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Thread: Bunnings the great unAustralian
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25th April 2009, 03:35 PM #16Hammer Head
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at least the government made them not open until 1pm in NSW.
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25th April 2009, 03:52 PM #17.
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25th April 2009, 04:44 PM #18
Depending on what time they opened affects my opinion. If they opened after 12 then I don't really have an issue with it. Locally, the supermarket, fish & chip shop, galleries, land sales office and others all opened at 1300. I saw people from all these businesses at either dawn service or the main march. Respects were paid but not everyone plays two up and drinks rum all day. If they opened normal hour's then my opinion alters significantly.
It's only a mistake if you don't learn from it.
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25th April 2009, 05:36 PM #19Deceased
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I used to work for a private golf club. The Anzac day tradition was:
Strictly no play before 1.00pm, any member disobeying that direction was hauled before the committee and had their membership suspended for a month. I know it happened.
The club made no money on that day as the bar trade did not even cover the additional penalty rates for the staff working. Also the club made a donation to the local RSL equal to the total trade and comp fees received on that day so financially it was a dead loss.
But it satisfied the club's desire to do its civic duty as well as its obligations to its members. Remember the older members were mainly exservicemen who established this tradition.
I knew quite a few clubs who did the same so don't assume that the old folks and their sporting clubs are making money on Anzac day.
Peter.
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25th April 2009, 09:31 PM #20
A store opening (or not) on any particular day should be at the discretion of its management and workers; if there are enough people willing to work and shop on that day - be it ANZAC, Christmas, Easter, Chinese New Year, Mouloud, Ganesh Chathurthi or Bathurst 500 - then let them do what they want. Not being retired, my retail therapy times are already constrained by the demands of work and children; two otherwise useful shopping days are already off the calendar because of weird religious festivals involving zombies, so I'd really prefer not to add any more to the list.
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25th April 2009, 10:01 PM #21
As long as workers are not forced to work on public holidays and weekends I think it's fine for them to open and as said above after 12.00 or 1.00 once respects have been paid. But from what I have heard a lot of people get coerced into working public holidays. Once everyone could have Saturday and Sunday off to spend time with there familys but over the years this time has been eroded away and as a consiquence a lot of familys have suffered. How many familys these days sit down for a Sunday baked dinner with the whole family any more? Some but nowhere like the numbers in years gone by. It's just more erosion of our family time and relaxation time, Dad, Mum or both are at work.
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26th April 2009, 12:49 AM #22China
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Any business should be able to open when and for how long they choose, it is up to the individual to decide if he/she will patronise that business, ( on the other hand any reason not to shop at Bunnings is a good one)
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26th April 2009, 04:26 AM #2369Guitars Guest
Opinions are like really great pieces of wood, everyone has one. Not shopping or going to a shop anymore because they opened on Anzac Day or Christmas Day etc, wouldn't leave us with many shops to go to for the rest of the year! On Anzac Day pubs are open, casinos,pokies clubs,newsagency's,supermarkets,petrol stations and bunnings.....the list goes on, and we play football. Personally I would rather see someone buying tools or wood at bunnings than getting rotten drunk at a pub and flushing their pay down the pokies, now if anything was to be disrespectful to the Anzacs, that surely would..!!
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26th April 2009, 09:17 AM #24
Maybe Bunnings doesn't have that much to be ashamed about if we look at the actions of the Victorian RSL
http://www.theage.com.au/national/po...0425-aitd.html
The dollar rules, even in the RSL, and they don't have to answer to shareholders.
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26th April 2009, 10:16 AM #25Member
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Why bash Bunnings? Just about everything was open after 13:00pm. What about factories, refineries, power stations, etc. They continue to operate and make money, most 365 days a year. Are they un-Australian too? I think Anzac day gets the respect it deserves, but I don't agree that the world needs to stop for everyone. I stopped going out to pubs on Anzac day, because there were too many idiots that thought the idea was getting to drunk to walk and making idiots of themselves. Leave it up to everyone to celebrate (or ignore) in their own way, rather than being told, you must do this, you can't do this, etc. etc.
What did I do yesterday, spent the day working at home, because that's what Anzacs and others have fought to allow me to do. What I want when I want it.
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26th April 2009, 11:01 AM #26SENIOR MEMBER
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hear hear blonk,
very well said.
regards, justin.
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26th April 2009, 03:06 PM #27
I marched yesterday. I have no problem with shops etc opening. That is why i served, to preserve our freedom of choice.
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26th April 2009, 05:39 PM #28Maybe Bunnings doesn't have that much to be ashamed about if we look at the actions of the Victorian RSL
http://www.theage.com.au/national/po...0425-aitd.html
The dollar rules, even in the RSL, and they don't have to answer to shareholders.
Check my facebook:rhbtimber
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