7 May 1965. Thought for the
Week: "The tie that binds them (Communists) across the frontiers
of nations, across barriers of language and differences of class and
education, in defiance of religion, morality, truth, law, honor, the
weakness of the body and the irresolutions of the mind, even unto death,
is a simple conviction: It is necessary to change the world. Their power,
whose nature baffles the rest of the world, because in a large measure
the rest of the world has lost that power, is the power to hold convictions
and to act on them
Communists are that part of mankind which has recovered
the power to live or die - to bear witness - for its faith." - Whittaker Chambers in "Witness".
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MR. CALWELL ECHOES DR. CAIRNSThe central theme of Mr. Arthur Calwell's speech at Canberra on Tuesday, opposing the Government's decision to send Australian troops to South Vietnam, was merely an echo of what Dr. Jim Cairns has been persistently putting forward: that it is primarily a "civil war" in South Vietnam. However, Mr. Calwell did not go as far as Dr. Cairns in demanding that the Americans withdraw. In fact Mr. Calwell appears to believe that it is all right for the Americans to be in South Vietnam, but that they should be left to themselves. However, Mr. Calwell did deliver one thrust of substance against the Government when he said that in selling wheat, wool and steel to Communist China, "Australia was helping to equip the Chinese army". Yet the Government, which was willing to encourage this trade, now sent Australian troops, in the words of the Prime Minister, to prevent 'the downward thrust of China'. The Government might be able to square its conscience on this matter, but this was logically and morally impossible."So long as the Government encourages economic aid for Red China, it leaves itself wide open to the charge of hypocrisy when it claims that it's foreign policy is designed to halt Communist expansion. |
NOT ANOTHER KOREAAs we reported last week, the mounting American air assaults have had little or no effect upon the Viet Cong in South Vietnam. If the Viet Cong is to be defeated, appropriate action must be taken on the ground. The Communists have infinite patience and will continue to apply Mao Tse-tung's famous principles of guerrilla warfare, one of which is to retreat in the face of superior force and to wait for an opportune time to advance. Now that the Australian Government is providing ground forces for South Vietnam, it has the right to ask, whether the American "no-win" policy has been discarded in favour of completely defeating the Communists. Australian troops were provided for the Korean War by the
present Government parties. The Korean campaign, which could have ended
in a major defeat for the Communists, ended in a stalemate and a propaganda
victory for the Communists in Asia. General van Fleet and other American
military leaders claimed that they had been prevented from winning in
Korea. If the Washington
policy makers really mean business at last in Asia, then they will demonstrate
this by making use of the best Asian fighting force in Asia at present,
the Chinese Nationalist army on Formosa. |
UNIVERSITY CAMPAIGN AGAINST GOVERNMENTWe trust that Australian taxpayers have noted that University professors, lecturers and students have spearheaded the nation-wide campaign opposing the Australian Government's policy concerning South Vietnam. Of the twelve members of the Monash (Victoria) University staff who sent a telegram of protest to Sir Robert Menzies, no less than eight were history lecturers. No wonder some rather slanted "history" is taught at Monash University. Another signatory to the Monash telegram was politics lecturer Dr. John Playford, an active smearer of the Australian League of Rights. A recent vile attack on the League's National Director, Mr. Eric Butler, in the University's paper, Lots Wife, was allegedly based upon Dr. Playford's files. Long-time Leftists from the Australian National University were active in the demonstrations outside Parliament House. One of these was Dr. R. Gollan, senior fellow of history. Across the Tasman in New Zealand, University lecturers and their students have also been active in supporting Communist strategy in South-East Asia. Lenin taught that Communist leadership must be recruited. |
PRESIDENT JOHNSON CRITICISES PRESS PROPAGANDAEven U.S.A. President Johnson - for whom we have a limited regard - has been moved by the sting of news bias to react against the loaded propaganda of most of the daily press. President Johnson is reported by The Age of April 29 as saying to a group of reporters: I do sometimes wonder how some people can be so concerned with our bombing a cold bridge of steel and concrete in North Vietnam and never open their mouth about a bomb being placed in our embassy in South Vietnam."Yes, Mr. President, we have noticed it, too. |
LIGHT ON SOUTH AFRICAMr. David Wright of Oatley, N.S.W, who claims to
have been a South African opposed to the Verwoerd Government, had a letter
published (rather surprisingly, we feel) in The Australian of
April 30 refuting some of the biased propaganda about that country. If
native wages are "starvation wages" (he says in reply to a previous correspondent)
"how is it that the South African Government has to limit the influx of
'foreign' natives". He continues: He sums up very ably by observing that the previous correspondent's letter "typifies the results of a long, antagonistic and non-factual press campaign." |
THE CONFUSION OF ARCHIBISHOP FRANK WOODSThe published views of Anglican Archbishop Woods of Melbourne on the war in South Korea, and his replies to protests from fellow-Anglicans, have filled us with despair concerning his Grace's lack of factual knowledge. However, his endorsement last weekend of Australian assistance to the South Vietnamese people fighting Communist aggression and terror came as a pleasant surprise. That is, until we reached the Archbishop's explanation for his stand. To set up, as he
does, the unfinished Korean War as a partial pattern to follow in Vietnam
shows how far from reality his one-sided reading has led him. If his
Grace is interested we will be pleased to supply him with a real history
of the South Korean disaster. But it is the third point advanced which
struck us as unbelievable. We quote The Age of May 3: Divinity is one of the battles the dedicated Christian must enter. The evidence that Communism is such a doctrine of evil, opposed to all the qualities, decencies and moralities that constitute Christianity, is abundantly available in the writings and actions of the Marxist dialecticians. We devoutly hope that Dr. Woods will make the time to familiarise himself with some of these perverted and Godless teachings. He would then cease making statements which not only reflect upon himself, but which tend to lower the standing of the Church. |
THAT "FREEDOM" MARCH IN ALABAMARemember all those sensational press stories about
those "down-trodden" American Negroes who insisted on marching from Selma
to the capital of Alabama, Montgomery in order to insist upon their rights?
Now the true story has been revealed by Mr. Scott Stanley, young American
Editor who has been named to Outstanding Young Men in America by the National
Junior Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Stanley reveals the following facts: Two newsmen from a national publication were jailed for staging
a fake beating of a Selma Negro. Eventually a physical clash was precipitated,
and Martin Luther King and associates got the incident they wanted. Rev.
Reeb was hit on the head. Reeb was not given immediate local hospital
care to save his life, but was driven 100 miles to Birmingham. Strangely
enough, the ambulance carrying Reeb had a flat tyre. On the march between Selma and Montgomery, drunkedness and sex orgies, some of them in public, were the order of the day. One prominent Rabbi and some clergymen left the march in disgust. |