1. The third issue of the new international print magazine Capitalism.HK is now online and it supports Westralian secession! Subscribe today.
  2. Two just-found Lang Hancock gems: an interview from 1974 on the gospel of Westralian secession; and an amazing essay from 1976 with many arguments in defence of capitalism that I’d never come across before, and this beautiful quote (among many others): “It is widely accepted in Australia, in communist countries and in most dictatorships that the minerals legally belong to the State.”
  3. Heart-warming Westralian secession violence from 1933-35: “ALLEGED HOOLIGANISM: DECENT CITIZENS RESENT BASE INSINUATIONS,” The Sunday Times (Perth), April 2, 1933, p. 13; and “WEST AUSTRALIA SECESSION: THREAT OF FORCE — ‘Only Means Left To Us’ Says Delegate,” Daily Herald (London), May 27, 1935, pp. 1-2.
  4. Sinclair Hill calls for dropping a neutron bomb on Canberra — in 1993. That’s the same Sinclair Hill who taught Prince Charles (and Kerry Packer) to play polo. And, more impressively, it’s the same Sinclair Hill who led the NSW Workers Party in the 1970s.
  5. Mark Tier with a brilliant 1974 essay on the Canberra Kremlin today.
  6. Viv Forbes with yet another unsurpassable essay he has dug up for us. It begins: “Government has made a new discovery — how to convert coal into paper. Their process is so efficient that I suspect the conversion rate is approaching one tonne of paper per tonne of coal.”
  7. Hans Tholstrup’s Adventures with Telstra Bigpond — a legendary Australian daredevil tried to fix his internet!
  8. Introduction to the Economics of Trust — another in David Sharp’s series of strategic introductions to economics.
  9. Two items from Paddy McGuinness this week:
  • Canberra’s social revolution,” The Australian Financial Review, September 21, 1976, p. 4. Uses Milton Friedman’s softness to justify collecting of statistics. Big contrast to the sentiment on statistics usually associated with Milton Friedman. For example, “I met Cowperthwaite in 1963 … Hong Kong. I remember asking him about the paucity of statistics. He answered, ‘If I let them compute those statistics, they’ll want to use them for planning.’ How wise!”
  • Paddy McGuinness in 1994 on the 2012 class size debate — “A new angle on teaching,” The Sydney Morning Herald, December 24, 1994, p. 14. Excerpt: “Do we really need more schoolteachers? Whenever the condition and performance of our schools are debated, the first cry to come from the teachers’ unions and their supporters in the community, and indeed often enough from governments, is that class sizes must be reduced and more teachers must be employed.”