About 9 hours ago few of us on cbts were digging based off questions that were posted in a previous bread, then I had to get on with life.
Looks like there's currently no new bread there so I'm posting this here. Apologies if it didn't go unnoticed but I fear it might have so will risk a repost.
The crumbs an anon seemed to be dropping: https:// 8ch. net/cbts/res/215269.html#215349
The start of our discussion:
https://8ch.net/cbts/res/215269.html#215755
Apologies, the below is kind of a brain dump..
Santa doesn't exist because logistics which relate to time-zones, so final countdown is Baker Island. Next question refers to the day before, NYE. Next question is does it (NYE, also) vary. It does also vary based on timezone, as all days of the year do. The last timezone for a day to "tick over" to is American Samoa + Baker Island. The first timezone to tick over is Christmas Island. We posted a bit about Christmas island and I had to leave. Later when I reflected on "does santa clause = christmas island?" Some anon pointed out the spelling clause is not correc. I searched for the term christmas island "clause" and found this article from last year: https://www .theguardian. com/australia-news/2016/jul/27/immigration-detention-doctors-challenge-border-force-acts-secrecy-clause-in-court
More interesting stuff in the article than just the below quotes:
>"Section 42 carries a two-year jail term for any “entrusted person” – anybody who works within the immigration detention system – who makes an “unauthorised disclosure” about conditions in the camps."
>“The government has locked up vulnerable patients on remote islands, prevented journalists from reporting on conditions that have been implicated in at least three deaths and removed workers from the charity group Save the Children in the context of reports of rampant and shocking sexual abuse. Australians have a right to know the damage that is being inflicted in their name on innocent people, including children.”
>"Previously, the chief psychiatrist responsible for the care of asylum seekers in detention on Manus and Nauru, Dr Peter Young, said the camps were “inherently toxic” and that the immigration department deliberately harmed vulnerable detainees in a process akin to torture."
>"When an 12-month-old baby girl – given the pseudonym Asha – was transferred from the Nauru detention centre to Brisbane for an acute medical condition, doctors in Australia refused to discharge her from hospital once she had been treated because, they argued, the island was not safe for her."