Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersMaking things matter

Making things matter

According to those pushing the carbon tax, 500 bureaucrats googling away quietly in Canberra and generating little useful except carbon dioxide exhalations, are more valuable than 500 farmers, foresters, fishermen, workers and miners whose machines also generate more of the same harmless carbon dioxide in order to produce the food, fibres, hardware and energy needed for our daily existence.
It is a suicidal policy to levy a carbon tax on people who produce things but not on those who don’t. Such an attitude shows how removed from reality the deep green mentality has become.
It is only since humans learned to harness carbon energy that we have been able to generate sufficient surpluses to support art, culture, academia, bureaucracy and big cities.
In the green energy society, before coal and oil replaced our hay burning horses and bullocks, most of the food produced was consumed by the large farming families, their labourers and their draught animals. Any surplus went to service people like butchers, bakers, blacksmiths and saddlers. Cities were small and there was little left for the tax man.
It is not the bureaucracy or the carbon tax that produces eggs for breakfast, electricity for the toaster, gas for the barbie or petrol for the car. It is hard working men and women with resources, skills and carbon powered machines.

Viv Forbes
Rosewood

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Charity founder given 9-month suspended jail term for assaulting teens

Award-winning youth advocate Cody Schaeffer will avoid jail time after pleading guilty to assaulting several children. The Order of Australia Medal recipient, who ran youth...
More News

Bridge’s most important moment

Dealer: S Vul: Both NORTH ♠ AK10754 ♥ J10 ♦ K5 ♣ 875 WEST EAST ♠ QJ63 ♠ 92 ♥ Q974 ♥ 632 ♦ 32 ♦ J1074 ♣ J43 ♣ Q1092 SOUTH ♠ 8 ♥ AK85 ♦ AQ986 ♣...

Community urged to get behind Heavy Horse Festival

The Darling Downs Heavy Horse Festival will go ahead this weekend with organisers encouraging the community and visitors to get behind one of the...

Ray White returns to Stanthorpe with new office

Ray White Rural and Livestock has returned to Stanthorpe, with a new office opening under the leadership of experienced local operators. Business leaders James and...

Crowd favourite dachshund races return

One of the most entertaining and downright adorable highlights of the Inglewood Show is set to return this year, with the ever popular Dachshund...

Redbacks to triumph in Cup

Aussie Rules bounces back to life in Warwick on Saturday night as the Criterion Hotel Warwick Redbacks host the annual Cardinal Cup pre-season game...

Dragway points on the line

Points will be on the line on Saturday for round one of the 1320 Motorsports Warwick Dragway Track Championships at Warwick Dragway on Saturday...

Network upgrades cause Stanthorpe mobile outages

Many Stanthorpe-based Optus customers have reported experiencing service disruptions this week, with the mobile provider’s mobile site in the area currently undergoing upgrades. The...

Fuel shortages raising serious concerns across Southern Downs

Small town fuel retailers across the Southern Downs have been left high and dry by worsening fuel shortages. Independent distributors in several villages have begun...

ARK’s pet of the week

Shadow arrived to Ark very frightened of her new surroundings. It has taken her time to come out of her shell, but she is...

Country show fun returns to Inglewood

The 2026 Inglewood Show promises a weekend full of excitement, entertainment, and family-friendly fun. The festivities kick off on Friday 13th March, with free...