Guest opinion by Viv Forbes
As Australia’s industrial capacity declines, Australia is becoming green and defenceless.
History holds lessons.
Back in Dec 1941, Japan suddenly attacked the huge US Naval base at Pearl Harbour. Three days later, two “invincible” British warships, “Repulse” and “Prince of Wales” were sunk by Japanese planes off Malaya. Soon Japanese armies were rampaging through Asia towards Australia. By Feb 1942, the British fortress of Singapore surrendered and Japanese bombs were falling on Darwin. By Sept 1942 the Japanese army had slashed their way down the Kokoda Track and could see the lights of Port Moresby. They were looking across Torres Strait to Australia. At that time, most of our trained soldiers were fighting Rommel in North Africa or in Japanese prison camps.
Suddenly Australia was on its own and needed to defend itself with what we had here.
Armies need soldiers, weapons, bullets, vehicles, fuel, food, alcohol (and cigarettes).
Soldiers volunteered and were conscripted. Australian conscripts formed part of the force that met the Japanese on the Kokoda Track.
Enfield Rifles, Bren Guns and Vickers Machine Guns were produced in large numbers at the Small Arms Factory at Lithgow supported by feeder factories in the area. Britain lost so many weapons at Dunkirk that Australian factories were sending guns to them. We could not do that now.
Motor oil was produced in limited quantities from oil shale at Glen Davis, but petrol was in serious short supply, and had been rationed since 1940. With the fall of Singapore, this shortage became severe, and charcoal burners suddenly appeared to keep cars and trucks moving. Kerosene was scarce so carbide lights were widely used. The demand for charcoal was so great that firewood became scarce so it was also rationed.
To conserve supplies for soldiers, rationing was introduced for tea, clothing, butter, sugar, meat and cigarettes. Hotels were only allowed to serve alcohol twice a day for one hour at a time of their choosing.
An immediate critical shortage was copper for cartridge cases and communications – Australia had mines producing lead, zinc, silver, gold and iron, but there was a critical shortage of copper.
Fortuitously, just before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, an exploration drill hole at Mount Isa had struck rich copper ore.
Mount Isa was called on to avert a calamitous shortage of copper in Australia. With government encouragement, Mount Isa Mines made the brave decision to suspend the profitable silver/lead/zinc operations and convert all mining and treatment facilities to extracting copper.
The lead concentrator could be converted to treat copper ore, but the biggest problem was how to smelt the copper concentrates. Luckily the company had skilled engineers and metallurgists in the lead smelter. In a miracle of improvisation, scrap steel and spare parts were purchased and scavenged from old mines and smelters from Cloncurry, Mt Elliott, Mt Cuthbert and Kuridala and cobbled into a workable copper smelter. In 1943 the first Mount Isa blister copper was produced. Production continued after the war when Mount Isa returned to extracting the then more profitable silver/lead/zinc. Later new plant was built enabling both lead and copper metal to be produced from this fabulous mine.
This story of the importance of self-reliance has lessons for today.
The war on carbon energy, the carbon tax, the renewable energy targets, escalating electricity costs and the voices in Parliament calling for Emissions Trading Schemes have all unnerved our big users of carbon fuels and electricity. Smelting and refining have become threatened industries in Australia, and closure of the Mount Isa copper smelter and the Townsville copper refinery has been foreshadowed. Already six major metal smelting/refining operations have closed in Australia this century and more are likely. The closures have affected copper, lead, zinc, steel and aluminium – the sinews of modern industry. And the car industry, with all its skills and tools, is closing.
More and more land and offshore waters are totally closed to exploration and mining. Offshore exploration for oil is very limited, except in the north-west. On land, there is no exploration in green no-go areas and the “lock-the-gate” rent-a-crowd are trying to prevent gas explorers from drilling even on their own exploration tenements. Local production and refining of oil is also declining, and it was estimated recently that by next year, half of Australia’s oil refining capacity will have closed. In the event of a disruption to tanker routes, Australia has just 12 days of diesel supplies before city fuel and food supplies start to dry up. Will we see charcoal burners on cars and trucks once again?
Heavy industry is scorned, and is migrating to Asia. We are losing the resources, skills and machinery needed for our own security, while we fritter away precious resources on green energy, direct action, carbon capture and storage and other pointless anti-carbon chimeras.
Our foolish green energy policies and the suicidal war on carbon fuels are killing real industry leaving us unskilled and defenceless – like a fat toothless walrus basking on a sunny beach.
Wake up Australia.
For those who would like to read more:
Australian Fuel supplies very vulnerable to disruption. Food and Fuel Chaos within days:
“Mines in the Spinifex – the Story of Mount Isa Mines” by Geoffrey Blainey, Angus and Robertson, 1960
“The Challenge of Standing on the Shoulders of Giants” by Collin Myers, Congress of the International Mining History Association, Charters Towers, 2014
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Viv Forbes, 11/11/14
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I do not agree with Vic Forbes.
Australia is now leading the world in rolling back the warmulonian inanity. Australia has voted in a PM who stated before the election “global warming is crap” and after the election that Australia would tolerate no more “socialism masquerading as environmentalism”. The carbon tax introduced by the Mendacious Bovine has been repealed as has the mining tax. Flim Flammery has been sacked from his $180,000 per year climate commissioner job. Further the RET (renewable energy target) has been placed under review, causing a 87% crash in “investment” in Big Wind subsidy farming. So there is a lot of good news.
While the green tape and carbon tax during the Gillardio-Kruddulence era did cause a significant impact on industry, the primary causes of de-industrialisation has been the union movement and wage competition from Asian neighbours.
[Warmulonian? The mods have new mental images of interstellar TV characters complete with worried eyes, warped foreheads and fevered brows. .mod]
Well, I have to disagree with you, to a point. The incumbent gummint is pro-progress and not so pro-AGW, but a semi-supporter (For votes you understand).
By far the biggest fools in Australia, are the Australian people. To allow themselves to be fooled by the likes of Flannery (Who’s first degree level qualification is English lit) and Garnout (Who in the 70’s negotiated with the PNG Govn’t to allow land to be sold for mining, the Ok Tedi gold mines of which he was on the board of directors and profitted handsomely out of it too).
PS. No-one in Australia votes for a PM. Voters in Abbotts electorate vote for him as an MP. It’s the party who elects a leader (Abbott) who usually becomes the PM after an election and forming a Govn’t.
The rise and rise of authoritarian television in the guise of Reality TV in Australia really concerns me. I wanted to research their funding as I suspect a Green money trail that will lead to those of a globalist mindset. However, It is just another one of the detailed and obsessive things I probably won’t find time to complete.
The sheer volume of this type of programming on Free-to-air during primetime in Australia is astonishing to me!
The production company Greenstone (G)* is responsible for a large number of the programs and it turns out, almost all of this type (Their Factual Series.) were funded by Government (NZTV in this case).
Here is a sample of the Brave New World of of Australia television:
Border Patrol (G)
Border Invasion USA
Border Security: International
Border Security USA
Customs
Coastwatch (G)
Coastwatch OZ (G)
City Beat (G)
Beat Squad (G)
Dog Patrol (G)
Dog Squad (G)
Send in the Dogs (British)
The Force Behind the LInes
Highway Patrol (G)
Motorway Patrol (G)
Highway Cops (G)
Highway Patrol – Outrageous Characters (G)
Highway Patrol – Worst Drivers (G)
Nabbed (G)
Cops – Miami Florida
Cops – Adults Only: Coast to Coast
Cops – Special Edition
There are more and many are less overtly authoritarian but of high propaganda value:
Cause of Death: Unknown (G)
Courtroom (G)
CIU – Crash Investigation Unit (G)
Private Investigators (G)
Serious Crash Unit – SCU (G)
Special Investigators (G) etc…
*December 2013 Greenstone was purchased by Australian company Cordell Jigsaw Zapruder known as CJZ.
cheers,
Scott
Another reason why I have PVR. FtA TV is a disgrace in Aus, and I refuse to pay for Foxtel (Ads). FtA and Foxtel TV will soon be a thing of the past (Where have we heard thta before?) when NetFlix comes to Aus.
Spot on Scott.
Someone also gave an opinion that the great glut of CSI shows on US television is meant to fool Amercans into thinking they actually have a functioning legal system. While the truth is 95% of incarcerations in the USA result from plea bargains (ie locked up with minimal access to legal advice- visiting hours only – and threatened with a raft of dire charges and sentences, unless you plead guilty to this one so you will only get a few years.)
The CSI shows are pure propaganda IMHO, the real history is very telling! To be a coroner was and still is one of the most corrupt and corruptible institutions ever invented! But do you ever hear anybody speak of it?
I just glanced at the TV guide tonight and noticed a couple of new reality shows:
Gold Coast Cops
Territory Cops
Lockdown
And here is a list of drama series that aired weekly (Some twice weekly) in Australia when I compiled it. Note their underlying commonalities:
Elementary (American crime drama)
Dexter (American crime drama)
The Shield (American Crime drama)
Person of Interest (American crime drama)
Longmire (American crime drama)
The Killing (American crime drama)
CSI (American police procedural crime drama)
CSI: Miami (American police procedural crime drama)
Major Crimes (American police procedural drama)
The Mentalist (American police procedural drama)
The Closer (American police procedural drama)
NCIS (American police procedural drama)
NCIS: Los Angeles (American military/police procedural drama)
Cold Case (American police procedural drama)
Criminal Minds (American police procedural drama)
Hannibal (American Thriller/Police procedural drama)
Blue Bloods (American police procedural drama)
Waking The Dead (British police procedural crime drama )
The Bill (British police procedural series)
Blue Murder (Crime drama)
Lewis (Detective drama)
Fairly Legal (Legal drama/Comedy-drama)
Danger Man (Espionage)
The Americans (Period drama about KGB spies)
Breaking Bad (Crime thriller)
Persons Unknown (Detention(?)/Thriller)
New Tricks (British Comedy/Drama/Crime)
cheers,
Scott
I could have summed up that list with the word “crap”! so much easier to type…
he Collins Class submarine was a good design. The build quality, not so good; as the Coles Report attested.
When you heat the environazis talk about “green”, take your wallet out of your pocket and look at the contents. That is the “green” the environazis are referring to.
Australia any time soon will get heavy rainfall, it will be more green.
Lewis P Buckingham
December 6, 2014 at 12:43 pm
“We desperately need submarines to protect us and our sea lanes.”
Any maybe a port facility not owned by China.
[snip – we don’t publish long comments in all caps because it LOOKS LIKE YOU ARE SHOUTING! resubmit in lower case please -mod]
I actually disagree to some extent. Whilst the Greens command far too much clout for a minor party (getting typically 10-12% of the primary vote) and overachieves in the media due to its sensationalism, it was the former Government (yes, who got into bed with the Greens) that started this by making the business investment environment in Australia completely ‘fluid’, after near on 25 years of relative stability, under proactive reforms, consultative processes and sound economic policies (under both Labor and Liberal regimes).
The current Government is trying to rectify this, but is now stuck like a rabbit in the headlights due to negativity in the press and in the polls. The resources super profit tax, the ETS/CT, umming and ahhing about company tax rates, the non-response to the Henry Review, its incestuous links with the trade union movement and the resultant outlandish wages and conditions in the resources industry, combined with a higher than required official cash rate due to the obsessive spending (and borrowing under the Rudd/Gillard regime), resulted in the Aussie dollar being far too high, and killing the export market. Add to this the ALP’s mantra of ‘big government is good government, and the resulting bureaucratic bottlenecks, it is now wonder big business is pulling out of Australia.
Green ideologies are just one factor.