
'Western civilisation enjoyer' exposes tactic used by Chinese real estate firms to exclude Aussies who speak English
Drew Pavlou captured footage of several firms during a visit to Melbourne's Swanston Street and Elizabeth Street in the heart of the CBD.
The Aussie suggested that the Chinese real estate firms 'excluded' English speakers, but his followers were left divided by his video.
Mr Pavlou, who describes himself as a 'Western civilisation enjoyer', said he counted 12 Chinese real estate firms on two main shopping streets in the Melbourne CBD.
'Most of them advertise only in Chinese to foreign buyers. English speakers are excluded,' he said on social media.
'Nobody can explain how this benefits Australia during the worst housing crisis in our national history.'
In the full video, published to YouTube, Mr Pavlou said he 'counted within one 500m stretch 15 bubble tea stores and about 12 Chinese real estate firms'.
'(They) only advertise in the Chinese language for Chinese people to buy property in Australia,' he claimed. 'It was just beautiful.'
Mr Pavlou told news.com.au his video was 'not racially motivated'.
He said his family background was Greek Australian and he would equally oppose Greek real estate agencies advertising to overseas buyers.
'Young Australians are locked out of the housing market due to record-high prices and low supply, yet prime property stock is being marketed directly to offshore buyers who will never live here,' he said.
'That inevitably drives demand upward and puts extra pressure on ordinary families and first-home buyers.'
Mr Pavlou claimed a Nord International branch, captured in his video, did not include 'a single piece of English language advertising' in the shop window.
Some viewers blasted the Aussie and criticised the location of his video.
'You're literally walking through Chinatown, of course there's going to be Chinese restaurants. It would be like counting every Italian restaurant in Lygon Street or Pho Place in Springvale,' one person said.
'When you visit Chinatown and it's Chinese,' another wrote.
Someone else questioned: 'Mate you were literally in Chinatown, what do you expect?'
However, Mr Pavlou, who staged a year-long protest at the University of Queensland against Beijing's anti-democracy activities in Hong Kong, hit back at his critics.
'Chinatown is Little Bourke Street, I was on Swanston Street and Elizabeth Street,' he wrote in response to those who criticised him.
Both Swanston Street and Elizabeth Street intersect Chinatown's Little Bourke Street.
A spokesperson for Elite Real Estate, which is featured in the video, said all of their listings were advertised in English and that their multilingual team worked with clients from all backgrounds.
Kristy Zhang, the director and co-founder of Austrump Hosting, a real estate agency that was also featured, said her business served a 'diverse client base'.
'We occasionally use Chinese language materials to assist clients who prefer it, we also regularly produce and distribute all our marketing materials — including flyers and brochures — in English,' she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
19 minutes ago
- Reuters
RBA's new policy board comes with added unpredictability
SYDNEY, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Australia's central bank has a problem communicating that has injected an element of unpredictability into interest rate policy when global uncertainty is already high, and its proving costly for investors. It all stems from an April shake up at the Reserve Bank of Australia that shifted rate-setting power entirely to a new nine-member Monetary Policy Board. At just its second meeting in May, the board decided to cut cash rates by a quarter point to 3.85% and sounded more dovish than analysts expected, even briefly considering an easing of 50 basis points given the uncertainty caused by U.S. tariffs. This, combined with some soft economic data, led investors to wager heavily on another cut in July while a Reuters poll of 37 economists found 31 expected an easing. Crucially, investors were encouraged to pile into these positions because the RBA did not push back on expectations, as they had often done in the past. Imagine their surprise, then, when the MPB held rates steady in a rare spilt decision of six to three, leaving many investors with painful losses. Speaking to the media after the decision, RBA Governor Michele Bullock explained that the bank could no longer offer guidance because the rate decision was up to the board alone and it could not be pre-empted. Essentially, the RBA had changed the way it communicates to markets, without telling those markets it had changed. "Since no single MPB member can front-run the whole Board, future inter-meeting communication is unlikely to endorse or push back against market pricing," said Luci Ellis, chief economist at Westpac and a former assistant governor at the RBA. "This implies that markets will be surprised more often than in countries like the United States, where the central bank puts more weight on avoiding surprising the market." Since then, a benign inflation report now has investors equally convinced the MPB will cut rates to 3.60% at its next meeting on August 12, in part on the hope it would not want to shock twice in a row. Yet the MPB's unusual composition makes for added uncertainty as it has just two RBA officials, along with a top Treasury official and six part-time external members with backgrounds in economics, business and banking. The latter are appointed by the Treasurer of the day with input from the RBA. Markets have little to no idea what the views of these six are, and that is unlikely to change as there are only vague plans for each to make one public appearance a year. It is now quite possible RBA board members could find themselves out-voted on rates, yet the governor would still have to front the media to defend a decision they did not agree with. And, since the votes are unattributed, there might be times when it would be impossible for investors to know if the central bank had been overturned. "It's even easier for the governor to be voted down because they're clearly outnumbered by externals members," said Jonathan Kearns, chief economist at Challenger and a former top official at the RBA. "I think the board is probably feeling now more emboldened to disagree with the governor." "It does add a little bit more risk into things, but it's up to the RBA to provide good analysis and well formulated recommendations that are convincing to the external members." The new format marks the RBA as something of an outlier in global central banks. The Fed and European Central Bank have boards made up of only central bankers, while the Bank of England has five central bankers and four professional economists on its board of nine. Votes of individual board members are made public for the Fed and the BoE, which have both become more divided in recent months. Speaking to an economic forum recently, RBA Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser conceded the July decision was less predictable for markets than it should have been and said the board was still "feeling our way" on policy. He insisted this unpredictability would not be the new norm, but cautioned there would be "shocks from time to time." Investors betting on a rate cut are fervently hoping next week will not be one of those times.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
B&M shoppers spot rare flavour of Snickers they've ‘never seen' before selling for £1
B&M shoppers have spotted a rare flavour of Snickers selling for £1. Customers were surprised to see coffee flavoured versions of the classic chocolate stocked on the shelves of the bargain store. Posting on the Facebook group Food Finds UK Official, a user wrote: "Not sure if these are new, but in B&M and I've never seen this flavour!" One user wrote: "I've been meaning to check out B&M for ages now and this might just be the push I need to go." Another added: "Imported from Australia, I had them over there and so so good I'll need to head to B&M." "I will be trying these," a third wrote. The bar sells for up to £2.99 at online retailers like Bombon and Candy Mail UK - nearly triple its price at B&M. The unusual chocolate bar appears to be a rare find, currently unavailable in other major UK supermarkets. The company Mars Incorporated launched Coffee Snickers back in February, with fans describing it as a bittersweet twist on their classic peanut, caramel and chocolate combo. The controversial new flavour comes after two years of development and 13 different product prototypes. Shoppers learned of the release through NewfoodsUK on Instagram. The bar divided opinions with one user calling it a "win-win" and another saying it was "disgusting". Mars Wrigley Research & Development director Chris Hutton said: 'We know how much Aussies love their coffee, and after two years of development and 13 different product prototypes, we're excited to bring this new twist on Snickers to life. 'Snickers Coffee Flavour is a proudly Australian-made product, formulated by our local team in Ballarat to deliver on both taste and sustainability, and we can't wait for fans to try it.' It comes after B&M shoppers spotted almond flavoured Snickers at the bargain store. The bar, containing almond pieces alongside peanuts, nougat, caramel and milk chocolate, was launched in the US six years ago. But it is not typically sold in the UK, making it an unusual find. Shoppers at B&M also previously spotted a brownie Snickers, which was another hit in the US. The Snickers bar was introduced by Mars, Inc. in 1930 and was named after the Mars family's favourite horse, Snickers. For decades, the bar was sold in the UK and Ireland under the name "Marathon" before being changed to Snickers in 1990. How to save money on chocolate We all love a bit of chocolate from now and then, but you don't have to break the bank buying your favourite bar. Consumer reporter Sam Walker reveals how to cut costs... Go own brand - if you're not too fussed about flavour and just want to supplant your chocolate cravings, you'll save by going for the supermarket's own brand bars. Shop around - if you've spotted your favourite variety at the supermarket, make sure you check if it's cheaper elsewhere. Websites like let you compare prices on products across all the major chains to see if you're getting the best deal. Look out for yellow stickers - supermarket staff put yellow, and sometimes orange and red, stickers on to products to show they've been reduced. They usually do this if the product is coming to the end of its best-before date or the packaging is slightly damaged. Buy bigger bars - most of the time, but not always, chocolate is cheaper per 100g the larger the bar. So if you've got the appetite, and you were going to buy a hefty amount of chocolate anyway, you might as well go bigger.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Australia's Santos extends due diligence deadline for $18.7 billion ADNOC-led offer
Aug 11 (Reuters) - Santos ( opens new tab said on Monday it had extended the period of exclusive due diligence to an international consortium led by Abu Dhabi's National Oil Company (ADNOC), which had offered $18.7 billion for Australia's second biggest gas producer. The period for exclusive due diligence has been extended until August 22, it said. ADNOC's investment arm XRG, along with Abu Dhabi Development Holding Company (ADQ) and private equity firm Carlyle, had offered $5.76 (A$8.89) per Santos share when the proposal was announced in mid-June. XRG now stands on the cusp of a deal that would give it stakes in major operations across Australia and Papua New Guinea— pending regulatory approval. Santos has already expressed its support for the takeover. If the deal goes through, Santos will form the Asia-Pacific platform of a global LNG business, as ADNOC looks to diversify beyond the Middle East amid rising geopolitical tensions in the region.