16 October 1998. Thought for the Week:
"As no government can carry on for a month without money,
it is not necessary to labour the point that the visible government
of a country is obliged to take its orders and to shape its
policy, and particularly its financial policy, in accordance
with the instructions of the dealers in this indispensable
implement, so long as they hold a practical monopoly of it."
C.H. Douglas in Social Credit |
THE TRAGEDY OF PAULINE HANSONby Eric D. Butler It is important to recall that initially Pauline Hanson was supported by the former West Australian Labor Member Graeme Campbell, a man denied any advancement in the Labor Party because of his independent views and criticism of those aspects of Labor policies which Campbell felt were undermining Australia's sovereignty. Eventually he was expelled from the Labor Party by Paul Keating and successfully stood as an Independent in the 1993 elections. He sat next to Pauline Hanson in the Federal Parliament and encouraged her in every possible way. Pauline Hanson progressively drew bigger and bigger meetings. Her biggest impact was inside the rank and file of the National Party. For whatever reasons, the media started to provide Pauline Hanson with increasing publicity. There was initially no suggestion that she was moving towards attempting to establish another political party. With the tide of a growing number of Pauline Hanson Support Groups, it appeared that Pauline Hanson was attempting to create a public opinion, which would shift public opinion on immigration and associated issues. Invited to appear with Graeme Campbell at a big Albury rally early in 1997, Pauline Hanson indicated in answer to a question that she was not contemplating the creation of a new political party. It was shortly afterwards that it was announced that a Pauline Hanson political party was being established. But Graeme Campbell's concept of political action was different - a new type of political party with elected Members of Parliament being directly responsible to their electors. One of the "Core Policies" of Campbell's Australia First was support for the introduction of the Citizen's Initiative Referendum system. During the early stages of the establishment of Pauline Hanson's Party there was little or no reference to CIR as a major policy. This only came after, contrary to Pauline Hanson's statement that she was not interested in State politics, it was announced that she was going to contest the Queensland State Elections. Her statement concerning CIR revealed a very inadequate understanding of the subject. Australia First had made it clear that it was only entering the Queensland State elections as a limited objective, contesting only 12 electorates with high quality candidates with the possibility of electing only or two in order to demonstrate that it was possible to start driving wedges into the major parties. It was at this stage that the strategy of the internationalists emerged into the open. Millions of dollars of free publicity was given to Pauline Hanson's One Nation, poured out through both the Packer and Murdoch chains of newspapers, which had already decided to destroy Graeme Campbell by giving him the complete silent treatment. Campbell and his numerous media releases disappeared from the media. The internationalists' anti-Campbell strategy was followed right up until the Federal elections. The story of how Pauline Hanson was eventually destroyed politically has yet to be told. Perhaps her main political adviser, David Oldfield, could shed some light on the subject. Presumably, it was Oldfield who advised that Hanson contest the new Queensland seat of Blair instead of taking a certain Queensland Senate seat. Graeme Campbell did his best to warn Pauline Hanson of the political folly of contesting Blair. In an article in The South Burnet Times on the eve of the elections, Campbell pointed out that it was mathematically impossible for Pauline Hanson to win in Blair. Before the elections, Pauline Hanson had predicted that her Party would win 12 Lower House seats and six Senate seats. When, after the election, Pauline Hanson eventually emerged to meet the media, she had an explanation for her defeat in Blair: "I was not prepared for the preferential voting system." What a pity Pauline Hanson had not heeded Graeme Campbell. But instead of heeding Campbell, she had failed to take any firm stand against the One Nation Strategy, which helped to remove from the Federal Parliament the man who is desperately required as Australia enters the deepest crisis in its history. Up until the last Federal Elections, Pauline Hanson had the potential to join with all other Australian nationalists. But tragically she was badly misled. She could start to make amends by publicly apologising to Graeme Campbell. Such an apology would help to ensure that Graeme Campbell does not leave the Australian political scene permanently. |
CRISIS KNOCKS AT THE GLOBAL DOORby Jeremy Lee The article began: "US President Bill
Clinton pronounced it gravely at the weekend. The world's
most powerful politicians and bankers, thrust together in
a scarcely precedented frenzy of Washington meetings, were
confronting the most serious financial crisis in half a century...
After dealing with details of the crisis, The Bulletin
quoted economist John Edwards, who pointed out Australia's
vulnerability: The Australian dollar has come under
attack three times this year and has lost 25% of its value
against the US dollar in the last eighteen months - none of
which was pointed out by politicians on either side during
the election, who made soothing noises about Australia being
a "safe harbour" (Tim Fischer) against the crisis in SE Asia.
Three days earlier The Economist (UK, October 10th)
had described the Washington meeting in much the same words:
Another article in the same issue of
The Economist pointed to an "unexpected" drop in the
value of the US dollar and the dramatic rise in the Japanese
Yen: People reading this global script are supposed to imagine that these things have taken place without rational explanation - that economies tread paths that have a life of their own, untouched by human action or intervention. The truth, however, is that economic policy is man-made, and that recessions and disasters are symptomatic of evil policies. The "surprise" of The Economist
was nicely cleared up for us by The Australian Financial
Review in its weekend edition of October l0th-llth, under
the heading "SECRET DEAL ON $US-YEN DIVE": As pointed out in On Target last week, it will require as much as $US3 trillion to rescue Japan's banking system. That's about $500 for every living soul on earth! We are about to see an exercise in money creation like nothing the world has ever seen before. This should be borne in mind when reconsidering the puerile and wildly inaccurate remarks of Prime Minister John Howard and Treasurer Peter Costello when spokesmen for One Nation suggested a new, low-interest programme to assist Australia's debt-ridden farmer and small businesses. Howard suggests, completely inaccurately, that depositors prepared to invest their money at 1 percent had to be discovered before banks could lend at 2 percent! Apparently, the Japanese would not agree with Howard's quaint and ill-informed economic nostrum. The article in the UK Economist,
referred to earlier, dealt at more length with the money-printing
policy now being swung into place: "In September, the Bank of Japan began to do this, but gingerly. It was afraid of weakening the Yen. It need be afraid no longer. The more Yen there are, the likelier the current strength of the Yen can be restrained. Another idea floating round in Tokyo, of giving shoppers vouchers worth Y30,000 ($260 or so) to every Japanese man, woman and child, with the value expiring after a short period, makes similar sense, for it would be spent rather than saved. Normally, a call to the printing presses is risky; in Russia, it is a sign of looming hyperinflation. Not in Japan. There is no better plan, and no better time to get the presses rolling." (end of Economist article) There is something ominously occult in the spectre of America's Federal Reserve (owned, contrary to public belief, by a private consortium of financiers) together with the largely unknown directors of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, deliberately deciding to stimulate one major economy at the expense of another. There is little doubt that the United States dollar is set to plunge, while Japan rises from the ashes. The fact that millions of people will be financially immolated in the process probably never crossed the minds of those manipulating the world's money systems. Under the system, the "printing-press" money now being created in Japan will re-appear as future inflation and higher taxes later on. This is because it will all be recorded as interest bearing debt, forced on future generations. Nothing so obviously reinforces the alternative to this sorry state of affairs as the proposals of C.H. Douglas, who advocated a much more scientific set of conditions for increasing the money supply, in accordance with prudent accountancy rules centred in the annual publication of a national balance sheet, with a subsequent policy of debt-free money-creation where warranted, to be distributed in dividend form to consumers. This challenges the enormous power vested in the current ownership of debt. But it is the only solution if we are to emerge from what otherwise will be - and already partly is - a global catastrophe. |
MANDATE FOR DICTATORSHIPby David Thompson In a sense, Mr. Howard is implying that the Senate is not representative of Australian views. He claims that, since he and his Coalition colleagues were re-elected with a majority in the House of Representatives, the Senate has a moral responsibility to "permit him to govern". Presumably, by claiming a "mandate" for the GST, because it was one of the policy issues on which he campaigned, Mr. Howard intends to claim that the Senate has a moral responsibility to pass any policy listed on the Coalition platform before October 3rd. Some observers have even claimed that because only half the Senate was elected on October 3rd, it does not have the authority to oppose the GST. This flies in the face of both reality and constitutional law. In reality, if the entire Senate was up for election, the Democrats and Greens would have an even larger Senate presence, and so would One Nation. It is even possible that One Nation could have won sufficient Senate seats to hold the balance of power. This would make the passage of GST legislation even more unlikely. Mr. Howard cannot have it both ways. Constitutionally, no Prime Minister can expect to dominate the Senate, or force legislation through it. The only "right" Mr. Howard enjoys in respect to the Senate, is to try to have his legislation passed by the Parliament. This is the same "right" enjoyed by every Member of the House of Representatives. If the concept of an election conferring a "mandate" upon a Prime Minister by virtue of a majority in the House of Representatives (no matter how slim) is to be accepted, then the entire basis of government must be reviewed. If Mr. Howard's claims upon the Senate are valid, he is effectively claiming that the government has the right to have its legislation passed without the intervention of Parliament at all. This has enormous ramifications. It means there is little purpose in having an opposition at all, a conclusion reached by such parliamentary leaders as Idi Amin. This view has obviously occurred to the ALP. Gareth Evans declared within hours of the close of polling that he would leave Parliament when it became evident that he could not expect to be helping to form a government. Similarly, Mark Latham concluded that there was not much point serving on the front bench in Opposition. This situation reflects an anecdote about a new Member of the British House of Commons being shown through the chamber by a veteran. Not content with the view from the government's backbench, the new Member advanced to the Ministerial benches. When his veteran guide remarked on his ambition, the new Member declared that it was from here that he could see the whites of the eyes of the enemy. To this the veteran MP responded that Members across the House were Her Majesty's loyal Opposition, and that by the time the novice reached ministerial rank, all his enemies would be seated behind him! If "mandate" means no challenge to policy, there seems little point in the Government itself meeting to debate such matters. Little more is required than the Coalition joint party room being informed of the intention of Cabinet, and the Executive being left to get on with it. In case it has not yet occurred to Mr. Howard, this is a definition of dictatorship that was applied with enthusiasm by Hitler and Stalin. The fact that Australians "voted" gives no refuge to the claim of "democracy". What counts is whether the Parliament works or not. Mr. Howard does not need Keating's intemperate language to show contempt for the Senate. By failing to respect the role of the Senate, Mr. Howard is showing the same type of contempt, and is effectively claiming a "mandate" for dictatorship. |