14 June 2002. Thought for the Week: "In
1945 it must have appeared to most people that with victory
war was done with, and that when its ravages had been repaired,
an era of peace and prosperity would dawn. Who was left to
make war? The late C.H. Douglas, however, from the very beginning
had seen the war as merely one frightful incident, like the
First World War and the Great Depression, in a long-term and
continuing policy, of which the culmination was to be a World
Government of a world police-state.
He recognised the existence of an occult government, largely identified with the Money Power as organised internationally, but spreading its tentacles increasingly into national governmental organizations through such agencies as Fabian Socialism, the London School of Economics, penetration of universities, and control of the media of communications. Of the inner core master-minding these huge events he wrote: 'They care no more for the immolation of the peoples of a continent than for the death of a sparrow.'" The Social Crediter, 1967 |
USURY THE ULTIMATE FORM OF TERRORISMby Jeremy Lee In our May issue of The New Times Survey we presented evidence that there are up to 40 Enrons waiting in the wings, totally and illegally overextended. Enron was the biggest corporate collapse in the last 200 years. We also provided the figures for the massive increases in household debt in America, Britain, Germany and Australia bigger than anything in recent history. There is a tangible feeling everywhere, not of anticipation, but of apprehension, for which there are realistic grounds. For almost 100 years a small number able to look further than immediate events to the longer term current of history has known such a moment was eventually coming. The most important of these was Clifford Hugh Douglas, whose predictions were uncannily accurate, and whose alternatives were so clear as to be self-evident to those who bothered to study them. With this picture in mind it may be of value to reconsider the nuts-and-bolts of usury what it is and what it has done. This précis is from a paper the author recently gave to a meeting on Queensland's Sunshine Coast: USURY DESTROYER OF SOCIETIES The same thing happened much later in the time of Nehemiah (470 BC), but with a different result. Again, the people were being financially oppressed: "We, our sons and our daughters, are many; therefore, let us get grain that we may eat and live. .... We are mortgaging our fields, our vineyards and our houses that we might get grain because of the famine. "Then I was very angry .... And contended with the nobles and the rulers and said to them: 'You are exacting usury ...Give back to them this very day their fields, their vineyards, their olive groves and their houses, also the hundredth part of the money and of the grain ....'" (Nehemiah 5:1-2). This time the money-lenders wrote off the debts! GREECE AND ROME MORE MODERN TIMES THE AUSTRALIAN STORY The Commonwealth Bank opened for business in 1913 and was immediately of immense benefit. It created $700 million for wartime expenditure in 1914, at a charge of five-eighths of one percent interest, thus saving Australia the huge war debts still plaguing other nations. The story of how the Bank was strangled in 1924, placing it under the directorship of the private money-lenders is one of the most tragic episodes in Australia's history. It has now been completely "privatized", by the same Labor Party which originally created it. In the same year the Commonwealth Bank opened for business 1913 the US Federal Reserve, a privately-owned Central Bank, was enacted in the US, establishing the pattern of Central Banking now operating across the world. Central Banks now operate under the aegis of the International Monetary Fund, set up at Bretton Woods in 1944. Of the IMF and its partners-in-crime, the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation, the courageous director of the Transnational Institute, Dr. Susan George, said on the ABC in 1992: "All these institutions are centralized, hierarchical, completely undemocratic and working with a lot of money contributed by their members, mostly their richer members. What do they do with that money? Well, in many ways they are helping to subjugate all the economies of the world. ... The World Bank is in charge of imposing this economic doctrine, the International Monetary Fund is in charge of imposing structural adjustment and GATT (now the World Trade Organisation) is involved with reducing not only barriers to trade, but any standards environmental, health standards, high wages that could be considered impediments to trade. I feel very much that the undemocratic nature of these institutions will mean that a whole new world order is put into place and that it is an anti-democratic, authoritarian order run by the elites of the world on their own behalf ...." GLOBAL MONOPOLY Now, at the start of the 21st Century, power has been centralized on a scale never experienced in world history. Nations have been forced into trading blocs completely dominated by Central Banks. Under Clause 107 of the Maastricht Treaty, Europe's Central Bank may not be challenged, nor is it beholden to any Member State of the European Parliament. Members have been coerced, against the wishes of their own people, into abandoning their own currencies in favour of the new European Currency Unit. Multinationals, themselves the creatures of the Banks which finance them, dominate world trade, forcing governments and industries alike to bend to their will. Global Governance a euphemism for World Government is on every trade agenda and behind each international treaty. THE DEBT MOUNTAIN |
THE MAGIC PRONOUNby Joseph Sobran taken from 'Friends
of Freedom' newsletter, June 2002 The State is a parasite Tyranny and freedom are equally nonpartisan." (emphasis added). |
ENQUIRY INTO FEDERAL ELECTION? WHAT NEXT?by Betty Luks Then in my mail came a "Downer Update", from that so-busy, jet-setting, world-problem-solving, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Alexander Downer; not only listing the largesse the Liberals have dispensed (from the people's own moneys of course) to groups within his electorate, but a reply-paid survey looking to identify the four most important issues of concern for the voters. The prepared list did not include controversial issues such as the draconian Anti-Terrorism legislation, the traitorous GATS Treaty, nor the planned International Criminal Court! What next? I wondered. Could we expect public meetings convened by the politicians whereupon they will announce they await instructions from their electors as to how they will vote on issues in Parliament? Don't hold your breath! Not likely! It might have more to do with their strategy and tactics for the next federal election. After all, they have to keep up the pretence they 'have a mandate' from their electors and the ticks on the ballot papers prove that this is so. Twenty-five percent of South Australians
preferred the minor parties or independents |
LETTER TO EDITOR"Australian Crews for Australian Ships servicing Australian Industry"Sir: The recent stand-off by the crew of the "Yarra" berthed at Port Pirie led to a 'victory' in as much as the ship will be replaced with another vessel with an Australian crew. But has the problem been solved or merely delayed until the next episode? The argument for local crews and their ships, which are reported to be more caring for the environment by not polluting our harbours and oceans is an appealing one. This was evident at Port Pirie where the Mayor and other sympathisers rallied support for the crew who occupied the ship. Minister for Transport and Deputy Prime Minister, Mr. John Anderson explained the government position, which simply is, that industry needs to be profitable to survive. To achieve a profit and remain competitive it is natural to seek lower input costs such as in this case, the cost of shipping. The positions taken by the unions and Labor were at odds with the ship owners, the government and industry. There could be only one winner. Of course, this example could be repeated across the nation thousands of times. If the GATS (General Agreement on Trade and Services) laws are passed, this example of industrial dispute will explode because under GATS, services such as police, fire services, hospitals and many others will have to go to tender to decide who will operate them. Australian workers and administrators will have to compete with all the low cost tenders from South-east Asia and elsewhere. When that happens, the government and unions/opposition will still be singing the same tune, namely Aussie jobs versus lower costs and competition. Could there be some common ground! A crisis may be averted if someone could think outside of the square. Stand back and look for the problems both sides share. Could we keep Aussie jobs for Aussie industry and still keep the cost structure down? If costs are a problem for industry, then might not costs also be a problem for wage earners? After all, they probably are not seeking to buy a townhouse; they are attempting to keep abreast of mundane things like rising school fees, car registration, water rates, food and power bills! Since finance provides the link between every section of production from raw materials through to consumption, it can be the first area to check. Taxation and interest rates, each of which is juggled to affect the economy, control the flow of finance. Whether taxes or interest are low or high, they are a cost that must be recovered through prices at every stage of the production cycle. Lower interest and taxes must therefore mean lower costs enabling lower prices needed for goods and services. Each 24 hours, $100 million of freshly created money is added to our money supply (On Target, May 10th, 2002). It enters the system as a debt to the banks and of course attracts interest. Even at today's relatively low interest rates, one can see how large the interest bill would be at the end of one month. Could this supply of new finance be applied to achieve a better result? Could the government, for example, recognise that we all want Australia for Australians, we all want people to have employment and we would like to have a product to export, if that is necessary, which has a competitive price tag. If those basic aims were agreed upon, would the government accept its responsibility and direct even some of that $100 million to be issued not as a debt, but as a credit where it could be applied to lowering school fees, rates, hospital charges, food and power bills to name a few? The cost price spiral would be in reverse! Ken Grundy, Naracoorte, SA 5271 May 20th, 2002 |
INTRODUCING SOCIAL CREDIT SERIESThis little series is proving of value to those who have set aside the time and made the effort to study at their own pace. Others have joined in home-study fellowships. What the series cannot do for the reader is instil the determination to make the effort; strengthen the resolve to understand the concepts; come to the realization of knowing and understanding the truths. Social Credit is not just 'monetary reform' as too many believe, and it is certainly not a cult based on the writings of C.H. Douglas. It is the resolution of the wholly artificial left/right 'conflict' raging in the world; a conflict deliberately intended to lead on to a world tyranny. In the introduction, the reader is advised not to "attempt to review individual Social Credit proposals in the light of present-day political, economic and financial orthodoxy, as that is counter-productive. Each theme exists within the framework of an alternative economic theory and social philosophy". A social philosophy, which, if applied, would lead to freedom not to tyranny. Effort is needed In the common words we use every day the souls of past races, the thoughts and feelings of individual men stand around us, not dead, but frozen into their attitudes like the courtiers in the garden of the Sleeping beauty. The more common a word is and the simpler its meaning, the bolder very likely is the original thought which it contains and the more intense the intellectual or poetic effort which went into its making. Thus, the word quality is used by most educated people every day of their lives, yet in order that we should have this simple word Plato had to make the tremendous effort (it is one of the most exhausting which man is called on to exert) of turning a vague feeling into a clear thought. Financial adviser, Grant Bird, speaking of the plight of the dispossessed farmers, made the observation (CSC Adelaide): They know they have been 'had' (by the banks, the system) but they don't know 'how'.Quite. But neither would they make the effort to understand how the systems are so weighted against them! They were quite content to put their trust in the very groups who sold them out. "Introducing Social Credit" series: |
2002 EDITION OF 'YOUR RIGHTS' IS NOW AVAILABLEYou can purchase your copies direct from Australian Civil Liberties Union, Post Office Box 1137, Carlton, 3053. Price $6.50; $8.00 posted. 'Your Rights' has been published every year since 1974 and is the most commonly used laymen's guide to the law in Australia. It has chapters on wills and estates, rights of victims of crime and pension payments. The rights of taxpayers, investors, consumers, motorists and mental health are also discussed. The 2002 edition also discusses anti-terrorism laws, Tampa, September 11th, Falun Gong, ASIO and DSD. A review in the Law Institute Journal said: "Your Rights 1999 is an extraordinary publication a must have for just about everyone. |
SYDNEY CONSERVATIVE SPEAKERS' CLUBThe next meeting for the Sydney CSC will be held on Wednesday, June 26th, 2002. Guest speaker will be Mr. Neil Baird and his subject: "Globalisation & Rationalisation of Banking, Airline & Retail Industries". The meeting will be held at the Lithuanian Club, 16 East Terrace, Bankstown. There is ample parking at the Club, situated only 600 metres from the Bankstown Railway Station. The cost of your attendance is $4 per person. Date for your diary: July 31st, 2002. Guest speaker will be Dr. Edmond Dafesh (the previously announced speaker will be unavailable at the time) but the subject will still be "Palestine Today". |
WEST AUSTRALIA ANNUAL SEMINAR & DINNERThe Australian League of Rights' 36th Annual Seminar & Dinner. The theme is A Legacy of Terror: Terrorism, Globalisation & Servitude. Guest speakers: Mr. Bill Daly, National Director of the New Zealand League of Rights; Mayor Peter Davis of Port Lincoln, South Australia. To be held at the historic Rose & Crown Heritage Hotel, Guildford on Saturday August 10th, 2002. For further enquiries please contact the State Secretary Phone/Fax: (08) 9574 6042. |
SOUTH AUSTRALIAN STATE WEEKEND August 17th-18th, 2002New Zealand's National Director, Mr. Bill Daly will be guest speaker at the South Australian seminar. Bishop John Hepworth has also accepted an invitation. Further details as they come to hand. Bill Daly for Victoria: Bill Daly will be speaking at a few meetings in Victoria. As arrangements are firmed up we will announce the details. |
NATIONAL WEEKENDThe National Weekend will be held over Friday, 11th (New Times Dinner evening) through Sunday, 13th of October, 2002. The event will again be held in the border town of Albury, NSW. It proved such an outstanding success last year. Put these dates in your diary. |