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Try 10 issues for just $10 WITH FULL WEBSITE AND APP ACCESS Your subscription includes ü Weekly delivery of the magazine ü Unlimited access at www.spectator.com.au ü The Spectator app, on mobile and tablet ü Spectator newsletters and broadcasts Three easy ways to subscribe Go to www.spectator.com.au/join Call 1 800 809 233 quoting ref. T051B (call +61 8 9362 4134 from New Zealand) Post the form to The Spectator Australia, Reply Paid 83891, Belmont WA6984, Australia Yes, I would like to subscribe to The Spectator Australia Australia: 10 issues for A$10, then A$92.50 per quarter by continuous credit card New Zealand: 10 issues for NZ$10, then NZ$107.50 per quarter by continuous credit card Subscriber’s details Title Name Address Postcode Email Tel no Send me the Spectator Australia editorial emails Payment Please charge my: □ Visa □ Mastercard □ Maestro □ Amex Card no: Valid from (if relevant) / Expiry / CCV Occasionally we would like to send you information about exclusive Spectator events, offers and competitions. Please tick if you would like to receive such communications by post by phone . From time to time we would like to send you carefully selected offers from our partners that we feel are relevant to you. If you are happy to receive such offers, please tick here . TERMS & CONDITIONS: Please note payments are processed in the UK and, as such, your bank may charge you an international transaction fee. Your subscription will continue automatically unless you cancel. Any subscription cancellations will take effect at the end of the current term. Refunds will not be given for any undelivered issues.
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‘From red tape to red carpet’ I plans currently in place should grow over the next 25 years to $32 trillion. n this week’s issue, we are delighted to hear from Gina Rinehart on the importance of mining to not only our national economy but also to our geopolitical sur- economy but also to our geopolitical survival. Fresh from almost single-handedly financing federal Labor’s so-called budget ‘surplus’, Ms Rinehart is correct to point out the long-term damage we are doing to this nation by constantly demonising mining as ‘evil’ and ‘dirty’. With India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi currently visiting these shores – and, it has to be said, to the rapturous delight of Australia’s much-valued Indian diaspora – there couldn’t be a better time for Ms Rinehart’s warnings. Indeed, when welcoming Mr Modi, Ms Rinehart emphasised the critical importance of Australian trade with India, and its enormous potential for growth. As Ms Rinehart pointed out, in the last five years under Mr Modi the Indian economy has grown to $3.5 trillion, and with ‘Australia really needs to work harder to develop its relations with India,’ urged Ms Rinehart, before pointing out that one of the keys to India’s astonishing economic success is Mr Modi’s commitment to his election mantra, ‘from red tape to red carpet’. Slashing prohibitive bureaucracy and regulations in order to encourage much-needed investment. Alas, under Labor, Australia is going in the completely opposite direction. From green tape to green poverty. As Michael Collins writes, the damage being done by Labor’s renewables strategy is enormous. He identifies nine asinine ways we are harming ourselves. Chris Bowen couldn’t be pursuing a more reckless and dangerous set of energy policies if he tried. And it’s not as if the warnings aren’t in abundance. As Judith Sloan writes, the Snowy 2.0 scheme, touted by former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull as his great climate panacea, is literally bogged in the mire. According to its former CEO, the project has no hope of ever delivering on the foolish promises repeatedly made by our climate-mad leftist overlords. Could there be a better metaphor for the craziness of our current energy policies? Mr Bowen and Labor are literally digging us deeper and deeper into the sludge of ever-burgeoning debt, threatening us with a collapse of mining investment, with blackouts, and with an ever-lowering standard of living, at the same time as they demonise and disparage the great industries that have built this nation. Poor Mr Modi must shake his head in disbelief as he looks at what we in this nation have – yet are so determined to destroy. Meanwhile, Mr Jinping is no doubt rubbing his hands with glee. ear Sir, A letter to Crisafulli D As a conservative Queensland voter I am absolutely dumbfounded at the inexcusable stupidity of your Liberal National party in giving bipartisan support to the Palaszczuk government to implement a ‘Treaty’ with 150 Aboriginal organisations – with indigenous Australians accounting for only around 4 per cent of the population in Queensland – along with ‘truth-telling’ and subsequent reparations amounting to millions of dollars of taxpayer money. Your party members must be blissfully ignorant as to what is really at stake here. The rewrite of Queensland colonial history will end up in reparations in a multitude of forms – to the financial, social and mobility detriment to the other 96 per cent of Queenslanders. No Australian history, geography or civics has been taught in the school curriculum as a specific subject since 1972, the year a new social studies syllabus was introduced to Queensland state primary schools. Most primary school pupils can’t explain why Australia Day falls on 26 January each year, let alone tell you the name of any early Australian explorer or recount their intrepid exploits to lay the foundations of modern Australia. Your party appears happily oblivious to the fact that the Liberals in every state in Australia (with the exception of Tasmania – for now) have been smashed to pieces in elections for their misguided efforts in trying to ‘out-Labor’ the Labor party. Even your federal counterparts have come to their senses and are now opposing Labor’s race-based Voice. Your party needs to backtrack quickly and publicly admit your misguided judge- ment on the ‘Treaty’. Are you totally ignorant of what has eventuated in New Zealand and Canada with race-based treaties within these nations? You have betrayed the centre-right conservative voter and left the silent majority of Queenslanders, who are waking up to this divisive race-based ideology, without a plausible alternative government. If you aspire to form government you first have to oppose the tired, worn-out, long-serving, totally broke Palaszczuk mob with crystal-clear policies based on core Liberal National party values – one man, one vote, one value before the law – not join them in implementing their socialist agenda. Are you in any way conscious of the folly of your actions in supporting this ‘Treaty’ legislation? Yours faithfully, Stan Wood, a Speccie reader from Queensland. 27 2023 . . . i

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