26 June 1998. Thought for the Week: "I
am afraid the ordinary citizen will not like to be told that
the banks can, and do, create and destroy money. The amount
of money in existence varies only with the action of the banks
in increasing or decreasing deposits and bank purchases. We
know how this is effected. Every loan, overdraft or bank purchase
creates a deposit, and every repayment of a loan, overdraft
or bank sale destroys a deposit."
Chairman of the Midland Bank, Sir Reginald McKenna, addressing a meeting of the Bank's shareholders on January 25th, 1924 |
THE EXPLOSIVE AUSTRALIAN POLITICAL SCENEby Eric D. Butler In view of what has emerged, with all the polls indicating that the electors are also set to punish the Federal Liberal and National Parties, the Queensland vote for Australia First must be regarded as a near miracle. The controllers of the mass media were clearly determined to sideline Graeme Campbell, the one man capable of providing stability and wise direction in the chaotic period now ahead of Australia. Analysis of the Queensland voting figures reveals that Australia First easily outpolled the Democrats and other minor groups. Even more important was the massive second preference votes. In my opinion, Australia First is now well placed to participate in the next stage of a battle, which will decide Australia's future. I am deeply concerned about the quality of One Nation leadership. It is now nearly half a century ago when Zionist Jewish leader Isi Leibler decried that the Australian League of Rights had to be destroyed. In one memorable statement, Leibler said the "League" had to be denied any status in Australian mainstream politics. The explosive Queensland election results have dramatically demonstrated that so far from being driven off the political scene, the League is dominating that scene. In their desperate attempts to meet the Pauline Hanson phenomenon, the major political parties, supported by their allies in the mass media, have sought first to demonise the League of Rights and then to use the League to destroy the Hanson Movement, which is extremely vulnerable because of the way it is organisationally structured and the lack of understanding of finance economics. Mr. David Ettridge may be, as claimed by some, primarily concerned about money, but his silly statement about "printing money" not only provided One Nation's opponents with means of launching further attacks on Pauline Hanson, but demonstrated his own lack of understanding of how the banking system works. Ettridge has also persisted with his nonsense about the League of Rights being a fascist movement. David Oldfield clearly is better informed than his colleagues and is primarily a classical political manipulator who means well. But good intentions of themselves are not sufficient to win the battle in which genuine patriots are involved. Several One Nation candidates who have attended a League of Rights Social Dynamics School have readily agreed that it is this type of basic knowledge, which One Nation supporters need. Pauline Hanson's instincts appear to be reasonably sound. There is some evidence that she can learn. I am not aware of the identity of the person who provided her with the material she used to attack me in the Federal Parliament. But I do know that when tackled by a friend of mine, she readily admitted that she had been misled. Pauline Hanson does not articulate her policies, such that they are, very well. But she has touched the basic issues, which have been worrying the Australian people for a long time. Any objective examination of what is now taking place in Australia needs to face the fact that there has been a long build up of resentment on many issues. The League of Rights has over the years pinpointed the basic causes of this resentment. As I have said from the beginning, Pauline Hanson is a genuine phenomenon. It is fascinating to be interviewed by journalists who are genuinely confused by what is happening. In the first of a series of interviews last week, I spent over 30 minutes with an ABC journalist who was desperately attempting to discover what made me and the League of Rights "tick". The modern journalist is the product of an educational system, which has left them with little basic knowledge about history. One journalist was even vague about Australia's wartime Prime Minister John Curtin. But all were clearly agreed that in some way the League of Rights was responsible for the Hanson movement. It was difficult to explain that every generation inherits something from the past, even if false ideas on some subjects. During last week only one of the numerous journalists who interviewed me, either for television, radio or the print media, indicated that they had read any background material on the League. And the exception was one who had gone to his paper's file on the League. Every question contained the usual reference to the League's "anti-Semitism". Even when the subject of international banking was raised the "loaded" question was introduced: "Did I think that international bankers were part of a Jewish conspiracy?" And so it went on. A most fascinating week, but it proved that the League has been taken seriously. The hysterical anti-Hanson material appearing in the Zionist Jewish press indicates that the Zionist lobby is fearful that the Hanson movement reflects a deep-seated concern in the Australian community, which could find effective political representation. Zionist hit man Gerard Henderson, essential reading for any, who want to know anything about the deeper currents in Australian politics, applied himself to the Hanson affair with an article in The Age of June 9th. Treasurer Peter Costello is lauded for his stand on Hanson. As usual, the League of Rights and Eric Butler get honourable mention. Then, not surprisingly, last Saturday's Age used a piece from The Australia-Israel Review, where that well known "expert" on the League of Rights, David Greason, is an editor. There was a time when the National Party, and its forerunner the Country Party, looked as if it might come to grips with the debt issue. Country Party members were happy to make use of the League of Rights' expertise. Sir Joh Bjelke Petersen scared the debt merchants and their numerous tools when he said that he was going to establish a Queensland State Bank. His Petersen Plan for reversing inflation sent shockwaves throughout Australia. Sir Joh was undermined inside his own Party. The same forces responsible are those that are currently examining how they can head off, or subvert, the Hanson movement, which could threaten the internationalist programme for Australia. There have been a number of ominous signs of subversion in the history of the Hanson movement. There has been a failure to establish a grassroots movement in which members have some real say. It is openly being run as a commercial enterprise from which it appears that David Ettridge could be the main beneficiary. There has been a failure to co-operate with Graeme Campbell and his Australia First movement, and the most ominous sign of all is the intention of One Nation to run a candidate against Graeme Campbell in his West Australian electorate. The very rise of the One Nation Pauline Hanson phenomenon brings Australia to the most critical time in its history. The Hanson phenomenon reflects the feeling of deep concern in the Australian community. The challenge to the League of Rights is how to ensure that Pauline Hanson is not destroyed by those who currently claim to be supporting her. This may prove impossible, but the effort must be made. |
ONE NATION AND FINANCIAL POLICYby David Thompson One Nation National Director, Mr. David Ettridge, demonstrated an appalling lack of understanding of the issue. "The government doesn't have to go overseas to borrow money," he said (quite correctly) on ABC radio. "They can print their own money as they did during the wartime, I believe." Etttridge simply set up One Nation for ridicule, which quickly came. The attack on One Nation by Treasurer Costello has been dishonest, and clearly designed to destroy their public credibility in advance of a possible Federal election. When attacking One Nation, Costello is attempting to establish that "The League of Rights is driving its (One Nation's) policy in relation to banking and money". (The Australian, 19/6/98). Costello ridicules the proposal to create credit through a State bank, as does Prime Minister Howard. "If a government started printing notes and putting them into circulation, inflation would take off and destroy people's savings," Mr. Costello said. This is almost certainly a deliberate misrepresentation of the One Nation proposal, as Costello must understand that credit is routinely created electronically as well as by increasing physical currency in notes and coins. Is Mr. Costello not aware that the creation of credit is the basic function of banking? If he was to check his own Reserve Bank Bulletin (March, 1998) he might learn something. The supply of Australian dollars in January 1996 was $285 billion. By January 1998, after two years with Mr. Costello in charge of Treasury, the volume of A$ in existence was $333 billion. That is, in a 24-month period, Mr. Costello presided over the creation of about $48 billion. This is $2 billion per month, which is approximately $27 in new money for every Australian person per week. This staggering amount of new money coming into economy is created as an interesting debt. It should be emphasised that, contrary to Mr. Costello's claim, inflation did not "take off". In fact, the inflation rate is at an historical low, but there is an economic price to be paid for the increase in debt: the drive towards lower wages, and high unemployment to ensure there is no inflation. |
IS THIS "A LEAGUE OF RIGHTS IDEA"?It is true that the League has kept alive the knowledge of financial alternatives, and an understanding of the creation of credit over 50 years of grassroots campaigning for just such a time as this. But it is a deliberate falsehood for the Treasurer to claim that the idea is invalid because it is "a League of Rights policy". One Nation could just as well argue that they "borrowed" the policy from the National Party, which has never pushed hard for it. In 1971, Queensland State President of the Country Party (now National Party), Sir Robert Sparkes took out full-page advertisements in Queensland Country Life (October 14th & 21st), in which he appealed for rural loyalty to the Party. Sparkes wrote: "because of the great importance of maintaining viable primary industries in Australia, the Federal Government should provide a source of long-term, fixed-contract interest-rate finance, below 3% to individual primary producers adversely affected by drought low prices and rising costs..." Could credit be "created" for such proposals? There are masses of documentary evidence that it not only could, but also has been in the past. The League has documented and preserved such information. Various Australian (and overseas) Royal Commissions have found so, including the 1936 Royal Commission on Money and Banking. In his 1937 Report, Justice Napier spelt it out.... the Commonwealth Bank can make money available to Governments or to others on such terms as it chooses, even by way of a loan without interest, or either without requiring either interest or principal repayment." Other groups and prominent individuals have drawn attention to the possibilities this opens up. Last week overlooked that the late B.A. Santamaria promoted this proposal towards the end of his life. To their credit, his National Civic Council has not retreated from the proposal, but has advanced it as an integral part of a proposal to regain Australia's economic sovereignty. In a recent issue of News Weekly (13/6/98) the NCC propose, "boosting Australia's investment in badly needed infrastructure improvements using low interest loans from the Reserve Bank". Can this be done by "creating credit"? The NCC acknowledge that it can, quoting the well-known comment by Alan Greenspan, Chairman of the US Federal Reserve Bank, in a speech on May 7th, 1998: "Central banks can issue currency, a non-interest bearing claim on the government, effectively without limit.." Greenspan referred to "a central bank, with its unlimited power to create money " Does Mr. Costello not know this? Do his Treasury servants know this? Surely there is ample documentary evidence available to Treasury that alternative financial policies are quite viable. Rudimentary research would establish, for example, that the Rural Credits Department of the Reserve Bank once issued credit at 1% to rural marketing boards. The truth is that Mr. Costello is not interested in alternatives. He is certainly not interested in risking his career by promoting an idea that could turn "conventional" economics on its ear, with the possible result that Australia may find its way out of the hands of the international moneylenders. Mr. Costello is a bankers' man and an internationalist. His is the worst kind of political and moral betrayal, and should be shown as such. |
THE HANSON MOVEMENT AND "THE ALBERTA EXPERIMENT"History provides a number of examples of attempts to challenge the Money Power. Back in the thirties the headlines of the world press announced that the electors of the Western Canadian Province of Alberta had elected with an overwhelming majority a Social Credit government that promised to overcome the Great Depression by issuing new credit to finance a social dividend. An international campaign was directed against the government led by a schoolteacher, William Aberhardt, who, like the majority of his colleagues, had never had any experience in government. How the government was eventually rescued from near disaster is compulsory reading for those who believe that a group of Pauline Hanson political rookies can save Australia. Those who refuse to learn from the mistakes of the past are doomed to repeat those mistakes."The Alberta Experiment" is available from all League bookshops: $10.00 posted. |
ACTION ON FINANCIAL POLICYAs C.H. Douglas observed, it would be the unforeseen event that opens up opportunities for regeneration. One Nation has virtually blundered in where angels sometimes fear to tread, and proposed the unthinkable: low-interest credit. Perhaps the appalling ignorance of the press is such that the scribes and chatterers are unaware of the major tactical mistake of allowing a public discussion about basic banking policy. Now is the time for actionists to dig out the bank of documentary material about money, and resume the educational work that has kept the knowledge of this alive for the last 50 years. It is only because of the League's patient, regular educational work that such an idea is now available to One Nation. While the League has had no direct contact with One Nation policy-makers, it is clear that the League has fulfilled its educational role by ensuring that the idea has not died. As a matter of basic morality, people like Treasurer Costello should be challenged to simply tell the truth about banking policy. Or is the truth not important? Are constituents entitled to hear the truth from their representatives? Or is Mr. Costello out of the Graeme Richardson mould, where lies are legitimate political currency? Does Mr. Costello believe in "whatever it takes"? We also suggest that prominent figures be equipped with the facts on money, using any of the following selection from League book services. "The Story of the Commonwealth Bank"
($6.00); "Report of the 1936 Royal Commission on Money
and Banking" ($4.00); |
ALARM BELLS RINGINGby Jeremy Lee On June 21st, Melbourne's Sunday Age
carried a carefully contrived article by David Greason and
Michael Kapel, both on the editorial staff of the Australia-Israel
Review. Headed "A Right old rats' nest" it claimed to
provide evidence that Hanson's policies, especially those
on banking and money-creation, had come from the League of
Rights. As evidence of this far-fetched allegation, the authors
cited the October 1981 issue of Enterprise, a League
publication at that time. The issue in question was headed
"The Deliberate Destruction of Home Ownership". It showed
clearly how debt policies were destroying the Australian dream.
The issue concluded with the following words: "The fundamental
question is this: If all money in existence is created as
an interest-bearing debt - a debt that is continually growing,
and is always bigger than the means of repayment - is it not
conceivable that the creation of a limited amount of debt-free
credit, certainly not greater than the existing increase in
the money-supply, might reverse the current disaster, and
get home-owners, industry and government itself back on their
feet again?" The authors of the Sunday Age article quote an article of 16 years ago because they hope the reading public cannot check its accuracy. Certainly, Treasurer Costello hasn't, although he has also cited Enterprise for his wild accusations. The facts about money-creation, the history of Australia's wartime finances and the current global financial manipulation to destroy national sovereignty are all included in Jeremy Lee's publication "Australia 2000 - What Will We Tell Our Children?" available from all League bookshops, $20.00 posted. Jeremy Lee was the author of the Enterprise article misquoted by Peter Costello and the Australia-Israel editors. |
FROM THE PRESS"I was interested to see the reaction of some of the people, purporting to represent ethnic interests, to the electoral success of One Nation in Queensland. "As I see it, the majority of ethnic people who have come to Australia appreciate the openness and fairness with which they are treated in Australia. They do not agree with many of their spokesmen that Australia should abandon its unicultural ethos.Those of Japanese background are well aware of the entrenched racism in Japan, a country which still believes in racial purity and superiority. Malaysians are aware of the unapologetic racism of the views of Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, which exclude Australia from Ascan 'because you are not Asians'. Not much racial tolerance there. The Chinese, whether from Hong Kong or the mainland, are aware of the totalitarian nature of the national government, which rolled tanks over its own youth and is busy destroying the culture, identity and religion of Tibet. Indonesians in Australia are aware of the lack of democracy, the nepotism and corruption of the government and social order in Indonesia which tolerates no political diversity and continues to deny freedom to East Timor. Australians can't be expected to take seriously comments from Asian countries about our standards of democracy and social relations when their systems fall light years behind ours. The vote for One Nation is, for many fair-minded Australians, an assertion of their belief in the value of our unique Australian community values and a rejection of the attempts by minority groups to dictate what values are to be morally and politically correct." NEVILLE DANE, Bateman - West Australian, 20/6/98 |