Letters to the Editor
Let us not forget Julian Assange
August 11, 2023
Stuart Rees is to be thanked for highlighting the suppression of debate and the control of information that the ALP administration seems to insist on. Just like the dark ages of Terry Sheahen and Graham Richardson. As Albanese is from the minor faction of the ALP, it would seem that the intent is to demonstrate unity by allowing the right wing to run the show and let us forget what is good for the country. It is obvious that subservience to the US is part of the ALP Right policy regardless of where this will take us. ...
John Davies from Mullumbimby
In response to: Why does the Australian Government fear dissent on AUKUS and Palestine?
Mythical Nazification of Ukraine
August 11, 2023
Chris Hermann (Letters, Aug 3) is disturbed that I referred in my article on Crimea (3 August) to Russian propaganda banging on about mythical Nazis in Kyiv. It seems I must spell out that I was referring to Russian claims about neo-Nazis permeating/influencing the government in Kyiv, not claiming that they dont exist in Ukraine, as in most countries. But his claim that Nazis have amassed a great deal of power in Kiev/Kyiv has not only not been established beyond reasonable doubt, it is utter hogwash. He may not believe me but he could listen to an actual...
Jon Richardson from Canberra
In response to: There is nothing mythical about Nazis in Ukraine
Richard Marles' repeated use of "seamless"
August 11, 2023
So many risks with AUKUS: The Australian public has been given no proper explanation of the strategic rationale behind the AUKUS deal. There is the enormous financial cost, the great uncertainty of its success, and the fact that it will distract and divert money from us adequately addressing global heating. The agreement ties us to a country that is becoming divided, dysfunctional and politically unstable. Defence Minister Richard Marles has repeatedly used the word seamless to describe the degree of closeness required in our relationship with the US for the AUKUS deal to be successful. I...
Ian Bayly from Upwey
In response to: Re Mike Scrafton's "Abandoned sovereignty" 03/08/23
'No' supporters not all white supremacists
August 11, 2023
While in agreement with the substance of Allan Patiences powerful denunciation of the morality or lack thereof in the No case against the Voice, his final argument is unconvincing. Patience makes a forceful statement of the moral imperatives propelling the Yes case indigenous marginalisation, the frontier wars history, the stolen generations, and the still-unclosed Gap in life outcomes for our First Nations peoples. Responsibility for these lies squarely in the hands of our colonial forbears and ourselves. The No argument, led by Peter Dutton, has sought, as Patience explains, to undermine the referendum for the short-term political...
Chris Young from Surrey Hills
In response to: White Australias moral backwardness
Pearls and Irritations articles are a STANDOUT
August 5, 2023
Pearls and Irritations articles are a standout and bring uniquely unparalleled journalistic information to the public domain. P&I has contributed immensely to presenting independent and honest journalism otherwise dominated by some malign MSM. May I wish P&I great success in bringing educative and pragmatic insight and knowledge to the mainstream population.
Kim Tan from Erina
In response to: A growing string of Pearls and just as many Irritations
There is nothing "mythical" about Nazis in Ukraine
August 3, 2023
P&I deservedly prides itself on publishing diverse, non-mainstream viewpoints while encouraging civil debate. However, I found Jon Richardson's article A twentieth century Terra Nullius: Crimea, Canards and Confabulations quite disturbing to read. In his apparent zeal to demonstrate that Russia does not have a valid claim over Crimea, Richardson refers to mythical Nazis in Kyiv. His denial of the existence of this detestable ideology in Ukraine appears to extend to his previous contribution. It has been established beyond reasonable doubt that Nazis not only exist in Ukraine, but have amassed a great deal of power in Kiev/Kyiv. Even the...
Chris Hermann from Sunshine Coast
In response to: A twentieth century Terra Nullius: Crimea, Canards and Confabulations
Wen Wei Po: A reply to Jonathan Leung
July 30, 2023
He is quite right saying Wen Wei Po is not an anti-Beijing newspaper. So I too was most surprised to discover it was the source of the phoney New York Times June 12 article about machine guns in Tiananmen Square mowing down protestors. The only explanation I can find for this egregious aberration says that at the time the energy of the protestors had triggered even strong pro-Beijing elements to go honest and admit previous regime mistakes (like the Cultural Revolution) had discredited the government to the point where they too were allowed to hope something better would emerge...
Gregory Clark from Tokyo, Japan
In response to: Psy-ops warriors: Tiananmen Square and the media-pack
An Earth Systems Treaty
July 24, 2023
We all need to become planetary citizens.
Geoff Holland from Portland, Oregon USA
In response to: We need an Earth System Treaty to save civilisation. And we need it now
The tragedy of Palestine
July 24, 2023
I, of course, endorse Jafar Ramini's thoughtful article written with great sorrow and passion. Occupied Palestine is, of course, the 51st state of America with all the support and benefits available to other US states, So we will not get any positive reaction to the mayhem currently facing the israeli government: it is a great pity though that this supposedly liberated and free thinking Government in Australia continues to support and recognise the rogue state called israel and refusing to honour an election promise to recognise the State of Palestine. We, like America, pander to the Jewish lobby in our...
Jono Farmer from East Fremantle WA 6158
In response to: Palestine lives
Miscarriages of justice
July 24, 2023
In the late 1970s I was unwittingly involved in the wrongful conviction of Charles Splatt for a murder in Port Adelaide. I was a public servant and a police sergeant asked me for advice about a crucial forensic matter of which I had some knowledge, but not much. With great reluctance I provided the sergeant with a formula that appeared applicable, but told him that I would not use the formula myself, and if called I would tell the court I was not an expert in the matter. It turned out that Mr Splatts subsequent conviction hinged in part on...
David Hamilton from Launceston
In response to: Miscarriages of justice: Kathleen Folbigg is one of an unknown number of people
Not just Robodebt
July 21, 2023
It is not just wrongful decisions by DHS and DSS which have had a major impact on peoples lives, but also cruelly poor administration by what is now Home Affairs.
Geoff Taylor from Perth
In response to: Robodebt and the APS
Nuclear subs deal sunk
July 21, 2023
If war in the Ukraine has taught us something it is that drones, missiles and intelligence are the future weapons of choice. Submarines, whether conventional or nuclear powered are not in the mix and thinking we might rely on six submarines or Abrams tanks, for that matter, to defend Australia is risable. The nuclear option is surely untenable, surely. That leaves us with drones and missiles based in Australia controlled from Australia as our best hope of surviving. But best we use discussion to bargain our way out of war.
Kevin McCue from Canberra
In response to: Nuclear subs deal sunk
WHOSE FAULT IS IT
July 21, 2023
In his article Mr Austen, makes no reference to where responsibility falls. It is the Minns Labour government who won the May Election? or is it the fault / failure of the former LNP government? I would suggest that it is the former LNP government, who under Gladys B. wrecked the Sydney suburban rail system by wholesale changes to time-tables. The Bankstown / Liverpool/Campbelltown line. Express services on the Bankstown line were significantly reduced. Trains no longer used the Bankstown line to Liverpool and Campbelltown. The LNP governments unsuitable ordering trains from Spain - and more!!
Peter Dowling from RAYMOND TERRACE
In response to: 40,000 infrastructure defects reported in Sydney Trains maintenance backlog
Six hundred years of reform?
July 21, 2023
Catholics are missing the point when talking about the failure of the Catholic Church. If it has failed and is irrelevant - get rid of it.
James Mitchell from IPSWICH
In response to: Fallen potatoes-the failure of the Catholic Church
Confusing the evidence
July 21, 2023
Chris Bonnor argues that It is always important that public debate on schools reflect what we know rather than what wed like to believe. Its a great shame that Bonnor undermined his otherwise excellent article by the use of an example which was not relevant to his thesis. As a former school executive, I have no doubt that Ross Fox gilds the lily when claiming credit for improvements in educational outcomes in Canberra-Goulburn Catholic systemic schools result from the Catalyst program, and exaggerates the contribution of systemic schools in providing for students with behavioural and educational difficulties, perhaps...
Christopher Bounds from Canberra
In response to: Lies, damned lies and school statistics
Julian Cribb and Saul Griffith must be heard
June 28, 2023
Inventor and climate activist, Saul Griffith, in his recent Quarterly Essay The Wires that Bind, describing the urgency of essential action, wrote: Real climate action in Australia and globally, must happen at the level where citizens interact with their local infrastructure and invest in their homes, businesses and communities. We need a new social contract such that every Australian can join the game. Cribbs 2023 book How to Fix a Broken Planet brings together in a short and highly readable volume, his conclusions about the survivability of the human species. It offers the reader a sensible and practical path...
Bob Douglas from Australia
In response to: Our planet is imploding: when will we act to save ourselves?
There is a plan for human survival
June 26, 2023
Recently Professor Cribb asserted that nobody has a Plan for Human Survival. This is not a true statement. PLAN E, introduced in this journal last year, is a concept for an emergency response to the hyperthreat of climate and ecological crisis. Professor Cribb has previously argued that PLAN E does not address his list of 10 mega threats. In fact, PLAN E does account for these and more. The hyperthreat encapsulates all forms of climate and environmental problems (threats 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8 on his list). The overall Grand Strategy takes an entangled security...
Elizabeth Boulton from Melbourne
In response to: Our planet is imploding: when will we act to save ourselves?
Retired US Admiral confirms Australian subservience
June 23, 2023
Many thanks to Margaret Reynolds for such a forthright criticism of Australian subservience to the US in matters of foreign policy and defence. That the United States takes this subservience for granted and has the capacity to compel subservience if ever it was questioned has been made clear in the comments of an (unnamed) retired US Admiral to the editor of the Australia Pacific Defence Reporter, Kym Bergmann. Kym quotes the Admiral's words in his most recent 20-minute podcast, which should be listened to in full. It is a chilling account of our subservience, and adds to the thrust of...
Mike Williss from Adelaide
In response to: A subservient defence policy undermines Albaneses successful first year
Ordering women into silence
June 21, 2023
Thank you, Jack Waterford, for publicising your contempt and rejection of the police and justice system in the ACT when it comes to protecting the privacy and dignity of women rape survivors. Of course, it's not just in the ACT that this happens but, in the male-dominated legal system generally. All the right words are used to suggest that everything is being done to help the victim but very little action is taken to prevent the perpetrator from verbally violating his victim over and over again in and outside of the court. In this, he uses his legal accomplices...
Diana Rickard from Tumbling Waters NT
In response to: Our law and order violate women
China Is it Really a Threat
June 20, 2023
But it is important to emphasise that Chinas apparent lead is largely due to its very large population about four times that of the United States. GDP/capita is the measure that determines the stage of development. By this measure the World Bank (there are slight differences between institutions who measure this because of different methodologies) calculates Chinas GDP/capita as $23,382, and the US as $80,035. the United States is ranked No. 8 and China is ranked No. 73 (quoted in Wikipedia). The Australian Strategic Policy Institute (which is really a wolf in sheeps clothing) would have us believe that...
Barry Trembath from Australia
In response to: Why is America so reluctant to acknowledge Chinas economic power?
Wen Wei Po NOT an anti Beijing newspaper
June 19, 2023
I thoroughly enjoyed reading Gregory Clark's article and would like to circulate it to my friends. Unfortunately, his assertion that Wen Wei Po was a weak Hong Kong newspaper known at the time for extreme anti-Beijing positions. Everyone in Hong Kong knows that, while it is not exactly a top selling daily, it's always been a diehard pro-Beijing paper. Like all newspapers at the time, without independent verification of the various stories bandied around, the Wen Wei Po just parroted the Tiananmen Massare stories. After all, there were a few fake eyewitness accounts doing the rounds at the time....
Jonathan Leung from Hong Kong
In response to: Psy-ops warriors: Tiananmen Square and the media-pack
Relations with China
June 19, 2023
Kevin Rudd has tackled the issues well in his book The Avoidable War, while fully cognisant of defects on both sides of the US China divide. He proposes the need for agreed guardrails to minimise escalation of incidents, while accepting strategic competition. China talks of its redlines. We need Australian institutions which are involved in collective security discussions which include not just military but economic aspects and representation which includes China. The democratic deficit is clearly on show, after the gross deception of the Australian public, by DFAT and Defence, in September 2021 after the Paris 2+2 meeting, a deception...
Geoff Taylor from Perth
In response to: Australia preparing for war- can it stop the rot?
An Answer to Neoliberalism
June 19, 2023
In answer to Alan Patience's Anticipating a Post-Capitalist World, one of the obvious solutions is to do away with 'workers' and 'bosses' by forming as many work places as possible into cooperatives. In this way workers become the owners and elect the 'bosses' thus forming a truly democratic workplace. Corbyn was going to encourage that in the UK had he got in. It could only be sponsored from a labour-socialist party which unfortunately Australia has no longer got. Maybe the Greens will get powerful enough to subsidise/encourage a big push to cooperatives. Its one of the few hopes we have.
Malthus Anderson from Tarras, New Zealand.
In response to: The End is Nigh! Anticipating a Post-Capitalist World