16 May 1980. Thought for the Week: "....a collectivity
has no moral standards of its own and invariably reflects the lowest
morals of its constituent parts".
C.H. Douglas. |
LETTER FROM AMERICAOne of our American correspondents with close
contacts in the Washington political scene writes to us on some significant
developments over the past few weeks "I have no doubt that the West is a sinking carcass ready to soon rot. I hope I'm wrong, but doubt it. Perhaps if a crisis is reached there will be a rejuvenation. There appears to be one here - at least a little one. Today Communist Marchers (May Day) were attacked by groups of patriots carrying American flags in Los Angeles, Washington, New York, Atlanta, etc. I watched it on T.V. Some of it was the result of planned counter-demonstrations and some the spontaneous result of enraged patriots. I saw plenty of Communist blood flowing.... "The traitor, Mrs. Timm, who went to Iran and sat beside Bani Sadr and spoke against America, has returned and has had a ton of mail, crowds milling about her home, and numerous threats. She is being protected by police...." There is a strong smell coming from the Department
of Defense (American spelling) in Washington. The Salt 2 Treaty is probably
dead. The Secretary of Defense, Harold Brown, lied to Congress on the
crucial issue of U.S.-Soviet equality in military hardware. Last December
Harold Brown spoke in public along the lines that there was approximate
equality of military power between the two super powers. But Brown's
confidential Report prepared for Republican members of the House Budget
Committee gives a far different picture. It was disclosed by national
political columnist, Jack Anderson: "The United States has already slipped
into a position of relative inferiority in the areas of strategic nuclear
forces and theater (American spelling) nuclear forces. ''The Intelligence debate is raging in Washington. A senior politician scientist asks in a recent issue of the Wall Street Journal why did not the Central Intelligence Agency (C.I.A.) foresee and foretell that the Shah would fall? Why did it not predict that the Soviets would invade Afghanistan? Kenneth Adelman, who asked the question, remarked that these failures were failures of imagination, a common human frailty displayed by the Russians before Hitler's invasion, the Americans before Pearl Harbour, and the Israelis before the 1973 war. The Central Intelligence Agency is losing credibility because of its poor performance over the years. The C.I.A. has consistently under-estimated the Soviet I.C.B.M. buildup. It has under estimated the scale and effectiveness of Soviet M.I.R.V. programmes, and given the assessment that Soviet warhead accuracies, which are acknowledged to be the equal of anything America has, would not be attainable by Russia until the mid eighties. The C.I.A. under-estimated the power of the Warsaw Pact countries, and those of North Korea by 25% to 40%. The Wall Street Journal makes the point that none of these situations changed swiftly, so surprise was not a factor in explaining these enormous errors. The same newspaper does not raise the possibility of intense subversion within the Central Intelligence Agency. Kenneth Adelman touches on a very hot issue with respect to intelligence organisations, and that is the one of centralisation. He says that Congress should promote independent, rival centres of intelligence collection and analysis; this increasing the quality of reports by increasing the competition and remove institutional biases from final assessments. The legislation now before the American Senate moves in the opposite direction: it would centralise the U.S. intelligence organisations still further. As Adelman states: "Decentralisation precludes the tendency for the intelligence agencies to sway together with the mood of the moment. For precisely this reason, West Germany established three main organisations responsible for foreign intelligence; France four, and Britain, at least five." Australia has several intelligence organisations; viz. A.S.I.O., O.N.A., J.I.O., A.S.I.S. - there may be more. Institutional competition is essential for the development of the effective functioning of a nation's organisation, be they intelligence organisations, universities, parliaments, police etc. Drab uniformity, brought on by centralisation, reverses the development of effectiveness. |
MONEY, MONEY, MONEYCharles Pinwill, Queensland State Director for
the Australian League of Rights, sends these comments Appalling lack of understanding on the part of our Assistant Treasurer at a time of increasing inflation and bankruptcy is not tolerable. I've a feeling that even six letters inviting Mr. MacPhee to contradict the Bank of New South Wales would put an end to this particular folly. "Mr. MacPhee's letter exposes another more important inaccuracy, viz. "...achievement of this objective (control of inflation) is dependent on control of the monetary aggregates'. "The first obvious point is that control of inflation is not an objective; it's a means. The objective ought to be to stop inflation; a limited objective might be to reduce it. "The control of 'monetary aggregates' is not a limitation upon the Federal Government. Sufficient powers exist if the knowledge and will to use them can be found. "However, here we fall into the Treasury obsession with 'monetary aggregates'. The Monetarists argue a relatively lesser aggregate; the Keynesians a relatively greater aggregate. This battle now rages within the Treasury itself and commands the status of 'question number one'. Stopping inflation does not necessarily depend on the amount of money issued, or as Mr. MacPhee puts it - 'monetary aggregates'. The choice of hyperinflation, stagflation, or mass bankruptcy, where producers run out of finance with which to meet losses - depends on 'monetary aggregates'. "Stopping inflation in Australia in 1980 depends upon the 'how' of credit creation, not upon the 'how much'. If purchasing power is created in such a way as to increase costs; i.e. as a debt, it must increase prices, and inflation. Whether the issue of credit is relatively small or large, the process by which every dollar is issued adds to prices in the course of repayment. The process itself makes inflation inevitable. Further information, if necessary, is obtainable from Chas. Pinwill, P.O. Box 3185, Toowoomba, Qld., 4350. Copies of the October 1978 issue of the Bank of New South Wales Review are available from all League offices. (Price: 50 cents, posted) as is The Money Trick (Price: $1.40 posted)." |
BRIEF COMMENTSAccording to the Director of the Institute of Family Studies more Australian families are breaking down, and in poverty, despite general "affluence". He said that the rich are getting richer and the poor, poorer. Things are not what they seem. If we fold back the cloak of what often appears to be affluence, find a deep black hold of debt. Very many Australians are living in neat suburban villas, with a shiny new car parked in the driveway, and some nice modern furniture inside the home; but there is $30,000 - $40,000 swinging on the house; the car is on hire purchase with $5000 swinging and there may be some more swinging on that new fridge or colour T.V. The rich may well be getting richer, as they have the advantage of initial capitalisation (money makes money). The poor probably are getting poorer as they struggle to survive in an intensely materialistic, credit oriented society. Those without the capacity to have access to continual credit from banks or other sources are in a disadvantageous position. We have our doubts about the "improved education" which was mentioned. We saw an advertisement only recently in a Melbourne daily (positions vacant) which stated that the young applicant "must be able to read". The growing rejection of the British people of both the Common Market and Fluoridation has led us to believe that a basic soundness still exists in the British people. We were interested to read comments by the Chairwoman of the British Housewives League on this very point: "There is no doubt that the Christian ethic is deeply implanted in the collective subconscious of the British people - and from very far back in history. When I heard the one time Bishop of St. Alban's telling young children that St. Augustine brought Christianity to Britain I was surprised. There was a church in Britain long before that. At the beginning of the fourth century A.D., six Bishops and several hundred other Christians, including St. Alban, gave their lives for their faith under the persecution of Diocletian " |