27 February 1998. Thought for the Week:
"It is possible so to twist the meaning of words, that policies
which result in conditions which are progressively obnoxious
to the majority of persons affected by them, can yet obtain
a considerable amount of support, by an appeal to high-sounding
words such as democracy, justice and equality. The emotion
to which appeal is made, is that which was invoked to justify
witch-burning... There is probably more nonsense spoken and
written around the words freedom and liberty, than in regard
to any other two words in the English language... Liberty
is really a simple thing, although difficult to come by. It
consists in freedom to choose or refuse one thing at a time."
C.H. Douglas in Social Credit |
THE DEADLY VIRUS OF MULTICULTURALISMby Eric D. Butler Through most of "liberated" Africa, there have been killings on a massive scale as Africans revert to tribalism. The mass killings are temporarily forgotten as the world braces itself for more convulsions and destruction. Those whites seeking to escape from the horrors of the new South Africa are finding that the Australian Government appears to have double standards concerning refugees. The Sunday Age of February 22nd published a story concerning a white South African woman seeking to obtain political asylum in Australia She says she has been robbed 12 times and mugged five times, and that it is not possible for whites to live under black rule. Cherryl Kennedy has told the Australian immigration authorities that she has been driven from South Africa by crime and reverse discrimination... She says that she has had three cars stolen and her house burned down. Her daughter has had a gun held at her head and her father and brother had both been shot - her brother fatally. There is nothing unusual about what has happened; it has become the norm in the new South Africa. The white woman who sat next to me on the plane from Singapore to Perth last December also described herself as a refugee, thanking God each morning that she was still alive. Now living in Broome, Cherryl Kennedy, after she entered Australia last year as a tourist, has claimed refugee status. The authorities have refused her application, stating that she does not meet the Government's criteria concerning qualifications and wealth. She is a cleaner. She is now taking her case before the Refugee Review Tribunal. She cites the affirmation action policies of the South African Government, which discriminates against whites. The case is causing considerable interest among white South Africans trying to leave the country. As these comments are being made, one of those who was prominent in the campaign to turn South Africa into a multicultural and multiracial society, President Clinton of the USA, has not yet used the USA's sophisticated technology to blast Baghdad. A growing number of Americans are being unkind enough to ask searching questions about the President's integrity. They recall how Clinton involved American troops in an attempt to end violence in multicultural Yugoslavia. He promised that he would have American troops out of explosive Bosnia by the end of 1996, and that the American mission in Bosnia would be "precisely defined with clear realisable goals" that could be achieved within the year. Clinton reneged on that promise only a few days after he had been re-elected in November. President Clinton then made yet another
promise, that American troops would be home by July 1998.
But by December 18th, 1997, he was also backing away from
that promise and called for an open-ended commitment to keep
American troops in Bosnia indefinitely. It appears that Clinton's
advisers had discovered that if American troops were withdrawn
from Bosnia, there would be an inevitable renewal of conflict
between the Serbs, the Croats and the Moslems. These three
different religious and cultural groups are not prepared to
live under the programme imposed upon them by the Clinton
Administration. As one studies that Clinton Administration's programme, it becomes clear that all major policy decisions are designed to advance the concept of some type of New World Order. Numerous international treaties are directed against national sovereignty. It is probably true that Clinton, like so many Western political leaders, is but a pawn in a game he does not understand. In Benjamin Disraeli's famous novel Coningsby there is the entertaining dialogue between the International Bankers and Coningsby, who is surprised that the British Chancellor of the Exchequer should be made Minister for Finance, as he knew nothing about the subject. "Exactly, my dear Coningsby, that's why we made him Chancellor of the Exchequer." The facts concerning the massive build-up of the "Asian Tigers" by the International Banks are readily available. Citicorp extended over $60 billion in Asian loans, Chase Manhattan over $39 billion, J.P. Morgan $23 billion, the Bank of America $16 billion. The International Monetary Fund has already poured out over $100 billion for the Asian crisis, and is asking for still bigger investments. Those with reasonably good memories will recall how Mexico lost control of its oil supplies as a result of the 1984 bailout by the International Bankers. The Mexican Middle Class was virtually wiped out and a grassroots revolution took place. In spite of the events of recent history, President Clinton originally stated that the Asian crisis was but a little "glitch" - nothing really to worry about. Whatever the outcome of the current Iraqi situation, in view of the pattern of past events, it is legitimate to ask how much can Clinton and his advisers be trusted concerning what they claim to be about. As the world scene becomes progressively more chaotic, all multicultural societies are increasingly at risk, as witnessed by the Australian situation where the Islamic community has openly expressed its opposition to John Howard's policy concerning Iraq. If open conflict emerges between Western nations and the Moslem world, what would the attitude of Moslem communities inside Western nations? What is required from Australia's politicians supporting the American Middle East policy are firm assurances that there is coherent strategy designed to deal with all emergencies, including the possible flood of refugees into Northern Australia. It is a fact of life that every form of life discriminates in favour of itself; otherwise it does not survive. White refugees from South Africa would be preferable to many others who are coming into Australia under refugee programmes. Australia is fast approaching the most testing time in its short history. The first essential for survival is a repudiation of the policy of multiculturalism and multiracialism and a rejection of any international agreement, which undermines Australia's independence. |
'MAI' SLOWLY BECOMES AN ISSUEby David Thompson Although negotiations are confidential,
the OECD progress towards a Multilateral Agreement on Investment
(MAI) is gradually becoming a public process because of the
magnitude of importance of the new treaty. Details are leaking
out, and those who understand the implications are variously
horrified, or going to lengths to justify the proposal. While
little is being said by Australian officials, the two Ministers
who are on record are both trying to justify Australia's negotiation
of the secret treaty. Kemp's comment is true, but offers little comfort, because the "rules of the game" (some "game"!) insist that the victims of foreign investment are completely powerless to defend themselves from giant trans-national corporations (including banks, insurance companies, etc.). Matthew Townsend, a Melbourne barrister,
writes that signatory nations to the MAI must agree to: Signatory nations can set their own exception to the treaty rules ("reservations") but these are to be eliminated overtime. The result of outlawing 'discrimination'
against foreign firms in Australia would be far-reaching.
For example, consider the following: -it could force Australian
governments to fund foreign universities in this country on
the same basis as we fund our own universities. |
"CONSTITUTION OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY"Australia is said to have submitted 29 'reservations'; areas where Australia would be (temporarily) exempt from the treaty provisions. Although secret, these are believed to be in the fields of banking, airlines, fishing, preferences for Aborigines, communications media, real estate, social services, Telstra, research and development, all government procurement, etc. It is essential to note that the above reservations are only temporary, and the programme for eliminating them is vague, but signatories to the treaty must agree to roll back these exemptions. If foreign firms are 'discriminated against' under the terms of the treaty, significant compensation demands would have to be met by government. Negotiations on the treaty are expected to be complete by April this year, and the international bureaucrats regard it as so far-reaching that World Trade Organisation director general Renato Ruggerio says the OECD is actually "writing the constitution of a single global economy". It is perfectly clear that as the single global economy takes shape, the governments of the nation-state will be forbidden to interfere, even in the best interests of their own people. Perhaps especially in the interests of their own people. The MAI treaty illustrates as perhaps no other has the truth that the nation, which is not prepared to discriminate in its own favour, is doomed. Australian Governments have shown in the past that they do not have the courage to discriminate in favour of Australians. Left to Government, Australia will sign this treaty, driving perhaps the final nail into the coffin of national sovereignty. It depends entirely on what ordinary Australians are prepared to do to resist this abomination. |
CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGE - FOR THE WORSE?While Australians debate the shape of any proposed republic, its proponents like Malcolm Turnbull, Neville Wran and Janet Homes a Court hold a supreme confidence in their ability to "get it right", irrespective of the legal and constitutional difficulties involved. There is perhaps the arrogance of the immensely wealthy that money cuts through all obstacles. But if Australians need a demonstration of constitutional change gone wrong, New Zealand is in the unique situation of providing just such a bad example. In a referendum in 1993, New Zealanders voted to change their electoral system from a "first past the post" system, to what is known as MMP - a type of mixture between "first past the post" and proportional representation. This provides for members of parliament for each electorate in the normal way, as well as each political party appointing additional MPs according to their proportion of the vote. Although New Zealanders have only had one election since its commencement, the MMP system is now widely regarded as an absolute disaster. In a recent book, "Why MMP Must Go", journalist Graeme Hunt, claims that New Zealand now has an alien and undemocratic voting system. Hunt claims that the then Labour Prime Minister, Sir Geoffrey Palmer, had stacked a 1985 Royal Commission into electoral change to give him the result he wanted. "Parliament took the bait, and the most ill-thought-out measure ever to go to referendum was placed before the country. . ." Hunt wrote. He describes it as "the constitutional disaster of the century". Australians might reflect on the process by which we are being forced toward a republic. Rather than an idea that has gradually gathered momentum from the grassroots, it was spawned by an arrogant and abrasive Prime Minister Keating, and fostered in the hothouse of the disaffected left of Australian politics. A reluctant Prime Minister Howard has been maneuvered into permitting it onto the political agenda, an agenda manipulated by internationalist press barons. At the only point at which they have been invited to be involved, only about 40% of the public bothered to vote for delegates to an intensive ten-day convention. This was a poor parody of the pre-federation conventions, and a contrived result will go to referendum in 1999. Perhaps the 1999 Australian question will, in retrospect, become "the most ill-thought-out measure ever to go to referendum". As yet, Australians still have the chance to learn from the New Zealand experience before we have our own disaster. |
FRUITS OF MULTICULTURALISMWhatever the United States hopes to achieve from a "strike" at Saddam Hussein, it is certain that the stocks of the United States in Gulf countries is as low as ever. On his return to the United States from Australia, the Negro Muslim leader Louis Farrakhan pointed out that the world's 1.5 billion Muslims were not exactly enthralled by the impending military action. In Australia, many are surprised to discover that there are quite deep divisions of opinion about Australian involvement in attacking Iraq. But although the "benefits" of the multicultural society are perpetually parroted, the very real difficulties are glossed over. Last weekend about a thousand Muslims demonstrated outside the US Consulate, against Australia's involvement in the Gulf, and warning that the anti-Arab feeling generated by the last Gulf war was already evident again. The problems begin in the schools. In Victoria, one school has been denied the right to rehearse the songs for an Easter passion play, because a "non-Christian" parent complained. Premier Kennett even contemplates ramming legislation through the parliament to permit the play to go ahead. In NSW school parent bodies are being forced to "review" whether the Lord's Prayer was appropriate for their multicultural student bodies. The fruits of multiculturalism are everywhere evident in a shattering of spiritual cohesion. Any nation that permits this is firmly on the road to decline. It is the Christian revelation that has provided Australia with its inspiration towards the free, tolerant and open society. We need to return to our Christian roots, not abandon them in the name of "tolerance". |
GULF CONFLICT II- CORNERSTONES OF RESPONSIBILITYAs usual, the mass media gave the following important press release by Graeme Campbell the silent treatment. Federal Member for Kalgoorlie and Parliament
Leader of Australia First, Graeme Campbell, warned today that
Australia's involvement in a new Gulf conflict could have
dire consequences for Australian primary producers. Mr. Campbell
said that Australia had trade surplus of $143 million with
Iraq in particular and a surplus of over $1 billion with the
Islamic countries in the Middle East. Mr. Campbell said it should be remembered that it was American, British, German and French arms traders who were originally so happy to bolster and enhance Saddam Hussein's military capacity back when Iran was the big bogie. "If our military are to be deployed in an effort to destroy specific military capabilities inside Iraq," he said, "it should be on a very public proviso that if the conflict and war objectives are widened beyond that scope, due to whatever circumstances, then Australian forces should be withdrawn...". Howard should seriously reconsider his stance. |
FROM THE PRESS"The Proxy War""What place has Australia in a war with the imperialist US against Iraq? Why indeed is the US fighting anyway? Is it a proxy war for Israel, or is it to distract people from President Clinton's sexual exploits? "We are told that Iraq must not have weapons of mass destruction. Then why should Israel be allowed to have weapons of mass destruction including the atomic bomb? There appears to be one law for Iraq and another for Israel. "Some years ago Israel invaded Lebanon and murdered thousands of the Palestinian refugees whom they had previously terrorised out of their homes. The US did not rush to defend Lebanon. "In the Six Day War Israel invaded the West Bank of Palestine with massive assistance from the US. Israel has occupied it ever since and totally ignored the numerous UN resolutions calling on her to leave. Now Israel is rubbing salt into Palestinian wounds by settling Jews in the West Bank and further dispossessing the native Palestinians. "I do not see the US and Australia rushing to enforce those UN resolutions. "Why should Iraq be singled out for this humiliation? Can it be that Clinton with a massive majority of Jewish members of his administration - including the Secretary of State - is fighting a proxy war for Israel?" Arthur Tuck, Dulong. (Sunshine Coast Daily, 23/2/98) |