“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.