1. Wayne Swan stands on the shoulders of other intellectual pygmies — inspired by Clive Palmer, Neville Kennard has an idea for a cartoon.
  2. Ron Manners: “Nothing is balanced about happiness” — say goodbye to your work-life balance books.
  3. Sell Government Transport — Mark Tier in Quadrant, September, 1975, pp. 93-96. Quadrant has gone steadily downhill ever since, but Mark Tier is still as active as ever in his free-market advocacy 37 years later. His latest book is Trust Your Enemies.
  4. 5 never before republished essays by famous Australian John Singleton: (a) Singo Incites Civil Disobedience — “Twisting the tail of paper tigers,” The Bulletin, October 30, 1976, pp. 82-83 (read to the end for the glorious outpouring of hate and rebellion from Ron Manners and others that this article brought forth); (b) Undeserved handouts make Australia the lucky country — “The real story behind WA’s ‘race riots’,” The Bulletin, October 9, 1979, pp. 22-24; (c) “A happy story about Aborigines,” The Bulletin, November 13, 1979, pp. 76-81; (d) John Singleton on Political Advertising — “A brand new market leader,” The Bulletin, March 15, 1983, pp. 26-28; (e) How John Singleton Would Make Tony Abbott Prime Minister — “How Malcolm Fraser will become Prime Minister: A two-year non-marketing programme,” Quadrant, June, 1975, pp. 33-35.
  5. Richard Hall, Mike Stanton and Judith James on the Workers Party — Richard Hall in his regular column in The Bulletin, December 27, 1975 – January 3, 1976, p. 18, followed by responses from Mike Stanton and Judith James a few weeks later. The topic is what the 1975 Federal election results mean for the Workers Party.
  6. Introduction to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) — some important history and observations by David Sharp.
  7. Lang Hancock on Environmentalists
  8. Parliament a place for pragmatists — Bert Kelly in 1982 says the Liberal Party tries to govern Australia badly to stop Labor from having the opportunity to govern us worse.
  9. Josh Frydenberg vs Maxwell Newton on Sir Robert Menzies — Frydenberg has tried to make Sir Robert Menzies look like a free-market advocate. Maxwell Newton destroys him in 1966.
  10. The Best Australian Think Tank Is … — by Benjamin Marks.

Big announcement next week. (And no, it is not about Mises Seminar 2012.) But here are big announcements about last week: Neville Kennard, Economics.org.au and our latest project were featured (and Nev was caricatured) in The Sydney Morning Herald here. Viv Forbes was interviewed on radio here and here. And Mark Tier was interviewed here.