13 November, 2019

Mr Morrison, I lost my home to bushfire. Your thoughts and prayers are not enough

Fires of unprecedented number and ferocity are today raging in New South Wales and Queensland. Residents in some regions woke to news that the fire danger was “catastrophic”. Rural fire chief Shane Fitzsimmons was blunt when he explained what that means: “It’s where people die.”
Image result for Mr Morrison, I lost my home to bushfire. Your thoughts and prayers are not enough
Prime Minister Scott Morrison inspecting
 a burnt-out property in the Gold Coast
hinterland in September 2019. Mr Morrison
has offered “thoughts and prayers” to
those affected by the fires.
I lost my home in Victoria’s 1983 Macedon bushfires. I know sympathy and financial assistance for those in the midst of the crisis is important. However, when political leaders such as Prime Minister Scott Morrison offer their “thoughts and prayers”, it’s hard to read this as anything but disingenuous. 
Scientists and meteorologists have for years warned of more frequent and extreme bushfires as climate change worsens. Their messages have been met by policy inertia. Nationals leader Michael McCormack on Monday went so far as to dismiss those who link bushfires to global warming as “raving inner-city lunatics”.

Read the story from The Conversation by an Associate professor/Principal Research Fellow with the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute from the University of Melbourne, Janet Stanley - “Mr Morrison, I lost my home to bushfire. Your thoughts and prayers are not enough.”

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