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Post by NFA on Sept 13, 2023 5:12:53 GMT 8
To comment on “Radical housing plan”, 13/09 -
Oh look, the Palaszczuk is planning a 21st-century slum on the site of the old drive-in, (“Radical housing plan”, 13/09). They could simply reverse their legislation that drove private investors out of the rental property market, but that would mean representing the will of the people and that would be against the wishes of their globalist masters, so they won’t do that.
Instead they will squander the wealth they extract by threat of enforcement from the dying remnants of the productive economy to re-create a 1950s idea that will inevitably decay into a dangerous ghetto, as these sorts of projects always do.
Don’t expect the ALP or LNP to use common sense or to follow the proven principles of free-market capitalism to return us to prosperity; that’s not on their agenda.
Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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Post by NFA on Sept 13, 2023 5:15:31 GMT 8
RE: ‘They’ve left us to die’
The Editor The Cairns Post
A trend is emerging of “trusted government authorities” going missing when needed the most, (‘They’ve left us to die’, 13/09).
In 2005, Hurricane Katrina victims, New Orleans poorest people, were herded into a stadium and left to their own devices.
Just prior to the Morrocco earthquake was Maui’s Lahaina fire, where authorities have actively prevented locals delivering food and water to fire victims.
Worse, they confiscated fresh food and left it to spoil in the sun, insisting that only Red Cross or FEMA were qualified to provide food.
They then made the victims queue for hours to access single portions of unhealthy packaged food.
None of that makes sense for a well-intentioned government, but when you understand that national governments have been subverted by an evil, wealthy, depopulationist cult it makes perfect sense.
(133 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Sept 13, 2023 5:17:13 GMT 8
To comment on “Samsung eyes corridor”, 13/09 -
It’s now beyond doubt that nobody in AEMO or our governments has even the vaguest understanding of electrical engineering or of the costs that their so-called “green” pipedream would incur. Even if inverter-based electricity could be given the inertia needed to power a grid expected to support a mass roll-out of electric cars, Australia doesn’t have the money to pay for it.
And I do wish that people would stop accepting these ugly industrial wind, solar, and battery installations being described as “farms”, (“Samsung eyes corridor”, 13/09). Good things comes from farms, but the only “good” thing that comes from these environmentally destructive disasters, from the perspective of their foreign corporate owners, are the subsidies we’re forced to pay for the second-rate, intermittent, unreliable, asynchronous energy they produce.
Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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Post by NFA on Sept 13, 2023 5:20:52 GMT 8
Yes Jennifer,
They are not 'farms' by any stretch of the imagination.
They are perverted industrial 'wastelands'.
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