Letters to the Editor
Progressive patriotism and vision
June 19, 2025
Regardless of the efficacy of Albanese's stated positions at the NPC, I agree with John Menadue. But Patrick Gourley noted something in his article about the weasel words and waffle that has now become a staple of political oratory on both sides of politics. While Dutton's speech and delivery was completely boring and moribund, the PM's speech was laced with this rubbish. I'm sick of hearing politicians and others talk about actively responding or actively listening. Sorry, but what the hell does that mean? Is it assuring the targeted audience that they are not inertly listening or inactively doing...
Wes Mason from Gisborne
In response to: The hazards of Albanese's 'progressive patriotism'
Prescient speech by Tulsi Gabbard
June 19, 2025
Sachs and Fares sound a timely warning. US director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, has just sounded a timely warning too. Nothing “bizarre” about it, as some media would have it. She said, “I recently visited Hiroshima in Japan and stood at the epicentre of a city that remains scarred by the unimaginable horror caused by a single nuclear bomb dropped in 1945, 80 years ago. Yet this one bomb that caused so much destruction in Hiroshima was tiny compared to today's nuclear bombs. As we stand here today closer to the brink of nuclear annihilation than ever...
Geoff Taylor from Perth
In response to: Stop Netanyahu before he gets us all killed
Cometh the moment, cometh the man
June 19, 2025
Is it at all possible that Anthony Albanese is just the leader we need? The steady-as-we-go quiet achiever that we need. I hope so, because the alternative is unthinkable.
Bob Pearce from Adelaide SA
In response to: Goodbye to all that? Rethinking Australia’s alliance with Trump’s America
John Tons, it's not 'problems' that are wicked
June 19, 2025
Like “free markets” and “artificial intelligence”, problems themselves aren't living human beings, they can’t be “wicked”. That would be ministers and mandarins. Dr Kennedy got the top PM&C job by dueting with Dr Chalmers. Singing the Langton Crescent ballad of “net zero, budget repair, inflation fighting, million jobs, rising wages”, while delivering their million-plus migrants, carefree expansion in non-market jobs, and declining living standards for punters. A South Seas island with stable government, endless energy resources, and easily managed borders, ought to have low power prices, reasonably affordable housing, and negligible population-pressures. It amuses the elite to inflict...
Stephen Saunders from O'Connor
In response to: Addressing our wicked problems
WA and feds complicit in undermining net zero
June 19, 2025
Peter Sainsbury’s striking graph on gas use from 2013 to 2023 reveals a shocker: Western Australia consumes as much gas as Victoria, Queensland and NSW combined – despite having a much smaller population. How? Because 36% of WA’s gas is used by the gas industry itself just to produce LNG for export. As The Australia Institute notes, just running gas export terminals uses more gas than Australia’s entire manufacturing sector–— and over twice what households use. WA’s gas consumption and emissions have both soared over the decade, making it the biggest handbrake on Australia’s climate goals. It’s also stalling...
Ray Peck from Hawthorn
In response to: Environment: WA addicted to producing, burning and exporting gas
Oz government schizophrenia
June 19, 2025
Paul Keating is right to take to task the part of the federal government that this week wants to join the US in war with China. Last week, it seems we weren’t automatically joining the US in fighting China. After all, this week Trade Minister Don Farrell celebrated ChAFTA, the free trade agreement with China, at a 400-person event in Melbourne. I quote from China Daily: “Australia's Minister for Trade and Tourism, Don Farrell, praised ChAFTA for its 'substantial benefits for both Australia and China'. Since coming into force in December 2015, two-way trade has more...
Geoff Taylor from Perth
In response to: Australia: A sovereign continent not for Marles to gift away
Going for less than a song
June 19, 2025
How stupid is Donald Trump? Greenland is closer, but it doesn't want to be taken over, annexed or bought... and it's got all that pesky ice and snow. Why isn't Trump turning his eyes to Australia? We've got all that Greenland has to offer without the hassle of all that freezing stuff. And our government is doing its darnedest to give us to to the US on a plate. Seems we can't wait to go to yet another unnecessary war. One thing we can be sure of though... it won't be Marles' or Albanese's children on the...
Margaret Callinan from Hawthorn VIC 3122
In response to: Australia: A sovereign continent not for Marles to gift away
Defence, defence and more defence
June 19, 2025
I’ve no doubt that China considers plans for defence as part of its normal governance and every country should and would be irresponsible if it didn’t . It may be that Chinese media is beholden to the Chinese Government or more likely that Australian media covers Chinese politics with such bias. But any world champion fighter will tell you that you don’t broadcast your punches and, if you do, you will lose. Richard Marles is unsuitable as Australia’s defence minister because for a start he can’t help himself broadcasting our punches, he can’t keep his mouth shut. Anthony...
Bob Pearce from Adelaide SA
In response to: australia-a-sovereign-continent-not-for-mar
Marles implies we should dump the US
June 18, 2025
Marle's admission we are essential to American military action against China is necessarily an admission that we are a primary pre-emptive target for China to defend itself as long as we have the US as an ally. Also that we can enforce stability in the region simply by kicking the US out of Australia, including Pine Gap.
Dave Bath from Horsham, Victoria
In response to: Australia: A sovereign continent not for Marles to gift away
Manufacturing consent
June 18, 2025
A worthwhile analysis, but to get a deeper understanding it needs to have some context. In that respect, I would recommend two ground-breaking books that set out very clearly that context. The first is Taking the Risk out of Democracy by a brilliant but now sadly deceased Australian academic Alex Carey and the other, even more detailed, is Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media by Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman. Both provide a compelling reason why faith in the MSM has been in constant decline for the last century: the concentration in control of that mass media...
Les Macdonald from Balmain NSW
In response to: Social media takes over as main source of news as trust falls
Trump is capitalism personified
June 17, 2025
As strange as it may seem, Donald Trump may be our saviour if we learn. Trump is capitalism personified. While the world watches on alarmed as the body count rises in Gaza, Trump sees it as an opportunity to build a hotel/resort, an opportunity to make a dollar for himself and his mates. He has shown that he cannot be trusted. Despite attempts to control freedom of information, regulators and the media there have enough examples of capitalistic corruption uncovered — GFC, wars, pharmaceuticals, banking royal commission, consultants and defence spending — for all to understand that the...
Bob Pearce from Adelaide SA
In response to: nuclear-subs-taking-on-water/
Corporate law needs to factor in environmental damage
June 16, 2025
It is a mistake to allow corporations to be formed with a directive that their directors should only “act in the[ir] companies' best interests” (as the corporate law now does). Nearly all of Australia’s corporations make money without severely harming the environment. It’s time for Australia’s Parliament to impose an obligation on directors of all companies to make sure their company doesn’t cause severe harm. This can be achieved by adding just 11 words to their existing duty “to act in the best interests of the corporation. Those words are, “but not at the expense of severe damage to...
Robert Hinkley from Berry, NSW
In response to: The murky world of lobbying and the North West Shelf
Can we believe this man?
June 16, 2025
Stewart Sweeney’s article is extremely timely. Just look at the ABC news today: “Shortly after Israel's strikes on Friday, US President Donald Trump said: 'The US had nothing to do with the attack on Iran'. Nothing, that is, except it was forewarned, and that central to Israel's military capability is US funding, US hardware, US intelligence and US technology.” That highlights the seeming perfidy surrounding the US-Iran nuclear and sanctions talks. There is a a further cost to the lives of many innocent people, and the real threat of an expansion of the conflict, drawing in yet...
Geoff Taylor from Karratha
In response to: Australia’s dependence on the US does not end with Trump
Right to peaceful protest essential for democracy
June 16, 2025
John Menadue’s recommendations for a more robust, more transparent, more participative rather than heavily (allegedly) representative democracy are all sensible, reasonable and much needed. It’s a tragedy and shameful that we cannot rely on either of the major political parties to advance these reforms. In fact, we can be confident that the two major parties will conspire together to avoid most of them or render all but ineffective any that they are dragged kicking and screaming to legislate. Absent from John’s list, although it may be implied in his bill of rights, is enshrining in legislation the right...
Peter Sainsbury from Darling Point
In response to: PM Albanese promises to restore trust in democracy
Cut the apron strings
June 16, 2025
Australia is a remarkably safe country. I disagree. Australia was a remarkably safe country. But since then, the US has infiltrated the ADF and associated entities; We have signed up to handing over billions for subs we won't get and couldn't operate without the US if we did get them; We have increasing numbers of US military bases and facilities on our soil; We joined the US in patrols and military exercises by land and sea perilously close to China's borders, air and sea limits; and We have been painting a bigger and bigger...
Margaret Callinan from Hawthorn VIC 3122
In response to: Perhaps Marles should ask the US why it is building up forces around China
Use words with care
June 16, 2025
Here’s a novel and innovative idea. Let’s stop talking about raising our defence spending, let’s stop talking about the threat from China, Russia and refugees. Let’s stop beating the drums of war in any sphere. Let’s replace words like fight, conquer and battle (eg fight against COVID, conquering inflation, battle against climate change) and start using our language to remember the power of diplomacy – based on co-operation and focused on our shared humanity. Let’s work with, co-operate on, and open dialogue about; let’s reach consensus, acknowledge our shared goals, and actually remind ourselves we are on a...
Alyssa Aleksanian from Hazelbrook
In response to: Why Australia needs a defence minister
The president has no clothes
June 16, 2025
The underlying truth barely mentioned in this article is the truth about Trump. For all his chest-beating and deal-making, world leaders see him for the joke he is. Putin and Netanyahu pay him lip service and continue to do as they please, as conquering whatever territory they choose knowing that the self-proclaimed king is naked. Meanwhile, the rest of the world leaders go about circumventing Trump's economic reforms, limiting their losses in the knowledge that it is the US that is suffering the most. Hopefully, Albanese is up to the job of putting Australia first. Mexico and Canada...
Bob Pearce from Adelaide SA
In response to: US progressives say stop supporting 'rogue genocidal regime' as Israel wages illegal war on Iran
Harrowing climate impacts of Labor's decisions
June 13, 2025
Julian Cribb is right to point the finger at Albanese’s Labor for the human and environmental toll that approving vast carbon pollution from projects like the North West Shelf gas terminal will cause. From sea-level rise and extreme weather events, to water shortages from glacial melt and the rapid spread of vector-borne diseases, the predicted impact of Australia’s ongoing fossil fuel addiction is harrowing. And our unwillingness to seize the opportunity to become a powerful electro-state is frustrating. With a thumping majority and support from other progressive politicians, Albanese has a chance to create a real legacy of...
Amy Hiller from Kew
In response to: Go-ahead for new carbon bomb marks Australia as enemy of the region
Remember the way NZ was expelled from ANZUS?
June 13, 2025
Paul, you're quite right with most of what you say, but why not go on to suggest we need wise diplomats who will know how to tell the US that we will not only leave AUKUS, but will suspend our membership of ANZUS as long as the US continues down the Trump régime path of international demolition in the interests of real-estate deals? Of course, it would be a massive wrench for the prime minister and the member for Corio to face up to the shambles of ANZUS that resulted in 1986 when a previous Labor Government joined with...
Bruce Wearne from Ballarat Central
In response to: AUKUS: America saving us from ourselves
Honour for Morrison, dishonour for Australia
June 13, 2025
The awarding of Australia's highest honour to Scott Morrison is indeed an affront to decency. It utterly debases our entire awards system. Most of us, I imagine, fume in impotent rage and move on. But what can we say to those who were harmed — if not destroyed — by Robodebt? How can it be that their nation has no difficulty in honouring one of the chief architects of that vicious, illegal scheme, yet finds it impossible to bring its perpetrators to justice? It is one more kick in the guts from a nation which has repeatedly failed in...
Richard Barnes from Melbourne
In response to: Award for Morrison an insult to the truth
LULUCF and the Emperor’s new clothes
June 13, 2025
Emma Lovell and Jessica Allen show how Australia is hiding behind the notorious Australia clause in the 2005 Kyoto Protocol to claim substantial reductions in our carbon emissions with only little actual reduction from our major emitting industries. The Australia clause, which allows Australia to benefit from the Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry Sector (LULUCF) factor, was widely criticised when Australia insisted upon it. In targetting emissions reductions in comparison to those from exceptionally high-emission years, the Howard Government set an absurdly low target for actual emissions reduction. This may be well and good in terms of...
Chris Young from Surrey Hills, Vic
In response to: Australia’s latest emissions data shows a giant fossil fuel problem
AUKUS is a dud club
June 12, 2025
News is splashing around about Trump launching an inquiry into AUKUS to see if it meets his America First policy. Of course, it does. We have to pay the US $368 billion (US$239 billion) over three decades for being part of the AUKUS club and, according to the contract, they don’t have to give us anything. Zip. Of course, Trump will love this contract, all the while laughing at Australia in the back rooms of the White House for signing up to such a dud deal.
Alyssa Aleksanian from Hazelbrook
In response to: Hugh White and our post-American future
Colonial minds
June 12, 2025
The Australian Government's reliance on a special relationship with the US dating back to 1942 is only part of the story. Our so-called leaders have always looked to a great and powerful friend, from 1788 on. Our leaders have never outgrown the colonial mentality. They are apparently incapable of imagining an independent Australia. The old political parties are relics of the 19th and 20th centuries. We need to get them out of our Parliament entirely. The growing numbers of independents and progressives is a start in this process, though so far they have not stepped up to international affairs.
Geoff Davies from Braidwood NSW
In response to: Hugh White and our post-American future
Hugh White sees half the elephant
June 12, 2025
I very much welcome Henry Reynolds ‘ wise exegesis on Hugh White’s essay, which I now must read. I share White’s reported view that Australia must now declare clearly to US that we will not go to war against China as the US’ ally over Taiwan. Urgently overdue. But it goes further than this, into the need to reshape our whole foreign policy world. We must reclaim Australia’s full sovereignty in this rapidly emerging multipolar world. We must truly become a friend to all and an enemy to none . We must stop demonising Russia and being trapped in...
Tony Kevin from Canberra
In response to: Hugh White and our post-American future
Let's talk sea-level rise, shall we?
June 12, 2025
I am grateful to Julian Cribb for his focus on sea-level rise (The latest numbers indicate a rise of between 0.5 and 1.9 metres by 2100 under existing carbon emissions. This is about twice the previous estimate.) When you consider even just the implications for Australian cities, it is mind-boggling. Docklands in Melbourne, for instance, might be 12 metres above sea-level but storm surges on top of nearly two metre sea-level rise will make life unpleasant. In another letter, I mentioned the Mekong delta at 0.84 metres above current sea-level. There are huge implications for global food production....
Jenny Goldie from Cooma NSW
In response to: Go-ahead for new carbon bomb marks Australia as enemy of the regionMerchants of
Australia is at a departure point
June 11, 2025
Ghaith Krayem lays things out re Palestine quite correctly. The latest sanctions move from Penny Wong marks a real point of departure by us and some partner nations from the US path. What is the US path? Well, the position of Mike Huckabee, US ambassador to Israel, is spelt out very clearly, unless, which is possible I suppose, he has changed his views in eight years. This from The Guardian today: “The ambassador’s position has deep roots in his evangelical Christian beliefs and longstanding support for Israeli settlement expansion. During his 2008 presidential campaign, Huckabee said: 'There is...
Geoff Taylor from Perth
In response to: Palestine and the gravitational politics of erasure
No thanks and you can have mine back
June 11, 2025
I thought the biggest insult of all time was the presentation of the Queen's/King's Birthday honour to the husband of a British monarch by Tony Abbott until the presentation of an award — any award — to Scott Morrison. All the volunteers who have fought fires, cleaned up after floods, delivered food aid, worked at meals on wheels, coached kids sport, fixed farmers' burnt fences, worked sausage sizzles etc etc should respond with a great big no thanks until we stop rewarding those who do their job and get paid very well for it. Get paid very well...
Bob Pearce from Adelaide SA
In response to: Scott Morrrison – Australia's worst AO recipient
You're playing into Albanese's hands, Julian Cribb
June 11, 2025
Julian Cribb's carbon bomb drowning Pacific, though rallying emotionally, is music to Woodside Albanese's ears. He can carry on regardless with his immigration bomb drowning Australia. Over 2022-25, his 1.3 million (net) tally is an unbelievable five to six times the historical average, blowing Kevin Rudd's record out of the water. Hardly anyone has blinked. With our self-absorbed intelligentsia applauding, it's barely a political issue. Sussan Ley doesn't want to know. It follows, Albanese will inflict more of the same, over 2025-31.
Stephen Saunders from O'Connor
In response to: Go-ahead for new carbon bomb marks Australia as enemy of the region
Young Australians won't accept Labor hypocrisy
June 11, 2025
Still reeling from Murray Watt’s rushed approval of Woodside’s North West Shelf project, I wasn’t ready for Samantha Hepburn’s rundown of six more mega gas projects. The emissions from these alone would blow Australia’s net-zero-by-2050 pledge to pieces. As Hepburn notes, Labor’s review of environment laws is a chance to make climate impact central to approvals. But in 2024, Albanese ruled out a climate trigger. Still, with 25 Labor, 11 Greens and three independents backing net zero — and public anger over the NW Shelf decision — momentum may be building to revive it. While the PM’s second-term vision...
Ray Peck from Hawthorn, Vic
In response to: Six more giant gas projects could join Labor's latest carbon bomb
As we awake from the American dream...
June 11, 2025
Les MacDonald’s summary of the military capabilities of the two belligerent superpowers makes frightening reading; that’s if you can count America as a superpower at all. Trump and his cronies may be sitting on a superpower arsenal, but as the Trump dictatorship starts to unfurl its true colours, the support of the citizenry is being withdrawn. Moreover, presuming the superpower clash Trump is urging comes about, China will be bombing Taiwan, not Pearl Harbour. Japan’s savage rampage through Mongolia and China didn’t stir the isolationists in the 1930s doing so nicely out of the Lend/Lease program. It wasn’t till...
John Mosig from Kew, Victoria
In response to: US unlikely to be able to hold its own against China
War with China
June 10, 2025
Les McDonald makes a valid point in saying that the US no longer has the naval or merchant fleet strength to invade China. But I suggest that's not in the Pentagon's war plans. If they have a coherent thought on the matter, Washington's military leaders want to deter China from invading Taiwan, or punishing it if it does. That involves massive bombing from the air, as Curtis LeMay did in North Koreas in 1952-3. No land combat. The danger, of course, is that bombing could escalate to include the use by either side of nukes. Let us hope...
Richard Broinowski from Paddington
In response to: Les MacDonald's US unlikely to be able to hold its own against China
The two-state solution is a chimera
June 10, 2025
Once again the chimera of a two-state solution is raising its head in Palestine. And as usual, Israeli approval is deemed essential. The current configuration of the state of Israel has, or so is my understanding, neither a constitution nor declared national boundaries. The lack of a constitution may not be a problem since Israel already has diplomatic relations with many countries. The lack of declared national boundaries may be another matter. How can a state without boundaries cut away a portion of the land it occupies and claims and declare it a sovereign state belonging to another?...
Hal Duell from Alice Springs
In response to: Talk of a two-state solution may not go much further
It's commentary on the evidence, not conspiracy
June 10, 2025
Your correspondent has two problems: (i) the IHRA definition which falsely declares criticism of Israel is antisemitic, trashing the memory of the Holocaust (imagine if we couldn't criticise Germany because it's anti-Germanic) and (ii) the abundance of evidence of genocide that's available pretty much in real time. We see the dead bodies, the razed homes, farms and infrastructure, hear evidence from humanitarian aid workers, hear Israel's leaders, civilians, settlers urging the continuation of the slaughter. Most recently, aid getting in is negligible, roads to aid stations have been declared combat zones, aid stations have become IDF targets. Why...
Margaret Callinan from Hawthorn VIC 3122
In response to: When critique sounds suspiciously like conspiracy
Childhood learnings
June 10, 2025
Oh! Patricia Edgar, how I hope that Mr Albanese has a skerrick of what he learnt as a child still in his brain to help him come to his senses now. He has a son. What on earth are he and his team thinking? That it's all too hard – not like the brave little engine. Thank you.
Judith Gamper from Kambah ACT 2902
In response to: Albanese should remember his childhood - and the rhymes he learnt
Cults never die
June 10, 2025
Further to Andrew Scott's recent article, the long march of neoliberalism has witnessed greed transform from a vice into a virtue and the accumulation of extraordinary wealth is now considered the pinnacle of human achievement. Following the global financial crisis, many neoliberal acolytes and disciples of laissez-faire economics admitted their entire intellectual edifice had collapsed. The corporate welfare solution of lucrative bailouts and quantitative easing was like feeding strawberries to a donkey and it merely transformed the protean elements of fascism into a dystopian paradigm of gangster capitalism. Its trajectory and devastating consequences are evident throughout most advanced...
Bernard Corden from Spring Hill Queensland
In response to: Pushing back with new urgency against neoliberalism
Challenging policy isn’t prejudice
June 10, 2025
Raising concerns about the weaponisation of antisemitism isn’t the same as denying that antisemitism exists. It’s about questioning how the term is sometimes used to shut down legitimate discussions about human rights and foreign policy. That doesn’t mean all criticism is fair or balanced, but it does mean we should be able to talk about these issues without being accused of discrimination. It’s also important to recognise that advocacy by Jewish groups, Palestinian groups, or anyone else, plays a role in shaping public debate. Highlighting the influence of lobbying, from any side, isn’t sinister. It’s part of understanding how...
Meg Schwarz from Macclesfield, Adelaide
In response to: When critique sounds suspiciously like conspiracy
Scott Morrrison – Australia's worst AO recipient
June 10, 2025
Scott Morrison wouldn't hold a hose while the East Coast burnt. He wasn't in a hurry to tackle COVID. He subsumed five federal portfolios without telling the ministers or the nation. He was widely despised for his style by his colleagues in the ABC Nemesis program. He now works for American Global Strategies, a lobbying outfit that promotes the AUKUS defence fiasco. He successfully launched a bottomless spend for Australi to reset national defence strategy based around a political wedge with the ALP. Scotty is now working for America's military industrial complex interests as a fully superannuated...
Donald Clayton from Bittern Victoria 3918
In response to: Let's rethink Australia's national security
Hegseth's immaturity
June 10, 2025
..[Pete] Hegseth was in a fighting mood. 'America is proud to be back in the Indo-Pacific – and we’re here to stay,' he stated ... Hegseth is too young to remember that the US fought an inglorious withdrawal to the 37th parallel in the Korean War, was defeated in the Vietnam War, was humiliated by the Taliban leading to a disastrous retreat from Afghanistan and has interfered in the politics of Iran, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Pakistan Taiwan, Korea and now India. Maybe we will soon hear the cry of the 1950s in the Caribbean – ...Yankee, go home!
Peter Gumley from Northern Rivers, NSW
In response to: The Hegseth directive: Australia spend more
Don’t mention it
June 10, 2025
A total of $917 billion was spent on the recent Elbit arms contract with Israel, $800 million (plus) handed over by Richard Marles earlier this year to the US for AUKUS (plus another $12 billion a year until we receive these hypothetical submarines). But flood victims, you can have a $800 one-off payment to clean out your house, buy new beds, furniture, redo your plumbing and feed yourself: $800 to put you and your family’s life back on track. We won’t contemplate an inquiry into the many insurance companies that were hoping to charge you a minimum $28,000...
Alyssa Aleksanian from Hazelbrook
In response to: Merchants of Death
When critique sounds suspiciously like conspiracy
June 6, 2025
John Menadue’s platform has become a staging ground for increasingly toxic screeds masquerading as foreign policy critique. Two recent pieces — Weaponisation of Antisemitism... and We Must Confound the Zionist Lobby— cross the line from criticism into crude conspiracy. The claim that antisemitism is “weaponised” to silence debate collapses under scrutiny. Israel is one of the most criticised nations on earth – by the UN, media, academics, and NGOs. If there is a Zionist conspiracy to suppress criticism, it’s doing a remarkably poor job. Every cause has its advocates, but only Jewish advocacy is routinely framed as shadowy...
Adam Slonim from St Kilda East
In response to: We Must Confound The Zionist Lobby
US won’t stop the murders of the hungry in Gaza
June 6, 2025
A great article from Ralph Nader, a man who ran four times to be US president himself. We watch on in utter disbelief as UN Ambassador to the UN Dorothy Shea votes against a ceasefire in Gaza, knowing that that means more mass murders by Israeli forces, because US Secretary of State Marco Rubio says he wants Hamas totally eliminated, so there is “not an ember”.
Geoff Taylor from Perth
In response to: Media shortcomings in covering terrorist Netanyahu’s daily Gaza mass murders
Pre-1978 progress in China
June 6, 2025
Firstly, I should say that I agree with Jocelyn about the guidance that Sun Tzu's The Art of War could give to the West as it already does to China. A very good article that summarises well the issues confronting China and the region. One area that I think may need further exploration is the progress that China made prior to opening up. Whilst it is undoubtedly true that Mao made some massive mistakes, I think it is also important to recognise the successes of that period. In 1949, China's life expectancy was 35 years. That put it...
Les Macdonald from Balmain NSW 2041
In response to: China and the Art of War
One month in, the honeymoon is over
June 5, 2025
I could not agree more with this letter. Unfortunately, less than two weeks into the new government, we are finding out why so many people had difficulty deciding whom to vote for and left it until the last minute to choose the best of a bad bunch. The speed with which the WA gas contract was approved tells a story of how the WA votes were bought. With more to come, unfortunately. Sadly, the old saying in politics — You can’t make changes if you're not in government — only applies if you're prepared to do something once...
Bob Pearce from Adelaide SA
In response to: marles-the-archetypal-sycophan
Gaslighting by Labor
June 5, 2025
The prime minister reportedly said while visiting South Australia, “the truth is that there are more extreme weather events, and they’re more intense now. Science told us that that was the case. The science has been proven, unfortunately, to be playing out. The thing is that climate change is real and we need to respond to it. And we need, I think, to respond to it across the board. That’s why my government has a comprehensive plan to deal with climate change. If the government believes this statement, then surely the Australian public are being subjected to gaslighting about...
Richard Ruffin from ADELAIDE
In response to: Time again for stewards to do a moral health check-up
Who does own shares?
June 5, 2025
Every night on our TV news, a disproportionate amount of time is given to the share market. Nothing could be more inflationary than the trading in shares that increase in worth without actually increasing the value of the company. That worth is being increased by chief executives and boards in the pursuit of their personal bonuses. There have been many crashes when the value of shares has fallen back more in line with the actual worth of the assets. Yet another example of where the rich get richer and the poor suffer no matter what as the...
Bob Pearce from Adelaide SA
In response to: Not all Americans own shares
Wake up Ross – net-zero's a scam
June 5, 2025
Ross Gittins lathers in Indigenous outrage over the (highly staged) Woodside decision, correctly noting it's an absolute free-kick in tax/levy terms. What he's still not ready to countenance about this massively corrupt deal, what's completely beyond Michael Keating's article the day previous, is the unmentionable that net-zero itself is a historic scam, another glorious happy birthday for Australia's political classes to have a big lend of hapless voters. After three sainted decades of UN climate action, nearly a decade of their net zero, global population, emissions, CO2, temperatures keep rising. What a surprise! I mean, all they're...
Stephen Saunders from O'Connor, ACT
In response to: In one awful decision, Albanese has revealed his do-nothing plan
Albanese and Gaza: Decency or dog act?
June 5, 2025
Peter Rodgers asked: whether, by repeating the statement that [Israel] has used starvation as a weapon of war which Anthony Albanese, finally, has condemned as outrageous and completely unacceptable, will there be any more substance to this fulmination? As of 4 June, we have seen added to this generalised charge of inhumanity by the Zionist forces in Israel, the shooting of Palestinians at the GHD distribution post and a declaration by the IDF that Pa;estinians are not to use roads — such as they may be — to access the GHD distribution post. So, Albo, you have direct...
Richard Llewellyn from Colo Vale
In response to: Israel-Gaza: Has Albo finally found his backbone?
A response to Tess Nikitenko
June 5, 2025
I agree with Tess that the restrictions on accurate advertising, which would help potential clients in making wise choices of psychologists, are somewhat arcane and ridiculous. However, as a fellow trauma specialist with a Masters in Counselling and several other accompanying qualifications, when I developed a pamphlet of our services I was contacted by the Australian Psychological Society with an amazing draconian restriction. They informed me that as I was not qualified as a psychologist I was not permitted to use the term psychological anywhere in our pamphlet. To be clear, I was not saying that I or any...
Maggie Woodhead from Perth, WA
In response to: Why psychologists can’t clearly say what they’re trained to do.
Super and social benefits – why the inconsistency?
June 5, 2025
The superannuation changes proposed by Dr Jim Chalmers, if carried, would result in taxation on earnings of superannuation accounts holding over $3 million dollars in assets. The tax-transfer system in general is based on the household unit. The proposed changes would mean that a household with two superannuation accounts would be subject to a super account tax threshold of $6 million, whereas a household of two sharing one superannuation account would be subject to a threshold of $3 million. This is not how the welfare system, or the pension system, works. Centrelink is absolutely rigid about enforcing household...
Roz Averis from Adelaide, SA
In response to: Don't let rich old men tell you the planned super tax is terribly bad