What a pleasant surprise...we rarely get ambassadors that do AMAs.
What led you to joining NationStates to begin with?
I'm full of surprises!
I first joined NS on the recommendation of a friend some time in 2015. Telaar is the oldest one of my nations that I can still remember the password to, which I keep in Osiris. I had no clue about the offsite side of NS until late 2017 however.
Nah, it's fush and chups down here. I've been up to Aussie twice as well -- your air-con is fantastic. It makes up for how everything wants to kill you. =P Have you had any interesting stories regarding animal life up there?
Skiing's cool. Glad you didn't say snowboarding! Do you remember what mountain?
The most interesting stories would have to be seeing a platypus in South Australia when it was previously thought that all platypus were extinct from the state, seeing a huge crocodile jump for a snack while on a boat in a crocodile park, and snorkling with the ecosystem within the Great Barrier Reef. No life threatening stories yet, thankfully... I mean, we did bump into a snake once but we were a huge group and it quickly left.
And um, sadly not. Maybe somewhere near Rotorua? Sorry.
Oh, god, now we have a Kiwi and a Wallaby?
Well, at least now we have more Southerners in the region.
Anyway, as to an actual question, what madness drove you to subject yourself to Wintrean AMAs?
Oh, and since I'll never get the chance to ask, how would you say the Emu Wars impacted the modern Australian identity?
An AMA sounded like fun! Sadly I also have a very poor memory so that one's on me!
The Emu Wars were fought by one fireteam and a jeep. If you're not familiar with a Bren gun, it's not really a suppressing wide-burst machine gun; it's definitely more for precise shooting. Basically what we now use semi-auto assault rifles for nowadays.
So, they didn't have much success after realising the emus disperse and also can take a few bullets each, but to keep this memey: they later put a bounty on emus, which farmers made a
killing out of and I think this helped propagate the image of a bush-wandering Australian with a knife going out to kill stuff.