JohnDe
La dolce vita
- Joined
- 11 March 2020
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I wasn't talking about Dutton, he isn't doing the small target approach.
True, but the referendum is long forgotten in most voters minds and the indigenous issues have been taken off the table, the tax cuts were well received and other than that nothing major has been announced and subjects like hydrogen super power are no longer mentioned.Ok, but I wouldn't call Albanese's past three years as small target. He did introduce a controversial referendum, he changed the legislated big tax cuts and delivered more for lower income wages, he changed industrial relations laws.
Albanese has been in the media almost every day, he is no small target. His and the government problems have been in decision making and timing.
voters are in the midst of deciding which leader is strong and purposeful for the times we are in. Albanese is losing that battle, while Dutton's unpopularity is forgiven because he looks to be stronger and more willing to stand up to the woke system.
Albanese has been in the media almost every day, he is no small target. His and the government problems have been in decision making and timing.
The way Dutton is trying to bankrupt business and consumers with his nuclear energy policy will lose him the election in my opinion.
This country with a relatively small population can't afford Dutton's energy policies which are simply a mirage that Dutton knows won't eventuate under his watch and is simply there as a naysay to the Labor policies.
It's a cynical policy at best and a disaster at worse, and he is already trying to destroy all forms of cheap energy that will compete with nuclear, eg Port Stephens offshore wind(which he has promised to cancel) and the Burdekin hydro-electric project which was cancelled by the incoming Coaltition Qld government.
Want unaffordable energy ?
Vote LNP.
t is obvious that you are a glued on Labor supporter, but sometimes we need to try and look without our bias and favoured eyes.
There is bias everywhere you look, on both sides of the argument, the question is how can we get a genuinely unbiassed assessment of our energy requirements and the solutions thereto.
Not from ANY political party or their associated fan clubs. It has to come from the science and engineering community, which is why I go back to Finkel and AEMO as being as unbiassed as it is possible to get in the context of electricity generation and distribution.
Neither of those parties mentioned nuclear as being necessary for Australia. Most of them say renewables backed up by gas(short term), batteries and hydro (long term). So that's the way I go and I will vote accordingly.
Disclosure. I am not a member of any political party and never have been."Bowen and his allies were quick to attack Frontier's modelling, accusing the report's authors of being silent on bill impacts for consumers. This overlooks the fact that Frontier's analysis simply followed the ISP - the government's energy transition roadmap - which also doesn't project power bill impacts.
"The first Frontier Economics report did a service to the debate by unwinding an accounting trick. It revealed the real cost of the Integrated System Plan (ISP) - which has become de-facto policy for Labor - is around $600 billion. This figure towers over the discounted "present value" $121 billion figure touted by Energy Minister Chris Bowen." Michael Wu and Zoe Hilton are senior policy analysts at the Centre for Independent Studies.
Others are getting involved -
Lift the ban on nuclear power in Australia!
Petition to Australian government to lift the ban on nuclear power in Australia. Nuclear energy is the safest, cleanest, and most reliable form of energy known to humankind.info.citizensparty.org.au
Disclosure. I am not a member of any political party and never have been.
Can you say the same about yourself?
Because your relentlessly disseminate LNP propaganda.Why would you ask such a question?
Because your relentlessly disseminate LNP propaganda.
Multiple times I have described myself as a fan of science, that has read books of futurism and science fiction, waiting and hoping for a day that we use nuclear power and travel to the planets.
Australia's former chief scientist Alan Finkel says there is no better source of zero emissions electricity than nuclear power, but it will take too long to meet our emissions targets.
Like I keep saying it will be sorted, it can't afford not to be and money wont come into the equation in the end.Of course he's right.
Nuclear is a great source of clean and constant energy as long as it's affordable.
Personally, I think emissions 'targets' are a bit of a crock, but the fact is that coal stations are wearing out and we need other sources of energy.
We could build more coal stations, but coal like gas and uranium is a finite resource that cost money to extract, process and transport.
As well as meeting our emissions targets we have to replace our ageing coal stations. The time frame for nuclear won't ensure that we do that if we just wait for nuclear.
Anthony Albanese to call national cabinet on anti-Semitism after latest attack
Anthony Albanese addresses the media about the anti-Semitic vandalism that occurred overnight in Maroubra. Picture: NewsWire / Nikki Short
Anthony Albanese says national cabinet will meet on Tuesday afternoon following the latest anti-Semitic attack on a childcare centre in Sydney’s east, reversing his previous position resisting Coalition calls to hold one.
The Prime Minister has so far rebuffed calls to convene a national cabinet meeting on anti-Semitism, saying as recently as on Monday “what people want to see isn’t more meetings, they want to see more action”.
But on Tuesday, Mr Albanese said he would convene the state and territory leaders.
“Will you now convene a national cabinet to tackle this crisis?” He was asked.
“We’ll have a discussion this afternoon,” Mr Albanese responded.
“We met last week, the premier of Victoria and the acting premier of NSW.
“Obviously, like in other places at this time of the year, people have been on leave. I know that the Premier came back, here in NSW. So we’ll have that discussion this afternoon.”
Just commenting on this bit and noting both are themselves consequences of the policies of successive governments.scared of extreme left voters and the Muslim political power block.
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