Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomestoriesWhacky green political agenda

Whacky green political agenda

By LAWRENCE SPRINGBORG

WHY is it, in a country as well-resourced and privileged as Australia, do we undermine our advantages and opportunities out of complete ignorance, or just dumb politics?
We seem only too keen to export our conscience in some sort of perverse pursuit of a whacky green political agenda.
It was bought home to me recently, when I walked into a train subway supermarket in the sprawling city of Shanghai – a city with a population of 24 million people, greater than Australia’s. I did so to gain an appreciation of how other people live and even more critically, where and how the locals source their food. My attention was drawn to a large open meat display refrigerator. It contained solely Australian product, labelled “Aussie Beef, Natural and Safe”
The natural clean and green advantage of our Australian grown food products are appreciated beyond our own shores.
Why is it then, the current Qld Government and the so-called green movement, including the Greens party want to demonise the land management practices of the Queensland farmers and graziers who grow that very food? If you listened to their rhetoric, you would be forgiven for believing that vast tracts of Queensland farmland is little more than a brutalised and pillaged moonscape, drained of its very last vestiges of fertility and life.
In actual fact our land is well managed and regulated, hence our fine international reputation.
The dishonesty of those aforementioned groups knows no boundaries. In August, the Queensland Parliament will debate appalling legislation, designed to strip farmers of their ability to manage vegetation on their land in order to grow the high quality food and fibre we need to feed and clothe ourselves into the future.
As our population expands and the opportunities increase for us to capitalise on this positive image, these laws will strangle that opportunity. Consequently, demand will increase and supply will be restricted, affecting jobs and driving up prices.
Displaying the height of hypocrisy, when this fact is raised with them, the proponents of these laws say they don’t care. Because we can import the food we need. The following point seems to be lost on them. Import our food from countries where they clear-fell their forests and have limited if any control, over the chemicals used, not to mention land management practices far less environmentally friendly than our own? It’s unconscionable to export jobs and opportunities overseas, because we’re being blackmailed by a few inner city green activists, who deliberately bathe themselves in ignorance about the reality of where their food comes from and how it is produced. These people pull the strings of a minority Labor Government, lacking the courage to stand up for the jobs and food security of Queenslanders. I for one will not support these laws.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

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

Numbers down for monthly three-bowl triples

Last Thursday the Warwick East Bowls Club held its monthly three-bowl triples. With a lot of people away at district sides events, our numbers were...
More News

Star Realty QLD celebrates three year milestone

This year marks an exciting milestone for Star Realty QLD as the locally owned business celebrates three years of helping property owners and tenants...

35th annual FB-EK Holden Nationals come to Stanthorpe

A blast from the motoring past is coming to Stanthorpe this June, with the 35th annual FB-EK Holden Nationals bringing almost 100 vintage 1960s...

Turkey Triples winners crowned

Helen Harm Real Estate sponsored the May Turkey Triples Competition at the Warwick Bowls Club, with the team taking overall first place, made up...

Windle stars despite movie move

Warwick Croquet club’s weekly golf play day was held a day early to make way for the club’s movie night on Thursday. While spirits...

Backing first home buyers

Darling Downs Bank is proud to support more first home buyers in our community to achieve home ownership through participation in the Australian Government...

‘Sign of the times’: QCWA branch to close after 65 years

Members of the Victoria Hill Queensland Country Women’s Association would have been hoping to celebrate the branch's 65th birthday with great fanfare next month...

Osmond adds to wins with All Too Foxy at Warwick

All good things come to an end but for apprentice Benjamin Osmond it’s a question of when. With time running out on his time as...

Fittock, Silver claim monthly medals at Stanthorpe

A big field of golfers played in the May Monthly Medal at Stanthorpe, which was also the first round of the Club Championships, on...

Merritt medal winner

A 77 net has earned Karen Merritt the Stanthorpe Women’s golf Monthly Medal – held at the club on Wednesday, 6 May. Merritt is relatively...

An update from Allora Days for Girls

For this month only, Allora and District Days for Girls will be brought forward to 21 May due to the room being needed for...