Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersA step backwards

A step backwards

The passage of the carbon tax bills today is no reason for celebration. It is a step back towards the dark ages.
Just a few generations ago, humans lived in a ‘green’ world. There was no coal, oil or gas providing light, heat, transport and traction power.
In this green utopia, wood provided heat for cooking fires and forests were felled for charcoal for primitive metallurgy; farmers used wooden ploughs and harvested grain with sickles and flails; the nights were lit using candles and whale oil; rich people used wind and water power to grind cereals; horses and bullocks moved coaches, wagons and troops; there was no refrigeration and salt was the only preservative for meat.
Towns were tiny as the whole family was needed to work the farm. For most people, the daylight hours were filled with heavy labour to produce, preserve and transport food. There was no surplus to support opera, bureaucracy or academia.
Humanity was relieved from this life of unrelenting toil by carbon energy – steam engines and electricity, machines, tractors, cars, ships and planes. Prosperity and longevity soared.
Today the pagan green religion celebrates the first step in their long campaign to destroy industrial society and reduce population.
They should be careful what they wish for.
For example, just a few more bitter winters in Britain will see their wind powered lights going out.
A British observer once said of the Whitlam government “Any fool can bugger up Britain, but it takes real genius to bugger up Australia.”
Parliament today showed the sort of genius needed to dim the lights in the lucky country.
Viv Forbes,
Rosewood

Digital Edition
Subscribe

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

Warwick Toastmasters to mark 40 years

Warwick Toastmasters held their inaugural meeting on 26 May 1986 and continues forty years later. Throughout this time, the club has provided training in public...
More News

Buyers competing for limited livestock

Main livestock numbers were reduced this week with 1244 head of cattle finding their way into the market and 1389 head of sheep and...

Dry conditions push lighter stock into yard

Agents and vendors combined again to present 1389 head of sheep and lambs for the weekly sale. The buyers forum was there with two...

Dalveen Sports Day returns after decades on the sidelines

The age-old tradition of Dalveen Sports Day has been resurrected after the Dalveen Sports Club and Dalveen School P&C joined forces to host the...

Wave of support keeps Southern Downs Steam Railway on track

Southern Downs Steam Railway (SDSR) is feeling the overwhelming support from the community after the volunteer-run railway received three grants in the last six...

Hands-on ag education event to debut in Warwick

Warwick students will get a hands-on taste of life in agriculture when the SCOTS PGC College hosts the town’s first Moo Baa Munch event...

Border Rugby league set to kick off

The Border Rugby League competition will start with a Round Robin event on 23 May at Tenterfield. Stanthorpe Gremlins president Roger O’Brien said round...

Warwick teen earns Boys Brigade’s highest honour

Standing inside Queensland’s Government House alongside an exclusive group of top Boys Brigade members, Warwick teenager Cain Cristina-Holland celebrated an achievement years in the...

UniSQ’s global role in groundbreaking space discovery

Researchers from the University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ), alongside those from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard University, have made a groundbreaking...

Stanthorpe voice to lead global women’s group

Stanthorpe’s Sandy Venn-Brown has been voted president-elect of global women’s rights organisation Zonta International. Ms Venn-Brown secured the role at the organisation’s worldwide election earlier...

Free movie day draws a crowd

Churches of Christ's One Table Cafe function room turned into a mini-cinema when "Song Sung Blue" screened for free on the big screen. The free...