Stop all this looking for someone else to blame
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June 1, 2021 12.03am
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To submit a letter to The Age, email letters@theage.com.au. Please include your home address and telephone number.
THE PANDEMIC
Chip Le Grand is right (“Treacherous Waters”, Insight,
The Age, 29/5). We hesitated on testing and vaccination and got lockdown. As a paediatrician seeing children from across my region, I have noticed dangerous complacency. We procrastinate on vaccines, and complain loudly about rural areas sharing lockdown, but we have stopped worrying about cold symptoms.
Christians are Called to Face Pressure at Work But Mental Fitness is Key to Managing It
YouTube sensation Eddie Woo says Christians facing workplace challenges often say it’s not something they signed up for, but the Bible disagrees.
By 96five Contributors Monday 8 Mar 2021
By: Amy Cheng
Christians are called to face pressure and it is only when they are under pressure that their true character is revealed, according to YouTube sensation Eddie Woo.
Mr Woo gave one of the keynote presentations at City Bible Forum’s recent Life@Work conference.
The conference, which ran online for the first time in its eight-year history, was on the topic of pressure in the workplace.
Christians are Called to Face Pressure at Work But Mental Fitness is Key to Managing It
According to YouTube sensation Eddie Woo, Christians facing workplace challenges often crying it’s not something they signed up for, but the Bible disagrees.
By Amy ChengMonday 22 Feb 2021
Christians are called to face pressure and it is only when they are under pressure that their true character is revealed, according to YouTube sensation Eddie Woo.
Mr Woo gave one of the keynote presentations at City Bible Forum’s Life@Work conference on Saturday.
The conference, which ran online for the first time in its eight-year history, was on the topic of pressure in the workplace.
The bad taste will linger long after the event ends
January 17, 2021 10.00pm
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The Age, email letters@theage.com.au. Please include your home address and telephone number.
THE AUSTRALIAN OPEN
The bad taste will linger long after the event ends
I have attended the Australian Open every year for at least the past decade. But not this year.
It is clear the mighty dollar is driving the decision to proceed, despite the risk of a COVID-19 outbreak (we’re still not confident our government has learnt its lessons from the second wave), and many Victorians stranded interstate not allowed back in, while about 1200 tennis stars and their entourages arrive.