Price does not favor the coalition with his rhetoric Trumpian

With the pre-fingering stations that open in a few days, I agree with Peter Hartcher that the spinmeisters of the liberal party left it a little late with their advertising campaign to “humanize” Peter Dutton. Many will have concluded a long time ago the type of human dutton. His political career is scattered with clues: his strike for the apologies, his false statements that Melburnians was too frightened to go out because of the African bands, his thrust of war with China, his then department wasted millions of dollars with a corrupt contractor on Nauru, his joke in the way, his recently interruption, his Australian joke. Recently, his compensation, his joke, his joke, his joke, his joke, his Australian joke, his Australian joke, his Australian joke, his Australian joke, his recently, his businesses, his shaking, his shaded Sydney for a fundraiser from $ 25,000 while the cyclone Alfred is fallen on his state of origin. If the elections were a job interview for the most important post of the ground, Peter Dutton would have failed a load of key performance indicators, no matter how much advertisements flow to humanize it. Nick Franklin, Katomba
Peter Dutton’s brazen boiling in question and image, in particular on Saturday Heraldcorresponds to the shameless promotion of this voice of the voice. You could repeat the madness to put it too thick. Peter Robinson, Ainslie (Act)
The doctors affect a better remuneration and conditions at Westmead Hospital.Credit: Janie Barrett
Healing system faults
Like many, I am angry for the treatment of medical professionals in the public hospitals of the new South Wales (“We pay a great price as doctors. Pay us what they are worth “, April 11). It is not only in Dickensian conditions for those who study for years to help us, our elderly parents and our children injured in the difficult moments of life, but also for pure stupidity. We do not want tired professionals and under resources that commit themselves not supported to save our life or leave hospitals even more short of skills while they head elsewhere. We pay vast taxes to medicate only for one reason: to have fair access to medicine. This is a difficult but mathematically feasible: x population means requesting the department and beds. These beds require a pre -established number of doctors, nurses and other staff. If the government (or a private company) is not providing, replacing or keeping this staff in the required numbers, they are violating the contract we have with them. And a public service department that has not paid them a living salary or that makes them extraordinary unpaid, is in abandonment of his duty of diligence. A plane cannot fly without pilots, engineers and control staff, a factory without qualified operators, so why should we let a hospital run without enough medical staff? Allan Kreuiter, Roseville
Nurses and doctors are not the only healthcare professionals who receive a raw salary agreement in the New South Wales. Clinical programmers work in the rear corridors of both public and private hospital systems, analyzing the clinical folders of each patient admitted in Australian hospitals, abstracting the relevant documentation and assigning codes from the national classifications of diseases and procedures. These codes, together with the demographic data of de-identified patients, inform governments at all levels of the health of the population, providing a rich database for research and quality studies and, since 2012, forming the basis of funding based on the activities of most public hospitals of NSW. Without clinical coding, funding cannot occur. The profession is bleeding qualified programmers for the private health system and other states and often is not able to attract qualified and expert candidates, often by relying on private contractual companies whose hourly rates are compared to the eyes compared. A prize for the clinical programmers of the new South Wales is late. Yes, there is a bucket finished money for health, but something is wrong when health workers at many different levels are leaving the public health system. Catherine Murator, Bomaderry
Develop concerns
Like an eighteen-year-old who looks to the future of our nation, they are anguished by the way our leaders face the housing crisis-with band policies that do not propose a long-term vision for Australia. State governments announce a higher density life in the suburbs that lack support infrastructures, recognizing that they do not have a plan to improve it. They have only two objectives: to acquire votes and claim the 3 billion dollar housing incentive of the federal government. We deserve a nation in which cities expand with their populations, rather than exploding in capacity. The actions of state governments are short -sighted and selfish. Australia needs politicians who think beyond the next elections and really care for the future of Australia. Alexandra Cuthell, Lindfield
The Minns government plans to eliminate the rules of the Council by stopping low and medium density accommodation in Sydney.
Dutton has announced that the first buyers of new houses will be able to deduct their payments of interest from taxable income (“Dutton promises reimbursements of mortgage interests deductible from taxes“, April 13). This seems seriously unfair for the many buyers for the first time they buy second -hand properties, which generally provide the lowest range on the market. And a rich young man who also buys a $ 10 million home? Toni Lorents, Fennell Bay
Labor’s latest thought bubble to give buyers of houses in difficulty an advantage by dropping the deposit required at 5 % will condemn these low income earnings at a long period of much higher mortgage rates, due to the higher financial risk for banks and mortgage insurance costs of much larger financiers, as well as longer reimbursement cycles. These extra useless costs are both large, up to $ 100,000 in 30 years and very profitable for banks. All this at the expense of these Australian fighters. Buyer attention. Tony Hors, Taree
I notice that a work policy allows to allow buyers of the first home to pay only 5 % deposit. How is it possible? The property and transport are regulated by state laws, non -federal. There is no jurisdiction for this intervention by the Commonwealth. The Labor Party is aware of it. It is misleading to offer this policy. Dennis Blut, Chammerry
It is not a chicken
Congratulations to the indefactable Kate McClymont for having revealed the Gordian node of companies and deceptive characters assembled by the gentlemen Petroulias and Faraj (“The cryptocurrency coin, the chicken shop and the missing millions“, April 12). We wonder what could be obtained if those great commercial minds made a similar effort in legitimate companies rather than presumably looking for patterns to tear people. Tim Parker, Balmain
Whatever the HeraldKate McClymont is paid, it’s not enough. With Shephard, Yamba
Commercial stories
Richard Glover’s column at least we had at the old days he resumed me (“Trump’s commercial vision? I was there. He wore the falling underpants”, April 12). With the cost of living in everyone’s mind at the moment, I would like to share with the millennials as life was in the 1940s and 1950s. My school shoes were also my best shoes, my sister and I didn’t have the overcoat and a better cardigan each. One day, leaving, I borrowed his and I wore it under mine in order to have a twin set. A hamburger and a frappè were an opportunity and hot milk with bread was a pleasure. I sat on a table outside a shop to watch TV. Later I rented a black and white TV and put two shit in the slot to watch it. We spent 10 years without going to the cinema. As parents, once we went to a drone-in and we had to leave before the end of the film. Thinking to think that our children fall asleep on the rear seat. Judy Nicholas, Kambar (Act)
Join the tail
We have just completed another melbourne in Wollongg Drive in our Hyundai electric car and we want to send a warning to other pilots EV that with too many charges not available or broken, the charging desert between Yass and Albury is wide. Gundagai, Holbrook, Jugiong – All broken. Only the two EVIE networks of Tarcutta fight. We have lost an hour waiting for our turn there and we suspect that Easter will bring problems to Tarcutta. The first adopters of the EV recharging how the NRM seem to have dropped the ball on this, since we allow vast banks of Tesla charger to remain inactive while fighting for non -Tesla waste. There must be greater supervision of this sector if the government rightly wants to see more electric cars on the road. Denise Young, Thiroul
Excuse me, my friends
While we are grinding our teeth asking us what to do after with the Joker in the White House, why not cut the losses on Aukus (LettersApril 12), do we say “Bonjour Mes Amis” to our old French friends and take a look at the German -free pilot subtitles? We could both build some new era networks and save some money to reconstruct our public education systems and TAFE. Tom Mangan, Woy
Four days go slowly in this period of the year in Galapagos.Credit: action
Alcohol
I write from the Galapagos islands in Ecuador. Today are the presidential elections and, since democracy returned to the country in 1979, the sale of alcohol was prohibited for the two days before and the day after the day of the elections. Whatever happens on May 3, at least Australians can celebrate or commission a beer. Michael Thomas, Cheltenham
- Send a letter to Sydney Morning HeraldEmail letters@smh.com.au. Click Here For suggestions on how to send letters.
- The opinion newsletter is a weekly winding of opinions that will challenge, champion and inform. Sign up here.