Speech given at the Capricornia Institute of Advanced Education, Rockhampton, by the Progress Party candidate for the Federal seat of Capricornia, Paul Rackemann, in a debate where candidates talked on the subject, “The Essential Issue in This Election,” October 15, 1980.
To the Progress Party, the essential issue of this campaign and of every campaign is the issue of individual sovereignty.
This means that the individual is free, and that he is responsible.
This is what we fight for, and it distinguishes us from all other parties. All other parties believe, to a greater or lesser degree, in the idea of government as a parent. According to them, the government should protect people not only from attack by others, but also from their own mistakes.
This is, at first sight, an attractive idea to many people. You can ask, “Well, why not?” The government is bigger and better informed that I am. Why shouldn’t it give me the benefit of its experience, by way of laws designed to protect me from myself?”
What is wrong with this is that the government can be as fallible and as immoral as the individual. When you put the government in the position of a parent, you have absolutely no guarantee that it will act for your benefit. What it actually does is, to borrow a useful Marxist phrase, to act in the interests of a ruling class.
What this ruling class will be will vary from government to government. In Queensland a few decades ago, the ruling class included dairy farmers. The Country Party government was heavily influenced by dairy farmers who strongly resented the encroachments being made at that time on their market by margarine. There was much talk of banning margarine, and I believe some laws were actually passed interfering with the margarine trade. At that time, too, there was a practice at every election of promising dams. Every district wanted a dam, and quite a lot of them seemed to get one.
Nowadays the balance of population has shifted, and urban groups have more influence. In particular, the university set are very influential, because of their articulateness as much as their numbers, and they are in a position to demand a lot of money for education, most of which is wasted on nonsense that only serves to increase the employment available to graduates of tertiary institutions. After this election, the university set, through their party, will have the balance of power in the Senate. They also have much influence on the Labor Party, and on the Liberal Party in Queensland and Victoria.
So the government exists to benefit a ruling class. This is a good reason why all those people who are not in a position to control the government should wish for its powers to be as small as possible. The government can’t help you, except by harming or taking from someone else. Nearly all of you, if you look into it carefully enough, will find that the nett effect of all the government’s immoral activities is to harm you rather than help you.
Apart from this, of course, the fact remains that this sort of government activity is immoral and is degrading to the subject. If the government acts as our parent, then we are not free citizens. Whether the government is democratically elected or not, we are its serfs to the extent that we tolerate its interference in our lives.
If neither the practical argument, that government interference harms you in your everyday life, nor the moral argument, that the government has no right to treat you as its slave convinces you, then perhaps you might be interested in the historical argument. We are following a path whereby many societies have plunged themselves into dictatorship and economic collapse before now.
A few years ago you might have heard elderly conservatives arguing that moral decay led to the collapse of civilisations. Those conservatives were upset by things like contraception and what they used to call revolting youth, but actually they were almost right. What they didn’t know was that the most serious form of moral decay was a particular form that takes place among the rulers of society, and is called financial mismanagement. This brings me to inflation.
Inflation takes place when the government of a country is weak and dishonest, and in order to please its citizens, spends more than it collects in taxes. Governments blame all sorts of things for inflation. They blame wage rises, which are actually a consequence of inflation. They blame the Arabs for trying to get the market price for their oil. They blame anybody they can, because what they want you never to realise is that governments cause inflation. Nobody else does. One of the flaws in democracy is that governments have to try to please enough people to form a majority, and one of the easiest ways to please people is by spending money on them. Thus the government runs around trying to find ways to rob Peter to bribe Paul, without letting Peter know what is going on. This never works for very long, and inflation is one nearly certain way to end democratic government in a country. Inflation in France led to Napoleon; inflation in Germany led to Hitler; inflation in the Roman Empire led eventually to the disappearance of the empire. Inflation in the American empire today will lead to the disappearance of this empire.
I wouldn’t be here if I thought there was no hope at all. There is hope, because the collapse of civilisation is never total. There will be the opportunity for people in the corners of the American empire to make a reasonably comfortable life for themselves, provided we recognise the importance of individual freedom and individual responsibility in our own societies, and provided we have a stable monetary system in our own corner of society. Unless you have a stable monetary system there is no justice, and there can be no individual responsibility. Without stable money, you can’t plan ahead. You can’t save. You can’t open a business and give people jobs, because without stable money you can’t get credit to open a business, you can’t work out your costs, you can’t tell what you can or should pay your staff. That, by the way, is one of the big lies about inflation. It is supposed to benefit the poor and harm the rich. What it actually does is to benefit the very rich, the very smart, and the very dishonest, at the expense of everyone else.
To sum up, I see individual sovereignty as the essential issue in this election and every election. I think inflation is very important because it is a form of government disharmony and leads to the destruction of liberty and of life. There is more to my philosophy of life than that, and I believe in a system of morality based 0n individual sovereignty. But for now, the main point I would like people to remember from this speech is that governments cause inflation. That’s the thing they tell the most lies about.