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Freedom

The Wisdom of Crowds

12/02/2022 by Australian Family Party

tree-and-axeThe story is told of a forest that was continually shrinking – but the trees kept voting for the axe. The axe, you see, was very clever; it was able to convince the trees that because its handle was made of wood, it was one of them.

In a recent major analysis of voting trends, the Australian newspaper reported, “Support for minor parties and independents has reached its highest level in four years.”

The corollary of that of course is ‘support for major parties is at its lowest level in four years!’

Australia has economic and social problems that it wants to solve – employment uncertainty, high mortgages (which force both parents out to work), high cost of educating and raising children, high power prices, high water prices, social ills caused by the rupturing of family relationships, addiction to alcohol, gambling, drugs and pornography, and suicide. Our politicians however, do not appear to be able to solve these. Watching Question Time should give us some clue as to why not.

As William F. Buckley once said, “We’d be better governed by the first 100 people in the phone book than by the stereotype politicians we are asked to vote for today.”

Hence the rise of minor parties and independents.

In his excellent book, ‘The Wisdom of Crowds’, author James Surowiecki describes how large groups of ordinary people are collectively smarter than so-called experts when it comes to problem-solving, decision-making, innovating, and predicting. The reason why, he explains, is that individual ‘experts’ are inherently biased. They are part of a club, whereas the knowledge and common-sense of the ‘crowd’ eliminates the bias and produces a clearer and more coherent result.

Take one example. The Australia Council gives taxpayer-funded grants to the arts. Dr Bella d’Abrera, Director of the Foundations of Western Civilisation Program at the Institute of Public Affairs, has brought to our attention a couple of these grants. One was an $80,000 grant to a cabaret singer whose performance involved writing abuse about Prime Minister Scott Morrison on her naked bottom. The other $80,000 grant was to a ‘poet’ who argues that ‘bowel movements are perhaps innately connected to the art of creative writing’. If this is what passes for art, then we’re in trouble. The real problem however, is that our hard-earned money is being used to pay for it. As John Roskam from the Institute says, “Don’t force me to pay for this sort of thing when there’s real suffering and real pain being experienced by business owners who are losing their businesses, their marriages, and their families because they have been shut down. There are a million better ways for the government to spend $160,000 – like for example mental health services for children who have been locked up for two years. That’s how I feel and that’s how a lot of Australians feel”.

Couldn’t have said it better myself.

Which is where the Australian Family Party’s authentic, local candidates come to the fore. Our candidates understand their local communities – their crowd. They are part of the wisdom of their crowds. Which makes them far better representatives than the major-party nominees who go along with all that Australia Council nonsense as they work their way up the party ladder.

At this forthcoming State election, our candidates need to replace these major-party apparatchiks. But they need your support – by word-of-mouth, by volunteering on election day to give out their how-vote-cards and of course, financial support to pay for the how-to-vote cards. If you would like to help them, please make a donation here.

We have a great team of candidates, let’s get behind them. Otherwise, there’ll be nothing left of the forest we call Australia.

Filed Under: Australian Character, Australian Politics, Election '22, Family Policy, Family Resilience, Freedom, South Australia

Dances With Wolves

05/02/2022 by Australian Family Party

wolvesSome time ago a friend of mine wandered into a tattoo shop in Sydney.  As you’d expect, on the walls were all manner of tattoos – animals, cars, people and of course a whole range of  words and slogans. One slogan in particular caught his eye.  It said, “BORN TO LOSE.”

My friend asked the tattooist, “Does anyone ever ask for that tattoo there, ‘BORN TO LOSE’?”  “Yes, sometimes,” said the tattooist.

“Why on earth would anyone want ‘BORN TO LOSE’ tattooed on their body?”  my friend asked.

The tattooist replied, “I only tattoo on their body what’s already tattooed on their mind.”

The Roman Stoic philosopher Lucius Seneca warned his critics, “Throw me to the wolves, and I will return leading the pack”.

Such contrasting outlooks on life.

Let’s ask ourselves this question, ‘what are we tattooing on impressionable young minds?’

Stoicism? Or surrender? Resilience? Or resignation?

Author Os Guiness once said, “It’s not the wolves at the door that’s the problem, it’s the termites in the floor.”  It’s not the external threats on our borders, it’s the rot within.

My first job after leaving school was with the South Australian State Government. I was there about six years, and I must confess the public sector didn’t suit me all that well.  I remember a guy there called Nigel who was very unhappy in his job and would complain almost daily.  It used to drive me nuts. So, one day I plucked up the courage and said to him, “Nigel, you’re obviously not happy working here, why don’t you leave and do something else?”  He replied, “What’s the point? I’m going to be retired in 17 years.”

On a remote dirt road in the northwest territories of Canada there’s a large sign which says, “Be careful which rut you choose – you’ll be in it for the next 50 miles”.  We often hear people say that their lives are in a rut. Like the old farmer out in the paddock holding a piece of rope and scratching his head, not sure whether he’s lost a cow or found a rope.  Or the cat that sat on the hot stove. If a cat sits on a hot stove, what can you be sure of? – He’ll never sit on a hot stove again. But then he’ll never sit on a cold one either. He’s ‘overlearned’ from his experience. Nigel was all those things.

As we know, it’s not what you’re good at in school that matters but what you’re good at in life.

Let’s teach our young people to be ‘better at life’. To let them know that through trials and difficulties we discover the treasure.

And where best to teach this? In the home, in the family.

Filed Under: Australian Character, Australian Politics, Election '22, Family Policy, Family Resilience, Freedom

Two People, Two Stories, One Message

22/01/2022 by Australian Family Party

candleStory Number One

Dr Williams had devoted his life to helping the poor and the underprivileged. He lived above an Op-Shop in a run-down part of town and had placed a sign in front of the shop which read:

“Dr Williams Is Upstairs”

When Dr Williams died, he had no relatives and left no money for his funeral as he had never asked for payment from any of the patients he had treated.

So a few of his patients and a small group of friends got together and scraped up enough money for a funeral for the good doctor.

They didn’t however have enough money to buy a headstone.

This was a concern as they feared his grave would remain unmarked – until one of them came up with a bright idea. They took the sign from in front of the Op-Shop and nailed it to a post above his grave. It made for a lovely epitaph:

dr-williams

Story Number Two

Not long before she died, a journalist conducted an interview with Mother Teresa.

“Mother Teresa”, the journalist asked, “I understand you spend a lot of time praying to God.”

“Yes, I do”, replied the famous nun.

“So, what do you say to God when you pray?” asked the journo.

“I don’t say anything”, replied Mother Teresa, “I just listen”.

“Oh, I see”, said the journalist, “so what does God say to you?”

“He doesn’t say anything”, replied Mother Teresa, “He just listens”.

A little light dispels a great darkness.

Filed Under: Election '22, Family Policy, Freedom, Launch, Prayer

The Three Russians

15/01/2022 by Australian Family Party

three-russiansIt’s time to bring the famous Russian brothers to Australia. We desperately need to apply them to legislation, to politicians and to Australia’s citizens. The three Russians are Morov, Lessov and Ridov – what should we have ‘more of’, what should we have ‘less of’ and what should we get ‘rid of’!

Let’s start with some personal character traits applicable both to politicians and citizens alike:

Morov: Respect, courtesy, courage. Honesty, humility, tolerance. Generosity, discernment, common sense. Marriage, children, adoption and income-splitting for stay-at-home parents. More pro-family policy. More recognition of Australia’s Judeo-Christian heritage. More patriotism and support for our armed forces. More self-reliance and personal responsibility. More freedom of speech, freedom of thought, freedom of religion. More doctor-training, palliative care, affordable housing, support for grandparents. More roads, ports, reservoirs, independent schools. More property rights, small businesses, and funding the ‘user’ of services such as aged care, child care, disability care, energy, housing, superannuation, pharmaceuticals, education and public transport – instead of the ‘provider’ of those services.

Lessov: Gambling ads, alcohol consumption, poker machines, tax. Divorce, suicide, loneliness, fatherless households, crime, prostitution. Less hubris. Less abrogating responsibility to un-elected bureaucrats and the duplication of Federal and State functions – health and education in particular. Less rules that apply to some but not to others. Less government spending and fewer international treaties. And less factional politics, social media and government surveillance.

Ridov: Fearmongering and the weaponization of issues such as climate and covid. Price-gouging and profiteering from climate and covid. Wastefulness, hypocrisy, double standards. Barriers to home ownership and the distortion of Australia’s history. Pornography, abortion and euthanasia. And let’s be rid of vaccine mandates, vaccine passports, social distancing, masks, perspex screens, lockdowns, dobbing in your neighbours, discrimination based on medical status, QR codes and the testing and quarantining of healthy people.

Of all the above however, the worst is fearmongering. What politicians, health officials and the mainstream media have done to this country over the past two years is unforgivable.

Australians were a united, fun-loving, irreverent, tough-minded, down-to-earth people. Now look at us.

In his book ‘How Fear Works’, Frank Furedi writes: “The most effective way to counter the perspective of fear is with values that offer people the meaning and hope they need to effectively engage with uncertainty. The problem is not fear as such but society’s difficulty in cultivating values that can guide it to manage uncertainty and the threats it faces.”

UK Bishop N.T. (Tom) Wright commented in similar terms: “Do you know what the most frequent command in the Bible is? What instruction is given, again and again, by God, by angels, by Jesus, by prophets and by the apostles? Is it ‘be good’? ‘Is it be holy’? Is it ‘don’t sin’? No, the most frequent command in the Bible is, ‘Don’t be afraid’.”

We want our lives back. We want politicians and bureaucrats to stop watching us and to get off our backs and out of our pockets.

Perhaps 16th Century Swedish Statesman Axel Oxenstierna put it best when he said, “Behold my son, with how little wisdom the world is governed.”

Filed Under: Australian Character, Australian Politics, Covid, Election '22, Family Policy, Freedom

‘Beware of Beginnings …’

27/11/2021 by Australian Family Party

pharoah-moses-beginningsIn his brilliant new book, ‘The Magna Carta of Humanity’, Os Guinness writes, “The great paradox of freedom is that the greatest enemy of freedom is freedom itself. Freedom cannot keep itself alive. It requires responsibility, which can be burdensome. People become complacent, self-satisfied, self-congratulatory. It is the beginning of the end.”

Freedom is a two-edged sword. People need to be free – “… life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness …” and all that jazz – but as Winston Churchill said, “Freedom also gives the enemies of democracy the freedom to undermine it”.

The Late Rabbi Sacks wrote:

“Those who are naïve about human nature find themselves disappointed again and again.

“Revolutions, protests and civil wars still take place because people think that removing a tyrant or having a democratic election will end corruption, create freedom and lead to justice and the rule of law – and still people are surprised and disappointed when it does not happen. All that happens is a change of faces in the corridors of power.”

After the French Revolution, Napoleon was more dictatorial than Louis XVI. After the Russian Revolution, Stalin was far more brutal than the Czar, and after the Cultural Revolution, Chairman Mao was more autocratic and murderous than any of the Emperors of the Chinese dynasties.

Each of these tyrants – Napoleon, Stalin and Mao – as well as fomenting anti-sovereign hatred – held a deep hostility towards God:

“We will never be free until we strangle the last king with the guts of the last priest.” – Diderot.

What the people who supported these tyrants naïvely overlooked was the inability of human beings to prevent the abuse of power and position once it has been attained.

Even democratically governments, acting ‘on behalf of the majority’, do not have the right to do whatever they want to a minority or to an individual. The ‘majority rules’ principle cannot be used to create a society of 1st and 2nd class citizens. Society cannot function like that.

Take the case of the vaccinated vs the unvaccinated. Even though they might be a majority, the vaccinated need to understand that the unvaccinated will not allow themselves to be bullied or oppressed. It is a mistake made by majorities and dictators since the days of Pharoah and Moses. If you oppress minorities beyond a certain point – and we are getting very close to that point – they will retaliate. And history shows that even though they may be outnumbered, the minority usually wins.

If they haven’t studied history themselves, one would hope our parliamentarians have employed enough graduates from places like the ‘Institute for Public Policy and Governance’ to advise them of these things.

But the real threat to our country is not the virus or the vaccinated or the unvaccinated, it is the authoritarian takeover of every aspect of our lives by those in power. We are witnessing the beginning of a new authoritarian bureaucracy. And we know where that leads – a surveillance state.

   “Know everything in order to control everyone.” – Adam Weishaupt (1786)

If the vaccine is all it is cracked up to be, those who are vaccinated have nothing to fear from those who are not vaccinated. Excluding the unvaccinated from every aspect of life from air travel to employment to sporting events, will not end well.

For a start, thousands of people have valid medical reasons why they can’t have the vaccine. Many of them have medical certificates signed by their doctors and yet are still being excluded.

The Australian Constitution (Part 5, Section 51 Clause 23A) expressly forbids any form of ‘civil conscription’ with respect to “the provision of … pharmaceutical and medical services”. In other words, no compulsory vaccinations!

Constitutions are written expressly to contain the limits of government power in order to protect the rights of minorities and individuals.

We need to be very careful over these next few months.

As my late father used to say, “Beware of beginnings …”

Filed Under: Family Policy, Freedom

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