3 December 1999. Thought for the Week:
"Certain doctors and other persons permitted by law to dictate
to their shabbier fellow-citizens sent out an order that all
little girls should have their hair cut short. I mean of course,
all little girls whose parents were poor. Now the case for
this particular interference was this, that the poor are pressed
down from above into such stinking and suffocating underworlds
of squalor, that the poor people must not be allowed to have
hair, because in their case it must mean lice in the hair.
Therefore, the doctors propose to abolish the hair. It never
seems to have occurred to them to abolish the lice...the lesson
of lice in the slums is the wrongness of slums, not the wrongness
of hair...it is only by eternal institutions like hair that
we can test passing institutions like empires."
"What's Wrong with the World" by G.K. Chesterton, 1910 |
DOWNER'S CHICKENS COMING HOME TO ROOSTby Jeremy Lee In The Bulletin's November 30th edition, National Affairs Editor John Kelly raises some issues based on the Intelligence reports, which require immediate public answers: ON DOWNER: ".... Despite denials at the time by Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, the Australian government was fully aware of the duplicitous role of the Indonesian military (TNI). ON PROPAGANDA: "The documents ... show up as a farce a ceremony engineered by the Indonesian military in which militia members handed in their weapons: the DIO (Defence Intelligence Organisation) reported the TNI ...in fact then handed back those weapons to the militia." ON GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS: "... The revelation of the DIO documents reflects tensions within the bureaucracy in Canberra: the defence department, and in particular its military intelligence arm, the DIO, believe the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFAT) and Downer are trying to absolve themselves of any knowledge of the almost certain destruction in East Timor after the election. "Defence sources are angry that DFAT officers and Downer have not been held accountable by Prime Minister John Howard for opposing the use of peacekeepers in the lead-up to the ballot. There is a strong view in the defence department that DFAT and Downer repeatedly ignored warnings from DIO and others that the TNI would 'scorch' East Timor after the ballot..." ON INDONESIA'S SECRET POLICY "All necessary force was to be employed, but with maximum deniability, maintaining public adherence to Indonesian commitments under the agreement while privately subverting the process of self-determination in East Timor ..." ON ALEXANDER DOWNER: "...The new documents will again raise the debate about Australia's role in the East Timor tragedy. They also require Alexander Downer to answer two questions: If he did not know about the assessments that Jakarta was running the militia, why not? If he did, why did he lie to the Australian public? ...." The whole sorry affair is made more distasteful by the fact the unsuspecting East Timorese were urged to vote without fear by numerous posters which said "We will not desert you! ". The massacre, which followed, will hardly persuade Timorese to trust the word of politicians in countries like Australia in future. |
IS ACEH NEXT?Over a million people recently gathered in the Indonesian island of Aceh to demand a referendum similar to the one in East Timor for an independent Islamic state. Indonesia's new President Wahid has said such a referendum may be held next year. Nobody is holding their breath. On November 26th about 2,500 Acehnese forced their way into the parliament in Jakarta to demand such a referendum. Indonesia is in an invidious position. With an archipelago of 17,000 islands and a major economic crisis there are obvious fears that their empire may shatter in pieces. Australia can expect no help from Indonesia on the question of the increasing flood of boat people - probably the reverse. Australia is going to have to toughen up considerably, despite Amanda Vanstone's reassurances. In a personal letter to The Bulletin
(30/11/99) Philip Ruddock, the Minister for Immigration gave
some idea of what is going on. After pointing out that Australia
issued 28,569 business visas in China to visit Australia in
1998-99 (not including Hong Kong or Taiwan). Ruddock continued:
If our quick reckoning is correct, this means some 3,000 mainland Chinese overstayed their visas during the last year. How many from other countries? And what happens if they're caught? A three-year stay in a detention centre at our expense? Meanwhile, the boat people keep coming. |
ELECTIONS, ELECTIONSBy the time readers see this, the results of two national elections will have been declared - New Zealand and Malaysia. New Zealand polls appear to favour a change in government to a Labour coalition - although polls are increasingly unreliable; remember Jeff Kennett? An assessment by Stephen Koukoulas in Wellington (Australian Financial Review, 26/11/99) contained two bits of information giving a lead to the odds being placed on Labour: "The key plank of the Labour agenda perhaps can be best captured in Clark's campaign launch when she said Labour would 'put the interests of New Zealand ahead of free-market purism every time.' "...Household debt levels have surged, from about 55 per cent of disposable income in 1990 to 100 per cent in 1999...." In the crazy world of economic orthodoxy, this is a sign things are booming - consumer confidence and all that. Malaysia expects a Mahathir victory. His economy is recovering faster than any in Asia - and is still Malaysian-owned. |
AUSTRALIA FLEXES ITS MUSCLESFollowing last week's emphasis on the imminent World Trade Organisation shindig, The Weekend Australian (27-28/11/99) told us on its front page that the WTO replaced GATT in 1995 as the global body for making and enforcing trade. It has 135 members, with China and Taiwan soon to join; that the coming millennium round will run at least three years: and that the world economy would receive a $1 trillion-a-year boost and Australia $7.5 billion if all trade barriers were removed. Not everybody believes these magic figures, figuring they really reveal a more frenetic rate at which we take in each other's washing - with increasing casualties in the process. All is not well, however. The leading article said: "Australia has issued an unprecedented threat to walk away from the new Millennium Round of world trade talks due to begin next week unless there are big cuts in farm trade barriers. "The warning from Trade Minister Mark Vaile came amid fears that the world's trade ministers would abandon the three-year trade talks.... The talks are shrouded in gloom after negotiators in Geneva failed this week to agree on a draft text to launch the new trade round. Veteran observers said they could not remember such a poor beginning to a new trade round...." Perhaps - just perhaps - the global market, under the heavy hand of the WTO is not the answer. But then Prime Minister Howard says there IS NOTHING ELSE! And he couldn't be wrong - could he? |
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLSThis gem appeared in The Bulletin (30/11/99): "Free travel on national highways may soon be a thing of the past after Transport Minister John Anderson forecast tolls would be charged on main roads. The first highway to attract a toll, Anderson noted, could be the proposed Western Sydney Orbital, due to be completed by 2007." Our Deputy Prime Minister would be just the chap to snip the ribbon on Melbourne's CityLink, when it finally starts electronically extracting $3.77 for a one-way trip to the city. Charges are expected to start just in time for Christmas - although, who knows? They keep finding excuses to delay. Perhaps John Anderson can speed things up. |
GUARDING OUR MOST PRECIOUS TREASUREby Alfred King The substance of this suggestion is no different to the current one with the Australian Press Council overseeing - it is asking the wolves to guard the sheep - with the resulting mass carnage inflicted on our culture and values. No greater influence impacts our thinking than the media. This makes it vital to the establishment. All the programming and news portrays a secular humanist view that man establishes his own moral values apart from the influence of anyone (including God), and that he determines his own destiny. This life-view has no absolute, eternal reference point - everything is relative. The rules can be made up as we go along. But how do we know if sexual promiscuity is immoral or not? Why shouldn't we cheat in business? Ted Koppel, the news-anchor for the US
ABC's "Nightline", in 1987 said, "we have constructed a tower
of Babel and it is a television antenna, a thousand voices
producing a daily parody of democracy in which everyone's
opinion is afforded equal weight regardless of substance or
merit. Indeed, it can even be argued that opinions of real
weight tend to sink with barely a trace in television's ocean
of banalities." The Establishment media relies heavily on subliminal messages to get its message across into our minds. Our problem is more what our subconscious minds are exposed to than our conscious minds. According to William Bryan Key, in his book, Subliminal Seduction: "The conscious mind discriminates, decides, evaluates, resists or accepts. The subconscious apparently merely stores units of information, much of which influences attitudes or behaviour at the conscious level in ways about which science knows virtually nothing. The vast communications industry realised long ago the resistance to advertising develops at a conscious level. However, there is little if any resistance encountered at the subconscious level, to which marketing appeals are now directed." The fact is that the individual is sovereign in his own life. Each of us must take control of what we allow to come into our homes - we can't look to government or industry protection to tell us what is good for us. We'd call the police if someone entered our homes and stole something of value - and that is what television is doing. I recommend the reader to evaluate the amount of time spent watching the TV and the kind of programmes watched - we are being attacked in an area we are unable to resist. The subconscious mind has no walls around it. You may want to develop an alternative way to use your time more effectively. |
POPULATION OF 50 MILLION? FORGET ITUnder the above heading John Vautin of Coolum Beach, Qld. (The Australian, 26/11/99), took the business 'leaders' to task: "I am a seventh generation Australian with rural connections dating from the 1700s. I read, with growing alarm, the opinion piece by Dick Pratt, 'Refugee alert sounds like a wake-up call.' An Australian population figure of 5O million has become the fashionable wish of those with vested interests in population growth. "This group falls into two broad categories. First, there are businessmen who want greater markets and are not prepared to seek them overseas. Second, there are politicians who aspire to strut the world stage supported by the authority of 50 million people or who want greater personal power bases for party political reasons. "Concerned with the growing populism of the egocentric ambitions I once wrote to a minister for immigration who responded that I should not worry as 'technology' would take care of it. My message for all of them is to get off their shiny, silvertail, citified arses, get out amidst the dust and blowflies, watch great rivers run backwards when irrigation pumps are turned on and see the degradation of thousands of hectares of formerly arable land. "Then they should tell us what technology is available to this parched continent that can produce enough water out of thin air to provide flush toilets, car washes, lawns, playing fields, golf courses, etc. Not to mention the cooling water required for mining, manufacturing and power generation industries. Put the idea aside Mr. Pratt. Until the technology is here, forget it. |
BABY 'J' AND THE UNRESOLVED MORAL DILEMMAby Tom Fielder Referring to his own family, Andrew Bolt (Herald Sun 15/11/99) says, "...that sums up what we've wanted for all our children - that they grow up loved and loving..." Commenting on the abortion procedure, he admitted, "True, there are other techniques - gruesome ones - to ensure these foetuses are killed before they are delivered." While James Murray, in his thoughtful article wrote, "What is more alarming is the institutionalised process which seems to have allowed what morally amounts to a felony take place." But potential mothers are seldom, if ever, counselled on two factors that will certainly impact upon their health later in life. The first is the unresolved grief and guilt (a bad combination of emotions) and the second is the statistical correlation between the unnatural interruption of pregnancy and breast cancer. Each year on Armistice and Anzac days,
Australians pays tribute to, and mourn the loss of, 100,000
of the flower of the nation's youth lost in the wars of this
century. And yet in 1997, ninety-five thousand unborn children,
whose needs and rights were not defined, were killed by a
supposedly therapeutic pragmatism for which there was no moral
principle at all. Children born in Australia, loved and raised in financially secure and satisfactorily housed families would be far more preferable to populate this country than being obliged by international conventions to accept tens of thousands of both legal and illegal migrants now massing in foreign lands ready to make the hazardous journey to Australia. |
UNINVITED GUESTS?by Phillip Butler A.J. Reed of Glen Waverley, Vic., has put to words the frustration and anger many Australians are feeling at what is happening. Herald Sun, 18/11/99: "A group of people I have never seen before climbed over my back fence and insisted I take them into my house. They don't speak my language, nor eat the same food as I do, but I find that I am obliged to put them up. I have to provide permanent accommodation, with bathroom and toilet facilities. I have to hire someone to prepare and cook their food. I have to provide medical attention for them. As if that is not enough, I also find I have to pay for legal assistance so these people can take me to court to make me allow them to come and live in my house. Is this fanciful and more than a bit ridiculous? Well, it is exactly what is happening on a national scale with the large numbers of boat people demanding to be allowed to stay Australia may be obliged to give help and succour to refugees, but these people are not genuine refugees. So, if we, the Australian people, feel this flood of illegal immigrants needs to be halted, please buy three stamps and take the time to write to your federal MP, the Immigration Minister and the Prime Minister and tell them how you feel about people trying to bypass all the proper migration procedures and forcing their way into our country." Must reading: "Camp of the Saints" by Jean Raspail, $25.00 posted; "Here We Go Again" by Doug Collins, $25.00 posted; "Dispossessed Majority" by Wilmot Robertson, $28.00 posted. |