The NDIS ‘bottomless pit’ cripples the economy.

Amazingly, Australia has found an even worse method to grow its economy than the immigration/housing Ponzi scheme: the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). This bottomless pit of public spending drives what is referred to as the “bedpan economy.”

The massive economic drain costs a fortune. Let’s be blunt: millions of Australians haven’t suddenly become disabled. Instead, a significant fiscal incentive has encouraged a substantial portion of the population to identify as disabled, while the wealthy exploit the system.

This trend is evident in the rise of new disabling terminologies such as “neurodivergence,” “ADHD,” and “spectrum.” To clarify, these conditions do exist. However, many of today’s disabilities were previously addressed as “anxiety,” which was managed with simpler solutions rather than extensive public support.

On the supply side, private equity, billionaires, and even organized crime are defrauding the entire system. For example, Domacom, an ASX-listed platform allowing investors to buy fractional stakes in property, reported that the trustee of its flagship fund has suspended new money-raising and secondary market transactions. MSC Trustees temporarily suspended the product disclosure statement used to raise about $200 million. This move came after investment schemes marketed by ASR Wealth Advisers pitched double-digit, government-backed returns to potential landlords of tenants with disabilities.

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