Freedom salmon tastes better.Sounds really fishy to me!
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Farmed salmon in mass breakout after fire melts pen
Fifty-thousand farmed fish are swimming free after a fire melts their pen off the Tasmanian coast, however, their flirtation with freedom will likely be short — as "what the seals don't get, the fisherman quickly do", the company's founder says.www.abc.net.au
If you know of a 'dark' website you can access it like any other. When most say dark web though they're talking about using a Tor (encrypted) server where you can browse anonymously. They aren't illegal in themselves and you can just download them.Just curious- how does one access the dark web?
I dont understand.
/no details, just in general
I mean, they are usually difficult to access for a reason but 'dark' just means it's hidden. Not necessarily illegal.Ah ok. So not ALL dark websites are bad?
Ok wow. I assumed all were illegal sites.I mean, they are usually difficult to access for a reason but 'dark' just means it's hidden. Not necessarily illegal.
Me too, I thought they were illegal websitesOk wow. I assumed all were illegal sites.
Just curious- how does one access the dark web?
I dont understand.
/no details, just in general
Drug traffickers in Australia must surely be doing it hard at the moment with the Covid restrictions, particularly in Victoria.Now that's a stash!
The Whiskey Au Go Go in Fortitude Valley went up in flames after two drums of diesel fuel were set alight in the building foyer. Fifteen people died.
Police quickly arrested two men — James Finch and John Stuart — who were subsequently convicted and sentenced to life in prison.
But there is evidence others were also involved in the crime.
The new inquest is expected to examine why police at the time didn't investigate further, and why corrupt NSW detective Roger Rogerson was involved in the original investigation.
Rogerson, who is currently serving a life sentence for a 2014 murder, reportedly told a newspaper he has no "new or secret evidence".
But Queensland crime author Matt Condon, who is writing a book on the Whiskey Au Go Go tragedy, says one possible theory is that police were protecting someone.
"From my understanding and research, police didn't proceed because one of the unnamed individuals associated with the Whiskey Au Go Go firebombing was an informant to a very senior corrupt police officer," he said.
After being deported to the UK in 1988, Finch admitted at least two other men were involved in the crime.
One of the men he named, Vincent O'Dempsey, was convicted last year for the 1974 murders of Barbara McCulkin and her two daughters.
The prosecution argued his motive was to keep Barbara McCulkin quiet about his involvement in the Whiskey Au Go Go fire.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-09-24/whiskey-au-go-go-firebombing-new-inquest/10290416