Sunday, 18 October 2015

Why people afraid from getting Airplane??

Why people afraid from getting Airplane?

Understanding what causes fear of flying can point you to the best path to recovery. Here's a brief explanation of the cause of fear of flying.Experiencing a "Bad Flight"
Hearing about Bad EventsIt's Not Always About FlyingThe Way People DON'T Become AfraidFueled by the Anxiety Trick


have a nice trip with blog EAP !

What Is Fiscal Policy?

What Is Fiscal Policy?

By Reem Heakal
Fiscal policy is the means by which a government adjusts its spending levels and tax rates to monitor and influence a nation's economy. It is the sister strategy to monetary policy through which a central bank influences a nation's money supply.These two policies are used in various combinations to direct a country's economic goals. Here we look at how fiscal policy works, how it must be monitored and how its implementation may affect different people in an economy.
Before the Great Depression, which lasted from Sept. 4, 1929 to the late 1930s or early 1940s, the government's approach to the economy was laissez-faire. Following World War II, it was determined that the government had to take a proactive role in the economy to regulate unemployment, business cycles, inflation and the cost of money. By using a mix of monetary and fiscal policies (depending on the political orientations and the philosophies of those in power at a particular time, one policy may dominate over another), governments are able to control economic phenomena.
How Fiscal Policy WorksFiscal policy is based on the theories of British economist John Maynard Keynes. Also known as Keynesian economics, this theory basically states that governments can influence macroeconomic productivity levels by increasing or decreasing tax levels and public spending. This influence, in turn, curbs inflation (generally considered to be healthy when between 2-3%), increases employment and maintains a healthy value of money.Fiscal policy is very important to the economy. For example, in 2012 many worried that the fiscal cliff, a simultaneous increase in tax rates and cuts in government spending set to occur in January 2013, would send the U.S. economy back to recession. The U.S. Congress avoided this problem by passing the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 on Jan. 1, 2013.
Balancing ActThe idea, however, is to find a balance between changing tax rates and public spending. For example, stimulating a stagnant economy by increasing spending or lowering taxes runs the risk of causing inflation to rise. This is because an increase in the amount of money in the economy, followed by an increase in consumer demand, can result in a decrease in the value of money - meaning that it would take more money to buy something that has not changed in value.

Let's say that an economy has slowed down. Unemployment levels are up, consumer spending is down and businesses are not making substantial profits. A government thus decides to fuel the economy's engine by decreasing taxation, which gives consumers more spending money, while increasing government spending in the form of buying services from the market (such as building roads or schools).By paying for such services, the government creates jobs and wages that are in turn pumped into the economy. Pumping money into the economy by decreasing taxation and increasing government spending is also known as "pump priming." In the meantime, overall unemployment levels will fall.


As we see there are many places are interesting ---- Sydney is beautiful place
In Sydney places like The rocks, Bondi Beach, Sydney Opera house and many other places to go
Injoy your time!!

Wednesday, 14 October 2015

Travailing at night

What do you think about getting train at night time?
Which one you prefer car or train?


I'll go with you to make a brief if it is safe at night to transport, referring to transport Sydney trains.
It's very common getting train is danger therefore, police on bikes alone with drug detection dogs are also active across public transport.
At night when trains stop working, there are buses to get to your direction (your suburb), also there are many of CCTV.
CCTV is security camera is active 24 hours per day.


Travelling late on Friday and Saturday nights

On Friday and Saturday nights between 15:00 and 06:00, Police Transport Command officers, both high visibility and plain clothed, patrol train, bus, ferry and light rail services as well as stations, stops and wharves to improve security and reduce crime.
Police on bikes along with drug detection dogs are also active across public transport.
Crime hotspots are monitored through an extensive public transport CCTV network of more than 10,000 cameras to provide customers with further peace of mind when travelling at night.

Travel tips

  • Try to use well-lit, main roads and avoid travelling alone at night.
  • Make sure that someone knows that you are travelling and if you can, it's helpful to carry a mobile phone.
  • On the platform, stand in an area which is brightly lit, covered by CCTV and close to Emergency Help Points.
  • Sit close to the guard's compartment indicated with a blue light on the train.
  • If there are other passengers on the train try to sit near them and not to become isolated.

NightRide buses

Most trains do not operate between midnight and 4.30am.
For your convenience a special NightRide bus service is available between these hours. All buses have radio contact with taxi operators and a taxi can be requested to meet you at your destination.

You're very welcome to comment and really what to know what is your opinion about treanspot in Sydney as a resident.
Thank you!!

Sunday, 11 October 2015

A brief about my professionality and my birds


My bird


I had 24 birds in my garden
 first, I had a small Cage with 6 bird. The First cage size was 1*1 meter, I had problem with my cage because my bird were increasing. So me and my Dad Decide to make a new cage, to make the bird fly as they want to, so we build a cage from wood with very big area was 1.5*4.5. The cage is feed for more than 200 bird. 4 couples were blue coloure and the others were green. I had only one wight bird. the beautiful time was when I was feeding my bird and especially when it was tea time, I had my cup of tea and I was listening to the bird sing. One day it was drizzling I went to to cover the cage and i saw a strange blue bird was so wet. I put the bird into a separate cage after I went and I bought anti-various food. For two day and the bird get very well, healthy and energetic.

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One picture of my decoration at receptions


 It's been a long time I didn't work at receptions, I Enjoy too much when I decorate and make stuff new thing that people love to see it, but unfortunately till now I didn't get chance too work in this area but definitely I'll work at the future.


Buying safe products

You can protect yourself and your money!

Buying safe products

The Australian Consumer Law contains a range of protections to help ensure that the products you buy are safe.

Mandatory standards

Certain products sold in Australia are subject to mandatory standards(link is external).These are introduced when considered reasonably necessary to prevent or reduce the risk of injury to a person.
If a product is subject to a mandatory standard, it must meet particular safety criteria before it can be sold in Australia.

Bans

Products can be temporarily or permanently banned from sale(link is external) in Australia when considered reasonably necessary to prevent or reduce the risk of injury to a person.
It is against the law for businesses to sell products when they are subject to an interim or permanent ban.

Recalls

If a product or service presents a safety risk or is non-compliant with a mandatory standard or ban, it may need to be taken off the market or ‘recalled’.
Recalls can be initiated by a supplier or in response to an order by the Commonwealth or a state and territory minister responsible for competition and consumer policy. All safety recalls are listed on the Recalls Australia(link is external) website.

Consumer guarantees

As a consumer, you may have the right to a refund if a product is unsafe. See consumer rights & guarantees for more information.

Product safety information

We provide detailed information about mandatory safety standards, bans, safety warning notices, recalls, and mandatory reporting at the Product Safety Australia(link is external) website. The site also contains information about safe practices you can follow to minimise the risk of injuries occurring.

Safety warning notices

A safety warning notice can be issued to warn the public that a good or service is under investigation or poses a safety risk. The safety warning notice will:
  • state certain goods or product-related services are under investigation to determine whether they may injure someone, and/or
  • warn of possible risks in using the goods or product-related services.
Safety warning notices are posted on the News section of the Product Safety Australia(link is external)website.

Mandatory reporting

If a supplier becomes aware of a serious injury, illness or death associated with a consumer good or product-related service it supplies, the business must report this information(link is external) within two days of becoming aware of it.

If you like to get more Info. you can visit this website  https://www.accc.gov.au/consumers/consumer-protection/buying-safe-products#mandatory-standards 
let me know about your comment and hopefully I made it very simple so I could get your feedback
and your very welcome to shear with me your.

News article

The Australian,,

WA discovery ‘could lead to a cure for HIV’



West Australian researchers have uncovered a process found to effectively control HIV that could lead to a cure for the deadly disease.
Martyn French, who led the team based at Royal Perth Hospital, said when the particular antibody, named by the group as plasmacytoid dendritic cell-reactive opsonophagocytosis antibody, was bound to the virus, it stimulated other cells in the immune system to kill the virus.
Professor French, who has 29 years of experience in the treatment and research of HIV, said the study was evidence that the process could effectively control the virus.
The process would be further studied so researchers could then apply findings to enhance a specific immune response in curing vaccines, he said.
“We’re working on the idea that you don’t use the antibodies to bind the virus directly and kill the virus, but you use antibodies that bind to the virus and then stimulate other cells in the immune system to kill the virus,” he said. “We’re the first group that’s taken this sort of approach to doing this.”
The group’s findings will be published by the American Association of Immunologists in its Journal of Immunology next month.
HIV is effectively controlled by antiretroviral drugs and patients could live “almost a normal life expectancy” but existing treatments don’t cure the virus, Professor French said.
He said many researchers trying to cure the infection focused on the use of a vaccine that would stimulate immune responses. “There’s still an incomplete understanding of what type of immune response needs to be stimulated by such vaccines,” he said.
The research was supported by University of California, San Francisco, professor Steven Deeks, who provided a majority of the 110 American and Australian blood plasma samples used in the study. Samples included those of patients who were able and unable to control the infection without treatment.
The research found there was a negative correlation when the amount of the antibody in the blood was related to the level of virus in the blood.


http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/health-science/wa-discovery-could-lead-to-a-cure-for-hiv/story-e6frg8y6-1227325573116


Unfortunately we do not know about plastic bottle of water

Is it safe to drink water from plastic bottles?


When it comes to a healthy drink, nothing can compete with water.
And in an effort to be more healthy, many of us make a point of carrying water bottles with us everywhere we go. But are our water bottles a health issue? Especially those made from plastic?
Generally they are safe, says Michael Moore, Emeritus Professor of Toxicology at the University of Queensland, but it depends on the kind of plastic the bottle is made of.
Most plastics are made of long chains of hydrocarbon molecules, built from simpler building blocks called monomers. Some plastics then have chemicals added to give them a characteristic such as flexibility or colour.


Buying bottle water

The 'single use' water bottles that you typically buy at milk bars, service stations and the like are usually made from polyethylene terephthalate (abbreviated to PET or PETE), an inexpensive and lightweight plastic. Its recycling code (the number in the centre of the triangle of arrows found on most plastics) is 1.

"PET is not one of the plastics that one would think has a propensity to cause a problem," says Moore.Moore agrees with the US FDA, which says that PET bottles are safe for use and reuse so long as they are washed properly with detergent and water to remove bacteria.The safety of using PET bottles was questioned after a student research project hit the headlines. The 2001 study found traces of a phthalate — a potentially harmful 'plasticiser' used to make some plastics more flexible — in water from PET bottles, but the research hadn't been verified.Moore says PET has never contained phthalates and the public's association between the two could be based on the plastic's name.

\And while some preliminary studies have suggested water from PET bottles can contain as-yet-unidentified substances with 'oestrogenic' properties (which disrupt the body's normal hormone regulation), Moore says no rigorous scientific review has backed these.A substance called antimony is used in PET production and it can leach into the water in PET bottles. However, this doesn't pose much of a risk, says Moore."Antimony is not in the same league as lead or mercury toxicologically so the likelihood of harm is low,' says Moore.




Using your own bottle

But what if you've decided not to buy bottled water, but to use a refillable water bottle to cut down on the plastic sent to landfill?

Polycarbonate has been commonly used to make the sturdy reusable water bottles that many of us use. Polycarbonate is one of the plastics classed as 'other' in the recycling scheme. It has a recycling code of 7, but not all bottles stamped with a 7 are made from polycarbonate.Polycarbonate is made of a monomer called bisphenol A (BPA). As the plastic breaks down over time, BPA is released into the water held in polycarbonate bottles, particularly when the bottle is heated or repeatedly washed"If you have a bottle made of polycarbonate, on first use there probably isn't much depolymerisation but as you use it again and again — especially if things are warm or hot — then there's a high likelihood that there will be a breakdown of the plastic to release the monomer," says Moore.But just because there is some BPA in the water, it doesn't necessarily mean it's dangerous, says Moore.Research in animals has found BPA can cause a range of conditions — such as cancer, diabetes, obesity and reproductive and developmental disorders. Some studies suggest that young animals metabolise BPA less efficiently than adults."But there's nothing much in the way of identified effects in humans — virtually all of the effects have been established in relatively higher levels of exposure in animal models. The level of exposure is probably not sufficient to cause these effects [in people]. But people who are feeding young children are saying 'I'd rather not take the chance', which is fair enough."It's likely that soon we won't need to make these choices ourselves, says Moore. Even though most national food safety agencies, including Australia's FSANZ, say that the level of exposure to BPA is too low to be dangerous, food and drink companies are moving away from polycarbonate because of the bad press.However, other agencies, such as the US National Toxicology Program, are worried enough to be carrying out reviews and the World Health Organisation is holding a meeting next month to review all the scientific evidence."There is a lot of ongoing work to look at the effects of this compound to see whether this genuinely represents a big issue. The position at present is that it doesn't constitute a huge issue," says Moore."In effect I would expect that in the very near future various agencies will make changes to the tolerable daily intake of BPA," he adds. The internationally agreed Tolerable Daily Intake (TDI) for BPA is currently 0.05 mg per kilogram of body weight per day.One plastic that can be undoubtedly dangerous for making water bottles is polyvinyl chloride (PVC), which has a recycling code of 3. PVC often has phthalates added to make it flexible — though you can't tell this by looking at the recycling code. Thankfully, PVC is not often used to make water bottles.


Choosing a bottle

If you want to err on the side of caution, Moore suggests you avoid drinks bottles that have the recycling codes of 3 or 7, particularly for children.The best bottles to use and reuse are those with the recycling codes 2, 4 and 5. 2 and 4 are made from polyethylene and 5 is made from polypropylene."There's absolutely nothing in polyethylene or polypropylene that could be classified as dangerous", says Moore. But these bottles are more expensive to make, so while they are likely to be found more and more in reusable bottles, PET is likely to be the plastic of choice for single-use bottles for a while to come.You can also check that reusuable bottles say they are 'BPA-free', as some bottles may be made of number 5 plastic but use polycarbonate linings or mouthpieces.Another rule of thumb is to use clear plastic rather than coloured or opaque because they eliminate small potential risks from colouring agents added to the plastic, says Moore.And while stainless steel or aluminium bottles are often considered a safe bet, these still have some issues, says Moore. Stainless steel can corrode a little over time and while the released iron won't harm you, it'll add an unpleasant taste to your water.Aluminium can also corrode and release aluminium salts into the water. One way of stopping this is to use a plastic liner, which takes you to square one. Glass is a good, but often impractical."In the end you've got to balance all the issues. I would think that many bottles are safe to use, even PET ones. The only one I would advise against are PVC and polycarbonate," concludes Moore.


























Refer to- http://www.abc.net.au/health/talkinghealth/factbuster/stories/2010/10/27/3048695.htm 


ARTICLE

How long should each Blog post be?

People often obsess over how long their blog posts should be. There’s a lot of information out there regarding the “perfect” length of a blog post, but a lot of that data is conflicting.

Do you enjoy to share a post in the Blog?





 Give me some idea let me hear your comment and you're very welcome to hear comment with me !!!

Wednesday, 7 October 2015

Do you know?


guess 

It's something about KFC 


Have fun!! :) ;)

You're very welcome to comment 
let me know 


KFC




Also, you can see history of KFC