Mass Immigration:
The following was taken from Nationalist Publications which can be accessed on http://members.ozemail.com.au/~natinfo/
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Nationalist
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[The on-line Nationalist Education Programme]
Section One
Culture
The Australian culture is unique and must continue,
and be given the opportunity to gradually evolve at a natural pace. To
continually introduce outsiders into our society, people who have played no part
in building our community, or who have no relationship with our heritage and
values (and often never will) diminishes not only the cultural heritage of
Australia, but breaks down the bonding of our community.
The Australian character has been formed by a unique set of circumstances. This
ancient land has been inhabited by an ancient people, a convict heritage, and
our pioneer's battles with the land, coping with drought and climatic
uncertainty. The early explorers were heroes in their own time and their names
live on - Stuart, Burke and Wills, Sturt, Eyre, Wylie and Baxter, Giles,
Blaxland, Wentworth, and Lawson, and later Kingsford Smith and Mawson. The stark
evidence of their exploration lives on in place names like Despair, Desolation,
and Hopeless scattered grimly across our landscape.
The early British and varied European settlers did not simply transfer a British
culture to this land, but were determined to shed the shackles of a British
class system, and thus developed a unique Australian society.
The Australian nation has produced a wide range of unique poets, authors,
literary legends, artists, scientists and inventors, cultural icons, rebels,
heroes and heroines, recreational activities, sports, music, entertainers and
characters, colloquialisms, and an identifiable style of language; we have
developed a distinct national character and ethos.
Our national identity and culture arose from among those Australians (especially
the native-born) who saw this country as their home, loved it as their own, and
drew their inspiration from it.
Our unique character further evolved through the people who developed our
agriculturally based economy - the drover, the shearer, the itinerant worker,
and our pioneer women. Australians fought in two World Wars, struggled through
the Depression, and created an open democratic society; a society which,
although imperfect, was free from the tyranny of government, censorship of the
media, and which gave great freedom - and consequent responsibility - to the
individual.
The success of our forebears in laying down the institutional foundation of
Australian life is something we can be proud of, and draw guidance from. The
centrepiece of their ideals was that this should be a nation free of "old world"
social divisions between citizens. Also, no Australian was to be forced to work
under pay and conditions enforcing servility or poverty.
AUSTRALIA FIRST
Our culture is rooted in our history. Australia led
the way with the secret ballot; the 8 hour day; votes for women; invalid, widow,
and old age pensions; strong trade unions; the arbitration system and the basic
wage. Our culture embodies the values of egalitarianism and mateship. It rejects
excessive authority and believes in a "fair go", admiration for the battler, and
a belief in the individual. Nowhere do humans stand smaller than in this wide
red land, nowhere is human insignificance so apparent: it was certainly the land
and isolation that fashioned mateship through shared adversity in the face of
its hardships.
Today, with our population huddled together on our coastal strips, our leaders
try to ignore the nature of our land, but we must not. The agricultural disaster
area which is the
Ord River scheme, the burgeoning
tragedy of riverland salinity, algae infestation along the Murray/Darling
system, the ecological chaos in the Gippsland Lakes, deforestation, and a
hundred other problems, shout aloud our ecological mistakes.
The Aboriginal people treated this land as a being with a spirit. This current
generation of Australians must strengthen our understanding of the land, and
preserve its soul and spirit for all future generations.
Our culture today emphasises a "balanced" life, free of excessive striving and
materialism, and has created an attractive society. As in the USA, Canada, and
New Zealand; Australia has incorporated the best features of British Culture -
the balance of law, freedom, and order; separation of public service and
politics; conflict solving by debate, not by force and insurrection; tolerance;
economic opportunity; fortitude in war without militarism; and provision of
social services. We have our distinctive art, music, theatre, literature, sport,
and film; with achievements in science, medicine, and social welfare; and a
unique quality of life.
Some of our cultural values, such as the apathy of
"she'll be right, mate", are now working to our destruction, as the Government,
media, ethnic lobbies, and business lobbies, motivated by self-interest and
misguided humanitarianism, work unopposed against the best interests of the
Australian nation. The "Australian Cringe" should be a concept of the past. We
do not need to look beyond our shores to solve our problems, be it educational
or economic: let us look to ourselves and our own resources.
Our culture and its values need support. Destroy a culture and you destroy a
people. This is well known to Australians who have seen the near destruction of
Aboriginal culture. We cannot undo history, but we can learn from it.
ONE CULTURE OR MULTICULTURALISM?
Today "our" Government is telling us that this
nation is to have a new culture: institutionalised multiculturalism. Immigrants
are no longer encouraged to join the mainstream of Australian culture. Our
culture, like all others, has weaknesses and failings, but this only means we
should work towards resolving these deficiencies - not destroying or replacing
this tried and tested set of beliefs with a system of multiculturalism which has
so clearly and violently failed wherever in the world it has been tried, such as
in the U.S.S.R., Ireland, Lebanon, Fiji, Uganda, Singapore, Israel, the U.K,
India, Spain, Sri Lanka, Yugoslavia, and the U.S.A.
Multiculturalism always produces a situation where group "rights" will conflict
with individual rights. Multiculturalism is making us into a colony of all
nations, rather than providing us with a sense of community. Why should people
co-operate and accept sacrifices for the larger community good if they do not
feel a part of such a community? Very few Australians support the idea of
deliberate multiculturalism. The survey done by the Office of Multicultural
Affairs in 1988 showed that neither the Australian mainstream, nor migrants,
want this policy, but their wishes have been ignored. In practice,
multiculturalism exacts the greatest adjustments from the least privileged. The
middle-class can choose their neighbourhoods. The poor, who have the least
choice in housing, jobs, schools, and social welfare, must live with the changes
wished upon them. The tensions thus created, and the loss of cultural identity,
are problems which are remote from the experience of the pro-immigration
lobbyists and the Canberra-based politicians.
One hundred years ago our forebears resisted the concept that
Australia was only a new (inferior) version of England. Now the "cultural
cringe" has surfaced again - with the cry "Australia is a part of Asia"; yet
Australia is no more a part of Asia than Africa is a part of Europe -
historically, geographically, and culturally we are unique. Let us not lose our
European identity in the rush for trade and tourism - and let us teach these
facts to all Australians.
The Australian people have slowly grown to understand and love this country -
our home - and we all have a responsibility to preserve it. We
also have the right to maintain our way of life - our culture -
without its government-induced destruction via mass immigration and
institutionalised multiculturalism.
Mass
Immigration: Undermining Australia's Way of Life
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