Science of the Social Credit Measured in Terms of Human Satisfaction
Christian based service movement warning about threats to rights and freedom irrespective of the label, Science of the Social Credit Measured in Terms of Human Satisfaction

"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing"
Edmund Burke

Science of the Social Credit Measured in Terms of Human Satisfaction
26 June 1987. Thought for the Week: "Big Business is by no means antipathetic to Communism. The larger the big business grows the more it approximates to Collectivism. It is the upper road of the few instead of the lower road of the masses to Collectivism."
H.G. Wells a former member of the Fabian Society, writing in the London Sunday Express in 1920. Quoted in Eric D. Butler's The Fabian Socialist Contribution to the Communist Advance

SHOULD WE SUPPORT JOHN HOWARD

Several of out readers have taken us to task for not throwing our full support behind Liberal leader, Mr. John Howard, the suggestion being that something akin to the end of the world will take place if the Hawke Government is re-elected. Our in depth exposure of the Hawke Government policies and betrayals of Australia's independence are a matter of record. The League was the first to bring to public attention the Fabian background of the Hawke Government, as clearly outlined in Mr. Hawke's famous 1984 address to the Fabian centenary dinner in Melbourne. We are not aware of one Member of the Opposition parties dealing with this question. But the NSW National Party has issued a scurrilous attack on the League, quoting former Communist and Fabian Socialist, Mr. K.D. Gott, as an authority on the League. Mr. Gott was engaged by the Hawke Government for six months, for $55,000, to "monitor" the League of Rights when it was pioneering the anti-Aboriginal, land claims movement.

Uncritical support for a Howard Government would mean support for a government many of whose members are obviously tainted with the, Fabian disease. We well understand the desperation of those who fear the future if the Hawke Government is re-elected. We recall the national sigh of relief, which went up when Governor General Sir John Kerr withdrew Mr. Gough Whitlam's commission and in effect ordered a general election. Mr. Malcolm Fraser was hailed as a new conservative leader who would reverse the disastrous policies, which the Whitlam government had been pursuing. Malcolm Fraser promised much of what Mr. John Howard is promising today. The League was at that time a lonely voice amidst the euphoria, warning that the Fraser Government was set on a disaster course. We pointed out in response to those who said that Malcolm Fraser could not be worse than Gough Whitlam, that he could be much worse. Mr. John Howard was a senior Minister in a government, which did enormous damage, much of it psychological.

We suggest that those involved in a movement whose roots go back over fifty years, and have studied governments and politicians over a long period of time, might with proper modesty claim to be able to offer responsible advice to their fellow Australians. The League is dedicated to the preservation of fundamental values and principles clearly outlined in Objectives, which have not had to be changed since the first League of Rights was formed in 1946.

As the distinguished British constitutional authority, Professor (later Judge) G.W.Keeton observed in his classic, The Passing of Parliament, "The history of modern political society is the history of the struggle of the ordinary citizen to exercise some influence upon government - and of his repeated failure to achieve that modest ambition.... When the candidate is returned to Parliament, he finds himself controlled by the party system, without the support of which he cannot hope to be returned at a future election. Accordingly, it follows that those who control the machine of the principal political party are the persons who exercise power in a Western democracy.

We are not concerned with parties and politicians as such, but with how to regenerate a type of constitutional democracy, which all modern parties have helped to subvert. There is an old saying that those who will not learn from the mistakes of history are doomed to keep repeating those mistakes. With a much bigger majority than Mr. Howard can possibly win - not unless there is major political miracle - Mr. Malcolm Fraser blatantly broke firm promises, including the one to reduce Big Government. Why should it be believed that John Howard would do what Malcolm Fraser failed to do?

In our opinion, John Howard is, personally, a much better man than either Malcolm Fraser or Bob Hawke. But that is not the issue. Mr. John Howard is a professional politician, a product of his own background, and as Federal Treasurer in the Fraser Government, was a disaster. As Treasurer he was completely subservient to financial orthodoxy. He attempted to impose the outrageous book and magazine tax, stubbornly refusing to listen even to appeals from Church groups who protested that the tax would destroy many small business journals. Those who talk about defending the Common Law should remember that Treasurer John Howard was a strong supporter of the reprehensible retrospective tax legislation. His deficit budgets would have won the warm praise of John Maynard Keynes, the idol of the Fabian Marxists.

One correspondent refers to the threat of further abuse of the External Powers to "convert Australia into a UNO satrapy..." if the Hawke Government is re-elected. The League of Rights was warning about the UNO and the threatened use of External Powers to subvert the Constitution, over forty years ago. Mr. Howard was a senior Minister in the Fraser Government, which took the first steps to place Australia under the direction. It was the same Fraser Government which further weakened Australia's traditional pro-European immigration policy, and which set the revolutionary Aboriginal land claims legislation in motion.

If it is argued that Treasurer John Howard strongly disagreed with these, and other destructive policies, then why did he not resign from the Fraser Government as a matter of principle? So far from defending Australia's independence, Mr. John Howard was in the forefront of the campaign to bring foreign banks into Australia, a policy subsequently implemented by Fabian Paul Keating. Like Mr. Paul Keating, Mr. John Howard was initially a strong supporter of a "broadly based" indirect tax to help pay for promised cuts in direct taxation, and appears to have been diverted from this approach by the campaign initiated by Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen.

As we have said previously, the taxation policy announced by Mr. Howard, even if implemented, offers no solution to Australia's basic problems. Now that the Hawke Government has embraced the dogma of "privatisation", which in practice will mean that State enterprises are taken over by private monopolists with access to billions of international bank credit, Mr. Howard is left without what was once one of his proposals. An objective observer would find it hard to detect much basic difference between Paul Keating and John Howard - except that both want to be in office.

Mr. Howard could still turn his mediocre campaign around by telling the Australian people that he realises that the Westminster system of government and the nation's constitutional safeguards have broken down, that the nation faces a great, crisis, and that that crisis can only be weathered by trusting the Australian people, and that, if elected as Prime Minister, his first act would be to legislate for a referendum at which the people could vote themselves the right, by adoption of the Swiss referendum system, to have a direct say in future concerning all unpopular legislation.

But Mr. Howard and his colleagues have rejected adoption of the Swiss principle. They do not appear to trust the Australian people any more than does the Hawke Government. Irrespective of who wins government on July 11th, we trust that the majority is very small, and that the past division of power in the Senate is widened further. Time and time again the Senate has at least slowed down the drive to centralise all power. Not surprisingly, all governments have attempted to weaken the powers of the Senate.

Do the advocates of trusting John Howard recall how, having used the Senate, to bring down the Whitlam Government, the Fraser Government then conducted its own anti-Senate referendum, with the revealing spectacle of Mr. Malcolm Fraser, supported by his colleagues like John Howard, campaigning for the same YES vote being supported by Mr. Gough Whitlam and his fellow Fabians, along with the Communists?

The salvation of Australia can only start with individuals acting in a responsible way. This means a responsible vote, support being given only to those political candidates who commit themselves, preferably in writing, to support the introduction of the Swiss system of Initiative, Referendum and (if felt necessary) Recall at the earliest opportunity. In some cases it may be much more responsible to go to the polling booth, to avoid being fined and to write on the ballot paper, "None of the applications for the task of representing me are acceptable," and sign one's name.

The history of modern governments shows that each new government, having inherited the power centralised by its predecessors, naturally tends to hold on to that power and then to increase it. Progressive inflation, irrespective of the rate, and mounting debt, create the impression that further centralisation is inevitable. Economic and political centralisation is the result of financial policy, not because of any natural law.

Any government determined to start decentralising power back to the people would have to be prepared to implement basic changes in present financial policies. This would require an electorate fully informed on the realities of the situation and determined to back its political representatives in a battle which would see the full mobilisation of international financial groups, and their local agents to prevent any loss of their power. There is not the slightest indication that Mr. John Howard, or any of his colleague, have either the knowledge or the desire to fight the battle, which must be fought if traditional Australia is to be saved from even greater disasters.

As we have constantly said, conservatives are doomed to fight a series of progressive rearguard actions under present financial policies. It would be irresponsible for us to support any suggestion that the election of John Howard Prime Minister will change anything basic. The real battle will continue after the elections.
All editorial comment authorised by Eric D. Butler, 145 Russell Street, Melbourne.


THE REAL PEACE MARCHERS

The following article came from a students university newspaper. This article is taken from the April 27th issue of WORONI, the newspaper of the students of the Australian National University (A.N.U.). The writer of the article, Gerard Wheeler, is listed as:- "Director, Economic Rationalists/Social Conservatives on Campus; Coordinator A.N.U. Anti-Feminist Task Force". And that's quite a mix. But supporters will be most interested to read what he has written:
"An old digger arched over a decrepit walking stick, his face lined with three quarters of a century's adventures and trials, his hands arthritic. At the War Memorial it was almost dawn on Anzac Day and the, digger's medals glistened with the reflection of flames from nearby candles. His eyes were downcast as he stood by the stone of remembrance, paying tribute to his fallen colleagues. "The digger embodies all that is Anzac. He is from a time when youth had a respect for their nation, their leaders, their families. When he was young, there was nothing abnormal about sacrifice and Australians knew the meaning of service.
"Today, as young People, we seem to have lost the devotion to duty that is characteristic of the Anzac tradition. We take to the streets to demonstrate in favour of the most selfish causes and regard nationalism and loyalty as notions to be spurned. "We need to recognise Anzac Day more than ever before as a time to express gratitude to those valiant hearts who were willing to selflessly defend human freedom. From those who landed at Gallipoli, to our soldiers in Vietnam, Australians have fought for liberty and we should never forget their sacrifices."
"The enormous numbers attending Anzac Day marches and services attest to the fact that Australians are rejecting the cowardice squeals of the Peace Movement and are again embracing the spirit of Anzac. It is not surprising that more people were present at this year's Dawn Service than appeared at the Palm Sunday Peace March.
"The contrast between the Anzac Day events and the Peace March is stark. At the peace rallies the usual rent-a-crowd chanted their churlish and selfish cries showing they have little to offer for Australia's future. They have failed to consider that you cannot capture the imagination of Australians with a future of pessimism, resignation, and lethargy. The Anzac Day ceremonies show, however, that a vigorous nation can be founded on a commitment to service, mateship, and raw courage. The great defenders of peace are not the peaceniks but our service personnel. In fact, there has been one genuine Peace March in April and it didn't occur on Palm Sunday.
"As young Australians we must not recoil from our duty to make the world a nobler place. We must embark on the challenge issued by Brigadier Alf Garland of the R.S.L. when he said: "Let us dedicate ourselves to taking up the burden's of the fallen, and with the same high courage and steadfastness with which they left our shores, set our hands to the tasks they left unfinished."
"If we fail this quest then the old digger at the Dawn Service may bow his head not for his fallen mates but for Australia's future."

Our Comment
Woroni is not alone, among student's university newspapers in what remains of the "free" world in demonstrating a marked return to traditional values. It is happening in other universities, particularly in the U.S.A and Canada. The "pendulum" is beginning to swing back. It may well be the youth of today that will save us; for today's youth is questioning the role and purpose of the industrial system, big business, and (it is coming!) - the financial system itself.