8 April 1987. Thought for the Week: "...there
are many groups today, who have come to what they feel is
Truth. This they are attempting to present to the world but
publicity is blocked at every point. In the nature of things,
this is bound to be ... By their suppression you should know
their truths; from which all would benefit if they were associated.
The light of this associated and greater truth should provide
an even greater power proportionately to further the reign
of His Kingdom on earth. Ultimately, this lies in the hands
of each one of us, who make up the body social. We are His
agents. With understanding and a live faith we need to turn
it into a church militant. This needs positive action, not
merely spotlighting social parasites, or even the disease
conditions which give them birth, but by building in accordance
with the Word, publicising the benefits due to cooperation
one with another in accordance with the Kingdom of God."
Ralph Duck in Thine is the Kingdom |
END OF THE HAWKE GOVERNMENT NOT CERTAINThere is no doubt that if an immediate Federal election were held, the Hawke Government would be defeated. But in the absence of some unforeseen event, the Hawke Government does not need to go to the polls for at least another 20 months. And much can happen in that time. The perceptive Professor Geoffrey Blainey commented last weekend that it could not be taken for granted that the Liberals would win the next Federal elections. Early last year all the public opinion polls indicated that the Hawke Governments electoral position was hopeless. And yet within a short period the Labor Government called an early election, which it won reasonably comfortably. One of the key factors in the Hawke victory was the widespread lack of confidence that a Howard government would be much better than Labor. That is still the case today. A close analysis of voting patterns in the recent series of by-elections, and the NSW elections, indicates that the Electors are voting AGAINST Labor rather than FOR the Liberals and Nationals. It is difficult to point to one basic issue on which there is any substantial difference between Labor and the Opposition parties. Any arguments about financial policies, including taxation, immigration, World Heritage listings, or the "restructuring" of Australian industries, both primary and secondary, to fit them into the New International Economic Order, are about minor aspects, not substance. The current controversy inside the Opposition concerning taxation, a controversy that helped Hawke win the last Federal elections, highlights the bankruptcy of the Opposition parties. Liberal leader, John Howard, the man who claims that Paul Keating took over his policy of bringing foreign banks into Australia, has a long record of attempting "to broaden the tax base". Labor has, from its point of view, been highly successful in doing just that. The fringe benefits tax, capital gains tax and the assets test, have yielded big dollars to the Federal taxing master with the minimum of political fallout. John Howard and his colleagues have no answer to this, except a few proposed cosmetic changes. Recent electoral disasters have not forced the Fabian strategists to change direction, but to consider a change in tactics. Already Prime Minister Hawke and Treasurer Paul Keating are talking a new language. We observed following the last Federal elections, that the Labor strategists cynically took the hard core Labor electorates for granted, ignored the rural vote, which they knew was strongly anti-Labor, and the hard core Opposition electorates, while concentrating upon the ''swinging'' electorates now made up of a middle class directly and indirectly dependent upon governments for their income. Writing in The Australian of April 4th Federal Labor Vice-President Stephen Loosley confirms our analysis in an article entitled, "Adopting a long-term view". Loosley states that at last week's top strategy meeting Prime Minister Hawke made it clear that he intends to lead Labor to a fourth term of government at the next Federal elections. Statements by Treasurer Keating indicate that he now supports Hawke for a fourth challenge. Loosley writes, "The romantic notions of the l940s of perpetual working class support for the ALP are gone. The ALP has new elements in its constituency. It must win back the disaffected while retaining those people who have developed a political affinity for the ALP in the post Whitlam period." Listed among the "new elements" supporting the Fabians are the many representatives of Big Business, men like Sir Peter Abeles, who have not only done well under the Hawke Administration, but who look forward to even better things to come if the Fabians can continue in office. One Federal Labor strategist was quoted as having said before the NSW State Elections that a Labor defeat in NSW might assist the long-term prospects for the Federal Labor government, the argument being that there was sufficient time for a new Liberal government in NSW to demonstrate that its policies were disastrous before the next Federal election. Presumably the man responsible for this Machiavellian comment did not anticipate such a massive anti-Labor backlash! But it is certain that one of the major factors in what happens at the next Federal elections will depend upon how the new government of NSW performs. Much will also depend upon the contribution of the Independents in the NSW State parliament, both in the House of Assembly and the Legislative Council. The biggest contribution the NSW State government could make towards moving Australia off the disaster course on which it is travelling, would be to introduce the Swiss principle of The Electors' Veto at the earliest opportunity. Such a move would shake the Fabians rigid, forcing them to show clearly that at heart they are totalitarians. |
ROBERT MAXWELL'S GLOBAL STEATEGYThe multimillionaire known as Robert Maxwell, currently in the news because of his stated intent to buy The Age, Melbourne, makes no secret of his desire to build his company, Maxwell Communications Corporation, into one of the world's biggest media empires. Maxwell was born in Czechoslovakia of Jewish parents and was originally named Jan Ludwih Hoch. Maxwell is a declared Socialist and says that if he buys The Age he would "certainly" support the Hawke government. Maxwell has had talks with Treasurer Paul Keating, who has been supporting Maxwell against strong opposition inside the Labor party. While a lot of crocodile tears are being shed concerning the Maxwell threat to the "independence" of The Age, the absorption of the morning Melbourne Age into the Maxwell Empire would be yet another development of the Australian media in the wrong direction. With the exception of Michael Barnard's weekly column, The Age provides its readers with a steady diet of liberalism of the worst type. The pro-Zionist policy of The Age would certainly continue under Maxwell ownership. Maxwell's interests include general printing, contract printing of newspapers, publishing and property and investment management. He has interests in Britain, USA, Japan, Europe, Hong Kong, Canada, Africa, South America and Australia where he owns the Australian National University press. His Pergamon Press, MCC is the biggest printer in Europe, the second in the USA, and the fourth largest in the world. Maxwell says, "You cannot be in the global communications business without Australia." He is the classic example of the nexus between the two pillars of Monopoly: Big Business and Big Government. |
BRIEF COMMENTS"Globalisation" continues. A Swiss report
states that for the first time since the Bolshevik Revolution
of 1917, a Soviet government is issuing a 100 million Swiss
franc, 10-year bond, in order to borrow on a Western market.
The report states that this "is a further sign of Moscow's
economic liberalism." Banking sources are quoted, as saying
that this issue could be the first of a series by the Soviet.
The manager of a West German Bank with strong trade ties with
the Eastern bloc nations, Bank Fuer Kredit and Ussenhandel
Ag. says that the Gorbachev economic and political reforms
are likely to help the image of the Soviet borrower. But,
he said, he expected institutions would be the main investors,
not the man in the street. Exactly. No sensible person would
want to interest in Soviet bonds. But financial institutions
are well aware of the "globalisation" programme via the New
International Economic Order. The rot inside the Christian Church continues to spread. The governing body of the United Church of Canada is recommending that the church allow sexually active homosexuals to become ministers. The Uniting Church is the largest Protestant denomination in Canada. In a 125-page report, "Towards A Christian Understanding Of Sexual Orientation", the General Council says "There are a variety of sexual orientations as a gift from God." It is not surprising that Christians are leaving the mainstream Churches in droves. The widespread cult of sodomy was one of the features of the disintegration of the Greek and Roman Civilisations. Father Gino Piovesana, the Italian Rector of The Jewish Oriental Institute in Rome, a study centre for the Eastern Churches, warns about "Glasnost" and freedom for the Christian Faith; "Towards the end of 1986 Gorbachev warned party bosses in no uncertain terms that they should not baptise their children. That has been his only religious statement. It is premature to hail a new religious policy under Gorbachev." A close study of career reveals him as a dedicated Marxist-Leninist, a man who understands the importance of dialectics. |
FROM THE CANADIAN INTELLIGENCE SERVICE(March 1988: by Ron Gostick): Attack on Waldheim Hypocritical |