8 November 1985. Thought for the Week:
"We are apt to look on art and on music especially as a commodity
and a luxury commodity at that; but music is something more
- it is a spiritual necessity. The art of music above all
other arts is the expression of the soul of a nation, and
by a nation I mean not necessarily aggregations of people,
artificially divided from each other by political frontiers
or economic barriers. What I mean is any community of people
who are spiritually bound together by language, environments
history, and common ideals and, above all, a continuity with
the past".
Vaughan Williams in National Music |
HAWKE GIVES THE ALBATROSS A JOB"Since he lost the election to Bob Hawke in March 1983, Mr. Fraser has been a man without a mission. He has been rattling round the world like an old ghost, looking for someone to haunt. Bob Hawke has given Mr. Fraser the legitimacy and the spotlight that he has lacked". Niki Savva, political columnist, in The Sun (Melb. November 2. Is that so? Well, we can't help asking ourselves the question -"Did Mr. Hawke REALLY give Malcolm Fraser the job to butcher South Africa or was he "under orders"? Well, perhaps not "orders": these sorts of "directions" are done much more subtly than the blatant issuing of instructions. Many people whose opinion cannot be discounted are satisfied that Malcolm Fraser has been selected for a key role in the United Nations. He has the right "qualifications": he will do anything at all to hug the limelight; he is the ideal "useful innocent" of Lenin - but perhaps not all that innocent. Has anyone thought, as we do, that Mr. Hawke may have been given "the message" from bodies like Institutes of International Affairs, International Socialist organisations, the higher reaches of the U.N., that Malcolm Fraser is to be "promoted" in the whirlwind anti-South Africa climate, as a "world figure"? An eminent personage? A zealot of the Socialist "religion", as Mr. Hawke is, would bend over backwards to do the bidding of his international Socialist masters. We'll never be likely, of course, to have confirmation of our suspicions: however, unfolding events my ultimately give the game away. |
PREDICTIONS OF FINANCIAL DISASTERJeremy Lee sends the following That, Mr. Keegan, was the whole idea
of those who committed Australia to the 1974 Lima Declaration.
We had to wipe out our own producers, and import on impossible
terms from the Third World. Why be surprised? Another article
on the same issue, reporting on the chaotic U.S. scene, said:
Both the U.S. and Australia, meantime,
are destroying their farming and manufacturing bases at a
furious pace. A quarter of a million US farmers are now in
deep financial trouble. Here in Australia, a rash of forced
farm auctions is causing near panic. The Australian
(same date) reported an auction of one of W.A's biggest farms: |
MOZAMBIQUE FETED WHILE SOUTH AFRICA FACES SANCTIONSThe Sunday Mail (Qld) Oct. 27, reported that Communist thug Samora Machel, who has given the Soviets naval facilities in Maputo, has just been in New York, being "... given the "red carpet" treatment talking to Henry Kissinger and oil executives and dining with David Rockefeller chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York, meeting industrialists in Houston, and visiting Fort Hood Army Base at the suggestion of Defence Secretary Caspar Weinberger ...." To win the approval of the Kissingers and Rockefellers, you must, it, seems, bankrupt your country, abolish elections, produce civil war, persecute the indigenous people and give aid and solace to the USSR. So far, it seems, South Africa hasn't qualified for similar "red carpet" treatment. |
MR. MALCOLM FRASER REWARDEDThis comment from Chas Pinwill League
State Director for Queensland "Any politician who established an impeccable record on some issue popular with the numbers game at the United Nations, irrespective of his own nation's interests, indeed, in spite of this record contributing to his defeat in politics, can expect to fall when the time comes, into a comfortable sinecure. "Not, of course, that Mr. Fraser's ambitions are sated with this committee appointment. It must be seen as his launching pad into his longer-term objective of a high level posting at the United Nations itself. "His failure as a national politician will not mitigate against his prospects as an international one. The U.N. is full of ex-politicians who, having been kicked by their electors, have 'ridden' the blow towards 'upstairs' deflection, instead of 'downwards' one. Mr. Fraser's predecessor, Mr. Gough Whitlam, has previously demonstrated the art. "In what Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen described as 'the great joke of all time', Mr. Fraser said that the one thing that would bring him back into domestic politics would be any sign that the Party was pandering to more right wing Australian viewpoints. "While senior Federal Liberals were busy discounting any possibility of this, and Dr. Jim Cairns was observing that 'the differences between the Labor and Liberal Parties were rapidly disappearing'. Sir Joh observed that Mr. Fraser, 'the hero and champion of the Socialist Left, would never get back into Australian politics. "The charade of a choice between opposites for electors will always be played, but in the end it's not the label but the contents that kill. Another way of saying Apartheid (apart-ness) is "birds of a feather flock together'. "Mr. Fraser and the international Socialists are certainly flying in the same squadron against Western interests in Africa. Certainly Mr. Fraser would not wish to fly with the internationalists on all issues, but then he doesn't have to do so. He will only be promoted and given a platform where he promotes their issues. "The kindest thing that can be said about Mr. Fraser, under the circumstances, is that he has neither the intelligence, the wisdom, nor judgment, to see very far in the matter of South Africa; or on any matter of importance, for that matter." |
SANCTIONSChas. Pinwill continues To the vast majority of people, relief from the daily media beatings will be the issue. The majority will still not agree with the anti-South Africa policy, just as they did not agree with the Communist take over of Vietnam. "Those who remember the last two years of the Vietnam War will recall a point where sufficient people said: 'Look, it's got to stop; it's just got to stop'. Why? "Few had been affected personally or economically. "Emotionally, Western peoples were in the position of the families who really didn't want to move out of their homes, even though over the years ten thousand blacksmith shops had set up in the neighbourhood. In the end, the sheer volume of the infernal racket of beating plowshears and swords could not be borne. "Let's get out gradually', they said. "Once interest in the struggle for South Africa has been utterly exhausted by media beatings of plowshears and swords, and the noises emitted are as intelligible as those of blacksmithing, the fire sale of South Africa will begin. Once again the arena will be Western thought, and Western media the Trojan Horse. This struggle might be termed the 4th world war,' Solzhenltsyn called Vietnam the 3rd, and we lost it. "Running alongside the KGB strategy for the defeat of order in South Africa, depending as it does on the moral fear of, 'seeming to be racist', is the careful preparation for Australia, New Zealand, and even Britain for similar defeat, via increasing fragmentation of the population through immigration policies; and after the defeat of South Africa, a radical upturn in the politicisation of these minorities on the way to majorities. |