We left Australia after 15 Yrs | Responding to *NEGATIVE* Comments

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 23 ม.ค. 2025

ความคิดเห็น • 22

  • @Eric-Tan
    @Eric-Tan 13 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +2

    I enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work 👏🏼

    • @tinydetour
      @tinydetour  12 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      thank you eric

  • @Kushal-v8b
    @Kushal-v8b 7 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Love your video's ❤❤😊 stay blessed always together 🙏🙏

    • @tinydetour
      @tinydetour  7 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Thank you 🙏 😊

  • @tacorevenge87
    @tacorevenge87 14 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +1

    I’ve been 15 years in Australia. I’m a brown Latino. Never experienced racism in Australia from white Aussies. I don’t think it’s race related. I think it’s about respect, manners, culture and shared values .

    • @tinydetour
      @tinydetour  13 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      🙏

  • @shaveensingh1308
    @shaveensingh1308 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    You guys are talking only about expenses for 1.5 years... nothing on income breakdown.. how can believe that it works ???.. what are your monthy online income sources? What is the online business name? How much money you can make in a month? Any way to find this out.. a video? Oh wait that is already coming since 2023.

    • @tinydetour
      @tinydetour  วันที่ผ่านมา

      We will do a video on income when we feel the time is right, and when we feel comfortable with it .... as far as trusting us or anyone else, it is completely based on the individual 🙂

    • @henrysymes
      @henrysymes 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@tinydetour I’ll bet the “online business” is just hocking junk at a markup, i.e. “drop shipping”, or some other unethical semi-scam - hence your reticence to discuss the nature of it in public. This would scan given your limited talents which, according to yourselves, don’t include committing NSW traffic regulations to memory or being able to follow them correctly.

  • @ShanakaBandara-tb7kd
    @ShanakaBandara-tb7kd วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Hi, If you remember your early days in Australia, Did you struggled to communicate with the people or you were good with English from the beginning?
    Actually this is not about you, it's about me. Because, even I got scored 76,79,80,84 in PTE, if I honest with you, I'm struggle lot to communicate with the people in English in real life. So, I want to know your general opinion about that. Is that normal and will get vanish and used to it within few months? How that affect to find/do a job in Australia?

    • @tinydetour
      @tinydetour  15 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +1

      I'm really sorry, we don't quite have the perfect answer for that, since it depends on the level of proficiency for each person. But one thing I know is, with enough practice and time, this can definitely be resolved, as it's a learned skill

  • @8932850
    @8932850 16 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Negative comments are still comments. It reflects more on the other person than you, and an indicator that you're achieving alot in life is if you have haters. So congratulations, on building up a large enough audience to have some haters too. Keep being your authentic selves and pissing more people off in the process 😂

    • @tinydetour
      @tinydetour  16 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Haha! You’re right about that - glad you enjoy our content :)

  • @henrysymes
    @henrysymes วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I’m terribly sorry that you experienced racism, given that my countrymen are largely morons (especially in the suburbs) this is a disappointment but hardly a surprise. My heart does go out to you, though.
    I did however want to just mention that your line two argument for leaving Australia was “driving was too hard for us here and we couldn’t be bothered to learn how to do it properly” was an incredibly funny admission, and not at all a good example of governmental overreach in Australia due to your argument relying on your apparent inability to understand a very simple public safety principle while also admitting your own incompetence as drivers.
    Since the wisdom in progressively scaling tax with income and the maintenance of a minimal welfare state is lost on you I’ll try to keep the argument as a simple as possible, without reference to economics, since that’s a discipline you’re apparently entirely ignorant of.
    If many car crash, many people die or are injured, many repair bills, insurance therefore expensive.
    How to drive down insurance cost? Make fewer cars crash into each other. How make few car crash if have many?
    Regulate driving heavily. Make car crash predicate circumstances illegal, e.g. drink driving, speeding, not driving within the lines, et al. Make competent driving the norm with enforcement using fines and criminal penalties.
    This make car crashes happen l e s s, making insurance c h e a p e r, killing people less f r e q u e n t l y.
    I’m baffled that otherwise sensible and intelligent seeming people such as yourselves were defeated by the complexity of the incredibly simple logic at work regarding traffic enforcement in Australia.

    • @longhorn789000
      @longhorn789000 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Haters gonna hate, brotha.... chances are they are jealous of your life and all the excitement you have now:)

    • @henrysymes
      @henrysymes วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@longhorn789000 I personally don’t like the “excitement” of living in corrupt, overcrowded, underdeveloped SE Asian megalopolises and wouldn’t trade my comfortable existence in an Australian capital city for the dubious benefits of low personal income taxes - which also generally results in those places having untrustworthy drinking water. No thanks.

    • @tinydetour
      @tinydetour  15 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      We never said that driving was hard and we weren't bothered to learn the rules ... all we said is while rules are good, it saves lives, but over regulation is definitely not.. which is what we have in Australia. And all the best to you ... be happy

    • @longhorn789000
      @longhorn789000 14 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      @@henrysymes dude, have you ever experienced the "dubious" medical care in "underdeveloped" SE Asian countries like Malaysia, for example??!! I very recently experienced medical care in Australia and sad to say that it was below par (files getting lost, one hospital not communicating with the next hospital while transferring a patient, etc).

    • @henrysymes
      @henrysymes 13 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@tinydetour Specifically you mentioned the headaches of demerit points, among other bureaucratic consequences of incompetent driving. I’ve been driving on an open license in Australia for more than a decade and only received two demerit points during that time - and even then only for a single lapse in judgement when I was nineteen. It’s obvious, being familiar with the bureaucracy you were referencing, that yours were the headaches of personal inconvenience resulting from your own failures of knowledge and application. That you can simultaneously acknowledge the public safety dividends such regulations provide but still find them so onerous as to be a reason for an international move means you are either hilariously incapable drivers or so stunningly self-centered that you object to progress when it inconveniences you personally - and I’m inclined towards the latter on the basis of your other expressed opinions on education, taxation, and the welfare state - so I’m glad you’ve found a society run by, of, and for similarly incompetent, self-destructively lazy, compulsively greedy rent-seekers in Malaysia. You’ll fit in equally well with the digital nomad crowd or with the members of the Dewan Rakyat. I wish you well.