LETTERS, AUSTRALIA
Write on: Letters to the editor
16 August 2008
Georgia
I am writing to condemn our news coverage of the war in Georgia.
You could not tell from our news or current affairs or interviews with experts, that a US puppet state, armed and trained by Israel and the USA, attacked killing 1500 Russian civilians and caused 30,000 refugees using the night of the opening of the Beijing Olympics to achieve virtual news blackout.
Given the carnage, just how could you expect Russia to respond. I beg you to remember just how bellicose was the USA after the 3000 deaths were caused on September 11. Can you remember what we did after that to countries with no direct involvement in the attack?
It seems unlikely to me that in such a tiny country with over 100 US and Israeli military advisers, that US motives were not the ones behind such attacks. How could this entirely predictable result possibly be in Georgias interests? In just the last few months, Georgia has received 206 tanks, 186 armoured vehicles and 25 helicopters.
Stephen Braithwaite (via email)
Islamophobia?
Your article by Ema Corro regarding the citizenship of Faiza Silmi in France (GLW #761) raises interesting questions regarding integration and tolerance.
However, reporter Ema Corro threw the baby out with the bathwater when covering this story. The implications of the French courts ruling are concerning. So too, however, is the oppression of women within the Islamic orthodox, as Silmi refers to it.
To label the courts decision as Islamophobic and anti-immigrant racism is to trivialise legitimate concerns held by the French authorities.
To what extent should female oppression be tolerated in an egalitarian nation? While I agree the French courts decision was not the right way to go about dealing with the issue, I do recognise their many concerns regarding these issues, and do not believe these concerns were rooted in Islamophobia, nor anti- immigrant racism, but instead in a genuine belief in sexual equality.
When one considers the efforts of many feminists who have fought for centuries for sexual equality, the prevalence of female oppression (whatever the context) is always concerning.
Luke Vanni
Wavell Heights, Qld
Missing: an analysis of ACTU
From the adoption of Labors Forward with Fairness IR policy at its April 2007 national conference, up until now, GLW has continued to expose the hypocrisy of the Labor government, states Graham Matthews (Write On, GLW #762).
But what has been missing in GLWs coverage throughout the Your Rights at Work campaign is any analysis of the role of the ACTU in seeking to conceal from workers Labors hypocrisy.
According to Matthews (GLW Nov 26, 2006), The lessons from history are clear. While Labors promise to scrap at least some of the worst of Howards IR laws is a good first step, it will have to be held to this promise, pushed to go further. Working people cannot afford their unions to be drawn into a mono-focused and uncritical vote Labor campaign.
But working people were drawn into a mono-focused and uncritical vote Labor campaign.
In June this year, I attended a Unions WA Organising Conference addressed by ACTU secretary Jeff Lawrence. When asked why the ACTU was unwilling to criticise Labors Forward with Fairness, Lawrence stated that the union movement could not afford to damage the ALPs electoral prospects.
The ALP may have wanted to give workers the impression that they would restore workers rights. But it was the ACTU that worked tirelessly to reinforce this myth.
A campaign to elect a Labor government committed to maintaining anti-worker laws is not a campaign for workers rights, no matter how many people attend its rallies.
Nick Everett
Bassendean, WA
Clean aluminium needs nuclear power
Dick Nichols is at pains (GLW #761) to prove that since the Australian aluminium industry is a major greenhouse polluter, shutting down the local smelters will be good for Australia and the world while having nil economical and social impacts.
Nichols should better stress the point that energy intensive industries, such as that of aluminium, are only as dirty as their energy source. The aluminium produced in Australia using coal-fired power stations creates some 17 kg of CO2 per kg of pure metal, very much the same as Chinese aluminium.
In contrast, the footprint of aluminium produced in France using nuclear power is only about 6 kg/kg, the same of that produced in Iceland or Norway using hydro and geothermal energy, all with similar costs.
Simply put, a nuclear power station up in Gladstone would slash the footprint, hence avoiding the need to shut down the smelters and retrain or relocate the aluminium industry workforce, as Nichols proposes, while preserving the income generated by the industry.
Keeping the smelters open using nuclear power will have another interesting side effect: enable Zane Alcorn (GLW #761, Six reasons to phase out coal) to develop his alternative exports of photovoltaic panels, solar plants and wind turbines using clean Australian aluminium. Unless, of course, Alcon is counting on cheap Chinese aluminium for his renewables master plan.
Carlos Caceres (via email)