Lang Hancock, “Life blood,”
The Australian, March 9, 1978, p. 6, as a letter to the editor.

Readers of The Australian who are concerned about objectivity, honesty and uranium (which can save us from the horror of the forthcoming energy crisis) should assess for themselves the answers to the following questions. Questions which Friends of the Earth when attacking the nations life blood — mining — avoid answering.

  1. From where does the finance originate for the 36 or more publications produced by Friends of the Earth and distributed on a large scale, often free of charge or at low cost, at public meetings and on public transport and within primary and high schools? Whether produced in Australia or not, much of the material in these publications is of overseas origin, including the senseless, blatant, inane, comic style or cartoon propaganda with its overt emotional appeal to women and young children.
  2. How much of the anti-nuclear material, purporting to be a scientific commentary on the so-called evils of the nuclear fuel cycle, would ever stand the refereeing process of normal scientific publications?
  3. How many of these untrue claims concerning the alleged “evils of uranium and plutonium” have been demonstrated to be false and yet no apology or disclaimer has ever been forthcoming from the propagators of the doom scenarios?
  4. Why does a Friend of the Earth office when in legal trouble remove itself to a far more expensive, central location into a building already housing numerous marxist organisations?
  5. Who are the key office bearers and motive forces behind the anti-uranium activities of these organisations? And what are their political affiliations and financial links?

The following paragraph is quoted from a book by Sir Fred Hoyle, Energy or Extinction — the Case for Nuclear Energy. From the foreword, written by Sir Alan Cottrell, formerly chief scientific adviser to the British Government.

It (the book) is about energy; about the alarming prospect that oil will soon run out and not be replaced by anything else. It shows that contrary to an influential belief — we do not have time, that there is no practical alternative to nuclear energy and that Western decision-makers have been frightened into immobility in their nuclear energy policies by a well-orchestrated campaign which has marched under an “environmentalist” banner but yet has a clearly identifiable political basis.

The book, when available in Australia, should become mandatory reading for all those who have a genuine concern for the world of the future, our children’s future, the problems of developing countries and for the peace and prosperity of Australia.

It would be both naive and unkind to suggest that individual members of Friends of the Earth, the young children who sport “Ban Uranium Mining” badges or the small number of genuine, concerned ecologists who are honestly trying to relate the environmental effects of the nuclear fuel cycle to the real dangers and disadvantages of alternative forms of energy production, are merely political activists or guilty of subversive motives.

However, interested readers of The Australian would do well to consider how easily such people can be regimented and manipulated to serve a political purpose.

LANG HANCOCK
Dalkeith, WA