1. Guilty Capitalists — Neville Kennard on the economic ignorance of guilty capitalists, who should feel guilty about their lack of economic knowledge only.
  2. The Middle of the Road — Viv Forbes in 1994, chastises Alexander Downer’s middle of the roadism. After all, it is dangerous to drive on the median strip, especially since that is where everyone else is driving and they are all coming from different directions.
  3. Carbon Tax Lies and Bribes — Forbes today. If only Downer had listened. If things were different, but then, they never are.
  4. Hancock gets tough over uranium mining — news item from 1977, where Hancock argues that the government has no role whatsoever to play in the development of the country and at least tries to argue that he is being active advocating a free-market in areas where he does not have investments. Good idea. Imagine if the mining industry or certain figures therein put effort towards repealing the prohibition of drugs by government. Then people would see that they are interested in principles.
  5. Noel Coward: There Are Bad Time Just Around The Corner — a beautiful and clever song.
  6. Julie Andrews, Henry Mancini, Johnny Mercer: Whistling Away The Dark — another beautiful and clever song.
  7. Lennie Lower on gold, gold mining and the gold standard — Australia’s most principled journalist before Bert Kelly.
  8. A politician tells his wife what he wants for dinner — Lennie Lower in 1933.
  9. About Starting a New Movement — Since we are employing a fair bit of Lennie Lower’s work, I’ll add him as another of our staff members soon. Ronald Kitching was a big Lennie Lower fan.
  10. A Critique of the Opening Two Sentences of the “About CIS” Page of The Centre for Independent Studies’ Website, www.cis.org.au — Just one sentence from Mises Seminar speaker Hans-Hermann Hoppe is enough to shake Australian “think tanks” to their foundations. They are welcome to attend The Mises Seminar at a special price, to expedite the rebuilding process.