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Chitchat Top 10 Most Liveable Cities 2019 Are All Non-Moslem Cities! Moslem Cities Form Half Of Most Shittiest Cities! Singapore Ranked 40th, Ahead Of London!

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
190904_online-liveable-cities.jpg


SYDNEY (BLOOMBERG) - Financial hubs like London, New York and Singapore did not fare well in a survey of the world's most pleasant cities to live in.

Singapore slipped three places to 40th spot in the Economist Intelligence Unit's (EIU) 2019 Global Liveability Index, behind Hong Kong, at 38th place from 35th last year, but ahead of London (No. 48) and New York (No. 58). The ranking was compiled before Hong Kong's recent political upheaval, but the disruption will likely show up next year.

"I think it's probably safe to say that Hong Kong's rating will suffer quite significantly," said EIU's regional director for Asia, Mr Duncan Innes-Ker.


EIU's ranking showed that the world's most liveable cities are generally less global capitals, and more regional second cities.

Vienna took the top spot for the second year running, confirming that life is officially better on the banks of the Danube than it is by the Yarra River in Melbourne, which took second place.

Australia and Canada dominate the top 10 with three cities each, while Osaka, Tokyo and Copenhagen complete the list. Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide are judged to offer the Antipodes' best quality of life, while Calgary, Vancouver and Toronto are North America's top locations.


"Overall, our index remains dominated by medium-sized cities in wealthy countries," the report notes, pointing to high-quality education, well-funded public healthcare and functional transport systems. These cities - with populations that number anywhere from 300,000 to one million - hit the sweet spot between overcrowded and underdeveloped.

"The upsides of these cities tend to be fully realised. You get a good collection of cultural activities, you get good access to healthcare and education," said Mr Innes-Ker. "But you don't get a lot of downsides that tend to come with big cities, things like traffic congestion, crime problems and general wear and tear."


To assess living conditions, the index examines the quality of healthcare, education, infrastructure, stability and culture. Each city is graded on more than 30 factors, which are then compiled into a weighted score of between one and 100.

At 99.1, Vienna's 2019 liveability score is almost perfect. Melburnians and others shouldn't feel too put out though: The scores among the top 20 cities vary by less than five points. No United States city made it higher than No. 22, with Honolulu ranked as the nation's top performer.

Across the board, the report points to improved quality of living, thanks to strengthened stability, as well as better education and healthcare systems - especially in emerging markets.

But climate change puts these gains at risk, the report said, noting that cities such as New Delhi and Cairo slipped down the rankings as a result of worsening pollution. Sitting right at the bottom of the list are Dhaka, Lagos and Damascus, with the war-torn Syrian capital retaining the last position for the past seven years.

https://www.straitstimes.com/busine...veable-city-behind-hong-kong-economist-survey
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
I wish whining sinkies would move to johor, where they keep saying the property prices and groceries there are so cheap.
 

mudhatter

Alfrescian
Loyal


Copy cat stinky slit eyed pig chinks.

:laugh:

No originality. No creativity. No authenticity. No inventiveness. Just copy-paste. Commie-paste, should I call it? :roflmao:

Keep licking your Ang moh Masters' balls.

Just another ''feel good'' ranking.

No facts, no bases. WTF is even livability.

:roflmao:

Stinking chinks would gladly lick Ang Mor :poop: if Ang Moh ranking said it tasted the best and is the most nutritious. :roflmao:

What a dumbfark.
 

mudhatter

Alfrescian
Loyal
Moslems should move to kelantan, marawi and aceh, or whatever shithole they create from shariah laws.


Fuck off.

Malaysia belong to Malays.

You chink bitches have no say on this matter.

We saw that with Zakir Naik. Chink and Ah Neh bastards created a racket over it.

In the end, what happened?

Stinky WILL be dominated. You like or not is immaterial. Chinks and Ah Nehs will face Ganyang. There's nothing pathetic loser slave chinks could do about it. Their only calling is to flex their knees in front of their Emperor Xi, or Emperor Lee.
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Fuck off.

Malaysia belong to Malays.

You chink bitches have no say on this matter.

We saw that with Zakir Naik. Chink and Ah Neh bastards created a racket over it.

In the end, what happened?

Stinky WILL be dominated. You like or not is immaterial. Chinks and Ah Nehs will face Ganyang. There's nothing pathetic loser slave chinks could do about it. Their only calling is to flex their knees in front of their Emperor Xi, or Emperor Lee.

Malaysia belongs to the Orang Asli. Malays are invaders.
 

mudhatter

Alfrescian
Loyal
If local moslems didn't suck arab dick, they wouldn't be rushing off to join isis, only to end up as toilet cleaners instead of suicide bombers.

You don't have a brain on top of not having wide enough eyes.

What does suicide bombers have to do with sucking cocks?

Sucking cocks is what chink whores do stinky chink sluts called SPGs do.

Suicide bombers detonate bombs.

Quite obvious that your IQ is at Ah Neh level.
 

mudhatter

Alfrescian
Loyal
Malaysia belongs to the Orang Asli. Malays are invaders.

The name says Malaysia not Orang Asli-sia.

When you find Orang Asli-sia, come back and contact me.

Tiongkok belong to Arabs, Mongols, Persians, Japs, Koreans and Manchus.

And Ah Neh land belongs to Arabs, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Afghans, Iranians, Turks, Brits and Portuguese.

Stupid is as stupid does.
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The name says Malaysia not Orang Asli-sia.

When you find Orang Asli-sia, come back and contact me.

Tiongkok belong to Arabs, Mongols, Persians, Japs, Koreans and Manchus.

And Ah Neh land belongs to Arabs, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Afghans, Iranians, Turks, Brits and Portuguese.

Stupid is as stupid does.

Can prove Malays were the original inhabitants of Malay peninsula?
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
This survey sounds rigged...like media corpse Garbage.

The truth about living in Sydney: Everyone has an escape plan - Big Australia
.
PHOTO Behind Sydney's beautiful views are Sydneysiders comparing notes on how to leave. ABC NEWS: TARYN SOUTHCOMBE
If you were at a party with 20 or 30-something Sydneysiders four years ago, the dominant conversational topic was getting into the property market.

It seemed like every person spent their weekends scouring the real estate pages and attending auctions to the point where they could trade details on how prices were moving in different regions with the sort of forensic detail previously reserved for sports analysis and, presumably, forensics.

Now things have changed. People aren't trading tips on how to buy in Sydney. They're comparing notes on how to leave.

An exit plan
When my wife and I started telling our friends about our plans to move our family out of Sydney and head for the wider spaces and less aggressive rents of Adelaide, something unexpected happened.

Around three quarters of the people confessed that they too had an exit strategy planned.

One was slowly moving stuff into his parents' garage in Newcastle ahead of a planned relocation.

Another couple had been inspecting properties in Perth with a view to moving when they decided to have kids.

Another had sent their partner ahead to look at opportunities on the Gold Coast before they committed to taking the plunge.

And friends that had moved to Hobart joked that they were hosting guests every weekend as Sydneysiders popped down to check the city out.

Houses in the suburb of Glebe in Hobart
PHOTO Hobart is luring many young people from the mainland. ABC NEWS: GREGOR SALMON
Even young, single people were looking at their finances and figuring that it would be no more expensive to move overseas — to London or New York or Nashville or Berlin — places that feel like cultural centres where you can at least get a drink on a week night.

The people who were determined to stay in Sydney weren't sure how they could manage long term. Even those who weren't fearing a budget-busting rent increase spoke darkly of rumoured developments or shared stories of compulsory acquisitions that didn't come close to paying for an equivalent property.

Everyone seemed to feel like they were one unexpected redundancy or medical crisis away from their entire economic system collapsing.

Work is changing where we can live
Part of it is down to the changes in work, even in the city with the lowest unemployment in the country.

With flatlining wages and a drop in permanent work, more and more people are working on casual gig contracts.

Aside from the economic effects of such parlous employment, it also makes working far more "flexible".

Once upon a time permanent jobs and mortgages tied people to the city; now that both are less common, it's easier to up stumps.

Everyone seems squeezed a little more every day — financially by rent bumps or road tolls or public transport increases, or physically by smaller and smaller properties and imposing developments lining every road, or emotionally by a city that seems culturally disinterested — whether that's selling off the Powerhouse or begrudgingly winding back lock-out laws years after most of the city's venues have vanished.

Why I won't miss Sydney
It's still a stunningly beautiful city, with glorious beaches I can never park close to and gorgeous galleries that buses go nowhere near while the light rail is tearing up the CBD, where the once-iconic Hopetoun Hotel sits boarded up and the Sando in Newtown becomes a novelty minigolf pub to remind me exactly how far Sydney has come from the city I fell in love with.

A shopfront.
PHOTO The Sandringham Hotel, one of Sydney's iconic live music venues, became the Newtown Social Club before reopening in 2018 as a minigolf pub. FACEBOOK: NEWTOWN SOCIAL CLUB
And that's why I'm looking forward to the open skies of Adelaide, where we'll have enough headroom to spend our weekends doing something other than recovering from the stress of the previous week and bracing ourselves for the stress to come.

And if the current trend is anything to go by, we'll see you a lot of you down there.

Andrew P Street is a freelance writer.

Posted Wed 14 Mar 2018, 6:00 AM AEDT
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal


news.com.au

Lifestyle
Real Life
Sydney is over: From glittering world city to sad and chaotic wasteland. What went wrong?
JANUARY 2, 2019 1:51PM
Sydney's New Years celebrations descend into commuter chaos

Shannon Molloynews.com.au
There is perhaps no better symbol of Sydney’s transition from a glittering world city to a sad urban wasteland than the image of tens of thousands of New Year’s Eve revellers waiting on choking rail platforms for trains that never arrived.
Just after welcoming in 2019, the city’s major transportation network failed — for the second time that day — due to a storm, on one of the busiest travel days.

So old is the infrastructure, and so high the cost of replacing it, that bad weather routinely sees systems crippled.

When NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian flatly refused to refund people’s wasted train fares, it was arguably another illustration of Sydney’s rapid downfall.

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Twitter user Michael Brodie snapped this image of choking train platforms after the rail network crashed on New Year’s Eve. Source: Twitter
It costs a fortune to live in the city, with house prices and rents well above famously costly locales like New York and London.

Overall cost of living has skyrocketed, with groceries and general costs higher than other capitals, while the night-life has died and dozens of venues have closed.

The roads are choked and the majority of infrastructure problems meant to fix traffic congestion are over budget and well past schedule.

And increasingly, fed-up and frustrated locals are fleeing to other states, particularly Victoria, at the fastest rates in several years.

The statistics speak for themselves — Sydney officially sucks. Just what went so horribly wrong?

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People are increasingly giving up on Sydney and moving south to Melbourne, data shows. Source: News Limited
PEOPLE ARE FLEEING

More than 18,000 people fled NSW in 2016-17, marking the highest exit rate in five years and up from 15,900 a year earlier.

In analysis last year, Leith van Onselen, chief economist with MacroBusiness, said a number of factors had been “pushing people out”.

“The cost of housing in Sydney has obviously gone through the roof — it’s one of the most expensive places to live in the world, Mr van Onselen said.

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Locals are leaving Sydney for other Australian capitals at the highest rate in several years. Picture: Christian Gilles Source: News Corp Australia
“A lot of younger people especially can’t afford to live there anymore, so they’re being forced to leave.

“Secondly, liveability is being massively eroded — traffic congestion, trains, schools, hospitals, all manner of public services — and related to that it’s just become an expensive place to live, not just for housing but for day-to-day life.”

Of those who relocated elsewhere in the country, many headed south to Victoria’s capital, Mr van Onselen said, which has seen a rise in interstate migration.

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Sydneysiders are moving to other capitals, particularly Melbourne. Source: Supplied
Melbourne’s total population is now expected to overtake Sydney by 2026, passing six million residents.

“In the last year, Victoria added 143,400 people, which is larger than the growth of NSW, South Australia, Tasmania, the Northern Territory and the ACT combined,” demographic researcher Mark McCrindle said.

A big contributor to that growth, according to Mr McCrindle, is people moving to Victoria from other parts of Australia.

And he said NSW is losing far more locals than it’s gaining from other states.

SERIOUSLY EXPENSIVE CITY

The NSW capital is now among the 10 most expensive cities in the world to live and has overtaken the notoriously costly locales of London and New York.

And the amount you need to be a resident in Sydney is rising faster than many other international cities.

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Cost of living pressures are stinging Sydney locals who pay considerably more than interstate counterparts on a number of measures. Picture: Steven Saphore/AAP Source: AAP
A comparison between Sydney and Melbourne by Budget Direct found the Harbour City is more expensive on almost every single measure, from housing to groceries and public transport.

Restaurant prices in Sydney are 2.6 per cent higher than Melbourne while general consumer prices for things like clothing are 9.3 per cent higher in Sydney.

Across the board, locals are feeling the pinch.

An Ipsos poll conducted for the Committee for Sydney lobby group found eight in 10 people believe cost of living has intensified over the past five years.

Sydney and Melbourne some of the most expensive cities in the world

A DYING NIGHTLIFE

It might cost more to live in Sydney, but that money is less and less likely to be spent enjoying a vibrant night life.

The controversial lockout laws designed to keep punters safe as they were out at pubs and clubs have instead killed off dozens of venues, according to activists.

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The once-popular Hugo’s nightclub on Bayswater Rd is one of a number of venues to close due to the lockout laws in Kings Cross. Picture: Adam Taylor Source: News Corp Australia
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SOHO on Victoria St in Kings Cross is another closed venue. Picture: Adam Taylor Source: News Corp Australia
Tyson Koh, organiser of the Keep Sydney Open group, said former hot spots like Darlinghurst and Kings Cross were now ghost towns after dark.

“Oxford St (in Darlinghurst) is basically empty,” Mr Koh said. “It has suffered enormously.

“Kings Cross is a completely different place … there are far fewer people heading (there) and it’s a ghost town.

“Unfortunately, some businesses haven’t made it and have been forced to close their doors. Several more are still doing it tough and barely hanging on.”

The State Government and hospitals like St Vincent’s insist the laws have reduced alcohol-related violence.

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The once-vibrant Oxford St in Darlinghurst is now littered with empty shops. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia
A HOUSING NIGHTMARE

House prices might be falling in Sydney at the fastest rate in the country, but it still costs a motza to nab a pile of bricks.

Data shows those hoping to buy a home have to earn a salary of $161,858 to buy a house without experiencing mortgage stress or $121,026 for an apartment.

“Mortgage stress is when 30 per cent or more of your pre-tax income is going towards loan repayments,” Sally Tindall, RateCity.com.au research director, explained.

“Everyone has bills to pay, mouths to feed and kids to educate. People are struggling to make ends meet as it is. When your mortgage repayments tip over that 30 per cent mark, it means you’ll struggle to have spare cash to get you through month-on-month.”

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House prices in Sydney might be falling but it still costs a pretty penny to buy. And renting is incredibly expensive too. Picture: AAP Source: AAP
It’s not just would-be homebuyers struggling. The cost of rent in Sydney is significantly higher than other capitals with a median weekly cost of $550 for apartments and $600 for houses.

According to analysis by consumer comparison website finder.com.au, Sydneysiders can pay on average up to $3500 a month in rent in a suburb located close to the city and up to $2750 for a place in a less desirable area.

According to the website Sydney Moving Costs, a one-bedroom unit can cost up to $570 per week while a single room in a share house is between $300 to $400 per week.

Budget Direct found the cost of renting a dwelling in Sydney is 43.2 per cent higher than in Melbourne.

RAIL NETWORK FAILURES

The New Year’s Eve chaos experienced across the city, when train services ground to a halt and thousands of people packed dangerously overcrowded platforms, wasn’t a one-off.

MORE: Train delays costs NYE revellers $5000

Throughout 2018, a number of issues thrust the network into chaos, from IT issues and flawed upgrades to rain and electrical storms knocking out signals.


A new timetable introduced last year sparked days of chaos with “indefinite delays” and staff shortages, and the Rail Tram and Bus Union accused the Government of failing to train enough new drivers.




On multiple occasions, transit authorities advised passengers to avoid trains when the system melted down and delay all non-essential travel.

Lengthy delays have become the norm when the network is stretched to capacity or unable to cope with bad weather.

INFRASTRUCTURE DUDS

George St in the middle of Sydney’s CBD was once a hive of activity, with shoppers and revellers flooding its pavements.

Now, it’s virtually a ghost town thanks to the over-budget and past schedule Light Rail project that has kept the city at a gridlocked maze for years.

The troubled tram project was meant to be finished in just a few months but now won’t be wrapped up until at least 2020.

Its cost has also exploded from $1.6 billion to $2.1 billion.

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The Light Rail project is well over budget and past schedule, with no end in sight. It has turned George St into a ghost town. Picture: Gordon McComiskie Source: News Corp Australia
Today it was revealed that a crucial rail link between Sydney and the booming Parramatta city has blown out, with an estimated cost of $20 billion, and doesn’t even have a business case, which was due last year.

WestConnex, the country’s biggest road infrastructure project, has also been plagued by issues and a few months ago the Government announced it would sell 51 per cent of it.

Christopher Standen, a transport analyst at University of Sydney, described the move as “the biggest misuse of public funds for corporate gain in Australia’s history”.

“In total, I estimate the NSW Government is pumping more than $23 billion worth of cash, public assets, enabling works and incentives into WestConnex,” Mr Standen said.

“Finally, as part of the (sale) deal … the Government has agreed to plough $5.3 billion of the sale proceeds back into WestConnex. It’s recouping just $4 billion by selling majority ownership. This translates to a financial return of 34 cents for every dollar spent.”

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Waitress Laura Gadliauskaite at work at Cafe de la France on George St, Sydney, which has become a ghost town thanks to the Light Rail project. Picture: John Fotiadis Source: News Corp Australia
There will also be minimal if any benefit for the enormous cost and overall loss worn by taxpayers.

“The extra traffic created by WestConnex will lead to more road trauma, traffic noise and air pollution across the Sydney metropolitan area,” Mr Standen said.

DOG-WHISTLING DEBATES

Despite the exodus of people from the state, Ms Berejiklian in October called for a drastic cut to immigration levels, which she claimed had been allowed to “balloon out of control”.

“It’s time to tap the brakes and take a breather on immigration levels to this state. We should return to Howard-era immigration levels in NSW,” Ms Berejiklian told The Daily Telegraph.

The only problem is that analysis has shown the permanent migration level has remained unchanged and the net overseas migration increase is largely due to international students.

Those students contribute billions of dollars to the economy each year and efforts to reduce the flow could have an unintended financial impact, experts say.

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Premier Gladys Berejiklian wants to cut migration to NSW. Picture: AAP Source: AAP
Given the current state of chaos, planning expert Dr Shane Geha said overseas migration is the thing that will save Sydney — not cripple it.

“I understand there’s some strong rhetoric about cutting immigration and slowing population growth, but it’s just wrong,” Dr Geha said.

“Our future depends on immigration. Strong population growth and significantly higher density living is the solution to our problems and any contrary suggestion is just nonsense.”

The truth about the cost of living in Australia

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