http://www.google.com/search?q=pauline++nexus+new+dawn+hanson&hq=&hl=en&lr=&
safe=off&btnG=Google+Search
http://www.newdawnmagazine.com.au/
One Nation and Pauline Hanson recent surge is bad news. Cf. the material in
the first couple of hits. Nexus and New Dawn are New Agey conspiracy theory
rags. Richard K. Moore at the world systems network list at csf has
published zillions of pieces in New Dawn. This one by another writer is a
fave of mine for my loony bin file.
http://www.newdawnmagazine.com.au/Articles/Stalin%20The%20Untold%20Story.htm
l
>Who really was Joseph Stalin? Messiah or madman? A controversial
examination of his achievements and rise to international prominence.
Explains why many in the former Soviet Union still revere his memory, while
others constantly demonise his name. Fascinating reading.
Michael Pugliese
P.S. The magazine has a visage of Lenin as an illustration on the website.
-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Burford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sunday, February 18, 2001 11:11 AM
Subject: [PEN-L:8264] Labor and One Nation win in Queensland
>Are there any positive reasons for Labour's success in Queensland (see
>below) or is this like Mitterand's ability to promote the left by using the
>racists to divide the right?
>
>My other question is what future can a country of 19 million Europeans have
>in a world economy in which their most important neighbours are hundred of
>millions of Asians.
>
>Presumably these shifts and shuffles within bourgeois two and a half party
>democratic politics merely reflect a long economic process in which clearly
>national capital has no answer for working people in Australia.
>
>Chris Burford
>
>
>
>BRISBANE, Australia -- Prime Minister John Howard has been dealt another
>election-year body blow by discontented Australian voters.
>
>The weekend state election in Queensland brought a massive victory for the
>Australian Labor Party, which already held power there.
>
>It follows last week's state election in Western Australia, where the ALP
>was swept in to replace Howard's Liberal/National coalition.
>
>The Labor opposition is now being tipped to win the next federal election
>easily.
>
>Discontent is being blamed on a new 10 percent Goods and Services Tax
>(GST), fuel prices and free-market reforms that have hurt people in the
>countryside, known as "the bush."
>
>Howard will be seeking a third consecutive term at the helm of this island
>continent of 19 million people when he calls a national election, expected
>by November.
>
>He will find it hard to resolve the voter dissatisfaction that swept the
>left-of-centre Labor Party back into power in Queensland with a huge
>majority, and which ousted the incumbent conservatives from Western
Australia.
>
>Labor gained an unexpectedly large swing of around 10 percent in
>Queensland. In order to oust Howard from the national capital of Canberra,
>Labor needs a swing of 0.6 to 0.8 percent nationwide.
>
>Apart from a massive protest vote that gave Labor state Premier Peter
>Beattie up to 69 of the 89 seats in the local parliament, Saturday's vote
>in Queensland also involved a return for the anti-Asian immigration One
>Nation party.
>
>Having virtually disappeared since it won one million votes in the last
>federal election in 1998, One Nation seemed set to win at least three seats
>in Queensland, well down on the 11 it won at the previous state poll.
>
>Federal Labor leader Kim Beazley said One Nation played no part in the
>massive swing.
>
>Labor's huge victory will send shockwaves through conservatives and give
>Labor politicians a huge morale boost.
>
>"You're going to see policy panic, you're going to see deal panic, you're
>going to see leadership panic from the Liberal Party," Beazley told
reporters.
>
>Howard insisted on Sunday that Queensland had voted on local issues while
>admitting it would be "foolish" not to heed the message.
>
>Labor governments now control five of Australia's six states, but most
>importantly have a stranglehold on the three big eastern states,
>Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria, which will determine the national
>election. The coalition's next test is in four weeks with a federal
>by-election in the Liberal seat of Ryan, a Brisbane constituency.
>