20 July 2007
Thought for the Week: The Party Power-Game: A
political Party is a group of people who share a sectional viewpoint which they
are convinced is right and so they seek to gain power for themselves in order
to impose it on others who disagree with them. This is quite incompatible with
decentralised action, which it merely uses as a part of the propaganda means for
attaining the power of government. All such Parties start off full of 'democratic
ideals' which soon turn out to be impracticable and obviously incompatible with
the seeking of centralised power over others."
-
- - Geoffrey Dobbs in "On Planning the Earth IV," "Home"
Journal, November 1990 |
ROMULUS
IS NOT MY FATHERby James Reed
Professor Raimond Gaita is professor of moral philosophy at King's College, University
of London and professor of philosophy at the Australian Catholic University. He
is the author of the book "Romulus, My Father", which has been made into a major
film starring actor Eric Bana (who has also played Bruce Benner in the Marvel
Comic film "Hulk").
Gaita has recently said in an article inn The Australian
(4/7/07 pp.24-25) that "one of philosophy's primary tasks in public discussion
is to be an uncompromisingly sever judge of intellectual laziness." That being
so, let us take a philosophical look at "Romulus My Father". As one critic
put it in the review: "The immigrant experience underpins this tragic story of
a fractured childhood." Gaita tells the story of his immigrant parents. His father's
wife Christina leaves Romulus for his best friend. The book and film takes us
through the tragic twists and turns of this family. The impression left in my
mind - and this could be my own reader's bias - is that Australian culture somehow
is responsible, at least in part for at least some of the family's plight. This
has become something of a literary genre. If
this interpretation is right, I say that this is utter nonsense. The post war
migrants were fortunate indeed to have been let into this country. Most of them
have done well in Australia. As well, I say: there is nothing specially sad about
the tragedies described in "Romulus, My Father". Tragic for young Raimond, yes
- but not exceptionally so. In my own family and circle of people I have known,
I have experienced or know someone who has experienced, worse. For
example, my best friend had a son who was the type of son any man could wish for.
He was happily married at age 24 with three young children and a beautiful wife.
One day he was killed in a hit and run accident. The funeral was attended by an
enormous number of people - most could not be seated. His young wife collapsed
on her knees by his coffin and kissed it as she said goodbye. She raised the children
alone. She never married and still mourns for her husband. The film "Titanic"
made $1 billion out of those sort of emotions, but it is present in our own experiences.
I have known old timers who fought in most
of the major battles of the 20th century. Men who were gassed in the trenches
during World War I and suffered the trauma until they died. Men who cried out
at night; men who could never get the sound of battle out of their ears. But they
worked on, until their death, with no complaint, no psychologist and no film made
about their suffering. I ask: who speaks for them? Who writes for them? The
story of the Anglo-Saxon suffering that built this nation on sweat and blood is
being forgotten. Today all that counts in the literary world is the migrant experience.
But, it needs to be "deconstructed", just as their intellectuals have "deconstructed"
our life. If the aim of philosophy in the wider sense is to encourage the critical
examination of core assumptions of our ideology, then Australia sorely needs "philosophy".
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DID OUR DIGGERS
DIE FOR THIS?by James Reed The Australian
soldiers who went off to fight in World War II, largely against the Japanese,
did not want to see Australia become an Asian colony. Yet today that seems
to be happening. Consider John Howard's seat of Bennelong, once an Anglo-Saxon
one. The number of non-English speakers is 36.3 per cent and over half of Bennelong
(58.8 per cent) were either born overseas or have parents that were. In the future,
diversity breeds more diversity, until a new homogeneity - 100 % Asian occurs.
What is true for one city is in principle true for all. That is how a nation changes.
Criticisms of immigration seldom appear in
our newspapers. Lionel Shriver "Turn of the Native," The Australian: Literary
Review 6/6/07 pp.7-8) has come close to raising a concern : "[There] may be
a psychological tipping point at which even initially kind, broad-minded populations
start to feel overrun. When a Host country's people no longer feel visited but
invaded, big, scary emotions come into play, emotions little different from those
of a homeowner whose house is being burgled." I
would add to this metaphor, that the "burglar" has long kicked the homeowner on
the street and the system, with its ideology of hatred of tradition stands ready
to punish any who object. Shriver cites an example from America of a ranging family
in New Mexico whose range has a border with Mexico. Each day 500 illegal immigrants
cross the land. This includes drug smugglers and
armed "coyotes". And "having been held up more than once, the ranchers are fearful
every time they walk out the door, and have written off whole tracts of their
own property as too dangerous to set foot on." I
fail to see how my suggested augmented metaphor is inappropriate. The situation
is well known to officials who allow it to happen because one of the benefits
of immigration is cheap labour for the furnaces of capitalism. |
OUR SOCIAL DECLINE : PROSTITUTING YOUTHby
James Reed Although attention has been finally directed towards the shocking
sexual abuse of Aboriginal children, let us not forget that White children are
also being sexually exploited. In Adelaide and other cities, children as young
as 13 and possibly younger, have been working as prostitutes on the streets and
sometimes in brothels. ("Prostitutes as Young as 13 on the Streets", The Advertiser
25/6/07 p.1.) This is a clear indication of
the social decay of our society and our descent into a dark age. It makes a mockery
of the economic reductionist claim that all is well with Australia because the
economy is 'bubbling along'. These economists, clearly, seldom walk the streets
after dark. |
WATCHING
BRITAIN BURNby James Reed Terror alert
and fear grips the media again as the members of a British plot to unleash a wave
of car bomb attacks across Britain are captured. Articles appear in our press
warning of up to 3000 young home-grown terrorists that could become radicalised
in Australia. Analyses are published telling us that "Islam Must face Its Uncomfortable
Truths" (The Australian 3/7/07 p.12). But the problem is much deeper than
that. An article in the UK International
Express (26/6/07 pp.24-25) "Destination Slough" says that Slough in Berkshire
is struggling to cope with a flood of immigrants. The sub-headline says: "As the
government admits immigration is out of control, racial tensions grow in the Berkshire
town where 80 languages are spoken and a quarter of the population have come from
abroad." Books such as Mark Steyn's "America Alone: The End of the World As We
know It" (2006) are right to see radical Islam as a major threat to the West.
But it is only part of a major general immigration led disaster.
The UK Department of Education has just released figures showing that in London
primary schools, 53.4 per cent of students do not use English as their main language.
In secondary schools the figure drops slightly to 49.3 per cent. These sorts of
statistics are replicated across the country. No nation can survive the type of
chaos caused by the undermining of a common language. Thus
the British government's commission on the future of a "Multiethnic Britain" has
rejected the concept of "Britishness" itself and advocates that British history
be "revised, rethought, or jettisoned". They call it multiculturalism, but we
should call it cultural genocide, the attack on our kind.
The original of the political correctness ideology, as argued by Frank Ellis in
his book "Political Correctness and the Theoretical Struggle", is firmly rooted
in communist doctrine. Old Chairman Mao spoke
and wrote about it a lot. Now we live under it: hasn't Lenin, Marx and Mao really
won? Perhaps the first battle, but we must not let it end this way! |
Hmmmm
. THE POPE ABOUT TO UPSET THE JEWS?by
Betty Luks The present Pope has announced that the Old Latin Mass, suppressed
in 1969, will make a comeback. But, the old rite has passages saying that the
Jews live in "blindness" and "darkness" and a prayer is made that "the Lord our
God may take the veil from their hearts and that they may acknowledge our Lord
Jesus Christ". (The Advertiser 30/6/07 p.75.) It will be interesting to
see if race hatred legislation will be used against the Roman Catholic Church.
There seems to be at least a problem in Victoria with its very restrictive Racial
and Religious Tolerance Act. Patrick J.
Buchanan: An American Catholic, Mr.Buchanan had the following to say about the
"Return Of The Latin Mass, Traditionalists Triumph, Despite ADL". 9/7/07
"Elevated
to the papacy at 78, Benedict XVI will take no action greater in significance
for the Catholic Church than his motu proprio [English | Latin] declaring
that the Latin Mass must be said in every diocese-on the request of the faithful.
Dissenting bishops must comply. "What earlier generations held as sacred remains
sacred and great for us, too," said the Holy Father in his apostolic letter, as
he authorized the universal use of the sole official version of the mass allowed
in the four centuries between the Council of Trent and Vatican II. To which
many Catholics will respond: "Alleluia! Alleluia!" And
so the pope has come full circle. At Vatican II, the future Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger,
head of the Holy Office for the Defense of the Faith under John Paul II, went
about in coat and tie and was seen as a radical reformer and modernist theologian
in the mould of his friend Hans Kung. Now, Kung is silent, Ratzinger is pope,
and the Latin Mass, which had fallen into disuse with the introduction of the
new rite in 1970, is back. Why? Because the Holy Father knows the solemnity, mystery
and beauty of the Latin Mass hold magnetic appeal, not only for the older faithful
but the searching young. And he acted to advance a reconciliation with traditionalists
out of communion with the Holy See, including the 600,000 followers of the late
Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, excommunicated in 1988, who belong to his Society
of Saint Pius X.
" |
HITLER,
SYPHILIS AND THE HOLOCAUSTby Peter Ewe The
title of the article is "Hitler's Syphilis Blamed for Holocaust" (The Advertiser
22/6/07 p.37). A psychiatrist, Dr. Bassem Habeeb has said that there is "ample
circumstantial evidence" that Hitler had syphilis. The claim was made to a Royal
College of Psychiatrists' meeting in Edinburgh. The disease's effect on Hitler's
brain and Hitler's belief that the disease originated in and was propagated by
the Jews may have led to Hitler's blueprint for the Holocaust, Dr. Habeeb said.
David Irving conclusively refuted the claim
that Hitler had contracted syphilis by 1940 (through a youthful encounter with
a Jewish prostitute). The argument and evidence is given in David Irving's book,
"The Secret Diaries of Hitler's Doctor". Hitler's doctor was Professor Theo Morell
and he had tested Hitler who was tested negative for syphilis. However,
if syphilitic insanity was the cause of Hitler fuelling the blueprint for the
Holocaust, there is a problem. The received version of the Holocaust requires
Hitler being a morally responsible agent. If he was really insane, then he could
not have been morally responsible because moral responsibility presupposes voluntary
and sane action ! Hence Hitler, if insane, would not have been morally responsible
for the Holocaust! Bad conclusion. Perhaps the logical ramifications of this idea
should have been examined more closely. |
HOWARD
WITH SECRET PLANS FOR TROOP WITHDRAWAL?Is
P.M. John Howard secretly planning to begin withdrawing Australian troops from
Iraq by February 2008? According to the Sunday Telegraph, 1/7/07 quoting
an unnamed senior military source, described Howard's withdrawal plan as "one
of the most closely guarded secrets in top levels of the bureaucracy." The
newspaper said the drawdown of troops would focus on soldiers based in southern
Iraq on security duty with Iraqi soldiers. Australia has about 1,500 soldiers,
sailors and airmen in and around Iraq. Howard,
a close ally of President Bush, has been a mainstay of support for the U.S. military
presence in Iraq. As recently as last week, Howard said there were no plans to
withdraw Australian troops from Iraq, and has consistently said that Australian
troops would remain in Iraq for as long as needed. A
spokesman for Howard referred to the prime minister's statement last week and
said he did not want to give credence to the newspaper report. |
$530 MILLION DAMAGES CLAIM - AND SO CLOSE
TO FEDERAL ELECTION!One of O.T's readers
just happened to pick this news snippet up. It was an article in The Age
on 22/6/2007. Our reader wrote: I get a daily email from Netwealth that
includes a small section from newspaper articles with a link to the full article.
Generally I don't bother going into the link unless I think there is something
of particular interest, like this one following.
"FEDERAL Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull, jailed businessman Rodney Adler
and a group of seven others will face the full force of a $530 million damages
claim arising from the collapse of insurer HIH after an attempt to nobble the
lawsuit failed. Mr Turnbull, business partner Russel Pillemer and his former employer,
investment bank Goldman Sachs Australia, had hoped they could ride on the coat-tails
of a pre-trial application by the bank and a pair of reinsurance companies that
attempted to reduce the size of the mammoth case. The trio had hoped to limit
the scope of the lawsuit by striking out two key claims from the three-limbed
case. The suit dates back to when Mr Turnbull
was insurer FAI's financial adviser during its takeover by HIH eight years ago.
HIH collapsed two years after buying FAI, owing creditors about $5.3 billion.
Other defendants include a reinsurer controlled
by the world's second-richest man, Warren Buffett, and former FAI finance director
Tim Mainprize and chief operating officer Daniel Wilkie. They are accused of withholding
information about FAI's financial health and failing to advise HIH about "illusory
profits" in FAI's accounts. The reinsurance contracts enabled the company to turn
losses into profits. In the NSW Supreme Court
yesterday, Justice Clifford Einstein ruled that the case against them should remain
the same because they had failed to prove the case was "doomed to fail". "The
respective defendants' submissions on this strike-out
are of no substance,"
Justice Einstein said. They had argued that there was not enough evidence to prove
that HIH lost more than $100 million as a result of the takeover of FAI, which
relied on their advice. The case is due to go to trial later this year. The
reinsurance contracts issued to FAI in 1998 were earlier criticised during the
2003 HIH royal commission. In 2004 the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority
disqualified six Gen Re executives, three of whom left the company." |
AUSTRALIAN HOUSEHOLDS DROWNING IN A SEA
OF DEBTAccording to the Housing Industry
Association and the Australian Property Monitors company, Australian households
are spending a record amount of money on interest payments as they try to keep
on top of rising mortgage, credit card and general household debt Bigger property
loans, multiple personal loans and surging credit card bills are sucking almost
12 per cent out of wages each week just to pay interest costs. The
ongoing lure of credit has pushed up total household debt to a record $1trillion
for the first time and the total is still rising, according to the Reserve Bank
of Australia. The latest debt figure, at May 30, is 13 per cent higher than May
last year and the growth rate shows no sign of slowing. Credit card debt now stands
at about $40 billion while investors have also racked up a massive S30 billion
debt for margin lending. Mortgage levels
account for 86 per cent The ratio in Australia of household debt to household
income has climbed to be among the highest in the world, RBA statistics reported.
One of the biggest contributors to the record $1 trillion dollar debt is home
mortgage levels, accounting for about 86 per cent of total household debt. According
to the Housing Industry Association, housing affordability is getting worse in
Australia. "Home purchasers are borrowing more than ever, just to enter the housing
market," HIA senior executive director Chris Lament said last week. "In the
five years between 2001 and 2006, monthly mortgage repayments have risen from
$780 to $1300 - a 50 per cent increase, while household incomes have increased
by just 31 per cent," Mr Lamont said. "It does not take Einstein to see that
people are taking longer and having more difficulty in paying off mortgages,"
he said. The latest Government Census report
for 2006, released last week, found outright home ownership (no mortgage) had
fallen from 41 per cent 10 years ago to just 31 per cent now. In its latest
market report, research company Australian Property Monitors said many low income
households could "go to the wall" if interest rates rise again. However, many
families were already under severe stress and there was still some fallout to
come from the past rises, PM operations manager Michael McNamara said. "Monetary
measures have had a profound affect on those lower income mortgage holders. There
will no doubt be more repossessions, forced sales and bankruptcies, following
the extra burden of higher mortgage repayments as last year's three interest rate
hikes take their toll," Mr McNamara said. As
for Credit Cards: On the credit card front, Australia has now passed 13.5
million card accounts for the first time, as a massive 548,000 extra credit card
accounts were opened up during the past year. Total credit card debt has also
surged to a record $39.63 billion. The average personal credit card now has
more than $2100 outstanding. The higher debt levels appear to be taking a hefty
toll on households and families. Bankruptcy
and personal insolvencies increased 12 per cent in Australia during the past year
to 8113 people in the latest March quarter. Debt agreements, where creditors agree
to partially pay off a debt or pay over time, increased the most up 28 per cent
compared with a year ago. Victoria's increase in bankruptcies were lower,
up 7 per cent, but debt agreements jumped 64 per cent in the March quarter. According
to debt recovery company Dun & Bradstreet more younger people are defaulting on
debts. About half of all debtors are now under 32, which is a 25 per cent
increase on a year ago, according to D&B chief executive Christine Christian.
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