Viv Forbes, Our Sacred Land & Other Essays (first published by Business Queensland and Common Sense in 1994), issue no. 101.About the Author»
Mr Downer tells us his goal is to shift the Liberal Party back to the middle of the road. And every year his party seeks to discover political truth by consulting public opinion polls or counting votes in national conventions. We are told there is no longer room for rigid principle — we must adopt moderation, compromise and pragmatism as our principles. This search for the middle of the road is not the solution — it is the problem. Continue »
by Viv Forbes, winner of the 1986 Australian Adam Smith Award for “outstanding services to the free society”
The government’s $4 million carbon tax manifesto is a litany of lies in a bucketful of bribes. Continue »
A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], “Dividing the wheat from the chaff …,” The Australian Financial Review, March 2, 1973, p. 3. Reprinted minus the last paragraph in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 33-35, as “State Quotas.”
Two weeks ago Fred said that had he the choice he would prefer a lower first advance for his wheat and have no quota rather than a bigger first advance coupled with a contribution of quotas. Since then my phone has been running hot with farmers telling me what they thought. Continue »
by a Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly],
The Australian Financial Review, February 16, 1973, p. 3.
One of the awkward decisions that an MP has to face is, should he do what his constituents want, even if he thinks they are wrong. Continue »
A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], “Tariffs — no such thing as a free feed,” The Australian Financial Review, November 12, 1976, p. 3. Reprinted in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 44-46, as “Tariffs paid by Exporters (2).” [“Tariffs paid by Exporters (1)” here.]
When I am talking to secondary industry leaders, I find it hard to convince them that the cost of tariff protection is borne by exporters. Continue »
Lennie Lower was one of the most famous journalists in Australia during the 1930s and 1940s. He was a prolific writer of satirical vignettes (for a long time he wrote eight columns a week, plus other projects). These three articles below were reprinted in Here’s Another (1932).
WHAT GOLD IS, HOW TO GET IT, AND WHERE IT IS
It’s not a bit of use looking for gold if you don’t know where it is.
People are pegging out claims all over the place when they would be better employed pegging out the washing.
Gold is a metallic auriferous gold metal which is found in large or small single lumps, or linked together as is in gold watch-chains, or invisible, such as sovereigns.
Amateur prospectors must remember, however, that it is illegal to peg out a claim on a man’s stomach just because he has a gold watch-chain.
Alluvial gold is found in creek-beds, water-holes, drain-pipes, and various other places. It is found on mountains and in valleys, etcetera.
It is also not found in many of the above places. That is the catch.
The best way to tell gold is to pass the nugget around a crowded bar, and ask them if it’s gold.
If it comes back, it’s not gold. Continue »
The Sydney Morning Herald, April 14, 1977, p. 2.
LONDON, Wednesday. — If the Australian Government is not prepared to do anything about uranium mining, then Lang Hancock will.
This is the message the West Australian iron ore magnate is spreading in London on one of his rare visits — a business trip, combined with a new phase in his pro-nuclear campaign.
Mr Hancock, 67, told AAP that he invited the father of the H-bomb, Dr Edward Teller, to speak in Australia on the need for Australian mining and export of uranium and development of nuclear power. Continue »
by a Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly],
“Getting the Ord River into the hit parade,”
The Australian Financial Review, March 26, 1970, p. 3.
Reprinted in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 16-17, as “The Ord Dam.”
Last week I got into trouble with old Eccles because I became enthusiastic about irrigation schemes in general. He lectured me severely then, and has been at it ever since, but has been concentrating particularly on the Ord River dam, which seems to infuriate him, for some reason. Continue »
A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], “More cold water on irrigation,” The Australian Financial Review, March 20, 1970, p. 3. Reprinted in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 14-16, as “Irrigation.”
I am becoming acutely aware that Eccles has dried up the wells of my eloquence. He has weaned me from subjects which I used to tackle with enthusiasm and acclamation. Continue »
- Gold Is Money — Neville Kennard with some important financial advice.
- Time to Butcher “Aussie Beef” — Viv Forbes in 1994, on why government interference in the beef industry results in a lower quality product.
- Westralian Secession Movement Pamphlet from 1974— “The PRIMARY OBJECTIVE of the movement is: To generate in ALL West Australians an IRRESISTIBLE WILL for Secession from Canberra.”
- George Formby: “It Serves You Right” — one of the great unacknowledged antiwar songs. Everyone will like Formby.
- Exclusive Oliver Marc Hartwich Interview on Hans-Hermann Hoppe — with the editor-in-chief of Economics.org.au. An invitation to Oliver Marc Hartwich for The Mises Seminar, to be held in Sydney, November 25-26, 2011. Tickets are still available to witness in person what the controversy is all about.
Viv Forbes, Our Sacred Land & Other Essays (first published by Business Queensland and Common Sense in 1994), issue no. 102.About the Author»
The Australian meat industry has more bureaucrats per producer than any other industry. There are stock inspectors, meat inspectors, health inspectors, factory inspectors, “research” bureaucrats, state and federal departments of primary industries, health departments, quarantine inspectors, consumer affairs officials, levy collectors, state and federal meat and livestock authorities and hundreds of rules and regulations. All of this funded by fees on every beast that bellows or bleats. Continue »
by Neville Kennard, veteran preaching and practicing capitalist
As the price of gold (as expressed in US Dollars, and also in Euros and most other currencies, climbs to record highs those who don’t understand that gold is money, gold is currency, wonder about it. They see gold as a safe haven that people like when they lose faith in other currencies, or as a speculative bet to be bet on for a short term gain.
I asked a wealthy American investsor a couple of years ago what he was currently invested in. “Cash,” was his reply, “totally in cash.” I questioned him about gold, as I thought he would be a hard-money type. He replied “I said ‘Cash’ and to me gold is cash, the only real cash.” This wealthy investor knew how to protect himself in times of turmoil. Continue »