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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 5:19:56 GMT 8
Re: Letters, 24/10
The Editor The Cairns Post
Our electricity bills continue to skyrocket with the ongoing forced inclusion of subsidised wind and solar but green-left activists continue to blindly insist that “renewables are cheaper”, (Letters, 24/10).
The Palaszczuk regime sometimes redirects some of our tax money away from hospitals and schools and back to us as electricity discounts for temporary relief.
The ALP-LNP twins are in lockstep with the Twiggy-class billionaires on this because they’re not representing us.
“Renewables” only make sense when viewed as an enemy attack on our society’s prosperity.
(85 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 5:26:33 GMT 8
Re: Port’s climate of change
The Editor The Townsville Bulletin
The enormous stumbling block for everything downstream of wind- and solar-energy harvesting technology is cost.
Wind and solar energy is very thin on the ground compared to the concentrated energy available to us from hydrocarbons, which are nature’s own batteries.
Any hydrogen or ammonia produced from wind and solar will be very expensive compared to the same products derived from hydrocarbons, (Port’s climate of change, 24/10).
In an international market, hydrogen and ammonia consumers will simply buy their materials from the cheapest supplier, likely to be China – which only gives lip-service to the UN’s climate lunatics.
Because North Queensland Bulk Ports Corporation is owned by the Queensland government, it’s guaranteed to waste a heap of money trying to defy the laws of physics and economics.
The entire green-left narrative only makes sense when it’s viewed as an enemy attack on our society’s prosperity.
(143 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 5:44:44 GMT 8
Re: An age-old bond with dingoes
The Editor The Gold Coast Bulletin
Dingoes came to Australia as the domestic dogs of the third race of humans to walk here over the land-bridge where the Torres Strait is now, (An age-old bond with dingoes, 24/10).
That was about 8,000 years ago, before Meltwater Pulse 1C finally closed that land-bridge.
The people were the Carpentarians, who we now know as aboriginals, and their closest overseas relatives are the Vedda of Sri Lanka.
Domestic dogs were used in herding and hunting by many ancient races, but conditions were different in harsh, dry Australia.
Dogs proved unable to herd Australia’s native fauna.
The Carpentarians adopted the fire-stick farming techniques of their predecessors, the Murraysians and the Negritoes, so hunting dogs weren’t worth their keep.
Dingoes found themselves largely homeless and were mostly left to wander as ferals.
Radiocarbon dating has been revealed to be notoriously inaccurate due to the impacts of cyclic solar micronova, but mainstream academia isn’t ready to face that reality yet.
(158 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 5:51:19 GMT 8
Of course they had a 'special bond' with dingoes, as well as kangaroos, wallabies and goannas!
In fact, anything that was edible.
Dog meat is still consumed throughout China and SE Asia.
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 6:07:04 GMT 8
Re: Power to the people
The Editor The Courier Mail
The Queensland government can own all the poles and wires it likes, but the more renewables it forces into the grid the more they’ll become stranded assets, (Power to the people, 24/10).
That’s because renewables cannot run a 24/7-365 electricity grid. It’s never been done anywhere. Even Australia’s King Island (population 1,585) test case relies on diesel.
When I checked this morning, King Island had plenty of wind (31 km/h) and some sun but was powering itself with 53% diesel.
The Queensland government’s obsession with “transitioning” to technologies that still don’t work as claimed after billions of dollars of “investment” over twenty years is insane.
It only makes sense when viewed as an enemy attack on our society’s prosperity.
(119 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 6:47:49 GMT 8
Re: Second class treatment, Add hours and save students
The Editor The Daily Telegraph
NSW has a “crippling casual teacher shortage” but not because of “the former government’s wages policy”, (Second class treatment, 24/10).
The true causes are vaccine mandates, the requirement to teach subjects which simply aren’t true (inc., man-made climate change, cheap renewables, white colonialist genocide, transgenderism, etc.), and the threat of falsely being labelled a sex offender.
The federal and state governments’ policies have engineered this teacher shortage and only drastic policy reversals can fix it.
If these policies were a deliberate attack on literacy, numeracy, and critical thinking skills, and therefore on civilised society, how would they look any different?
As to Malcolm Gladwell’s “10,000 hour rule”, yeah, nah, practice makes permanent, not perfect, (Add hours and save students).
We need to teach facts, not fiction, and we need to teach more intelligently, not for more hours.
(137 words)
Peter Campion Tolga
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 7:19:23 GMT 8
CM - To comment on “Premier’s pitch: ‘Been through a lot together’”, 24/10 -
Almost a century of failed climate predictions, decades of failed cheap electricity from renewables predictions, years of failed Covid-19 death predictions, and months of failed Voice referendum predictions have served to wake people up to the harsh reality that neither the Labor nor Liberal parties are representing the will of the people but are actually implementing the agenda of unelected foreigners whose public faces include Klaus Schwab of the WEF and António Guterres of the UN, (“Premier’s pitch: ‘Been through a lot together’”, 24/10).
Yes, we have been through a lot together and vast amounts of it were unnecessary, unwarranted, and in net terms, damaging to the population. Much of what we’ve suffered since the 1990s has been the direct result of the Liberal and Labor parties working against our interests. People are getting this now. They’re seeing it because it’s unmissable and unmistakable.
If our elections aren’t rigged, there’s an excellent chance that neither the Labor nor Liberal parties will gain enough seats to rule in their own right.
Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 7:59:52 GMT 8
DT - To comment on “More harm than good”, 24/10 -Almost a century of failed climate predictions, decades of failed cheap electricity from renewables predictions, years of failed Covid-19 death predictions, and months of failed Voice referendum predictions have served to wake people up to the harsh reality that neither the Labor nor Liberal parties are representing the will of the people but are actually implementing the agenda of unelected foreigners whose public faces include Klaus Schwab of the WEF and António Guterres of the UN, (“More harm than good”, 24/10). The Aussies who are truly misguided, who have embraced misinformation and disinformation as factual, are those who support the various globalist divide-and-conquer campaigns, such as the Voice was and such as “treaty” and “truth telling” would be.
Most of them lean left politically and are concentrated in the inner-city electorates that are most disconnected from the productive economy and the real world. Thankfully there’s still enough based, real-world Aussies in the regions to out-vote inner-city leftie lunacy, but only for now because that’s what Albo’s Big Australia migration policy is meant to change.
Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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Post by NFA on Oct 24, 2023 8:19:31 GMT 8
To comment on “Solar panels security fear”, 24/10 -Those of us on the censured and silenced sceptical side of the climate and energy debates have been providing stark warnings about the many and various weaknesses in the “renewables” rollout for decades and foreign control of inverters has been just one of them, (“Solar panels security fear”, 24/10).
Older home solar systems don’t have internet-connected inverters but all newer systems do. Why is internet connectivity necessary? It’s so the non-dispatchable, asynchronous energy they produce can be turned off remotely when it threatens to destabilise the grid. South Australia, Australia’s “renewables leader”, gets away with its tens of thousands of older home solar systems by exporting its uncontrollable sunny-day floods of excess asynchronous energy to Victoria, which acts as a giant battery.
If the interconnectors went down on a sunny day, South Australia’s grid would collapse totally – again. So while internet connectivity is vital to contain home solar’s dark side, it also exposes it to foreign control.
The same principle applies to industrial wind and solar installations, too; they’re entirely hackable. As ever, the only valid application for electricity derived from wind and sunlight is on yachts and remote rural properties. Everywhere else it’s a weakness, not a strength.Jennifer Short Edge Hill
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