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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:34:51 GMT 8
RE: Vehicle thefts driven up
The Editor The Cairns Post
Crime is up because behavioural standards in some demographics are down, (Vehicle thefts driven up, 28/07).
Behavioural standards are down because the reward for criminal acts exceeds the consequences for them.
This imbalance between rewards and consequences is an artefact of Palaszczuk Labor government policy.
Premier Palaszczuk is employing the Hegelian dialectic: create a problem to cause a reaction to deploy a planned solution.
She initiated this crimewave because she wants voters to demand more regulations so she can expand government powers.
Palaszczuk has demonstrated that she will cynically manipulate citizens to achieve ever expanding powers.
If voters properly understood how deeply undemocratic Labor has become, they wouldn’t get a vote ever again.
(113 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:43:05 GMT 8
RE: State of emergency – Letters
The Editor The Townsville Bulletin
All climate alarmists share one trait; they claim things invisible to us are dangerous so we must do what they say, (Letters, TB, 28/07).
They’re all from the far left of politics, even the so-called “conservative” ones, and all their solutions give more power to governments.
Prophesising scary weather events and claiming to be able to prevent them has been a very effective strategy for charlatans since pre-civilisational times.
Tribal shaman in ancient cultures got undeserved high status and a free ride by using this strategy.
It’s easy to debunk every one of Dr Steve Turton’s 326 words, but unfortunately that takes twice as many words and won’t fit in this column.
We’ve all seen first-hand that none of the alarmists’ prophesies eventuate - seas never did flood Townsville in 2010.
It is completely safe to ignore arm-waving climate alarmists, but voting for them is extraordinarily dangerous to our freedom and prosperity.
(152 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:46:23 GMT 8
RE: UFO bodies ‘retrieved’
The Editor The Gold Coast Bulletin
After the last three years, everyone should be deeply suspicious of stories fed into the media mill by the US administration.
Their Covid-19 narrative was incredibly destructive economically and as the truth slowly emerges about the side effects of the injections people are seeing just how evil they are.
Therefore when that same administration suddenly inserts pre-groomed “highly qualified” UFO “whistleblowers” into the public narrative it should ring alarm bells, (UFO bodies ‘retrieved’, 28/07).
For decades so-called “conspiracy theorists” (who got everything right about Covid-19) have warned of the US administration planning “Project Bluebeam”.
Bluebeam will utilise existing top-secret technologies to convince the world’s people that an alien invasion is happening.
The ultimate purpose of this deceit is to bring in their long-desired single world government, which will be a global dictatorship.
Aliens are no threat to humanity – but some humans are.
(142 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:47:23 GMT 8
Well said, Peter.
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:50:23 GMT 8
AS on the Second Amendment
A letter for the Editor
It is with respect that I must disagree with your editorialist on the subject of the United States Second Amendment, which is not at all a limitation on the people but very much is a limitation on the government. The Second Amendment says, “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”
The laws made by some US states and to which your editorialist refers are repugnant to the Constitution because they infringe the right of the people to keep and bear arms. All laws that are repugnant to the Constitution are of themselves illegal. Illegal laws are not to be celebrated even if they do align with personal feelings.
If a criminal was to threaten a US citizen in a law-abiding US state with a fake gun, that US citizen can simply draw his real gun and permanently end that threat. In this manner the law-abiding US states that properly respect the Second Amendment have far lower crime rates than does Queensland.
Alejandro Serranogarcia Ayr
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:55:00 GMT 8
RE: People before politics: PS chief rallies troops
The Editor The Courier Mail
As a former bureaucrat, I must disagree with Mike Kaiser, (People before politics: PS chief rallies troops, 28/07).
It is not the job of bureaucrats to say “no” to politicians, it is to follow the letter of the law precisely and without error or exception.
Western democracies are increasingly experiencing difficulties caused by ideological bureaucrats disregarding the legislation they are tasked with administering to subversively achieve their personal political objectives.
Should a bureaucrat experience a politician demanding an illegal or unlawful action be taken it is incumbent on the bureaucrat to report that politician to his supervisor who must report that activity to the appropriate law enforcement body.
Similarly, it is incumbent on politicians and all other citizens to report to law enforcement authorities any bureaucrat who is disregarding or wilfully misapplying the law.
Only when a system of laws is properly respected and administered can we have a functional society.
(151 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:57:49 GMT 8
RE: Foreigners snapping up our property, Government stats are out of whack
The Editor The Daily Telegraph
Columnist Vikki Campion raised the issue of foreigners buying Australian residential real estate and leaving it vacant in her column last Saturday, (Our empty warehouses of foreign prosperity, 22/07), so it’s good to see the topic gaining more traction, (Foreigners snapping up our property, Government stats are out of whack, 28/07).
The Chinese middle class sees the obvious threat it is under from the Chinese Communist Party and is desperately getting its children and its assets out of reach of that tyrannical regime.
Rental income is immaterial when your motive is to safeguard your assets and have a bolthole in another country.
If our government was competent and was exclusively serving the interests of Australians, there would be no foreign ownership of our residential real estate whatsoever.
This raises the obvious question: is incompetence the cause of this problem, or is “our” government working for foreigners?
(146 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 7:58:50 GMT 8
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Post by NFA on Jul 28, 2023 8:30:41 GMT 8
To comment on Justice Rares’ ruling and comments in the AEC vs Craig Kelly matter- With a referendum looming that could permanently change our national Constitution, it’s timely that the Australian Electoral Commission has entered the news cycle in a particularly unfavourable light. I refer to Justice Steven Rares’ Federal Court judgment against the AEC in the Craig Kelly font size case. In paragraph 45 of his summary ( www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au/judgments/Judgments/fca/single/2023/2023fca0854 ), Justice Rares states, “Not informing a candidate or party of the location of allegedly contravening conduct was unjustifiable and unreasonable”. Now that it has been confirmed that the AEC is capable of unjustifiable and unreasonable conduct and that it cannot be trusted to perform its duties in an unbiased manner, we need to consider the counting of the ballots in the Voice referendum and their security between the casting and the counting. As with elections, ballot counting can be observed by scrutineers but they must be appointed by political parties, or the G-G or state/territory governors (and their equivalents). With so much at stake in this referendum, we need a very rapid overhaul of ballot security and counting practices, which must include opening up scrutineering to everyone – particularly those people with no existing political affiliations. Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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