- Nine original videos this week: (1) high-profile Australian, Neville Kennard, on why he’s an anarchist; (2) the Workers Party Reunion; (3) Viv Forbes on his many free-market advocacy battles; (4) Ron Manners on being a joyous libertarian; (5) Mark Tier on Smoker’s Rights; (6) Dr Steven Kates on the Classical School vs the Austrian School; (7) Professor Dr Hans-Hermann Hoppe on “The State — The Errors of Classical Liberalism”; (8) Hoppe on “Society Without State — Private Law Society”; and (9) Hoppe on “Politics, Money and Banking”. This is the first footage of any of the speakers in 1080p full HD, thanks to Joshua Marks.
- Ten items by Bert Kelly this week: (1) on government in sport; (2) on his pre-Parliament life; (3) on his family history; (4) on why Liberals implement more socialism than the Labor Party; (5) on a possible reason why he was not more publicly outspoken; (6) on how the weather is usually unusual and how timeless his articles are; (7) on what he is leaving to posterity; (8) on why Eccles is to blame for everything; (9) on those who claim to support free enterprise yet stand aside when it’s time to be counted; and (10) on the fact that tariffs equal high prices plus world war. There are now over 100 items featuring Bert Kelly on Economics.org.au, archived at BertKelly.info.
- Four items by John Singleton and Howard this week: (1) Singo and Howard Engage with Homosexuality; (2) Singo and Howard Demand Repeal of Libel and Slander Laws; (3) Singo and Howard on Consumer Protection; and (4) Singo and Howard on Consistency.
- A great article by Sukrit Sabhlok on Westralian Secession. It’s not radical!
- One Ron Paul interview that he gave exclusively to an Australian publication in 1988.
- Lastly, please send this review of the Mises Seminar around. I named The Hon Dr Peter Phelps, Dr Steven Kates and James Paterson in the title, but they and their supporters must not have got the message.
Bert Kelly, “The sporting camel in the tent of the taxpayer,”
The Australian Financial Review, September 16, 1977, p. 3.
Mavis is feeling her political oats. She always gets on edge and starts to sniff the political wind as each Parliament approaches its second birthday.
From now on, as election day comes relentlessly closer, she will be out and around the electorate hoping to spot a popular cause which will bring in a few votes.
After one such expedition she returned proudly carrying a splendid book called A White Paper on the Financial Plight of Sport in Australia. Continue »
Bert Kelly, The Australian Financial Review, December 23, 1977, p. 3.
After my defeat at the election, the next notable event was the declaration of the poll, at which I fondly hoped that large numbers of my previous supporters would give me a rousing and fond farewell.
So I prepared a powerful statement explaining why I was defeated and blaming it all on Eccles. Continue »
A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], “It’s back to the tractor,”
The Australian Financial Review, December 16, 1977, p. 3.
I haven’t been writing much about the election campaign because I have been so busy beating up and down the land, imploring people to vote for me. Continue »
by a Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly],
The Australian Financial Review, November 11, 1977, p. 3.
I have never made any secret of the fact that the quality that I envy most in my political colleagues is their fast footwork. Continue »
John Singleton with Bob Howard, Rip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 50-52, under the heading “Consistency”.
Most people are not consciously aware of the issue of consistency, even though, in their day to day lives, they constantly demand it. Children in particular demand consistent action of their parents. If you, as a parent, say one thing today and another tomorrow, you’ll hear all about it. Continue »
John Singleton with Bob Howard, Rip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 52-56, under the heading “Consumer Protection”.
An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.
ROBERT A. HEINLEIN
To protect men from their own folly is to people the world with fools.
HERBERT SPENCER
The area of consumer protection legislation is where knee-jerk reflexes predominate. Every time there is an accident, the cry will go up, “there ought to be a law”, “it shouldn’t be allowed”, or, “the government should stop it”. Continue »
Bert Kelly, “The mixture as before — in capitals …,” The Australian Financial Review, January 28, 1977, p. 3. Referencing Bert Kelly’s “Farming’s only certainty is of being wrong,” The Australian Financial Review, September 8, 1972, p. 3; republished in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 7-9, as “Supply and Demand (2)”.
The article that follows first appeared in September, 1972, and is unaltered except that two paragraphs have been deleted to make room for this explanation, but the sense has not been changed.
After you had read it, you will realise how things alter on the farming front and how dangerous it is to speak authoritatively about the future in farming.
After all, your Modest Member lives near the centre of things and has access to all the best advice in Canberra, but look at the mistakes I made! Continue »
1. Kiss every baby, lick every boot? (AFR, January 23, 1976)
2. Rebel wine is a very heady drink (AFR, April 7, 1977)
1.
A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], “Kiss every baby, lick every boot?” The Australian Financial Review, January 23, 1976, p. 3.
After each election Mavis gives me a lecture about how I should start to campaign for the next election the day the poll for this one is declared.
“You must be ceaselessly assiduous, dear,” she says.
“Till the electorate soil endlessly and tirelessly. You must be seen to be a dedicated servant of the people. Attend every function, open every fete, wipe every eye, smooth every brow, kiss every baby, lick every boot. By so doing you will surely be able to increase your majority at the next election. And think how proud that would make me, and perhaps they will even make you a minister at last.” Continue »
A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], The Australian Financial Review, May 12, 1972, p. 3. Reprinted in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 158-60, as “Trouble with Bishops.”
I am used to being castigated by Mavis, Fred, Eccles and almost everyone else, but now the bishops are having a piece of me and this is harder to take. Continue »
Padraic P. McGuinness,
“It’s about money — and there’s nothing wrong with that,”
The Sydney Morning Herald, September 28, 2000, p. 8.
The essential commercialism of the Olympics is true of the Australian and nearly all the other competitors, writes Padraic P. McGuinness.
The absurdity of the cult of amateurism in sport has never been clearer than in the present Games. While the general pleasure and good feeling the event has aroused are welcome, and the high point for everyone the general outpouring of joy at Cathy Freeman’s gold medal, the whole event is essentially about money. Continue »
John Singleton with Bob Howard, Rip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 139-40, under the heading “Journalism”.
Feed pigs swill.
ANON.
Journalism, and newspapers in particular, provide an interesting example of the need for business people to concern themselves about long-term consequences. Newspapers and journalists today enjoy a very low reputation, because for too long they have sought to take short-cuts, and promote sales through distortions, exaggerations, sensationalism and half truths. Continue »
Bert Kelly, One More Nail (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1978), ch. 3, pp. 13-16.
I was born in 1912 and there were four in the family, two girls and two boys. We all went to the little Merrindie school which was about three miles from home. Before my younger sister went to school the three of us used to ride on one quiet old mare. Then where there were four going to school we graduated to a spring cart. It was a one teacher school and I suppose all the high powered educationists of today would be very sorry for us, but I think that we were lucky. For one thing, we were always seeing interesting things on the journey, which is more than do most country kids of today as they travel in their big buses. And there is nothing quite so stimulating as a good one teacher school. You always have the opportunity to listen to the lessons being taught the class a year or more ahead of you. If the discipline is good, and it was with us, we learnt a lot and much of it painlessly. Continue »