Things are quiet around here, so I'm just gonna post a ripper of a letter sent to The Age the other day:
There's an elephant on the road
Our yabbadabbadoo terror laws are like the trick I used to play on my children when they were squabbling on long car trips. To distract them, I'd suddenly sound the horn: "What was that for that, Dad?"
"To get the elephant off the road."
"What elephant? There's no elephant on the road!"
"See, it works, doesn't it?"
The crazy logic was unanswerable. Car horns do keep elephants off the road and distract kids, momentarily, from their bickering. Anti-terror laws do distract citizens (from many other important issues) while intimating that their leaders are doing their utmost to protect us.
Our politicians will always be able to claim that the laws worked as deterrents, even if there is no terrorist attack in Australia ever: "See, I told you they'd work!"
Hans Colla, Highton
There's an elephant on the road
Our yabbadabbadoo terror laws are like the trick I used to play on my children when they were squabbling on long car trips. To distract them, I'd suddenly sound the horn: "What was that for that, Dad?"
"To get the elephant off the road."
"What elephant? There's no elephant on the road!"
"See, it works, doesn't it?"
The crazy logic was unanswerable. Car horns do keep elephants off the road and distract kids, momentarily, from their bickering. Anti-terror laws do distract citizens (from many other important issues) while intimating that their leaders are doing their utmost to protect us.
Our politicians will always be able to claim that the laws worked as deterrents, even if there is no terrorist attack in Australia ever: "See, I told you they'd work!"
Hans Colla, Highton