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Albanese has arrived in China to talk about expanding economic relationship with Xi Jinping

Albanese has arrived in China to talk about expanding economic relationship with Xi Jinping

Sky News AU2 days ago
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's second visit to China is purely to focus on expanding the economic relationship between the two nations.
Economics, trade, regional security, and the uncertainty in the US will be central themes in his visit with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
'We will have important meetings, about tourism, about decarbonisation of steel, about the full range of issues,' Mr Albanese said.
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Australia is like a fish on a hook with these AUKUS submarines, except that a fish tries to detach itself and find clear water (' PM tested on US alliance ', July 14). Even decades before we are likely to see one of these subs, we have an American undersecretary for defence demanding that Australia commit to deploying the nuclear-powered boats supporting America should there be conflict in the Indo-Pacific. Time for plan B and clearer waters. Lyn Savage, Coogee Australia has a history of joining the US side in military conflicts. This is a strong display of where our allegiances lie. The US administration knows this yet chooses to demand an answer whether we would follow it into conflict with our most important trading partner as we are visiting that partner on a mission to improve trade and diplomatic ties. This deliberate act of sabotage demonstrates the deep lack of regard the US has for Australia's national interests. 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I am tired of seeing and hearing such narrow, ignorant and disingenuous views of both our nation's history and of the Voice proposal: 'trickery' it was not. As Thomas Mayo reminds us, speaking about Indigenous history, 'We were once remarkably peaceful and happy, and we want that for our children today'. Is that too much to ask? Kerrie Wehbe, Blacktown The frustration concerning racist sentiment against Indigenous people shown by your correspondent is palpable, but I feel his comments that trivialise those who, for example, attend NAIDOC events are off the mark. Change does not generally come about in the style of the French Revolution. It comes about by thousands of individuals showing their support for a cause in any way they can, no matter how small, day after day after day. No one's denying we have a long way to go, but we should also not deny that overall support for Aboriginal people and their aspirations is light years ahead of where it was 50 years ago. Ross MacPherson, Seaforth The failure of the 2023 constitutional recognition referendum was disappointing enough without yet another attempt to rewrite its history. There were five years of consultation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples throughout Australia, leading to the 2017 Uluru Convention, which delivered the Uluru Statement from the Heart. The statement calls for 'Constitutional reforms to empower our people'. More specifically, 'We call for the establishment of a First Nations Voice enshrined in the Constitution'. The government decided to hold a referendum in 2023 to implement this request. There were not 'two separate issues'. Indeed, during this consultation process, the powerless symbolic recognition option favoured by your correspondent was one of several options rejected by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and by conservative constitutional lawyers. Symbolic recognition had been comprehensively rejected by the voters in the 1999 constitutional preamble referendum. In the 1967 referendum, voters overwhelmingly approved constitutional changes to give Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples the same rights as those enjoyed by all other Australians. In 2023, voters refused to include a powerful specific Voice for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the Constitution. David Hind, North Sydney Racism is a failure to love our neighbour as ourselves. Racism is a failure of compassion. Such failure separates us from each other and violates our shared humanity. Racism makes slaves of us all. Mark Porter, New Lambton Rights, wrongs and the RBA Consternation about leaving interest rates on hold has been grist for the media mill (' If RBA is misguided on rates, we'll suffer from its fumbling ', July 14). A broader perspective would lament the lingering political and cultural quagmire driven by concern for housing borrowers. 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Don't play the poor mortgagors card. Paying back has always been difficult, but the rewards are great – just ask renters and the homeless. No, the fact is the RBA is impotent. A move in the cash rate is a two-edged sword because a reduction, say, is simply a transfer of spending power from lenders to borrowers. For all we know, that could lead to a reduction in aggregate spending at present. Your mortgagors will gleefully pay down their loans and, as surveys have suggested, increase spending hardly at all. From Gittins' previous writings, I get the impression that he too sees that stabilisation policy needs to be left to fiscal policy, which has a much more direct and measurable effect on the relevant targets – employment and inflation. Mike Bush, Port Macquarie I'd feel more comfortable about the RBA getting monetary policy settings correct if Ross Gittins were on the board. 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Tony Sullivan, Adamstown Heights Rescue the Roxy How the Roxy (' Historic theatre sits unloved for more than a decade ', July 14), only the second cinema in NSW to be added to the National Trust Register, could have been sold off privately and not supported and maintained by successive state governments is beyond comprehension. So little now remains of the history of Parramatta that it is soul-less as Sydney's 'second city'. George Zivkovic, Northmead Another building suffering dire neglect is the small 1920s Moorish-style service station on the corner of Princes Highway and Canal Rd, St Peters. After the government spending squillions of dollars on the M8, nothing has been done to resurrect this small gem or turn it into something useful. John Swanton, Coogee Fuel folly It is pure folly to think that EV trucks will ever be used in Australia's remote places (' Road ahead for electric big trucks a long-haul ', July 14). There isn't any grid electricity where they go. 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