NBN stands for national bloody nuisance
Every day my work grinds to a halt at some point because of poor NBN internet speeds.
Every day my work grinds to a halt at some point because of poor NBN internet speeds.
The rhetoric used in the Greater Sydney Commission's plan for what used to be called Sydney says it all.
Letters
Paul Keating is to be congratulated for addressing an issue that can easily fall prey to mere sentimentality ("Euthanasia is a threshold moment we should not cross", October 20). I wonder if this wouldn't even be on the table if we actually had the courage to accept that a life without suffering, while desirable, is a virtual impossibility. If, in the end, the proposed bill is all about suffering, I see no reason why the law shouldn't be expanded in ever widening circles.
A careful look at the new energy policy reveals the depths of dishonesty voters have to live with.
All the time, effort and expense on research to lengthen our lives just for us to suffer more in the end ("Cost-cutting blamed for neglect at nursing homes", October 15).
We are on the way to providing 100 per cent of our energy needs from renewables.
PR campaigns are pointless when the hard facts suggest they amount to little more than putting lipstick on a pig.
How could the government get into Catholics' bedrooms? The church has been clogging up the space for centuries.
I fully agree with Elizabeth Farrelly ("Sydney seems full of people hating people", October 14-15). But community anger is also driven by another factor – it is taking longer, and costs more, to commute to and from work by road.
The NSW government is certainly not bereft of ways to spend our money and that is amply proven by their new push to plaster the waratah logo over all our cultural institutions ("Pressure to dump waratah cultural rebrand", October 8). Surely even they realise that when they lease out the rights to the Opera House, Taronga Zoo et al the first thing the new lessees will do is change the logo. Or is there an outside chance that this government has finally finished leasing out the state's dwindling assets? Stewart Smith North Kellyville
It looks like millions are to be spent to raise the profile of state leader.
Can't keep military plans safe, so why are we subcontracting out the details of Centrelink customers?
Not sure on what planet Australia's Foreign Minister Julie Bishop lives, but it's not on the one on which I live.
For decades we have been warned about climate change, and we have preferred to do next to nothing.
Maybe support would be more forthcoming if residents were given something more than just apartments.
An Australia with its gun laws scrapped, as Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP Robert Borsak desires, is an Australia the vast majority do not want ("The killer quirk hiding in our gun laws", October 7-8). The thought of it sends chills down the spine. One only has to look at the US, and the continual carnage there, to view what our society would become if our gun laws were scrapped. John Cotterill Kingsford​
Tony Abbott should publicly answer a simple question: Do you think Jesus will save us from global warming? ("If it had only rained until the end of September", October 1.) Because, as an ex-student priest, and a blind neo-liberal who believes we should "let the markets work their magic", it seems that he does believe that the "only recourse ... will be prayer".
Why bother with a state budget when the NSW government can strip transport funding less than halfway through a financial year?
The Las Vegas attack is evidence of how criminals can remain undetected. It requires more than visual surveillance to recognise the motive and execution of the gunman's plan.
President Trump must make sure only the right type of guns get into the hands of the right type of people in America.
You have now had the worst mass shooting in US history and what will be done about it? Nothing.
It is not same-sex marriage that "cleaves our society to pieces", but the intrusion of outdated and irrelevant church dogma into our secular lives.
The notion that the Commonwealth Grants Commission might penalise NSW and Victoria for not allowing fracking for gas extraction is utterly undemocratic and, dare I say it, un-Australian.
Are the lovely Margaret Wyatt, 80, and her husband adopting ("Housing affordability: growing divide between haves and have-nost", September 24) I am happy to fill out an application form!
For a project that promises to "bring Sydney closer together", WestConnex seems to be causing more than its fair share of division and controversy.
Rather than build smaller stadiums, they might like to work on building up a game worth filling them.
Unless Australia can find a statesman it is not hard to envision this dry continent becoming uninhabitable within a century.
No Malcolm Turnbull, the recklessness surrounding gas supply does not lie with the Berejiklian government.
It seems to me that if we don't like the way nursing homes are run, we need to plan our own.
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