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Change the idle style and change Australia into a 'Baum-style country'

Obesity rate is up 10% in Australia (Daily Mail photo)


Australian society is changing, but not necessarily in the right direction.

According to the Daily Mail, unfettered Australia has disappeared, and more so-called "livable" cities have been affected by curfews, making it difficult to drink after 10:00. Although smoking and cancer rates in Australia have fallen sharply since the mid-1990s, obesity rates have risen by nearly 10%. In addition, electricity and gas charges skyrocketed because of the gradual abandonment of built-up power plants by Australia's government.

When watching football or cricket games you can't drink beer, you can't eat in a bar smoking area, and once idle Australia is strikingly depressed.


Australia-(overmanaged) bom-style country

Australia's government has introduced a series of absurd, pointless laws that stifle "laissez-faire" attitudes and frequent incidents of suspected corporate bragging.

Last year, a fisherman in Cairns, far north of Kunzhou, was fined A $365 for not wearing a seat belt when he pulled the boat out of the water. When the fisherman moved his boat to a trailer and moved 15 metres just at the public pier, a policeman went up and issued a ticket, making the fisherman "dumbfounded".

In addition, a resident of Perth, Western Australia, was fined A $1000 for just 30 centimetres from the width of the trailer.

Brissom (Simon Breheny), director of policy research at the (The Institute of Public Affairs) Institute for Public Affairs, said rising costs of living and absurd regulations were preventing Australians from enjoying their lives. Australia as a whole is getting better, but some of the core areas of life are getting worse, one of the main reasons is the growing government red tape.

People have to have something in their lives to make them happy, and government is trying to change some of the people's lifestyles, such as drinking, smoking and gambling, which are not suitable for fun, Bree said.

Once upon a time.

Looking back at the beginning of the century, we can see that Australia is quite different now than it was at that time.

When the 2000 Olympics were successful, a bottle of beer cost just A $2.5, and now a plastic cup of moderate beer on the court costs as much as A $8.

In 2013, the average Australian household electricity bill was A $170, up A $100 from 2003. Cigarette taxes have also led to a surge in cigarette prices, from A $11.20 a carton in 2000 to A $25 to A $30 today.

Burley argues that cigarette taxes are so unfair that smokers and drinkers are not "elite" and are forced to pay more.

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