“Foreword” by Lang Hancock, in John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), p. xiii.

It is refreshing indeed to read a book by young Australians on the obvious merits of free enterprise, especially as the authors have set an example and are therefore able to say, “Do as we do, not do as we say.” This is in marked contrast to the philosophy which has grown up in Australia and is currently being preached in our schools that “the world owes me a living.” The world owes no one anything, the individual owes it to himself to make what he wants of his own life.

Most of Australia’s ills, as pointed out in this book, are attributable to our failure to stand up and be counted, to our shirking of responsibility and to our adopting of the great Australian theme song “The Government Orta.” Whenever confronted with a difficulty (mostly of his own creation), the man in the street says, “The Government orta do something about it”; the employer says, “The Government orta lay down guidelines to save me from thinking”; the shirker says, “The Government orta keep me from the cradle to the grave”; the student says, “The Government orta give me a diploma.”

In writing a book such as this, emphasis must be placed at all times on making people understand that the basis of all civilisation is mining, because everything comes from the earth. This is something which is not understood by the public, the media, the bureaucracy, the government or the opposition. It is understood, however, by those dedicated people in the communist controlled Unions who realise that by destroying mining they are able to achieve their aim of destroying Australia and thereby gaining power for themselves out of the ruins that they have created. In other words “the quiet revolution” beloved of Dr Cairns. Proof of this can be seen from the fact that 65 per cent of the strikes that are engineered in Australia are held to disrupt the mining industry, yet only 5 per cent of the nation’s workforce is involved in that industry.

I hope this book finds its way to the classroom of every school and the library of every centre of so-called learning in this great country of ours; a country which could be the richest on earth if the true principles of a free enterprise market economy were allowed to operate as John Singleton and Bob Howard advocate.

(in order of appearance on Economics.org.au)
  1. Governments Consume Wealth — They Don't Create It
  2. Singo and Howard Propose Privatising Bondi Beach
  3. Singo and Howard Speak Out Against the Crackpot Realism of the CIS and IPA
  4. Singo and Howard on Compromise
  5. Singo and Howard on Monopolies
  6. Singo and Howard Support Sydney Harbour Bridge Restructure
  7. Singo and Howard on Striking at the Root, and the Failure of Howard, the CIS and the IPA
  8. Singo and Howard Explain Why Australia is Not a Capitalist Country
  9. Singo and Howard Call Democracy Tyrannical
  10. Singo and Howard on Drugs!
  11. Simpleton sells his poll philosophy
  12. Singo and Howard Decry Australia Day
  13. Singo and Howard Endorse the Workers Party
  14. Singo and Howard Oppose the Liberal Party
  15. Singo and Howard Admit that Liberals Advocate and Commit Crime
  16. Up the Workers! Bob Howard's 1979 Workers Party Reflection in Playboy
  17. John Whiting's Inaugural Workers Party Presidential Address
  18. John Singleton and Bob Howard 1975 Monday Conference TV Interview on the Workers Party
  19. Singo and Howard on Aborigines
  20. Singo and Howard on Conservatism
  21. Singo and Howard on the Labor Party
  22. Singo, Howard and Hancock Want to Secede
  23. John Singleton changes his name
  24. Lang Hancock's Foreword to Rip Van Australia
  25. New party will not tolerate bludgers: Radical party against welfare state
  26. Singo and Howard introduce Rip Van Australia
  27. Singo and Howard on Knee-Jerks
  28. Singo and Howard on Tax Hunts (Lobbying)
  29. Singo and Howard on Rights
  30. Singo and Howard on Crime
  31. Singo and Howard on Justice
  32. Singo and Howard on Unemployment
  33. John Singleton on 1972's Cigarette Legislation
  34. Singo and Howard: Gambling Should Neither Be Illegal Nor Taxed
  35. Workers Party Platform
  36. Singo and Howard Join Forces to Dismantle Welfare State
  37. Singo and Howard on Business
  38. Singo and Howard on Discrimination
  39. Singo and Howard on the Greens
  40. Singo and Howard on Xenophobia
  41. Singo and Howard on Murdoch, Packer and Monopolistic Media
  42. Singo and Howard Explain that Pure Capitalism Solves Pollution
  43. Singo and Howard Defend Miners Against Government
  44. Singo and Howard on Bureaucracy
  45. Singo and Howard on Corporate Capitalism
  46. The last words of Charles Russell
  47. Ted Noffs' Preface to Rip Van Australia
  48. Right-wing anarchists revamping libertarian ideology
  49. Giving a chukka to the Workers Party
  50. Govt "villain" in eyes of new party
  51. "A beautiful time to be starting a new party": Rand fans believe in every man for himself
  52. Introducing the new Workers' Party
  53. Paul Rackemann 1980 Progress Party Election Speech
  54. Lang Hancock 1978 George Negus Interview
  55. Voices of frustration
  56. Policies of Workers Party
  57. Party Promises to Abolish Tax
  58. AAA Tow Truck Co.
  59. Singo and Howard on Context
  60. Singo and Howard Blame Roosevelt for Pearl Harbour
  61. Singo and Howard on Apathy
  62. Workers Party is "not just a funny flash in the pan"
  63. Singo and Howard on Decency
  64. John Singleton in 1971 on the 2010 Federal Election
  65. Matthew, Mark, Luke & John Pty. Ltd. Advertising Agents
  66. Viv Forbes Wins 1986 Adam Smith Award
  67. The writing of the Workers Party platform and the differences between the 1975 Australian and American libertarian movements
  68. Who's Who in the Workers Party
  69. Bob Howard interviewed by Merilyn Giesekam on the Workers Party
  70. A Farewell to Armchair Critics
  71. Sukrit Sabhlok interviews Mark Tier
  72. David Russell Leads 1975 Workers Party Queensland Senate Team
  73. David Russell Workers Party Policy Speech on Brisbane TV
  74. Bludgers need not apply
  75. New party formed "to slash controls"
  76. The Workers Party
  77. Malcolm Turnbull says "the Workers party is a force to be reckoned with"
  78. The great consumer protection trick
  79. The "Workers" speak out
  80. How the whores pretend to be nuns
  81. The Workers Party is a Political Party
  82. Shit State Subsidised Socialist Schooling Should Cease Says Singo
  83. My Journey to Anarchy:
    From political and economic agnostic to anarchocapitalist
  84. Workers Party Reunion Intro
  85. Singo and Howard on Freedom from Government and Other Criminals
  86. Singo and Howard on Young People
  87. Singo and Howard Expose how Government Healthcare Controls Legislate Doctors into Slavery
  88. Singo and Howard Engage with Homosexuality
  89. Singo and Howard Demand Repeal of Libel and Slander Laws
  90. Singo and Howard on Consumer Protection
  91. Singo and Howard on Consistency
  92. Workers Party is born as foe of government
  93. Political branch formed
  94. Government seen by new party as evil
  95. Singo and Howard on Non-Interference
  96. Singo and Howard on Women's Lib
  97. Singo and Howard on Licences
  98. Singo and Howard on Gun Control
  99. Singo and Howard on Human Nature
  100. Singo and Howard on Voting
  101. Singo and Howard on
    Inherited Wealth
  102. Singo and Howard on Education
  103. Singo and Howard on Qualifications
  104. Ron Manners on the Workers Party
  105. Singo and Howard Hate Politicians
  106. Undeserved handouts make Australia the lucky country
  107. A happy story about Aborigines
  108. John Singleton on Political Advertising
  109. Richard Hall, Mike Stanton and Judith James on the Workers Party
  110. Singo Incites Civil Disobedience
  111. How John Singleton Would Make Tony Abbott Prime Minister
  112. The Discipline of Necessity
  113. John Singleton on the first election the Workers Party contested
  114. Libertarians: Radicals on the right
  115. The Bulletin on Maxwell Newton as Workers Party national spokesman on economics and politics
  116. Singo and Howard: Australia Should Pull Out of the Olympics
  117. Singo and Howard Like Foreign Investment
  118. Mark Tier corrects Nation Review on the Workers Party
  119. The impossible dream
  120. Why can't I get away with it?
  121. The bold and boring Lib/Lab shuffle
  122. Time for progress
  123. The loonie right implodes
  124. Max Newton: Maverick in Exile
  125. John Singleton on refusing to do business with criminals and economic illiterates
  126. Censorship should be banned
  127. "Listen, mate, a socialist is a bum"
  128. John Singleton on Advertising
  129. John Singleton on why he did the Hawke re-election campaign
  130. Sinclair Hill calls for dropping a neutron bomb on Canberra
  131. Bob Howard in Reason 1974-77
  132. John Singleton defends ockerism
  133. Singo and Howard talk Civil Disobedience
  134. The Census Con
  135. Singo and Howard Oppose Australian Participation in the Vietnam War
  136. Did John Singleton oppose the mining industry and privatising healthcare in 1990?
  137. Bob Carr in 1981 on John Singleton's political bent
  138. John Singleton-Ita Buttrose interview (1977)
  139. King Leonard of Hutt River Declares Defensive Just War Against Australia the Aggressor
  140. Singo says Lang Hancock violated Australia's 11th commandment: Thou Shalt Not Succeed
  141. Singleton: the White Knight of Ockerdom
  142. John Singleton bites into Sinclair Hill's beef
  143. Save Parramatta Road
  144. 1979 news item on new TV show John Singleton With a Lot of Help From His Friends
  145. Smoking, Health and Freedom
  146. Singo and Howard on Unions
  147. Singo and Howard Smash the State
  148. Singo and Howard on the big issue of Daylight Saving
  149. Come back Bob - It was all in fun!
  150. A few "chukkas" in the Senate for polo ace?
  151. Country Rejuvenation - Towards a Better Future
  152. Singo and Howard on Profits, Super Profits and Natural Disasters
  153. John Singleton's 1977 pitch that he be on a committee of one to run the Sydney 1988 Olympics for profit
  154. Thoughts on Land Ownership
  155. 1975 Max Newton-Ash Long interview on the Workers Party
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(in order of appearance on Economics.org.au)
  1. Ron Manners’ Heroic Misadventures
  2. Hancock's Australia
  3. Hancock on Government Help
  4. Wake Up Australia: Excerpts Part 1
  5. Wake Up Australia: Excerpts Part 2
  6. Lang Hancock's Five Point Plan to Cripple Australia
  7. Governments Consume Wealth — They Don't Create It
  8. Up the Workers! Bob Howard's 1979 Workers Party Reflection in Playboy
  9. Governments — like a red rag to a Rogue Bull
  10. Singo, Howard and Hancock Want to Secede
  11. Lang Hancock's Foreword to Rip Van Australia
  12. New party will not tolerate bludgers: Radical party against welfare state
  13. Small and Big Business Should Oppose Government, says Lang Hancock
  14. A Condensed Case for Secession
  15. Hancock gets tough over uranium mining
  16. Hancock's threat to secede and faith in Whitlam
  17. PM's sky-high promise to Lang
  18. Govt "villain" in eyes of new party
  19. The spread of Canberra-ism
  20. Govt should sell the ABC, says Lang Hancock
  21. 1971 Monday Conference transcript featuring Lang Hancock
  22. Aborigines, Bjelke and the freedom of the press
  23. The code of Lang Hancock
  24. Why not starve the taxation monster?
  25. Lang Hancock 1978 George Negus Interview
  26. Party Promises to Abolish Tax
  27. Right-wing plot
  28. "The best way to help the poor is not to become one of them." - Lang Hancock
  29. WA's NCP commits suicide
  30. "You can't live off a sacred site"
  31. Hancock: King of the Pilbara
  32. Bludgers need not apply
  33. New party formed "to slash controls"
  34. Workers Party Reunion Intro
  35. Workers Party is born as foe of government
  36. Government seen by new party as evil
  37. Ron Manners on Lang Hancock
  38. Does Canberra leave us any alternative to secession?
  39. Bury Hancock Week
  40. Ron Manners on the Workers Party
  41. Lang Hancock on Australia Today
  42. Hancock and Wright
  43. Lang Hancock on Environmentalists
  44. Friends of free enterprise treated to financial tete-a-tete: Lang does the talking but Gina pulls the strings
  45. Lang Hancock, Stump Jumper
  46. Lang Hancock: giant of the western iron age
  47. The Treasury needs a hatchet man
  48. We Mine to Live
  49. Get the "econuts" off our backs
  50. 1971 Lang Hancock-Jonathan Aitken interview for Land of Fortune (short)
  51. Gina Rinehart, Secessionist
  52. 1982 NYT Lang Hancock profile
  53. Enter Rio Tinto
  54. Hamersley and Tom Price
  55. News in the West
  56. Positive review of Hancock speech
  57. Lang Hancock International Press Institute General Assembly speech, Canberra, 1978
  58. Australia's slide to socialism
  59. The Great Claim Robbery
  60. Why WA must go it alone
  61. Lang Hancock in 1976 on Public Picnics and Human Blights
  62. MILLIONAIRE PUTS MONEY BEHIND SECESSIONISTS
  63. Resource Management in Australia: Is it possible?
  64. The gospel of WA secession according to Lang Hancock
  65. Crystal Balls Need Polishing
  66. Minerals - politicians' playthings?
  67. John Singleton-Ita Buttrose interview (1977)
  68. Boston Tea Party 1986 style
  69. Singo says Lang Hancock violated Australia's 11th commandment: Thou Shalt Not Succeed
  70. Singleton: the White Knight of Ockerdom
  71. Tactics change by Hancock
  72. Lang Hancock complains to Margaret Thatcher about Malcolm Fraser
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