Thank you for sharing your recount and experience. I have been to Australia and New Zealand a lot and while I mostly traveled for fishing purposes I don't have as much an experience to compare as you seemingly do. But don't you think what you shared is happening in a lot of other places? I feel Auckland and Christchurch vs the rest seems to me quite similar to what you described about Sydney or Melbourne vs the rest in NSW/Victoria. Look at Japan, check out Tokyo and Osaka and then go to the country side. Most villages in the Japanese countryside are pitiful sights. I am surprised the snow in the winter in Niigata does not consume most of the older houses in small villages. They are in horrific condition.
Obviously 5-10mil aud properties in affluent suburbs are not comparable with the backcountry. Properties most often are a pretty fair reflection of the income level of people and that in turn is an outcome of educational achievements of humans. Most of the time, not always.
What really gets me is the unbelievable widening of the wealth gap in the past 20 years. The middle class has been hooked on drugs like internet, gaming, weed, alcohol, and a decline in moral values. Anything that shuts them up and lets them escape reality. Because otherwise they would revolt. So far I see not an inch of resistance. That surprises me the most. How much further can you push someone into a corner without them retaliating?
Obviously 5-10mil aud properties in affluent suburbs are not comparable with the backcountry. Properties most often are a pretty fair reflection of the income level of people and that in turn is an outcome of educational achievements of humans. Most of the time, not always.
What really gets me is the unbelievable widening of the wealth gap in the past 20 years. The middle class has been hooked on drugs like internet, gaming, weed, alcohol, and a decline in moral values. Anything that shuts them up and lets them escape reality. Because otherwise they would revolt. So far I see not an inch of resistance. That surprises me the most. How much further can you push someone into a corner without them retaliating?
When I lived there (3.5 years), I found Australia to be a strange place. The society is similar to all island nations I've ever lived in, where a few powerful families own a large majority of key businesses and dabble in politics to ensure the success of the businesses. Australia may be a large land mass, but with only 20M people, it's quite small.
I lived in Sydney but traveled up to Port Macquarie often enough, spent time up in the Cairns region and been to Perth, Margaret River and down through Melbourne where my wife's parents live. The more blatant things that caught my attention was the huge disparity in wealth between the average population and the wealthy. Kind of reminded me of the US southern states but more awkward because the avg and the poor in Australia are generally white while in US southern states they are black (lots of whites as well, but no wealthy blacks in sight).
For example, during the NSW flooding, major roads were cut off and cars were diverted inland through side roads. For the first time in my life I saw metal tin roof huts with 8 or 9 scruffy blond hair kids standing in front, staring at the circus of cars passing through their off road. Reminded me of so many downtrodden people I'd seen in the countries I lived in or visited in Asia and Africa. Just couldn't believe what I was seeing before driving back to North Sydney, where coastal houses don't sell for under 15 million.
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