John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 237-39, under the heading “The State”.

The State is not … a social institution administered in an anti-social way. It is an anti-social institution, administered in the only way an anti-social institution can be administered, and by the kind of person who, in the nature of things, is best adapted to such service.
ALBERT J. NOCK

The kind of many who wants the government to adopt and enforce his ideas is always the kind of man whose ideas are idiotic.
H.L. MENCKEN

Our formula is this: everything within the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State.
BENITO MUSSOLINI

Statism exaggerates mistakes and institutionalises failures.
E.R.C. WORLD MARKET PERSPECTIVE

When a government steps outside its intended role of protecting individual rights, it ceases to be a government and becomes a State. Thus, we live in a world composed of States. There is, to our knowledge, not a single government, in the truest sense of the word, to be found anywhere in the world.1

States live by feeding off their citizens. It has frequently been said that they are like cancers, and with good reason. Once started, they grow enormously, are very difficult to stop, and eventually kill their host and themselves. We in Australia are currently being sucked dry and strangled by our cancerous State. Today both major Australian political Parties only fight over who is going to be our rulers. That we are going to be ruled is taken for granted.

As has been explained in many places in this book, the State operates by distributing privilege, by robbing Peter to pay Paul. It builds up large groups of people who are dependent on it, or who simply use it to exploit others. It is an instrument of coercion and expropriation. It is the friend of all who want something for nothing, and the deadliest enemy of all “well-disposed, industrious and decent” people — of those who don’t expect the unearned, and who strive to be at all time independent. Most people know this.

It has been pointed out that few people like or trust politicians. But what are we to do? There is, for most people, an overwhelming sense of powerlessness. The State is so large and has so built up an enormous momentum. Unfortunately, there are no simple answers — particularly as, in many cases, the State reduces, by taxation, inflation and regulation, large numbers of people and institutions to dependence on it.

The worst thing we can do is follow the example of most of our so-called industrial and intellectual leaders, who have merely lain down at the State’s feet, rolled over and begged it to scratch their bellies. They deserve to follow the State into its inevitable oblivion, but, unfortunately, they’d take us all with them.

What we must do, is first arm ourselves. Our weapon can only be knowledge. The only way to bring about peaceful change is through education; the only way to fight bad ideas is with better ideas. The Centre for Independent Studies in Sydney, and the Foundation for Economic Education (Aust.) in Brisbane are two non-political, educational groups that have recently been formed to promote the idea of freedom. There are an enormous range of alternative ideas being tried out all over Australia, from communes, to community action groups. All of these are moving in the same direction, away from State domination and control, and towards personal control. Unfortunately, many of these have a tendency to try to use the State to achieve their ends. Such a tactic will not succeed for the State may help up to a point, but, in the final analysis, it will always put self-interest first. To have any chance of longterm success, these alternatives must by-pass the State, and not attempt to use it for their own ends.

It is a standard operational procedure of the State that it starts out by “helping” groups who appeal to it. This help is usually in the form of money. As soon as the groups are well and truly dependent on that money, then the hidden strings attached to it start to be pulled. By controlling purse strings, the State controls the groups, and it ends up using them.

The most important thing we all have to realise is that it is long past time that we started to draw lines, and stopped retreating in the face of the constant advances of the State. We must take a lesson from Great Britain. They bought time and temporary peace by retreating. Where did it get them? We must stop trading short-term gains for long-term suicide. And we must wake up to the gigantic con that the State represents. It is feeding off us. It is our work and our production that makes its existence possible but what thanks do we get? We get abused, kicked about, regulated, robbed blind, and asked to work harder.

It is high time we decided just who are the public servants, and reminded them that that is what they are. Our modern State represents the single greatest threat to our freedom and our prosperity. Our greatest enemy is not the communists or the multinationals or the “yellow hordes”. It’s right here at home — our very own governments. As American mining engineer, Eugene Guccione, put it when in Australia this year: “asking (government’s) help to correct a problem, any problem, is like asking an arsonist to help you put out the fire.”

Footnote
  1. One possible exception could be the Na-Griamel Federation, which is currently attempting to establish its independence in the New Hebrides. If the surrounding States do not interfere, it could become a truly free country.