kingfisher, emotional argument certainly has it's place in whipping up fervor.
But it's simply not convincing. Emotion does not a case make. Your arguments have been nothing but emotion and hyperbole and vague threats of future doom. You've given no concrete answers to clear questions. You've given no reasonable counter to the alternative proposals put forward. You've given no actual justification for the things you want.
Emotional argument is fine, but without those facts, you are doing your own desires a disservice. You are not only failing to support your cause, you are actively harming it. This is the essence of Poes law - someone who is so wrapped up in their own argument that they can't see their rhetoric is actually running counter to the point they are trying to make - that their own words are serving as a scathing indictment.
Australians, at least the ones I've met, are not cowards. Do you think they are? Then why do you think appeals to fear will be an effective rhetorical technique? Most of your emotional arguments have been just that, an appeal to fear. Do you really expect this to be effective?
Do you NOT think Australian's are patriotic? If you do, then why do you seem to find a foreign power violating your sovereign territory and stealing your natural resources to be acceptable? Why do you seem to be so willing to give up the things that your countrymen value, like their ecology, in stubborn worship of a culture of fear? This may not be your actual argument, but this is how it looks to a neutral third party (I'm mostly in this thread for the occasional bout of New Zealand politics).
Your argument is, at best, incredibly ineffective. Even if you are still sure that what you believe is correct, it might be worth examining it and trying to figure out why.