This would get my vote
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To submit a letter to The Age, email letters@theage.com.au. Please include your home address and telephone number.This would get my voteUntil now, I have agreed with tough police action against anti-vaccination protesters. I am old and frail and therefore at considerable health risk should I contract COVID-19 from any of them.
What changed my mind is a report by productivity commissioner Stephen King, who says there are cheaper and more effective alternatives to prisons, especially for low-level offenders, such as home detention, diversion, community service, drug, alcohol and mental health programs and restorative justice programs, where offenders and victims of crime come together (âCuff loveâ, Insight, 13/11).
We have more police than ever before, better equipped and supported by a criminal justice system that is sprouting town-sized jail complexes around Victoriaâs population centres at an alarming pace. Incarceration rates are climbing, yet politicians would have us believe crime rates are soaring. Maybe police are targeting low-hanging fruit, leaving tougher criminals to their own nefarious devices.
Whatever the reason, whatever it is they are doing now seems not to be working. Maybe prevention is better than cure. My vote will go to politicians who are prepared to take the political risk of giving prevention strategies a go.
Bill Wright, St Kilda West
A refreshing read
How refreshing to read Stuart Rolloâs article âLest we forget, China hawksâ (Comment, 11/11). His balanced, nuanced historical perspective notes our developing sense that âwar with China is on the horizonâ is âeerily similar to that of Europe in the years leading up to 1914â.
I, too, am disturbed by the âloose talk of warâ with Defence Minister Peter Dutton and even Prime Minister Scott Morrison stoking the war-mongering fires when speaking of a âChina threatâ.
Rollo wisely advises that, among all the noise, we listen primarily to the voice of soldiers to remind us that âwar means suffering and loss, and a healthy society should do everything in its power to avoid itâ.
Kevin Burke, Sandringham
Wishful thinking
David Crowe is rightly unconvinced with Scott Morrisonâs latest âcan-do-capitalismâ slogan, which assumes that the mythical free market will save us (âCry freedom: PM punts we want itâ, Comment, 12/11).
The PMâs ideological belief that capitalism will lead the way in fixing climate change is up there with the other myths of trickle down and laissez-faire capitalist economics. Itâs nothing more than wishful thinking.
Climate change requires proactive government leadership that is not missing in action and has a sense of selfless urgency that steers capitalism in the right direction for all.
Paul Miller, Box Hill South
A continuing failure
Ten years on since A Bloody Business was shown on the ABC and still the live export industry is failing our animals on a monumental basis (âOn the kill floor: Secret video shows animals writhing in âextreme painââ, The Sunday Age, 7/11).
The Exporter Supply Chain Assurance System (ESCAS) has not protected our animals from systemic atrocious treatment, and all while the live export industry purports to have changed. In reality, all the tweaks in the world have not and will not safeguard our animals.
Agriculture Minister David Littleproud could not possibly view the latest video footage from Indonesian abattoirs and honestly state that ESCAS works. Live export is a national disgrace.
Lyndi Chapman, Keilor
Seek common ground
The unedifying display of our two top federal politicians calling each other liars (âMorrison, Albanese offer perspectives on lyingâ, The Age, 13/11) shows how timely is the pact between the worldâs top powers, China and the United States, to take a different course, at least on the pressing issue of climate change.
On just this one vital issue, if nothing else, could Scott Morrison and Anthony Albanese please try to find some common ground? They must know what hazardous territory is climate policy for political leaders of both sides. For self-preservation, if no other reason, could they please call a truce on climate change?
I donât suggest agreement on some lowest-common-denominator emissions reduction target. Rather I would just like to see an end to the use of climate as political football. Why, for example, not bring on constructive debate of Zali Steggallâs climate change bills?
Could they even perhaps consider agreeing on some no-lose campaign rules? For example, that each side would forgo all attempts to take political advantage of any move by the other, however ârecklessâ, to increase emissions reduction ambition.
John Gare, Kew East
When itâs gone, itâs gone
It was the 1940s. Busy bottle swallows flitted in and out of mud nests carefully crafted beneath the overhanging cliff to thwart predatory snakes. A pair of black ducks speared around the bend like jet fighters. Meanwhile, unseen insects repetitively traced ever widening, mesmerising circles on the still waterâs surface. Overhead, the elephantine limbs of centuries-old Murray River redgums bore timeless witness to life passing beneath.
Suddenly, my bamboo rod bent and vibrated. There were flashes of silver as sunlight shone on the cod gyrating in clear water.
I understand why young people march in the streets. I grieve for their losses. Iâve joined them, but to what benefit?
Bill Hampel, Malvern
Was this cut?
Energy minister Angus Taylor was quoted as saying Australia was an âactive and constructive participant in the negotiations to ensure a positive outcome for COP26â (âAustralia joins nations trying to soften accordâ, The Age, 12/11).
Somehow the last part of his sentence âand to ensure business as usual for the fossil fuel industryâ must have inadvertently been omitted.
Leigh Ackland, Deepdene
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