolute fortune from media deals and reality TV shows, and I’m sure she’ll lap it all up. I do have a certain amount of sympathy for her, as I don’t think she had much hope of being anything other than a drug dealer, given her family background, but as others have said, she knew the risks of trafficking drugs to Indonesia, so my sympathy is limited.

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  15. Lealea

    We live in Melbourne and my husband is an accountant. He said that this year he has witnessed a number of clients having to sell their homes and rent due to not being able to afford their mortgages anymore. Owning a home is a dream that is becoming harder and harder for everyday people.

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  16. Kate o

    The whole miss universe competition is ridiculous! If there are no guidelines about plastic surgery then anyone barbie-esque looking should be allowed to enter…. 

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    • Anon

      I said the same thing last night. No plastic surgery should be a foundation rule – IF they insist on holding these worthless competitions.

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      • Noelle

        How would you regulate that though? And where would you draw the line? And then, why allow teeth whitening? Or spanx? Or makeup?

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      • fifif

        mm.. but then i guess what happens if a burns/accident victim wanted to enter.. would they be excluded?

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    • Alyssa KT

      I think it’s sad that the most beautiful “woman” in Canada was a man until 4 years ago.
      I understand that transgender people feel they were born the wrong sex and I fully support them changing or doing anything that makes them more happy with themselves but I do not condone people who were men competing alongside women for a range of competitions. It’s not allowed in sport. And it shouldn’t be allowed for a former man (who was genetically given narrower hips, smaller thighs and little to no cellulite) to be measured against actual women.
      And yes, plastic surgery should also be out – but that’s another argument

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      • Anonymous

        She hasn’t won it yet, and in all honesty, I don’t think she will

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      • Anonymous

        There’s no need to put woman in quotation marks. She is a woman.

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  17. Rick Morton

    I dread ever having to buy a home. Come on, where’s that best selling novel I need to write!

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    • Anonymous

      Me too Rick. I think we should have stayed in Europe where it’s normal to rent your whole life!

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    • Chloe

      I will buy anything you pen Rick. Love your writing!

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    • iamevilcupcake

      A velociraptor love story? I’d read it!

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  18. loves2bake

    We were lucky that the area that my husband and I grew up and wanted to settle down in has some of the lowest housing costs in Sydney. We also made sure we bought a house that we could afford on one wage since we knew that I was going to be a SAHM for a little while. Sure, I’d love to have been able to buy a house in a higher price bracket but to do so would have been irresponsible. At just under $300K our mortgage is less than 5 times my husband’s salary (which will continue to increase over the next few years since he is still on the sliding pay scale as a fairly new teacher, so that gap will shorten). Plus, we have three bedrooms and a decent backyard. I think that there are huge shortages in Sydney in the housing market and there seems to be a lot of people who over commit or go to pretty close to their limit in order to buy in a particular area (I may be wrong, but that’s the impression I get), but there are other areas of Sydney which are good areas but are looked down upon because of how the media chooses to portray it – the reality is completely different!

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    • elle

      Where do you live? In the West?

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      • loves2bake

        In the outer South-Western suburbs

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  19. Anonymous

    Free Schapelle!!! She’s done enough.

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  20. jb expat

    The story about Ben Polis must have broken too late to be included. I first heard a blip on the radio this morning and dismissed it as another overblown footie-related thing. But when I read in the paper what he said I was truly disgusted. This guy is a CEO? Seriously? I’m mid-level mgmt where I work and we are trained/warned once a year about the perils of social media (meaning personal use having impact on your employment relationship). Polis should be fired by the Board of energy watch and the demons should walk away from his money. What’s to investigate?

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    • Molly M

      The facebook quotes from Ben Polis in the Herald Sun are so incredibly offensive. I hope that not only does he lose his sponsorship of Melbourne FC and Melboure Victory, but that people boycott his business – ENERGY WATCH – this guy is an arrogant, racist, sexist, tool.

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      • jb expat

        Apparently there were more quotes that weren’t suitable for publishing – I thought the ones they published were sufficiently horrid – can’t imagine what the unfit-for-publication ones said.

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    • Lulu

      I didn’t know what story you were talking about, so I just checked The Age. Holy shit. Damn right, I can’t believe he’s a CEO either.

      Oh, and he says “he’s not racist because his cleaner is Asian”? I’d laugh if it weren’t so serious.

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      • RandomMon

        I read that article too. He really is a joke, a sad little man lol…& the pic from the Brownlow made me laugh, the girl he’s with, she towers above him and she looks extremely young, maybe 19 even, I don’t know, I’m only speculating, I mean I’m not suprised in the slightest but it just looked quite comical.

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    • LellaK

      Oh that made me feel ill – his comments were disgusting! Melbourne FC are REALLY not having the best of times at the moment…

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