4 October 1991. Thought for the Week: "If a nation
expects to be ignorant and free, it expects what never was and never
will be."
Thomas Jefferson |
AN AUSTRALIAN REVOLUTION UNDER WAYThe big vote for Independents at the recent N.S.W. Municipal Elections provided further confirmation of the growing evidence that there is a revolt against party politics right throughout Australia. With the opinion polls showing that Prime Minister Hawke has, with the support of Dr. John Hewson's obsession with the introduction of a consumption tax, started to narrow the previous massive lead for the Coalition parties, it is not surprising that a number of political commentators are starting to discuss the possibility of Independents holding the balance of power in the next Federal Parliament. In an article in The Australian of September 23rd, three former Senators, Michael Macklin (Democrat), Chris Puplick (Liberal) and John Black (Labor) argue that there is a "De facto revolution of the Independent minded voter", arguing that electors have started to learn that it is possible for them to exercise some sanctions over governments. They write, "It seems voters have figured out that our Lower Houses of Parliament are simply electors colleges to choose the premiers and the prime minister and from which leaders effectively choose their Cabinets. As a result, the voters have begun to limit their leaders' powers by electing Lower House Members who reflect their wishes more closely than the party machines." The three former Senators visualise a scenario in which the balance of power after the next Federal elections is held by a small number of Independents, and Dr. John Hewson being forced to negotiate with Ted Mack and other Independents on such controversial issues as union reform and the consumption tax, in the same way that N.S.W. Premier Nick Griener is being forced to negotiate with the Independents in the N.S.W. Parliament. Our own view is that unless the unexpected happens, the next Federal Elections will be much closer than many anticipate. The possibility of a small group of Independents in the Federal Parliament holding the balance of power after the next elections, should be encouraged as widely as possible, countering the false argument that a vote for an Independent is a wasted vote. The rights of the individual are much more likely to be protected when there is a balance of political power. |
IMPLICATIONS OF THE INCREDIBLE MALCOLM ROSS CASEIn our last issue we referred to the Malcolm Ross case in Canada, where a young school teacher has been deprived of his teaching position and his income because he published, outside his school activities, a number of books which were a defence of traditional Christianity against what the author claimed was a type of anti-Christian Jewish conspiracy. Canada is, like Australia, a Common Law country, and the Ross case should be a warning to Australians who smugly claim, "But that could never happen in Australia". Before they adopt this complacent view, they might reflect on the recent aggressive action by a prominent Zionist leader, Mr. Mark Leibler, who has complained to the headmaster of the Brighton (Victoria) Church of England Grammar School about teaching, which it is claimed, helps to foster "anti-semitism". The teaching concerns the New Testament story of the stoning of Stephen, regarded as a saint by the Anglican Church. Mark Leibler is in essence demanding that the New Testament be revised. We will return to this issue later. Malcolm Ross never took his Christian views into the classroom. His school board regarded him as an exemplary teacher. But under Zionist pressure the New Brunswick government began attacking and harassing the Moncton teacher. The Zionists demanded that he be removed from his teaching position. The Government was faced with the problem that Ross could not be charged with any crime, as he had not committed any offence under the Criminal Code. And so the so-called Human Rights Commission was involved. Late last year it set up a one-man board in the person of a New Brunswick law professor Brian Bruce. We are indebted to our Canadian contemporary, On Target (September 2nd), for the following: Some More Free To Speak Than Others BOULARDARIE, N.S. There was a time when efforts
to remove controversial books and unconventional teachers from the classroom
provoked spirited objection from groups committed to civil liberties.
To judge from the Malcolm Ross case, devotion to free speech seems to
be flagging, even among those who ought to be in the business of defending
it. "Ross taught language and math to Grades 7, 8 and 9 at Magnetic
Hill Junior High School in Moncton, N.B. In his spare time, he wrote
and published books proclaiming the Holocaust to be a myth and postulating
the existence of a Jewish conspiracy to undermine Christianity. "With no apparent sense of irony, Brian Bruce, the University of New Brunswick law professor who led the inquiry into the case, ruled that Ross' writings made his dismissal necessary in order to ensure 'a discrimination free environment'. "Ross plans to seek judicial review of the decision, but he needn't look to his union for help. The co-president of the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation, Joe Breen, declared fatuously that the decision has 'no negative impact on the general freedom of speech of teachers in this province'. "Far from condemning efforts to punish Ross for his unconventional views, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association quietly endorsed the campaign against him a year ago. In a letter to the school board, Alan Borovy, the association's general counsel, wrote that 'there must be exceptions to (the) proposition that employees need not be accountable to their employers for their extra curricular activity'. "'Teachers exercise enormous power over vulnerable youngsters,' Borovy wrote. 'Parents and pupils are entitled to have confidence that the teachers will treat them fairly. The more extreme the expression of ethnic prejudice is, the less people from the target groups can be expected to trust the fairness of the teacher concerned'. "As to the fact that the three children whose father's complaint led to the inquiry had never been taught by Ross, nor met him, nor even attended the school where he taught, 'it should not matter', Borovy said. "This is an Orwellian spectacle: a government 'human rights' tribunal, egged on by the nation's most prominent 'civil liberties' organisation, ordering the dismissal of a teacher for views he expressed outside school. "The C.C.L.A. is on a slippery slope here. Will it now endorse the view put forth in testimony by the complainant parent, that people who oppose official bilingualism, or who belong to single-sex organisations like the Elks Club and the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, should be forbidden to teach? "In the present climate, of course, no one seriously expects such sweeping tests of political correctness to be applied. But that's only because the Elks Club membership isn't far enough from the mainstream to generate widespread opprobrium .. "But the remedy of false speech ought to be corrective speech, not suppression of disagreeable speakers. "If a climate of ethnic prejudice or tension exists in Moncton schools, the board should implement programs that foster tolerance and understanding. It should not undertake to punish those with aberrant views. "No one wants to defend anti-Semites and bigots. But free speech is meaningless if it only protects obnoxious, objectionable thought in the words of the American jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., 'not free thought for those who agree with us, but freedom for the thought that we hate.'" |
TRADITIONAL AUSTRALIA CAN BE SAVED!The collapse of Communism does not mean that
the totalitarian threat has ended. As the League of Rights has correctly
pointed out, Communism was from the beginning but one of the creatures
of those international forces of subversion seeking to undermine Western
Civilisation. That undermining process has gone much further than some
people realise. The Fabian movement is but the respectable face of the
same conspiracy out of which Communism grew. The League has, thanks to the dedicated backing of its supporters, built up a unique movement. Last year it carried through an in-depth planned programme. It met all its obligations. It owes no money, even though its reserves are small. It has no grandiose salary and expense accounts. The critical situation demands that the League move towards a new and major offensive on the heritage front. It is essential that today's young Australians are told of their priceless heritage. Adequate educational material must be provided. The League has material on the drawing board. But it must have adequate finance. This year's Basic Fund target has been set at $70,000. Yes, we know that times are hard, and we have explained why. But if we are to save traditional Australia, we must make the effort. There has been an initial inspiring response to the 1991-92 Basic Fund, but a massive effort is now required. Please send your contribution to P.O. Box 1052J, G.P.O., Melbourne, 3001. |
PEOPLE GIVE - BUT THEY ALSO TAKE AWAYfrom The Australian, September 23rd"John Hirst's opinion on republicanism (The Australian, 18/9), made some interesting points regarding changes of the past 30 or 40 years. He stated that government was carried out in the monarch's name, i.e. Her Majesty's Australian Government or Her Majesty's Government. "Today of course we have to be advised, constantly by our Prime Minister, that it is his government: what a presumption albeit not a surprise. "The truth of the matter is that it is our government, governing us, in Her Majesty's name as our Head of State. It has not been so much a diminution of Her Majesty's civic status but rather an overly inflated ego on the part of our Prime Minister. "It is difficult to imagine the chairman of the board addressing a shareholders' meeting by talking of 'his board'; he or she would be aware how that would go down with the owners of the company. It would appear that we have become complacent in our acceptance of an apparently changing order and yet our respect for and acceptance of the protection of the Crown is still there. I live out in the real Australia and we still take our oaths of allegiance very seriously, offer the first toast to Her Majesty and on appropriate occasions sing both our own and the Queen's anthem. "Our Constitutional Monarchy is alive and well and our politicians would be very wise not to forget that; that which the people give, the people can also take away. (Russell L. Smith, Omeo, Vic.) |