The cop on the right in the picture looks like he is fourteen.
Might look like that because he is she. Atleast her cheekbones tell that to someone who has been studying forensic anthropology for a while.
The cop on the right in the picture looks like he is fourteen.
Australians must be rich. don't you guys already pay like 400 bucks for a gram of coke?
When I was in high school cigarettes were 3 bucks a pack. not too long ago I could get them for like 4 bucks a pack in certain places.
you would have to be out of your mind to pay 2 dollars a cigarette.
And it's mostly caffeine and lidocaine.
Our wages are comparatively high (median wage is about $AU50,000, with the minimum wage sitting around $17/hour) but our cost of living is just as high. We're in the middle of a crazy housing boom where one bedroom apartments in Sydney cost upward of $400/week to rent and are selling for nearly a million dollars. A cup of coffee costs $4 or more, a beer is $8 in a pub and an average restaurant meal is over $30. Electricity is incredibly expensive and rising exponentially every year and we pay stupid prices for telecommunications and internet because there's not much competition.
When I was younger, cigarettes cost about $10 a packet, and I regularly went without food in order to buy them. I don't imagine smokers will behave any differently now that they cost $40 a packet.
Australians must be rich. don't you guys already pay like 400 bucks for a gram of coke?
When I was in high school cigarettes were 3 bucks a pack. not too long ago I could get them for like 4 bucks a pack in certain places.
you would have to be out of your mind to pay 2 dollars a cigarette.
Where are you buying your beers from? I pay $4.90 for mine at the local pub and this is in Sydney. I guess if you do buy craft beer then it is dearer.
Restaurant meals also vary. I'd say $15 + as so many people use vouchers these days or only go on certain days.
Enjoy your shiitty addiction to a drug with limited joys
I actually don't drink beer, so don't quote me on that oneA schooner of tap cider is between $6 and $9 in most Sydney pubs, so I presumed beer was about the same.
Depends where you eat. I had dinner at a not-that-fancy Vietnamese restaurant the other night and the bill for two people came to $70, but we often eat at cheaper restaurants that come to $30 - $35 for two decent size mains.
I'm in the inner west, though, so meal prices might be being driven up by the current trendiness of my suburb.
Not everyone can be as awesome as you are.