by Peter Wong, Executive Director of the Lion Rock Institute, regular contributor to English and Chinese print, TV and radio in Hong Kong
[This was first published in the Chinese-language publication Eastweek on June 12, 2012, and online here.]
I am especially grateful for the wise elders in my life. I treasured their experience and wisdom. Many of today’s TV ads in Hong Kong are about financial planning so that people can retire in their 40s and go on expensive holidays. The message is to dislike your job and live a carefree life without working. The wise men I knew had one thing in common: they were eager to reach for another peak in their lives, regardless of whether they were in a wheelchair or were already successful financially. Continue »
by Viv Forbes, winner of the 1986 Australian Adam Smith Award for “outstanding services to the free society”
Calling it “A Price on Carbon” is two more lies:
Firstly, a tax is a compulsory levy on production, consumption, income or expenditure.
A price is the amount voluntarily offered, paid or received for real goods or services.
Therefore the “Price on Carbon” is a tax. Continue »
Sudha Shenoy, “Zoning and the market for property,” World Money Analyst, April 1980, p. 11. (With thanks to Mark Tier.)
Zoning is one of the most entrenched and “respectable” areas of government intervention. Upon examination — as with other forms of statism — we find that the market for land has its own checks and balances — without the corruption that always accompanies state intervention. Continue »
Sudha Shenoy, “Government: the fastest growth area,” World Money Analyst, October 1979, p. 11. (With thanks to Mark Tier.)
Government has grown faster than any other “industry” — because there are no restrictions on its growth. The idea of “checks and balances,” supposedly so important in political institutions, should also be applied to government in the economic sphere.
In most countries outside the Soviet bloc, government is the fastest growing single entity. Even when the economies stagnate, the “public” sector continues to grow. At other times, government spending has grown faster than the economy as a whole, so that an ever-increasing proportion of total resources passes through the hands of some government department, board or nationalised industry. Continue »
“New party’s chief: Not good enough,” The West Australian,
November 3, 1975, p. 12.
John Singleton, advertising chief, is a hard man to please.
Despite the remarkable electoral debut of his new political party — the Workers’ Party — in the Greenough by-election on Saturday, he still was not satisfied. Continue »
- Neville Kennard Obituary, by Benjamin Marks (with many comments by others).
- More Bert Kelly brilliance uncovered this week for the first time in over 30 years: on political speech writers | on how the enemies of the free-market just want the quiet life | on how government fails spectacularly (this is the only non-Modest Farmer column in The Bulletin by Bert Kelly I have found) | on structural change | and on what the future will be like when Bert Kelly is thawed and resurrected (he thinks Nev had the right idea)! There are now 126 items featuring Bert Kelly archived at our site BertKelly.info.
- Bob Howard on “The Discipline of Necessity” — one of Howard’s few post-Workers Party essays, and a beauty. There are now 112 items featuring John Singleton, Howard and the Workers Party archived at our site WorkersParty.info.
- Lang Hancock is an important figure we should all learn more about. Here is what we’ve uncovered this week: 1982 NYT profile | 1978 Hancock speech to the International Press Institute General Assembly | a positive review of a speech Hancock gave at that event, but it refers to either a different speech or a speech improvised from the previous item | and more important Hancock history on Rio Tinto, Hamersley and Tom Price, and News in the West. There are now 53 items featuring Lang Hancock archived at our site LangHancock.info. Also, please check out another of our sites, GinaRinehart.info, which has received nearly 700 Facebook likes, over 100 comments and some media attention, thanks to your support.
- Viv Forbes, one of the last living and active Australian legends (and he is still outdoing us all), with three new classics: Carbon Tax Retrospective? | Solving Three Canberra Problems | Vested Interests in the Climate Debate | also, Lang Hancock’s 1981 Quadrant essay that we posted last week, “We Mine to Live,” was largely written by Forbes who gave Hancock permission to use it without attribution (so as not to offend his employer at the time) and who is also the anonymous friend Hancock quotes. There are now 60 items featuring Viv Forbes archived at our site VivForbes.info.
- Lennie Lower explains why egg-timers should replace proverb-filled calendars.
- Chad Morgan “On The Social Service” — a classic Australian libertarian song.
- Benjamin Marks: “The exciting new Australian Taxpayers’ Alliance” | and an update to the end of “The Best Australian Think Tank Is …”.
by Benjamin Marks, NevilleKennard.info publisher
Neville Kennard died yesterday, aged 74, after being hounded and hobbled by governments he never consented to, abandoned by the Australian think tanks he funded and ignored by the journalists he gave massive scoops to. He was surrounded by his loving family, and an ever-growing web of legislative controls. But if anyone can keep his legacy in safe hands, then it’s his wife Gaby, sons Sam, Walt and Jim, brother Andy (who Nev reckoned to be a closet libertarian) and friend Hans Tholstrup. Continue »
Bert Kelly, “Cold comfort on a return trip,”
The Bulletin, December 23/30, 1980, p. 68.
Regular readers of this column will have noticed that, as I get older, I am taking an increasing and morbid interest in my imminent demise. Mavis is responsible for some of this, she being upset because I didn’t win a ministerial State funeral. In spite of this I know that there will be no corners cut when my time comes; I know that Mavis is planning that I am arrayed in my striped trousers in my coffin as I go with proper dignity to my cremation. Continue »
by Viv Forbes, winner of the 1986 Australian Adam Smith Award for “outstanding services to the free society”
Australia’s carbon tax has already started to combat global warming by producing the coldest May in Canberra for fifty years. Continue »
Speech delivered by Lang Hancock, March 7, 1978, to the International Press Institute General Assembly in Canberra. Table of Contents»
1. WE MINE TO LIVE
Most people pass their days with no thought of the role mining plays in their lives. In fact, it never enters their heads that without mining they could not live.
The public knows where to buy things they need, but seldom considers their origins. As far as they are concerned, food comes from a supermarket, electricity comes from a plug on the wall, motor cars from a dealer, luxury appliances from a departmental store, and so on. They probably credit the creation of these necessities of life as coming from factories, power stations and even farms, whereas in fact they all begin with mining because everything comes from the earth. You either mine it or you grow it, and you can’t even grow it until first of all you mine the fertiliser with which to make things grow.
Without minerals we could not till our soil, build our machines, supply our energy, transport our goods or maintain any society beyond the most primitive. Our horn of plenty starts with a hole in the ground.
We are in great trouble if we forget it and people in Australia, particularly in Canberra and government circles generally, have forgotten it, whilst it would seem that the western world generally has never known it.
Throughout history civilisations have been shaped by the use of minerals. Mineral supplies have determined the rise and fall of empires, pattern of populations and the evolution of human enterprise in industry and rising living standards. Continue »
Two letters to the editor appeared under the one title, “Hancock and the Workers,” in The Australian, April 1, 1992, p. 10; the first one by Bill Stacey, the second Roger Wickham. Here they are:
The Weekend Australian’s obituary for Lang Hancock (28-29/3) referred to his financial support for the “extreme right wing” and misnamed Workers Party. This is not an accurate description of Hancock’s position or that of the Workers Party. Continue »