Mark Tier, The Australian, February 6, 1975, p. 6, as a letter to the editor.

Sir — Your editorial, Voices of Frustration (28/1), presents a number of misconceptions about the Workers Party’s policy and our attitudes which will no doubt plague us for many years.

While Dr Whiting pointed out we are not interested in “human leeches, parasites, no-hopers and bludgers,” we have been misreported as being not interested in the sick, handicapped, aged, the poor and the unemployed. While we are advocating that Government is not the correct agency to look after these people since welfare programs of this nature have a built-in tendency to expand the number of dependent people, it is far from correct to paint us as being inhuman.

The very formation of our party indicates our great concern for all people and with a greater concern for the 99 per cent who are not sick, handicapped and unemployed. In particular we are very aware of the fact that people receiving old age pensions have been robbed for many years through taxation and do have a claim to receive the pension they look forward to on retirement.

However, they do not have the right to create further victims through taxation to finance their pensions. What we propose is to establish a fund from the proceeds of the taxes that these people have been paying for years and years through the sale of millions of dollars of government property. This fund would then take over the responsibility of paying pensioners and become one of many competing pension funds.

Who, you ask, would handle the country’s foreign policy, defence forces and public transport? Had you read our policy more carefully, you would have noted that the only moral function of Government is the running of defence forces, police and law courts — that is to protect, not invade, individual rights.

Health services would be provided by the free market that would be significantly cheaper and of higher quality than they are now. To appreciate this fact consider that every time you go to a doctor, approximately two-thirds of his fee is paid to the Government through one tax or another.

Mr Hayden is proposing to create an enormous bureaucracy (to be paid for by more tax) to transfer the tax money he receives from doctors back to their patients to subsidise the high fees that he is responsible for in the first place.

On the question of public transport I suggest that you investigate the situation in Sydney and you will find that where the benevolent NSW Government allows competition with its coercive bus monopoly, bus fares are cheaper and services more frequent.

As you say, it is “easy to ridicule this new version of laissez-faire capitalism,” but as with any form of ridicule, it is no substitute for rational argument.

MARK TIER
Darlinghurst, NSW
(The writer is spokesman of economic affairs, foreign policy and defence for the Workers Party.)