@aps1080 wrote:
You elected him.

Weather changes all the time, i have been up qld way when it was wet and dry, drought. The farmer had been there years and that was how it went.

Dorothy mckellar summed it up in her poem.

I did not.

 

"That was how it went".   But it need not have been like that.


He lived in an area where it has never been treey.

Droughts occurred before clearing.





@aps1080 wrote:

He lived in an area where it has never been treey.

Droughts occurred before clearing.


No, he didn't.

 

Not the droughts that we have now.

How do you know ?

I didnt say where he lived.

Not all qld was covered in trees before settlement.


Huh?   How do I know?   Apparently everyone except you knows.


So you will forego all beef raised in qld then ?


Or do you eat meat from cleared land ?


How much of qld have you seen with your own eyes.

Look. I have no problem accepting that the severity of the drought in that region could be due to deforestation.

 

That doesn't mean we can't support our farmers through this hardship. Charities have sent millions upon millions of dollar to drought and flood stricken countries overseas, yet when it comes to our own natural disasters, there is an eerie silence. A sense of disbelief that this could be happening in our "lucky country".

Time to get behind your own country, folks, your people need your support.

 

With regards to rampant deforestation, there is still nobody listening.

 

All around the world, it's still being done to the last great forests, the Amazon for dams, cattle and sugar,  and the Indonesian rainforests for palm oil.

 

Nobody is waking up.

 

 

aussie chrissy.jpg


@icyfroth wrote:

@j*oono wrote:

Sorry Icy.  I'm all charitied out this Christmas.  Six new Kiva loans last night for family members on the x's side. We are doing a gift to the charity of our choice this year for a change instead of the usual bottle of spirits.

 

My favourite one is to a young farmer in Thanh Hoa City. The loan is to buy sand, cement and bricks to build a toilet as his family has to use a neighbours latrine.


Totally understand, Joono.

 

Who gives a rat's about the aussie farmer, anyway? Overseas farms and families are much more important. 

 

There's enough ppl losing jobs thanks to the Halal Boycott. Who cares about the livelihoods lost to the Ausse producers who provide the product to be halal certified in the first place.

 

All that can come from overseas anyway, seeing we're sending money over there to help their farms and families.

 

Let them deal with halal certification.


i can't believe you are taking joono to task for spending HER money however SHE chooses to. Smiley LOL


@icyfroth wrote:

Look. I have no problem accepting that the severity of the drought in that region could be due to deforestation.

 

That doesn't mean we can't support our farmers through this hardship. Charities have sent millions upon millions of dollar to drought and flood stricken countries overseas, yet when it comes to our own natural disasters, there is an eerie silence. A sense of disbelief that this could be happening in our "lucky country".

Time to get behind your own country, folks, your people need your support.

 

 

 

aussie chrissy.jpg


That's the thing, nobody said not to support our own farmers or that we would not support our own farmers.  

I support our farmers by buying Australian produce, preferably as directly as possible instead of via the supermarkets who screw them as hard as they can.  As a long term measure though they need to revegetate some of the land because pasture alone is not sustainable and soon transforms into a dust bowl.  

 

Hoping they all have a good day today and a better season coming.

 

Happy Christmas.


@*pepe wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

@j*oono wrote:

Sorry Icy.  I'm all charitied out this Christmas.  Six new Kiva loans last night for family members on the x's side. We are doing a gift to the charity of our choice this year for a change instead of the usual bottle of spirits.

 

My favourite one is to a young farmer in Thanh Hoa City. The loan is to buy sand, cement and bricks to build a toilet as his family has to use a neighbours latrine.


Totally understand, Joono.

 

Who gives a rat's about the aussie farmer, anyway? Overseas farms and families are much more important. 

 

There's enough ppl losing jobs thanks to the Halal Boycott. Who cares about the livelihoods lost to the Ausse producers who provide the product to be halal certified in the first place.

 

All that can come from overseas anyway, seeing we're sending money over there to help their farms and families.

 

Let them deal with halal certification.


i can't believe you are taking joono to task for spending HER money however SHE chooses to. Smiley LOL


I can't believe you think I did. If you reread my post above where I said I totally understand?

Joono can do what she likes, I'm sure she's a big girl now.