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Brain: I actually know quite a bit I've just got nothing to show for it in this circumstance. Level 1 These people arent working their regular jobs because they are fighting fires. Unless you want them going back to work you have to support them. That or proper state fire protection + proper funding. Ausgov, you cant have a system that completely relies on volunteers and have no support network for them. That does not make sense. They will be forced to give up the fight for lives and property so they can go support their families leaving massive fires undefended. level 2 Wait what?!? Your volunteer firefighters aren¡Çt getting paid at all? Here in Germany our volunteer firefighters continue to be paid as normal by their employer in situations as this. level 2 I'm a manager in Australia and one of my staff is a CFA volunteer. When he goes out to assist with the fires, we still pay him... It's the right thing to do. level 2 Our firies are renowned for being selfless, fighting other fires when their own homes are at risk, etc. Our mongrel government is relying on that fact to screw them over. They won't even upgrade their P2 masks, which don't form a seal and block up when wet to P3s. level 2 leaving massive fires undefended. Whoa whoa, whose side are you on here?! We need to fight fires not defend them! level 2 Maybe insurance companies should pay as it would be cheaper than paying out for the houses that have been lost level 2 *Portugal had entered the chat. level 2 In Italy we also have the same problem. Emergency Medical Services completely rely on volunteers with few/very few paid EMT. Luckily our volunteer organizations are quite advanced and have lots of volunteers and we can cover most of the country 24/7 level 2 get the protesters to fight the fires, they like to waste their time away from a job level 2 That's the idea, /r Paupericide level 2 Are we getting to the point where we are just going to start subverting the government entirely and crowdfunding public works and services? I feel like it's coming sooner than later as the elite and "leaders" continue to ignore the average people in their countries level 2 The more I learn of this, the more it feels like an issue in Nationstates you have to address level 2 I wonder if they get any workers compensation if any injuries happen or if anyone dies. I doubt it. Don't be sorry though. The climate denying leader just returned from vacation while his country burned. level 2 Imagine if they all followed the actions of our PM and put their own interests first.... (Hawaii) level 2 The president over there should resign or be thrown out of office by the people level 2 But according morriscum, they wanted to be there. Perhaps firefighters should crowdsource trips with the family to Hawaii if firefighting is too hard? Or tickets to one of the tests? Are the ashes back? Checkmate libtards /s.
The Body 2009 audiobook edition cover Author Stephen King Country United States Language English Genre Coming-of-age story Publisher Viking Publication date 1982 Media?type Print ( Hardcover) The Body is a novella by American writer Stephen King, originally published in his 1982 collection Different Seasons and adapted into the 1986 film Stand by Me. Some changes were made to the plot of the film, including changing the setting year from 1960 to 1959 and the location of Castle Rock from Maine to Oregon. The story takes place during the summer of 1960 in the fictional town of Castle Rock, Maine. After a boy from Chamberlain, Maine, named Ray Brower disappears and is presumed dead, twelve-year-old [1] Gordie Lachance and his three friends, Chris Chambers, Teddy Duchamp, and Vern Tessio set out "on a quest" [1] to find his body along the railway tracks [1] after telling their parents they will be camping out because they consider it to be a "rite of passage. " [2] "Because they are young, the idea of finding the body excites them, making this trip an adventure. " [1] During the course of their journey, the boys, who all come from abusive or dysfunctional families, come to grips with death and the harsh truths of growing up in a small factory town that does not seem to offer them much in the way of a future. [1] "It is not until they actually see the boy's body that they finally confront the reality of death. " [1] "The kid was dead. The kid wasn't sick, the kid wasn't sleeping. The kid wasn't going to get up in the morning anymore... or catch poison ivy or wear out the eraser on the end of his Ticonderoga No 2 during a hard math test. The kid was dead. " [1] In comparison to King's prior works, the narrative of The Body is complicated in that it is told in first-person point of view by the now adult Gordon Lachance. Most of the story is a straightforward retrospective of what happened, but comments, or entire chapters that relate to the present time, are interspersed throughout. Although he is only 12 at the time of the story, Gordie's favorite diversion is writing and storytelling. During the narrative, he tells stories to his friends, and two stories are presented in the text as short stories by Gordon Lachance, complete with attribution to the magazines in which they were published. Plot summary [ edit] Vern Tessio informs his three friends that he has overheard his older brother, Billy, talking with his friend Charlie Hogan, about inadvertently discovering the corpse of Ray Brower, a boy from Chamberlain, Maine, a town 40 miles or so east of Castle Rock, who has gone missing while going out to pick blueberries. The four friends decide to find it so as to be famous. Gordie explains how he and each of his friends come from either abusive or dysfunctional homes: Gordie's older brother Dennis (a. k. a. Denny) has been killed in a car accident while undergoing basic training in the army, and his parents (who are old enough to be his grandparents) have largely ignored him since then. Gordie also struggles over his brother's death and searches for a way to make peace with his loss. Chris is regularly abused by his alcoholic father and older brother, and is treated with contempt by his teachers because of his family's criminal reputation. Teddy's father suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder after returning from World War II and burned both of Teddy's ears against a stove in a fit of rage that caused him to be sentenced to a sanitarium. Although he suffers vision and hearing problems, Teddy still holds his father in high regard due to his military service. Vern, although his parents do not seem to be abusive towards him, is harassed by his brother and continues a long-term search for a jar containing several dollars' worth of pennies he buried under his porch. Gordie, Chris, and Teddy all believe that Vern's brother Billy stole the jar. Vern refuses to believe this since he hates his brother and doesn't want to admit Billy outsmarted him because of the trauma Billy has caused him. The boys walk along the railroad tracks toward the presumed location of the corpse. Along the way, they trespass at the town dump and are chased by Chopper, the dump custodian Milo Pressman's dog. Milo insults Teddy's father, which causes Teddy to unleash his anger on Milo. Gordie and Vern are nearly run over by a train while crossing a trestle. While at a resting point, Chris predicts that Gordie will grow up to become a famous writer ? perhaps he will even write about his friends one day. When the boys finally find the body, a gang of bullies arrives just after they do. The gang is composed of leader John "Ace" Merrill, Vern's older brother Billy, Chris's older brother Richard (nicknamed "Eyeball"), Charlie Hogan, Norman "Fuzzy" Bracowicz, Vince Desjardins, and Jack "Jackie" Mudgett. The older boys are upset to see the younger group of four friends, and during an argument, Chris pulls a gun belonging to his father from his bag and fires into the air. Chris then threatens Ace, and after a brief standoff, Ace realizes that Chris is serious and the teenagers leave. Having seen the body, the boys realize that there is nothing else to be done with it and return home without further incident. The older boys ultimately decide to phone in the location of the body as an "anonymous tip", and it is eventually found by the authorities. Some days after the confrontation, Ace and Fuzzy break Gordie's nose and fingers, and kick him in the testicles, and are on the verge of harming him more seriously when they are run off by Gordie's neighbor, Aunt Evvie Chalmers. Eyeball breaks his brother's arm and "leaves his face looking like a Canadian sunrise". Teddy and Vern get less severe beatings, but the boys refuse to identify their assailants to the authorities, and there are no further repercussions. The narration then goes into fast-forward, and Gordie describes the next year or so briefly, stating that Teddy and Vern drifted off, befriending some younger boys. In high school, just as Chris predicted, Gordie begins taking college preparation courses; unexpectedly, so does Chris. In spite of abuse from his father, taunts from his classmates, and distrust from teachers and even school counselors, he manages to be successful with help from Gordie. The final two chapters describe the fates of Gordie's three friends, none of whom survive past young adulthood: Vern is killed in a house fire after a party in 1966. Teddy, while under the influence of alcohol and drugs, crashes his car in 1972, killing himself and his passengers. Chris, who became an outstanding high school and college student, and is in his second year of law school, is fatally stabbed after trying to stop an argument in a fast-food restaurant. Gordie, the only survivor, continues to write stories through college, and publishes a number of them in small literary journals and men's magazines. His first novel becomes a best-seller and a successful film. Since writing about the events in 1960, he has written seven novels about the supernatural. Gordie has a wife and three children, and is revealed to be a veteran of the Vietnam War and the counter-culture of the 1960s, occasionally referred to in the flash-forward narratives during the main story. The story ends with Gordie visiting Castle Rock and seeing Ace, realizing that he managed to escape the town and is finally able to make peace with the painful memories of his childhood. Accusation of plagiarism [ edit] In Lisa Rogak 's unauthorized biography Haunted Heart: The Life and Times of Stephen King, a friend of King's, George McLeod, claimed that King had cribbed the idea for The Body from a short story McLeod had written, but these claims are disputed by King. McLeod requested a portion of the royalties from The Body and Stand by Me; King refused. McLeod sued, which ended their friendship. Since then, King has refused his fans' requests to read their manuscripts for advice; King has claimed that he is concerned that there may be further accusations of plagiarism. [3] Critical reception [ edit] Aaron Burch, a lecturer in English at the University of Michigan, wrote Stephen King's The Body: Bookmarked, [4] which analyzes the novella and describes how it influenced Burch's life, including inspiring him to become a writer. [5] See also [ edit] Stephen King short fiction bibliography References [ edit] ^ a b c d e f g May, Charles E. & Magill, Frank N. (Eds). (2001). Critical Survey of Short Fiction. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press Inc. ^ May, Charles E. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press Inc. ^ Rogak, Lisa (January 5, 2010). Haunted Heart: The Life and Times of Stephen King (First ed. ). St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0-312-60350-9. ^ Burch, Aaron (15 July 2016). Stephen King's The Body: Bookmarked. Brooklyn, New York: Ig Publishing. ISBN 978-1632460301. Retrieved 1 May 2017. ^ Rich, Jacob (7 September 2016). "Author Aaron Burch talks Stephen King's 'The Body' in his new book". The Michigan Daily. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
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