18 June 1999. Thought for the Week: "Right
through the ages we find this universal sense of Divine inspiration
- this feeling that a wisdom beyond that of man shapes the
destiny of States; that the institutions of men are but the
imperfect instruments of a Divine and beneficent energy; helping
their higher aims. Should not we, sir, grant the prayer of
the many petitions that have been presented to us, by recognising
at the opening of our great future our dependence upon God?"
Delegate John Glynn, South Australia, Constitutional Convention, 1897. |
A CASE OF SELECTIVE INDIGNATIONby David Thompson In defence of his position, Mr. Entsch has declared that he knew nothing about the contract, and was only a Director of the company by virtue of having loaned the principals a sum of money. However, a number of vital principles are involved in the issue. The first is that of an independent judiciary. The reason that the judiciary is an organ of the Crown is that impartial decisions can be seen to be free of political influence. The usual concern is that the judiciary might be used to pursue political opponents. However, the protection of political cronies is potentially just as serious, and it is this that applies in the Entsch case. Mr. Entsch may well have been entirely innocent of having concealed any personal advantage through the awarding of Defence contracts. But should his mates use their numbers in the Parliament to declare his innocence (or guilt)? Or should such matters be decided in the courts? The issue merely underlines the importance of the Crown being seen to be an impartial force - a force above power politics. It is certain that the removal of the Crown from the Constitution would render the question of court impartiality even more unlikely. The second question at stake in this issue is that of double standards. Mr. Entsch is alleged to have transgressed Section 44(v) of the Constitution, which states that anyone who has a "direct or indirect" financial interest in agreements with the public service is disqualified from sitting in the Senate or House of Representatives. Although the Labor Party is keen to test Mr. Entsch's position in the High Court, it is interesting that Mr. Beazley and the ALP studiously ignore other provisions of the Constitution which might disqualify Members from sitting in the House. In fact, it is another part of Section 44, which states that anyone "under any acknowledgement of allegiance, obedience, or adherence to a foreign power, or is a subject or a citizen or entitled to the rights and privileges of a subject of a foreign power" is also disqualified from sitting in Parliament (Section 44(i)). Many readers will recall that when the late George Turner sought to challenge a number of MPs about their right to sit in the House (and the Senate) he found it impossible to have the issue treated seriously. There was certainly no support for the suggestion that such questions should be settled by the High Court. The matter was settled by the Parliament closing ranks, and refusing to address the issue. Some of those alleged by George Turner to have been in breach of Section 44 (i) are still in the Parliament. However, when One Nation, the political and social pariah, had a Senator elected from Queensland, an Asian businessman successfully forced a High Court challenge to Heather Hill. As a British citizen, Hill is alleged to be a "foreigner", and therefore disqualified from sitting in the Senate! The ALP has provided strong (if muted) moral support for this challenge to Senator-elect Hill's right to occupy the Senate. Will Mr. Beazley apply the same standards to his own MHRs and Senators? Or is his righteous indignation about Mr. Entsch and Mrs. Hill a case of indignation of the most selective kind? |
HAS THE BALKANS WAR REALLY ENDED?by Jeremy Lee By far the longest of Kosovos borders is that with Serbia, into which Slobodan Milosevic's troops - with their weapons intact - are withdrawing. As savage and seasoned fighters with, rightly or wrongly, a cause to die for, the chance of coming to grips with ground forces rather than the technically immune air bombardment they have faced so far, jeopardises the vain hope that they will settle peacefully into neutrality. With old scores to settle on both sides, let alone the atrocities that have occurred since the recent conflict commenced, coupled with the return of not far short of a million refugees to a country where their homes, jobs and in many cases relatives have disappeared, an explosive situation will exist. The first example of retaliation will spark a resurgence of the guerilla warfare at which the Serbs are so skilled - this time directed against NATO forces, administrators and welfare workers. Such a war, if it occurs, will not be remedied by air strikes. The targets will be increasingly elusive. In the midst of this potential powder keg, NATO will be trying to administer the biggest reconstruction programme in world history. The Australian Financial Review (11/9/99) gave some idea of the directions: "The US special envoy for the Balkans Carl Bildt told the UN Security Council yesterday that the task of rebuilding the region following the Kosovo conflict will be the most 'complex peace implementation in modern times'. Kosovo will have to be taken from virtually nothing to practically everything in the next few years' Mr.Bildt said... Sums of money to be invested were yet to be decided by the G8 yesterday, but the total aid is expected to be enormous. European Commission estimates suggest at least $US20 billion (A$30.777 billion) will be needed just to launch the initiative, not including the cost of rebuilding Kosovo " Already arguments have broken out within NATO as to who will have overall command of the peacekeeping forces. Once this has been resolved - if it is - there will be the additional task of keeping harmony between the diverse array of troops who make up the force, as well as the differing political views of the governments in the countries from whence they come. If the disaffection of military commanders in previous "peace-keeping" exercises is anything to go by NATO's problems are only just beginning. |
IS THE GST CONSTITUTIONAL?Apart from the fact that opinion polls show an increasing opposition to the GST, and the obvious divisions among the Democrats on the issue, a constitutional time bomb hangs over the legislation. Section 55 of the Constitution reads: "Laws imposing taxation shall deal only with the imposition of taxation, and any provision therein dealing with any other matter shall be of no effect. "Laws imposing taxation, except laws imposing duties of customs, or of excise, shall deal with duties of customs only, and laws imposing duties of excise shall deal with duties of excise only." The Australian Financial Review (11/6/99): "When the Federal Government was first asked about the constitutional validity of the GST bills in April this year, it refused to table its advice in the Senate and has since maintained a stonewall response. "The truth is more likely to be that the Government did not have any legal advice at the time on the key section in the Constitution relating to indirect tax, s55. The Government did not seek advice from the Australian Solicitor-General until after those questions were raised..." An accompanying article in the same edition reported that Professor Geoff Lindell a constitutional expert at Melbourne University believed there was a major constitutional problem with the GST Bill. "... The imposition in the same act of a tax on goods and services raises a serious question under Section 55 which could lead to a High Court challenge..." Additional weight is lent to Professor Lindell's position by the fact that the High Court has already created a precedent in a similar case in 1992, when a swimming pool manufacturer, Mutual Pools, contested the application of Sales Tax. The High Court found in Mutual Pool's favour, ruling that Sales Tax was invalid because it was a tax on land and goods. Such a ruling on the GST would not eliminate the tax, but it would require the Howard Government to redraft the legislation - currently in 27 bills - to comply with the ruling. This could not be done before the Senate elected at the recent Federal election takes its place, with a stronger opposition to the GST than at present. |
THE SHADOW OF FINANCIAL CRISISThe Bulletin (15/6/99) has again
reiterated a sober warning about approaching financial convulsions.
Editor Max Walsh believes it now certain that the Federal
Reserve in the US will be forced to raise interest rates at
the end of June. Included in his remarks were: Max Walsh is not the only one with such
fears. Peter Switzer, in The Australian (11/6/99) started
his column: "No, don't say it. Don't even think it. BIS Shrapnel's
interest rate forecast of 9 percent home loan interest rates
in 2000-2001 couldn't come true. Could it? Another column in the same issue said: "....Rising anxiety in the United States over inflationary growth has fuelled an increase in 'unofficial' cash rates domestically...." An accompanying table showed the 'creep' in 90-day and longer interest rates, despite the official line of Reserve Bank chief Ian MacFarlane that there is no contemplation of interest rate increases at this stage. |
GST STILL HANGING IN THE BALANCEThe League still holds the view that
it is defeatist to surrender on the issue of the GST. If representative
government means anything at all, it means that we are not
governed by "deals" made behind closed doors, but by our representatives
arguing their case in the Parliament, and representing our
interests. This means that all that really counts is the vote
in the Parliament. In this case, the next vote will be in
the Senate, and the Democrats appear to be the group to decide
the issue. The Democrats make a virtue of the suggestion that
they do not vote on rigid party lines, but on conscience.
If there is any such thing as a conscience in politics, it
must certainly have something to do with an obligation to
represent constituents. Another issue that has now surfaced concerning the GST is whether it is actually constitutional. (See On Target). Mr. Howard and his Ministers refuse to table their legal advice, suggesting there may be considerable doubt about whether the GST is constitutional or not. We suggest that this should be pursued. Why not ask Mr. Howard to come clean? Why not press Treasurer Costello to tell the truth? Why not ask the Attorney General whether he has advice that may affect the passage of the GST? What do they have to hide? Are they proposing to deceive the electorate? Reports that public support for the GST has collapsed do not surprise us in the least. In our experience, there wasn't much public support for it in the first place. It is more likely that Coalition politicians were deceived by their own propaganda. One activist reports that polling small businesses in a major regional centre reveals that only one in twenty support the introduction of the GST, and a good majority bitterly oppose it. Nevertheless, weekend press reports confirm our earlier information that another $75 million of taxpayers' money is being set aside to "sell" the GST to us. Remember that $10 million of our money was spent before the election in an attempt to "explain" the GST. Legal advice suggested that this was not using public money for party political purposes, although it smacked of splitting hairs. We continue to pay, and the next $75 million will be the largest government media campaign ever launched in Australia. (Should that read "propaganda" campaign?) It is designed to educate the public on how this version of the GST will work, and advise business of its obligations. Indications are that we have about two weeks before the Senate vote, in which we can ask our Senators -primarily the Democrats - to say no to the GST. The names and fax numbers of Democrat Senators presently in the Parliament are as follows: Meg Lees (leader, South Australia): (02) 6277 3996; Natasha Stott Despoja (S.A.): (02) 6277 3235; Vicki Bourne (NSW): (02) 6277 3815; John Woodley (QLD): (02) 6277 3725; Andrew Bartlett (Qld): (02) 6277 3791; Lyn Allison (Vic): (02) 6277 3087; and Andrew Murray (W.A.): (02) 6277 3767. |
RICHARD BUTLER JOINS THE CFRAs we documented in a previous On Target, it was the US Secretary of State, Madelaine Allbright, who sponsored President Clinton as a member of the elite Insider Club, the Council on Foreign Relations. It now emerges that she has also sponsored the membership of Australian diplomat and United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq, Richard Butler to the CFR. Butler is expected to act as "diplomat in residence" at the CFR beginning next month. Ms. Allbright is regarded as the chief architect of the NATO bombing of Serbia, which is now publicly acknowledged as an almost certainly illegal bombardment of the sovereign nation of Yugoslavia.Membership of the CFR is an essential prerequisite for any aspiring presidential candidate in the United States; if you're not an 'insider', there is no chance of success. Is Mr. Butler being groomed for higher duties in the future? |
THE BANKRUPTCY OF THE "FULL EMPLOYMENT" ETHICA new book in the non-Anglo-Saxon world
is causing a sensation. The book, Viviane Forrester's L'Horreur
Economique, winner of the Pins Medici, has sold more than
350,000 copies in France, more than 60,000 in Germany, more
than 50,000 in Argentina, and is now being translated into
more than 20 languages. Simply, it challenges the whole, spurious
idea that in a world of such technological marvels, it is
possible to give everyone a meaningful occupation: The sentiments expressed could have been titled 'The Breakdown of the Employment System'. That was the title of one of C.H. Douglas's papers 70 years ago, warning of the very conditions described in the article. Douglas went further in offering a sane solution. It looks like a book all Social Crediters will appreciate. As yet unavailable in Australia, but when stocks in English are available we will advise. |
IMF TO ENTER COMMERCIAL HELDUntil now the International Monetary Fund has been an international body, which received contributions from the member-states, which provided its liquidity base for the on lending of funds. Its record is not encouraging, and many have claimed it has created more crises than it has cured. A minority of politicians have questioned its performance, making the continuation of contributions precarious. The US Congress very nearly forestalled the last contribution, against President Clinton's protests. It is now seeking to become a commercial entity in its own right. The Australian (11/6/99) reported: "The International Monetary Fund could raise up to $US1OO billion ($152 billion) and boost its lending resources by half if it tapped the capital markets instead of relying on its member countries for contributions... 'The prospect of private sector participation in IMF funding, long resisted by traditionalists in the international monetary establishment, has now become a real and imperative option,' the report (by the Bretton Woods Committee) says. 'For the IMF's central role in crisis intervention, it will furnish speed and flexibility', in contrast with 'the ponderous and lengthy process of getting money from the US, Japan and its 180 other member countries. Well! It's only a step from here to listing the IMF on the world's stock exchanges. A new "bubble" could take over from the existing one - with investments solely in the misery of the world's misery. That ought to make enough profit! And Goldman Sachs & Co. could no doubt help with any brokerage required. |