". . . So, then, what is the voice of the people? Where can it be located, this vox populi? What defines the voice of the people? Is it a voice charged from some higher understanding or merely one coming from voting booths? No matter how much one may cherish the sacred cow of democracy, the reality is that the democracy as we know it is very much underdeveloped. Certainly, it will not be found from voting booths given that the type of candidates to choose from are usually governed by the dictatorships of the party to which they belong or how much money they can muster in support. Much needed change is required for higher human aspirations in governance and political structures. . . " Political democracy today has many significant flaws: money, party politics and the mass media have more to do with the success or failure of a candidate at the polls than does his or her moral character and position on current issues. . . In a dictatorship common people are harassed and fooled in many ways by the whimsical rule of the dictator. . . Today, in our so-called democracies people are equally harassed by the whimsical decisions of political parties and the expedient behaviour of party cadre. . . " If the system of individual dictatorship cannot be fully
supported, how can we support the system of party dictatorship? If
few, or no, backbenchers of a legislature can speak out against the
party leader are subject to a dictatorship, which then also covers
the relevant nation in which the party predominates. Also, if the
only choice is between two parties because they have the most money
to get into the legislature, again it is dictatorship because opportunities
are denied for real representation" |
March-April 2003, Vol. 25, No.2
The Farce of Global Democracy
President Bush says he intends giving
democracy to the Iraqis. Remember, he is President after a court disallowed
70,000 votes. Never has so much been said about democracy and never
have we been so far from the ideal. How many of the governments supporting
Bush are democratic? Among those claiming to be democratic how many
listened to their own people or permitted open debate and voting in
their parliaments? In Britain Tony Blair barely quelled a large revolt
within his own Labour party over British participation in the Iraqi
campaign. The British public clearly and overwhelming opposed the military
action while Robin Cook, former Foreign Secretary, resigned. In just over three eventful weeks
the US led forces took control of Iraqi. But what comes next. Occupying
a country is a time-consuming and costly business. The irony of discussions
about democracy in Iraq is that if any half-genuine elections are permitted
those likely to be elected will be representatives or supporters of
establishing an Islamic Shi-ite State. After years of suppression the
Shi-ites have been able to openly express their religious fervour. Many
of the Shi-ites take their cue from the Iranian Islamic revolution.
This is an amazing irony. Through the 1980s the US backed Saddam in
the bitter 10-year Iraqi-Iran war. Saddam maintained a secular Iraq
and ruthlessly suppressed attempts by the Shi-ites and other Moslems
to gain a political foothold. Religion was permitted but any fundamentalism
was squashed. It was in fear of the fervour of the Iranian revolution
spreading throughout the Moslem world that the major western powers
backed Saddam against Islamic Iran. In toppling Saddam to protect the
US dollar President Bush may have given an opening to a force that could
later prove deadly to the Secular Humanists and Mammonites who presently
rule the citadels of Western Power and insanely believe they can impose
a colourless uniformity on the entire world. It is clear that the Iraqi business
has forced much more into the open the question of Israel and the dominance
of the elitist Zionists and their Christian-Fundalmentist allies within
the US government and media. Much of this exposure is coming from Jewish
writers, particularly from Israel, making it clear that they want an
end to the ill-treatment of the Palestinians and just solutions to other
frustrations within the Arabic world. Even sections of the mass media
are carrying statements that would have been unheard of a year ago.
Here is an example from The Sunday Star-Times of April 13: The problem is that Bush's victory in Baghdad is all too likely to stoke his arrogance and his laziness. He has shown that he can win in the face of world opposition. He has shown that he can remove his enemies without significant help from the rest of the world (Tony Blair and John Howard being the exceptions that prove the rule). He is all too likely to think that victory in Baghdad is a licence for unilateralism. "The Mammonites, as Jewish writer Uri Avnery calls the modern enemies of Humanity, will almost certainly find in time that they have bitten off more than they can chew. For the present they may yet cause a great deal more killing and destruction. Buoyed by his "win" against undefended Iraq President Bush and his unelected backers are already talking of invading Syria and other countries. |
The Maid and the Ogre by Israel ShamirA dreadful monster assaults the city, kills its
brave defenders, and advances to devour the citizens. At the last moment,
a young maiden demurely walks forward to meet the monster. Her very
sight, the sight of feminine innocence, vulnerability, spirituality,
certainty of the right cause, stops the ogre in its tracks. The beast
suffers her to tie her belt to his mighty neck and walks away, tamed.
Rachel Corrie was murdered by a monster from another tale. This young American girl, an ISM activist, tried to stop with her fragile body a Zionist bulldozer from ruining Palestinian homes. She could not imagine that the driver will look at her and calmly ride his ten-ton steel machine over her body, and back. Nothing in her life prepared her to the encounter with a monster born and bred in the Zionist labs, a monster that is totally alien and hostile to humans. She wrote to her parents: "no amount of reading, attendance at conferences, documentary viewing and word of mouth could have prepared me for the reality of the situation here. You just can't imagine it unless you see it, tank-shell holes in the walls of their homes and the towers of an occupying army surveying the [Palestinian children] constantly from the near horizons". Though she saw dead bodies of Palestinian children with their heads split by the Jewish sharp-shooters, she still had some illusions of "the difficulties the Israeli Army would face if they shot an unarmed US citizen". She was mistaken. Her country's President is about to send the US Army to destroy Iraq and turn the killers of Rachel into the undisputed supreme power of the Middle East. If Bush would be guided by America's interests, he would demand extradition of Rachel's killer. But the driver is not exclusive. The people behind the bullet-proof windshields of Caterpillars are the final product of Zionism. At the beginning of [the] Zionist movement, its eugenic task was expressed in a poem: "Mi dam umi eza Nakim lanu geza"- "out of blood and sweat we shall breed a new victorious and cruel race", sang the Zionists. With [the] murder of Rachel Corrie the experiment came to its fruition. The "cruel race"is not a dream anymore, it is a new geopolitical reality. . . . Rachel's dreadful death should open America's eyes to the real danger to the world that grew in the Middle East. Her killers possess nuclear weapons, not only bulldozers. If Bush is so keen on a Middle East intervention and on removal of WMD, his troops could land here, on the shores of ar-Rafah, where [there] is a real threat to the world's peace, and forcibly remove all the weapons of mass destruction. P.S. A friend of Rachel, an ISM activist Susan Barclay was deported a few days ago to the US by Sharon's regime, and now she is touring the US with lectures about the unfolding Palestinian tragedy. She can be contacted at stbarclay@yahoo.com (end of Shimar article) Israel Shamir is a native of Siberia with wide
experience as an author, translator and journalist. He has worked in
many countries including Russia, the UK, Japan and Israel. He lives
in Jaffa, Israel. His books include The Pine and the Olive and
Travels in Japan, and has made translations of Joyce, Homer and
Agnon into his native Russian. Stirred by the ill-treatment of the Palestinians
by the blind cruelty of the political Zionist elites, and favouring
humanitarian solutions to violence, he writes regular articles which
can be subscribed to at shamireaders@yahoogroups.com/ He further quotes her: "The human race is not divided up, in the Iliad, into conquered and conquerors. There is no refuge from fate; learn not to admire Might, not to hate the enemy, not to scorn the vanquished". These are potent words of wisdom and encouragement for us all, especially when the world presently seems dominated by the "Might is Right"philosophy. In The Divine Wind Mr Shamir suggests everyone will be better off if much of the US Federal government's power is decentralised to the various States and its own role reduced to the functions of the US mail. This is along the lines of Solzhenitsyn's advice, pre-Glastnos to the Soviet leadership, that power must be decentralised and made more local. The Centralised Soviet Government over-extended itself and a clumsy and chaotic decentralisation followed. What will follow after the US Government over-extends itself? |
Triumph of the PastTriumph of the Past is the monthly journal of American Social Crediter and Distributist Michael Lane. Until now the journal has been available to overseas subscribers for $US22. As from the April 2003 edition Triumph of the Past can be subscribed via email at no charge. To receive the e-edition, send a note to triumphofthepast@aol.com To receive a plain-paper mailed edition the cost is $US20 which is only to cover the postage. This can be submitted by a personal cheque in equivalent New Zealand dollars, which is presently approximately $38, though we would suggest adding $5 or $6 to this to cover any bank fees. Order from PO Box 29535, Columbus, Ohio 43229, USA. Michael Lane is the author of the two recent booklets, Charles Ferguson: Herald of Social Credit ($13) and Human Ecology & Social Credit ($11). We can supply both. "The state doesn't have to "provide" or "generate" work. Instead, free people with the dividend and let them surprise you. They'll come up with things the state could never dream of." - Michael Lane (email 24-4-03) |
Road Deaths and TaxesDeath and taxes are humorously said to be two
of the things we can't escape in this life. Certainly when it comes
to the motorist the Government has struck a financial winner by combining
the two. There are several hundred road deaths every year and certainly
reasonable precautions ought to be taken to minimise these. But accidents
have always happened. Before the advent of the motorcar some people
were killed in horse accidents, from sinking ships and on derailing
trains. Did these result in massive government concern? No, but then
people had a little more freedom in those days and it was realistically
accepted that "accidents do happen". By and large people and societies, wherever civilisation exists, learn from accidents and responsible people take more precautions. But the Government isn't particularly concerned about road safety except that by continually upbeating the issue it creates an atmosphere within which the motorist can be milked for all he is worth. While crime reigns virtually out of control almost the entire resources of the police have been directed against the motorist. The individual policeman is not to blame. He is also a victim. Most policeman are so demoralised they leave the force at the first opportunity. Many depart after just three years in the force. Between the 1984-91 policy of the Lange Labour Government of early retirement of older experienced policemen and those who simply just leave it is now said that those with as little as six months on the job are "old school". They know that road policing is primarily now driven as a source of revenue, not road safety. The comment of one Auckland sergeant, passed to us several months ago, was that "we will be busy on the roads for a while now otherwise there might not be any money to pay us at Christmas". The Police Department gets to keep a percentage of the revenue it collects. We know the Government is not really concerned about deaths on the roads. We know this because it isn't concerned about deaths that occur elsewhere. A number of murderers are walking free because of ridiculous legal technicalities and the Government does not seem to be concerned. The Government actually finances about 15,000 abortions a year. It entertains the idea of legalised euthanasia. At least 5000 known deaths occur each year in hospitals due to misdiagnoses or mistreatment, or the incorrect medication is used. Presumably if an excuse could be found to tax all those lucky enough to escape death in hospital then we would find new terms entering our vocabulary such as "the carnage in the hospitals". Perhaps it is not an exaggeration to suggest that the motorist leads nearly everyone of us toward the Police State. The photo drivers license, which was introduced illegally by National Transport Minister Maurice Williamson is really a personal ID Card. |
The Night After
|
OLagrangian point". . . The sun, as an enormous solar system
object, appears to possess an insurmountable gravitational advantage
over the comparatively tiny earth, exerting many times the gravitational
pull of our planet. But there is a point, about a million miles from
the earth, where the gravitational pull of our little earth equals that
of the gigantic sun. Astronomers call this equalising spot, the OLagrangian
point. |
The Problem of Social Credit by Anthony CooneyIn Warning Democracy Douglas tells us
bluntly that "Modern taxation is legalised robbery, and it is none the
less robbery because it is effected through the medium of a political
democracy." He goes further, "It would be both simple and practical
to abolish every tax in Great Britain, substituting therefore a simple
sales tax on every description of article." Our ultimate objectives are the payment of a
National Dividend and the institution of the Just Price by means of
a National Discount, but the passage from Warning Democracy reminds
us that these objectives are related by juxtaposition to taxation and
its philosophy. There is a further passage in Warning Democracy
which is germane to any strategy which we might devise for the achieving
of our prime objectives: In short a campaign to demand a National Dividend would be, and in fact was, met by public incredulity and hostility. A campaign for a National Discount would be met by public incomprehension. Social Crediters must accept, however difficult it may be to do so, that the poor, as much or even more than the well-off, worship money. They do not want to be told that their money is "created out of nothing," is in fact of itself, worthless. How then, do we persuade people to want Social Credit? For until people want it we will not have it. What is suggested is that a campaign for a change to a simpler and fairer system of taxation would, in the present climate, gather considerable support especially if it proposed to lift the burden of taxation from the vast and overwhelming majority of the population. What is the likelihood of success a campaign for the abolition, not of all taxes replacement of income tax and V.A.T. by a tax on all sums passing through the bank clearing houses, payable by the Bank of England from the creation of new credit paid into the Treasury's account, debt and interest free? It has been suggested that a rate as low as 2.5 % would yield the Treasury the same amount as presently yielded by Income Tax and VAT, however the actual rate is unimportant once the principle is established. It is suggested that the abolition of Income Tax, with a "Negative Income Tax" for the lower paid, would have the same effect as a National Dividend. Admittedly it would benefit some more than others, though it is often pointed out that the very rich do not pay Income Tax anyway, and once the system was established there would have to be some adjustment. It is also suggested that the abolition of V.A.T. (currently 17.5 %) would have the same effect on a range of prices as would a National Discount. Whilst the British Government no longer has the competence to abolish V.A.T. it could reduce it to point one of one percent and leave it to firms to calculate their liability and remit their tax themselves. There would of course be an immense saving of the revenue and resources presently devoted to collecting taxes. Such a campaign, led by Social Crediters would almost certainly draw in a wide spectrum of supporters. This is a fairly sketchy outline, sufficient, it is hoped, to provide a ground plan for action. |
The Origins of Political CorrectnessAn Accuracy in Academia Address by Bill Lind, Director of the Centre for Cultural Conservatism Variations of this speech have been delivered to various AlA conferences including the 2000 Conservative University at American University. The movement's website is www.academia.org Where does all this stuff that you've heard about this morning, feminism, the gay rights movement, the invented statistics, the rewritten history, the lies, the demands, all the rest of it. For the first time in our history, Americans have to be fearful of what they say, of what they write, and of what they think. They have to be afraid of using the wrong word, a word denounced as offensive or insensitive, or racist, sexist, or homophobic. We have seen other countries, particularly in this century, where this has been the case. And we have always regarded them with a mixture of pity, and to be truthful, some amusement, because it has struck us as so strange that people would allow a situation to develop where they would be afraid of what words they used. But we now have this situation in this country. We have it primarily on college campuses, but it is spreading throughout the whole society. Where does it come from? What is it? We call it "Political Correctness." The name originated as something of a joke, literally in a comic strip, and we tend still to think of it as only half-serious. In fact, it's deadly serious. It is the great disease of our century, the disease that has left tens of millions of people dead in Europe, in Russia, in China, indeed around the world. It is the disease of ideology. PC is not funny. PC is deadly serious. If we look at it analytically, if we look at it historically, we quickly find out exactly what it is. Political Correctness is cultural Marxism. It is Marxism translated from economic into cultural terms. It is an effort that goes back not to the 1960s and the hippies and the peace movement, but back to World War I. If we compare the basic tenets of Political Correctness with classical Marxism the parallels are very obvious. First of all, both are totalitarian ideologies. The totalitarian nature of Political Correctness is revealed nowhere more clearly than on college campuses, many of which at this point are small ivy covered North Koreas, where the student or faculty member who dares to cross any of the lines set up by the gender feminist or the homosexual-rights activists, or the local black or Hispanic group, or any of the other sainted "victims" groups that PC revolves around, quickly find themselves in judicial trouble. Within the small legal system of the college, they face formal charges star-chamber proceeding future that Political Correctness intends for the nation as a whole. Indeed, all ideologies are totalitarian because the essence of an ideology (I would note that conservatism correctly understood is not an ideology) is to take some philosophy and say on the basis of this philosophy certain things must be true is the history of the oppression of women. Since reality contradicts that, reality must be forbidden. It must become forbidden to acknowledge the reality of our history. People must be forced to live a lie, and since people are naturally reluctant to live a lie, they naturally use their ears and eyes to look out and say, 'Wait a minute. This isn't true. I can see it isn't true," the power of the state must be put behind the demand to live a lie. That is why ideology invariably creates a totalitarian state. Second, the cultural Marxism of Political Correctness, like economic Marxism, has a single factor explanation of history. Economic Marxism says that all of history is determined by ownership of means of production. Cultural Marxism, or Political Correctness, says that all history is determined by power, by which groups defined in terms of race, sex, etc., have power over which other groups. Nothing else matters. All literature, indeed, is about that. Everything in the past is about that one thing. Third, just as in classical economic Marxism certain groups, i.e. workers and peasants, are a priori good, and other groups, i.e., the bourgeoisie and capital owners, are evil. In the cultural Marxism of Political Correctness certain groups are good, (women are deemed not to exist) blacks, Hispanics, homosexuals. These groups are determined to be "victims," and therefore automatically good regardless of what any of them do. Similarly, white males are determined automatically to be evil, thereby becoming the equivalent of the bourgeoisie in economic Marxism. Fourth, both economic and cultural Marxism rely on expropriation. When the classical Marxists, the communists, took over a country like Russia, they expropriated the bourgeoisie, they took away their property. Similarly, when the cultural Marxists take over a university campus, they expropriate through things like quotas for admissions. When a white student with superior qualifications is denied admittance to a college in favour of a black or Hispanic who isn't as well qualified, the white student is expropriated. And indeed, affirmative action, in our whole society today, is a system of expropriation. White owned companies don't get a contract because the contract is reserved for a company owned by, say, Hispanics or women. So expropriation is a principal tool for both forms of Marxism. And finally, both have a method of analysis that automatically gives the answers they want. For the classical Marxist, it's Marxist economics. For the cultural Marxist, it's deconstruction. Deconstruction essentially takes any text, removes all meaning from it and re-inserts any meaning desired. So we find, for example, that all of Shakespeare is about the suppression of women, or the Bible is really about race and gender. All of these texts simply become grist for the mill, which proves that "all history is about which groups have power over which other groups." So the parallels are very evident between the classical Marxist that we're familiar with in the old Soviet Union and the cultural Marxism that we see today as Political Correctness. But the parallels are not accidents. The parallels did not come from nothing. The fact of the matter is that Political Correctness has a history, a history that is much longer than many people are aware of outside a small group of academics who have studied this. And the history goes back, as I said, to World War I, as do so many of the pathologies that are today bringing our society, and indeed our culture, down. Marxist theory said that when the general European war came (as it did come in Europe in 1914), the working class throughout Europe would rise up and overthrow their governments, workers had more in common with each other across the national boundaries than they had in common with the bourgeoisie and the ruling class in their own country. Well, 1914 came and it didn't happen. Throughout Europe, workers rallied to their flag and happily marched off to fight each other. The Kaiser shook hands with the leaders of the Marxist Social Democratic Party in Germany and said there are no parties now, there are only Germans. And this happened in every country in Europe. So something was wrong. Marxists knew by definition it couldn't be the theory. In 1917, they finally got a Marxist coup in
Russia and it looked like the theory was working, but it stalled again.
It didn't spread and when attempts were made to spread immediately after
the war, with the Spartacist uprising in Berlin, with the Bela Kun government
in Hungary, with the Munich Soviet, the workers didn't support them.
So the Marxists had a problem. And two Marxist theorists went to work
on it: Antonio Grainsci in Italy and Georg Lukacs in Hungary. Gramsci
said the workers will never see their true class interests, as defined
by Marxism, until they are freed from Western culture, and particularly
from the Christian religion true class interests. Lukacs, who was considered
the most brilliant Marxist theorist since Marx himself, said in 1919,
"Who will save us from Western Civilization?" He also theorized that
the great obstacle to the creation of a Marxist paradise was the culture:
Western civilization itself. In 1923 in Germany, a think-tank is established
that takes on the role of translating Marxism from economic into cultural
terms, that creates Political Correctness as we know it today, and essentially
it has created the basis for it by the end of the 1930s. This comes
about because the very wealthy young son of a millionaire German trader
by the name of Felix Weil has become a Marxist and has lots of money
to spend. He is disturbed by the divisions among the Marxists, so he
sponsors something called the First Marxist Work Week, where he brings
Lukacs and many of the key German thinkers together for a week, working
on the differences of Marxism. And he says, "What we need is a think-tank."
In 1971, he wrote to Martin Jay the author of a principal book on the Frankfurt School, as the Institute for Social Research soon becomes known informally, and he said, "I wanted the Institute to become known, perhaps famous, due to its contributions to Marxism." Well, he was successful. The first director of the Institute, Carl Grunberg, an Austrian economist, concluded his opening address, according to Martin Jay, "by clearly stating his personal allegiance to Marxism as a scientific methodology." Marxism, he said, would be the ruling principle at the Institute, and that never changed. The initial work at the Institute was rather conventional, but in 1930 it acquired a new director named Max Horkheimer, and Horkheimer's views were very different. He was very much a Marxist renegade. The people who create and form the Frankfurt School are renegade Marxists. They're still very much Marxist in their thinking, but they're effectively run out of the party. Moscow looks at what they are doing and says, "Hey, this isn't us, and we're not going to bless this." Horkheimer's initial heresy is that he is very
interested in Freud, and the key to making the translation of Marxism
from economic into cultural terms is essentially that he combined it
with Freudism. Again, Martin Jay writes, The stuff we've been hearing about this morning, women's studies departments, the gay studies departments, the black studies departments Frankfurt School essentially does is draw on both Marx and Freud in the 1930s to create this theory called Critical Theory. The term is ingenious because you're tempted to ask, "What is the theory?" The theory is to criticise. The theory is that the way to bring down Western culture and the capitalist order is not to lay down an alternative. They explicitly refuse to do that. They say it can't be done, that we can't imagine what a free society would look like (their definition of a free society). As long as we're living under repression order which creates (in their theory) the Freudian condition, the conditions that Freud describes in individuals of repression. What Critical Theory is about is simply criticising. It calls for the most destructive criticism possible, in every possible way, designed to bring the current order down. And, of course, when we hear from the feminists that the whole of society is just out to get women and so on, that kind of criticism is a derivative of Critical Theory. It is all coming from the 1930s, not the 1960s. Other key members who join up around this time are Theodore Adorno, and, most importantly, Erich Fromm and Herbert Marcuse. Fromm and Marcuse introduce an element which is central to Political Correctness, and that's the sexual element. And particularly Marcuse, who in his own writings calls for a society of "polymorphous perversity," that is his definition of the future of the world that they want to create. Marcuse in particular by the 1930s is writing some very extreme stuff on the need for sexual liberation, but this runs through the whole Institute. So do most of the themes we see in Political Correctness, again in the early 30s. In Fromm's view, masculinity and femininity were not reflections "of 'essential' sexual differences, as the Romantics had thought. They were derived instead from differences in life functions, which were in part socially determined." Sex is a construct; sexual differences are a construct. Another example is the emphasis we now see on
environmentalism. "Materialism as far back as Hobbes had led to a manipulative
dominating attitude toward nature." That was Horkhemier writing in 1933
in Materialismus und Moral. In one of his most trenchant essays, Egoism and the Movement for Emancipation, written in 1936, Horkeimer "discussed the hostility to personal gratification inherent in bourgeois culture." And he specifically referred to the Marquis de Sade, favourably, for his "protest. . . against asceticism in the name of a higher morality." How does all of this stuff flood in here? How does it flood into our universities, and indeed into our lives today? The members of the Frankfurt School are Marxist,
they are also, to a man, Jewish. In 1933 the Nazis came to power in
Germany, and not surprisingly they shut down the Institute for Social
Research. And its members fled. They fled to New York City, and the
Institute was re-established there in 1933 with help from Columbia University.
And the members of the Institute, gradually through the 1930s, though
many of them remained writing in German, shift their focus from Critical
Theory about German society, destructive criticism about every aspect
of that society, to Critical Theory directed toward American society.
Classical economic Marxism is not light, and most of the radicals of the 60s were not deep. Fortunately for them, and unfortunately for our country today, and not just in the university, Herbert Marcuse remained in America when the Frankfurt School relocated back to Frankfurt after the war. And whereas Mr. Adomo in Germany is appalled by the student rebellion when it breaks out there student rebels come into Adorno's classroom, he calls the police and has them arrested rebellion as the great chance. He saw the opportunity to take the work of the Frankfurt School and make it the theory of the New Left in the United States. One of Marcuse's books was the key book. It virtually became the bible of the SDS and the student rebels of the 60s. That book was Eros and Civilization. Marcuse argues that under a capitalistic order (he downplays the Marxism very strongly here and it is subtitled, A Philosophical Inquiry into Freud, but the framework is Marxist), repression is the essence of that order and that gives us the person Freud describes hang-ups, the neuroses, because his sexual instincts are repressed. We can envision a future, if we can only destroy this existing oppressive order, in which we liberate eros, we liberate libido, in which we have a world of 'polymorphous perversity," in which you can "do you own thing." And by the way, in that world there will no longer be work, only play. What a wonderful message for the radicals of the mid-60s! They're students, they're baby-boomers, and they've grown up never having to worry about anything except eventually having to get a job. And here is a guy writing in a way they can easily follow. He doesn't require them to read a lot of heavy Marxism and tells them everything they want to hear which is essentially, "Do your own thing." "If it feels good do it," and "You never have to go to work". By the way, Marcuse is also the man who creates the phrase, "Make love, not war." Coming back to the situation people face on campus, Marcuse defines "liberating tolerance" as intolerance for anything coming from the Right and tolerance for anything coming from the Left. Marcuse joined the Frankfurt School in 1932 (if I remember right). So, all of this goes back to the 1930s. In conclusion, America today is in the throws of the greatest and direst transformation in its history. We are becoming an ideological state, a country with an official State ideology enforced by the power of the State. In "hate crimes" we now have people serving jail sentences for political thoughts. And the Congress is now moving to expand that category ever further. Affirmative action is part of it. The terror against anyone who dissents from Political Correctness on campus is part of it. It's exactly what we have seen happen in Russia, in Germany, in Italy, in China, and now it's coming here. And we don't recognize it because we call it Political Correctness and laugh it off. My message today is that it's not funny, it's here, it's growing and it will eventually destroy, as it seeks to destroy, everything that we have ever defined as our freedom and our culture. |
Was there really life before Occupational Safety and Health?For those born before 1979 - I Can't Believe You Made It - Was there really life before Occupational Safety and Health? The erstwhile bureaucrats at OSH and some other government departments would like to outlaw every conceivable thing they perceive as dangerous. A farmer told us he'd heard that it may soon be compulsory to wear a seatbelt while driving a tractor. There is no doubt some regulation against giving a small child the thrill of his life sitting on a knee on a tractor at half a mile an hour. Farmers are supposed to keep visitors, presumably including his wife and children, away from the shearing shed during shearing. There are such a host of regulations that even the most informed bureaucrats are unaware of all of them. Auckland Council apparently has a regulation insisting that homeowners must erect scaffolding before they can paint their roof, and a council boffin must inspect the scaffolding before it can be used. Fortunately most people just go ahead and paint their roof quite oblivious of the fact they are breaking some silly law. The following was emailed to us: . . . Looking
back, it's hard to believe that we have lived as long as we have. .
. As children, we would ride in cars with no seat belts or air bags.
Riding in the back of a pickup truck on a warm day was always a special
treat. (Not to mention hitch-hiking to town as a young kid!), and riding
on the running board. What's a running board? Our baby cribs were covered
with bright coloured lead based paint. We had no childproof lids on
medicine bottles, doors, or cabinets, and when we rode our bikes, we
had no helmets. We drank water from the garden hose and not from a bottle.
. . We would spend hours building our go-carts out of scraps and then
rode down the hill, only to find out we forgot the brakes. After running
into the bushes a few times we learned to solve the problem. We would
leave home in the morning and play all day, as long as we were back
when the street lights came on. No one was able to reach us all day.
No cell phones. Unthinkable. We played dodge ball and sometimes the
ball would really hurt. We got cut and broke bones and broke teeth,
and there were no law suits from these accidents. They were accidents.
No one was to blame, but us. Remember accidents? |
Science and Money
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Open Letter to Health MinisterWe have lifted the following open letter to New Zealand's Minister of Health and Food Safety from the website of U.K. health researcher Phillip Day. It has also appeared in the monthly Healthy Options. Interested readers might like to ask Mrs King for a copy of her reply to the writer, Mr Ron Law. Letters to MPs don¹t require a stamp: Dec 2002. Dear Minister, Research into causes of death in New Zealand presented at the recent NZ Society for Risk Management Conference at Te Papa, stemmed from my membership of the Ministry of Health's Sentinel Events Project Working Group. It quickly became very evident that empirical data exists to give concerns about systemic dysfunction within the Ministry of Health; especially with regard to development of policy and policy advice. It seemed incongruent that on the one hand officials select and rabidly support certain public health policy initiatives that seem insignificant in the context of the big picture, yet quickly reject and even deny, to the point of data stripping, major public health issues. In this month's column in New Zealand's top "people's" health magazine, Healthy Options, I'm taking the liberty of raising a series of questions and offer you the opportunity to respond via this column. I will donate $150 to a charity of your choice if you take up the offer. Did you know that highly preventable medical injury is the number three cause of death in New Zealand following all-cancer deaths and vascular disease? Have you been advised that highly preventable medical injury resulted in 43,385 potential years of lost life (PYLL) in 1998 - second only to vascular disease? Traffic related deaths resulted in 23,196 PYLL and meningococcal meningitis deaths 1,000 PYLL. Have your officials explained to you why they removed all reference to medical injury related admissions to hospitals in their policy report "The Burden of Disease and Injury in New Zealand"? (BDINZ) This is really puzzling as in the Ministry's own 306 page publication, "Selected Morbidity Data for Publicly Funded Hospitals 1998/99," (SMDPFH), upon which the BDINZ report was based, 35% of injury related admissions to hospital are due to medical injury - versus 25% for falls, and only 6.6% for traffic accidents. Have your officials told you that for every hospital bed taken up with a patient with a traffic injury, 5 beds are taken up with medical injury related patients? Can they explain why they stripped such important public health information from a document that claims to provide the basis for policy advice to the government? This is not only puzzling, but I'm sure you agree it is very concerning. Page 34 of BDINZ refers to "Unintentional injuries and adverse effects of health care" and page 36 notes "Adverse effects (surgical, medical, pharmaceutical)." Yet, despite giving the perception that they are included, officials left all of the data out and adjusted the number of injury related admissions accordingly. I'm sure you agree that if your officials have deliberately stripped the third leading cause of death in New Zealand, the second leading cause of PYLL and the leading cause of death in under forty five year olds, something is terribly wrong. Words like malfeasance, misfeasance, nonfeasance, or simply downright incompetence spring to mind. Either way, do you agree that an inquiry is in order? Can you explain to the readers of Healthy Options why the Government has committed $200 million to subsidise research and pharmaceutical interests in attempting to develop a vaccine with only a 50% chance of success to reduce about 15 deaths per year due to meningococcal meningitis (MOH estimates) when your own Ministry of Health officials have blocked efforts to get Professor Peter Davis' research team funded to continue their wonderful work on documenting the carnage due to medical injury? Minister, it simply does not make sense. We are talking about $200 million being championed and committed on a 50/50 chance of reducing 15 deaths per year or 1,000 PYLL, versus apparent deliberate data stripping and rejection of requests for $50 million to target the reduction of more than 1,500 highly preventable medical injury deaths (43,000 PYLL). We're talking about committing $2.66 million per potential life saved over five years - yet refusing to commit a dime to targeted funds to reduce the highly preventable carnage in our publicly funded health system. Minister, does this make sense to you? Another example of the Ministry of Health's
apparent dysfunctional approach to policy making relates to cot deaths.
The British Medical Journal has just published further research pointing
out that second hand mattresses have a strong relationship with cot
death. This fits with earlier research showing that 2nd, 3rd, 4th born
children are at increasing risk of succumbing to cot death. On the other
hand, New Zealand research shows that over 25% of all babies are sleeping
on thick polyethylene sheets in line with Dr Jim Sprott's recommendations.
Not a single cot death has been recorded amongst these babies whereas
one would have expected over 100 such deaths. Simple logic concludes
that all cot deaths in New Zealand occur amongst babies not sleeping
on thick plastic under sheets. Minister, regardless of the spin that
your advisors might put on this evidence, a Ministry that rabidly invokes
the 'precautionary principle' when it suits them should be advising
all mothers to utilise such a stunningly simple and cheap public health
initiative. Why do your officials continue to deny the facts? 100,000
plastic sheets saving 100 lives equates to a few thousand dollars per
saved life paid for from private funds. Minister, your advisers' myopic
policy advice is perplexing to say the least. It simply defies logic.
One could even suggest it is criminal. Highly preventable medical injury impacts on
the economy to the tune of more than $4 billion per year. I would recommend
a $50 million capital injection, $5 million of that to go to Professor
Peter Davis's research team to monitor progress via annual safety audits
of randomly selected patient records. You'll receive howls of protest
from your advisors; such a strategy would not fit with their fashion-based
approach to setting policy which includes systematically stripping unwanted
data from official reports. It would, however, go a long way toward
reducing the 1,500 plus extra empty seats at the Christmas dinner table
each year and might even stave off a Royal Commission of Inquiry. After
all, Cave Creek only resulted in 14 deaths and the Gisborne debacle
in a similar number. Quality Ministers can only make quality decisions
it they are provided with quality advice. Healthy Options readers look
forward to your response in the New Year. |
Help Stop the GATS BetrayalAuckland's "North Shore City Council wants the Government to be more upfront about its negotiations on the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)", reports the North Shore Times Advertiser (15-4-03). The Council is unhappy with what it regards as the Government's "secretive handling" in dealing with others in the World Trade organisation and the consequences for local government. Tony Holman, chairman of the Council's strategy and finance committee says it's "inappropriate that local authorities be constrained by an agreement to which we're not a party to and which puts into question our mandate to carry out policies and programmes for which we were elected by the community." GATS means that local bodies could be required to put a wide range of services up for tender, including libraries, transport, water supply, planning and building controls and waste disposal. Not only this but they may be required to always offer the contract to the lowest bidder. Tenders not only from the other end of the country but from anywhere in the world will have to be treated equally. If a local company was given a contract in favour of a foreign one because it had, for example, local knowledge and had done a good job in the past, but the foreign tender had quoted a couple of dollars lower, the council could be sued. It is important that other local bodies demand greater openness over GATS, and preferably its complete rejection by the Government. A few letters to local papers and to mayors and councillors could go a long way toward exposing this betrayal and having it stopped. |
Faith Unity Against Debt Slavery
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Will Tax Revolts Occur?In 1215 the English King John was forced at Runnymede
to put his signature to Magna Carta. On the question of the relationship of the individual to the state Magna Carta stands as a great beacon hard-pressed taxpayers and citizens might turn for an answer. Unlike violent revolutions that lead to decades of dictatorship and bloodshed Magna Carta simply restated in no uncertain terms that even the State is subject to the higher universal laws of the Creator. The State has a right and duty to exercise its authority concerning the legitimate functions of the nation but its role is that of giving service to the members of society. In the absence of suitable sanctions today's governments claim unlimited power. Among the features of Magna Carta were the limits placed on how much taxation the State could claim, and if desired a taxpayer had the right to offer to pay in kind or by offering his service. Imagine today's pork producer delivering a load of bacon to the local IRD office! Today's taxation rates are much higher than any mediaeval king ever imposed and it is resulting in little pockets, here and there, of revolt or talk of revolt. In the last On Target we quoted from Michael Lane's description of American author Otto Skinner's successful defence against income tax demands by the US Inland Revenue Service. Mr Skinner describes in his book, A Defence Against Arbitrary Taxation,* how to do this and the advice has been successfully adopted by others. Michael Lane suggests that there may be no reason why the same technique cannot be applied successfully in other common law countries. And it is within the law. "Skinner¹s persuasive argument", wrote Lane, "is that not only the letter but also the spirit of the law are on your side. The long and the short of his argument is that there simply is no statute in the U.S. Tax Code that imposes a tax on the income-producing activities of the ordinary American! . . . Skinner proposes a defence so simple it is profound: simply make the government prove its case. To do so, it must say what law you violated." In the meantime we have received an email concerning a class action being mounted in the United States against the IRS. This action is being formally launched during May, 2003. Those interested in following the action can contact the following websites: www.irsclassaction.com and www.irscodebusters.com Timid souls who worry that any major tax revolt would result in a government being unable to pay pensions and welfare etc., should rest assured. It is unlikely to ever come to that. In any nation with reasonable material infrastructure and a degree of social stability any significant tax revolt is more likely to force legislators to re-examine the whole question of money, and then ask themselves what is it and where does it come from. If people are able to sufficiently gather themselves together to revolt against arbitrary taxation they will surely be able to raise an effective protest against any policy that imposes poverty amidst plenty. Governments do not usually initially raise taxes in order to "pay" for wars. Where do these previously non-existent billions come from? Most people don't willingly want to impose starvation and deprivation on others the necessities of life now made easily possible by the modern production system. But we also want freedom. Welfare is a mess of porridge in exchange for giving up some of our freedom. Much of today's taxation merely goes in debt servicing and these debts were created by the private banks who have now mortgaged the entire globe. After WWII the post-war German War Debt was written off by mutual agreement of the banks and interim government, while British taxpayers were forced to shoulder a trebling of their already burdensome public debt. Much of today's debt could likewise be written off at the stroke of a keypad. Imagine what true progress could be made if the Church, as in John's day, got its act together and added its moral authority to the tax revolters who are campaigning against usury.! *The Biggest "Tax Loophole"of All is available from Otto Skinner, PO Box 6609, San Pedro, Ca 90734, USA, for US$44.95 (as advertised in 1997) |
Christian ZionismThe Christian Zionist movement holds that the return of the Jews to the land of ancient Israel is the fulfilment of Biblical prophesy. Taking Puritanism to its ultimate lengths Christian-Zionist advocates have not been content just to keep silent over the brutal treatment of the Palestinians, including 50 years of living as refugees and second class citizens, but they advocate a militant Zionist Israel. Their support for a Greater Israel, extending from the Euphrates to the Nile, often goes even further than many Jewish Zionists are prepared to state. This brutal interpretation of Scripture has not a scrap to do with the holy mission and teachings of Christ. People of goodwill everywhere, including Christians, Jews and Moslems, have spoken out against the abuse of the Palestinians and the insane goals of the Zionist-Christian Fundamentalist nexus. But how did large numbers of Christians get sucked into supporting such a violently cruel objective? An outstanding twentieth-Century journalist, author and investigator, Douglas Reed devoted many years to researching and documenting how the modern Christian world came to let itself get dragged into a Puritanical sludge pond and elevating the God of Wrath while demoting the God of Love and Mercy. In his The Controversy of Zion (1985) Reed extensively covers over 2500 years of history revealing the historic battle between the two philosophies of freedom and Collectivism. Another valuable study is Grace Halsell's Prophecy and Politics: Militant Evangelists on the Road to Nuclear War (1987). We can supply both titles for $25 and $17 respectively. An aspect of the Christian-Zionist movement is the heavy emphasis on the "Jesus was a Jew' claim. Whether He was or not the idea behind this promotion is to get Christian support for the political ambitions of Zionism. It might be equally legitimate to say "Jesus was a Palestinian"or 'an Arab', but the argument could become puerile and detract from what He did and who He was spiritually. There is a fascinating book The Invention of Ancient Israel: The Silencing of Palestinian History (Routledge, 1996) by Keith Whitelam, Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Stirling, Scotland. During earlier work on the history of Israel and its association with Christian-European history Professor Whitelam came to feel that a distortion had occurred, and that the history of Palestine and the Palestinians may be more relevant to Christian-European history than that of Israel. The book may be available in some libraries. Here are a couple of extracts, supplied to us by an English friend: ". . . Invented in the image of its inventer" (Gorman 1961). . .the dominant discourse of biblical studies has masked the means by which the term Palestine has been divested of spatial and temporal significance. Palestinian history has become one of the many excluded histories, divested of significance in terms of world history and relegated to pre-history. Europe, and later Zionism, has rescued the historical significance of the region. . . in its search for ancient Israel: a search for its own cultural roots which has silenced Palestinian history. It is this invention to which we much now turn in order to illustrate the ways in which the dominant discourse of biblical studies has achieved this in the name of objective scholarship." And: "This work has been a long time in the making. . . I began work on it in late 1984. . . and have continued whenever time has been available. . . It was only during the last period of sabbatical leave that the work took on its present shape, changing from an attempt to produce a history of ancient Palestine to an exploration of how such an enterprise was hindered by political, social, and religious influences. . ." Another most interesting study concerning the question of how the Christian world may have come to get some of this wrong is provided by Michael Lane in his lengthy review of the late Thomas Robertsons' Human Ecology: The Science of Social Adjustment. This review is presented in an attractive booklet and was published only a few months ago. Called Human Ecology: The Legacy of Thomas Robertson, the posted price for the booklet is $11. Robertson contended that within the European political and Church structures too heavy an emphasis was placed upon the Hellenic Greek Classical idea, resulting in a tendency to favour systems of arbitrary power and to downplay the importance of giving expression to the individual human spirit. This helped cause the unfortunate and artificial separation of the material and spiritual worlds, at least in our minds, and theological circles. Robertson wrote favourably of the Baconian-Inductive method of investigation as did C.H. Douglas which makes room for the intuitive and instinctive facilities as legitimate and vital expressions of the human spirit, but which the Classical approach tends to downplay and sometimes even regard as aberrations. Douglas' discusses this matter in his Social Credit, originally published in 1924 ($16 posted). |
Dumping the Dollar for Gold DinarsCompliments of The Guardian Bulletin (Democratic
Party), 26 Warren St, Oamaru This year three Muslim countries intend to trade amongst themselves using gold dinars. The gold dinar will not exist in physical form, it will merely be defined in terms of gold. This is their way of releasing the stranglehold which the IMF has over them. More Muslim countries are expected to follow suit when feasibility aspects have been resolved. This proposal resulted from the International Conference on Stable and Just Monetary Systems held in Kuala Lumpur last August. It was attended by over 300 male academics and bankers who heard Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop Minister the International Financial System". He said Dr Jory Huffschmid, writing in the January-February 2001 issue of Development and Cooperation under the heading of 'Learning from Malaysia', drew two important lessons from Malaysia's success. First, even a small country can implement measures to defend its interests which go against the prevailing opinion of economists and institutions. Second, such measures can in fact function in economic terms. It was not entirely a Muslim conference. Peter Challen and Rodney Shakespeare from the Christian Council for Monetary Justice three Christian adherents present proposals for beneficial change made their book Seven Steps to Justice. The audience of 300+ there to hear them was boosted to 450 by a large number of women who had been attracted by the emphasis in the book on the rights of women and the basic income for all. Peter Challen pulled no punches. He told his audience that he had not heard others mention in the Conference how poverty would be tackled in new structures of justice; of how rich/poor divisions would be ended; how the world's women would find a place of equal dignity in the world; how the planet's capacity would be preserved and enhanced; of basic incomes both social and economic guaranteed for all; of how country after country, sold out in the 'new world order', would be restored to economic and social sanity. Despite this shock criticism, both were invited to visit a new university where many women sought clarification of their proposals and information about a basic income. In addition they were invited for discussions with Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop. All of the Conference papers to be sent to Islamic centres as part of an education process. |
Re-inventing the Pyramids
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