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It would appear as through Parnell McGuinness (“JD Vance chastised Europeans on free speech. He wasn’t wrong”, June 8) and similar-minded conservative commentators such as Sky News After Dark, are continuing on their ideologically driven warpaths oblivious to the voice of the Australian people as expressed in the May 3 election. While these media darlings of the right still want to rant and rave and feed each other’s egos with negativity, doom and gloom, the great mass of Australians are getting on with life, comfortable with their government which is safe, stable, secure and focused on traditional Australian positive values of a fair go, kindness and friendliness. To become relevant again and play a meaningful role in modern Australia, the right-wing media needs to jettison these antagonistic Trump-like approaches which were clearly rejected by the Australian people.

Warren Marks, Richmond (Tas)

US Vice President JD Vance.Credit: nnariwood

Parnell Palme McGuinness warns against the suppression of ideas, quoting the US vice president’s controversial advice to the Munich Security Conference in February that “governments must listen to and respect their citizens”. However, she, like JD Vance, can’t resist cherry-picking just which ideas and citizen groups are worthy of respect. She uses the case of the phrase “identified as” being currently questioned and “no longer [deemed] acceptable” by some activists, as an example of “groups trying to control public conversation”. But is this really a “kind of slippery censorship”, or just the progression of an idea so it more accurately conveys the lived experience of a group? Wasn’t JD Vance’s speech realistically more of an attempt to control? It’s a shame Palme McGuinness sabotages her own argument, adopts the culture war cover, and portrays progressive ideas as threats. Everyone counts, Parnell.

Kerrie Wehbe, Blacktown

EVs not for me

After 60 years of driving, I recently explored the hybrid option (“The sweet spot: How to get the most out of your super and the pension”, June 8). I currently drive a diesel SUV, and being a self-funded retiree, I receive no government pension. I spend about $100 per fortnight on fuel. The hybrid currently comes with no spare wheel and no tow-bar, which I need to tow my boat. The changeover figure is $12,000 in the dealer’s favour. The cost of a one-off tow-bar is an extra $2000, and a spare wheel costs a couple of hundred more. That equates to about six years’ driving if I continue to use diesel. There is no government incentive for me to change. Free rego for all EV-driving retirees might sway me. I think I will stay with my diesel as I am not that green.
David Sayers, Gwandalan

Undeserved reward

This just brings discredit to the whole honours system (“Politicians, scientists and costume designer feature in King’s awards”, June 8). The highest honours go to those who have already achieved a higher role in society, often just for doing what that job requires. Isn’t achieving that position (and the salary that goes with it) reward enough? Meanwhile, those who make a real sacrifice and give true service to others might receive a lower honour (when nominated), if any at all. In the case of the honour given to Scott Morrison, one hopes that it is primarily because most ex-PMs have historically received a similar award. Otherwise, it wouldn’t seem to be merited. The citation says it’s for “his leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic and his key role in the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal”. Doesn’t that come with the job of being PM? His role in the pandemic overlooks the refusal to require those already wealthy to pay back JobKeeper payments for which they were ultimately found to be ineligible, the “stroll-out” of vaccines, and the needless antagonism of China over the pandemic’s origins (which damaged Australia’s trade). And the value of the AUKUS deal remains questionable. And then there are the multiple ministries, robo-debt, claims to not hold a hose, and statements that women protesters were lucky not to be shot. I predict that this will prompt many other letters to the editor.

David Rush, Lawson

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