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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 4:31:39 GMT 8
RE: Call for MP’s to release details
The Editor The Cairns Post
That politicians were ever exempted from Right to Information laws shows how inverted our system of governance has become, (Call for MP’s to release details, 10/10).
We are private citizens so the government should know almost nothing about us, but we’re under continual microscopic examination by the government.
The government are our employees so we should know everything about them, but they somehow contrived to exempt themselves from our scrutiny.
We elect the government, fund it, and are meant to be served by it, but it has escaped our control and evolved into a monster.
The ALP-LNP twins created that monster and if we want to restore the proper relationship between it and we natural humans we must begin by ejecting them from our parliaments.
(125 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 4:33:07 GMT 8
Your most important letter, amongst many, yet!
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 4:37:57 GMT 8
RE: Vigilante groups not fault of cops
The Editor The Townsville Bulletin
Nick Dametto seems to have stopped short of laying blame for Queensland’s crime pandemic where it belongs, (Vigilante groups not fault of cops, 10/10).
Dametto “has placed the blame squarely on policy makers” - with “internal decision and policy makers” who are “further up the chain”.
Is Dametto suggesting these “policy makers” have gone rogue and are defying their orders from the Palaszczuk Labor government?
If yes, then the Palaszczuk government is negligent for not sanctioning or dismissing them and Dametto should say so loudly.
If no, then why is KAP’s deputy leader concealing the Palaszczuk government’s responsibility for the crime pandemic?
We all know Labor are terrified of the bureaucracy but we elect them to control it: if they can’t do it we need to replace them.
If KAP won’t state the obvious truth about such a core problem then maybe we should replace them, too.
(147 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 4:39:19 GMT 8
And get rid of elitist bureaucracy.
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 5:26:50 GMT 8
Re: Global fund’s ‘Yes’ to solar company
The Editor The Gold Coast Bulletin
Wow: if you really want to raise the red flags for people who are waking up to the extent of the scams we’re surrounded by, then go ahead and use the words “global”, “Yes” and “solar” in one headline, (Global fund’s ‘Yes’ to solar company, 10/10).
Most of us don’t yet know exactly who’s behind globalism, but we do know that everything “global” is meant to centralise power in the hands of an unelected few, which has always ended badly for the common folk.
The “Yes” campaign in the Voice debate has come to symbolise deception and deceit, and we all see that coming from the major corporations and political parties.
The more solar that is pushed into the grid the higher power prices go, so we all see the underlying claims about “cheaper electricity” were entirely false.
What do globalism, the Yes campaign, and solar have in common? There’s nothing good in them for us and we need to say No to all of them.
(166 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 5:28:52 GMT 8
Access to taxpayers money is the real aim.
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 5:41:17 GMT 8
Re: Massacre in the desert
The Editor The Courier Mail
The Israel-Hamas conflict has raised a common question amongst news consumers of all political persuasions, (Massacre in the desert, 10/10).
Why did we see more video of the fighting in Israel in the first day than we’ve seen from Ukraine in two years?
We can’t blame language or technology or connectivity, in the smart phone era everyone’s a journalist, so why the dearth of detail from Ukraine?
Could it be that we’ve been systematically misinformed about events in Ukraine?
Given the amount of our wealth and defensive equipment that has been sent to Ukraine, I think we deserve answers to that question.
(102 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 5:44:30 GMT 8
American Democrats and RINO's and 5-Eyes organizations have a lot to answer for.
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 5:58:20 GMT 8
Re: Terrorism and war have no place here, say politicians
The Editor The Daily Telegraph
It’s both predictable and disingenuous for politicians to be flapping their gums about local protests over foreign events, (Terrorism and war have no place here, say politicians, 10/10).
Predictable, because politicians always leverage foreign and local events to get publicity and further their particular agendas.
Disingenuous, because they’ve all contributed to our current disastrously-divided “multicultural” domestic hoi polloi.
“Multiculturalism” is better described as “sectarianism”, which is why we see groups of alleged Australians getting worked up about events on the other side of the world.
We would’ve been far better off in terms of domestic security had we stuck with multiracial uniculturalism, where all new arrivals were integrated into our unique Australian culture.
Of course, the globalists didn’t want that because a divided society is easier to conquer.
Currently we don’t even try to integrate new arrivals, which will turn out to be extremely detrimental to our nation in the long-term.
(151 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 6:17:54 GMT 8
Re: Bug burgers? We won’t diet wondering
The Editor The Herald Sun
Speaking of wondering, I’m wondering who the sick freaks are who keep saying we should eat bugs, (Bug burgers? We won’t diet wondering, 10/10).
Australia isn’t short of land or water to grow proper food; we just have too much government to be able to do that efficiently.
The bug-eating movement stems from the globalists who populate the United Nations and World Economic Forum and is a form of ritual humiliation that also sickens and weakens us.
Claims about “emissions” from farming causing “global boiling” are absolute nonsense which only the most extreme leftists now still believe.
So why do both the Labor and Liberal parties still conform to an agenda designed to humiliate, sicken, and weaken us?
Because they’re owned and operated by the globalists and we’re not going to improve anything here until we eject both from all our parliaments.
(142 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 6:19:26 GMT 8
Lets have a referendum to withdraw from the evil United Nations.
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 7:14:38 GMT 8
To comment on “Yes vote will win in only 22 seats”, 10/10
HS - To comment on “Yes vote will win in only 22 seats”, 10/10 DT – To comment on “Yes case falling behind in seats”, 10/10 -
The latest polling, which is so disastrous for Anthony Albanese and his Yes campaign, (“Yes vote will win in only 22 seats”, 10/10), does way more than highlight Australia’s city-rural divide. It should prompt questions about what exactly causes inner-city residents to become so very disconnected from everyone else. Nobody should be supporting a change to our contract with the government that cements in racism, but that’s what these 22 electorates seem intent on doing.
It's the same with support for the other far-left agenda items which are so clearly nonsense; global “boiling”, cheap electricity from renewables, and people miraculously transforming into the opposite sex. The strongest support is in the areas most disconnected from nature and the Earth’s natural systems.
It’s worth studying exactly what affects the people living in these artificial environments that they lose touch with reality so completely.
Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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Post by NFA on Oct 10, 2023 7:19:38 GMT 8
To comment on “Art of disagreement dying in voice debate”, 10/10 -
Tom Minear has missed a couple of details in his op-ed, (“Art of disagreement dying in voice debate”, 10/10). Firstly, the failure to debate issues with logic, reason, rationality, and decency lies with the left. We on the conservative side are constantly accused of descending into viciousness by the left but in reality the left simply moved the goalposts so they could claim to be offended by everything in a pathetically transparent attempt to claim the high moral ground.
Secondly, indigenous Australians do indeed “deserve better from our governments” and that must begin with a general realisation that aboriginal disadvantage on remote communities is a direct consequence of how governments of both stripes have managed them. People locked within socialist systems cannot and do not advance, and socialism is the governance model that exists on remote communities.
If we genuinely want to improve life on remote aboriginal communities we need to end the socialism there and restructure them as free-market capitalist economies.
Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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