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At Least Beaver Cleaver Wasn't Offered Drugs At School and Came
Home to a Mother and Father Who Were Married to Each Other, Mr Rudd

Mr Rudd's snide reference the the 1950s American TV show Leave it to Beaver  in his speech at the ALP National Conference reveals more of his sinister  vision for Australia  than he realises.

At least "Beaver" Cleaver, the young schoolboy in the corny  1950s American situation comedy he referred  to  wasn't offered drugs at school and came home to a mother and  father who were married to each other.

And the only "ice" in the fridge was the kind you put in lemonade.

That would all be anathema to the policy makers of a future  ALP Government apparently.

A Rudd regine  wouldn't be a throwback to the  "consensus" years of Hawke, it would be a return to the  sinister social engineering of the likes of Al Grassby and Lionel Murphy who gave us, among other disasters, multiculturalism and the Family Law Act.

Amidst the media circus surrounding the remarks of  "Farmer Bill" Heffernan, One Nation has some tough questions for Rudd's Brave New World new of New Labor, questions, as usual, no-one else has thought to ask:

Would a federal Labor Government continue the tough new citizenship rules proposed by the Howard Government?

Would they allow entry to Australia to people carrying AIDS or TB?

Would they try to  bring in on a federal level the racial and religious anti-vilification laws that have destroyed  free speech in Victoria?

Would they resurrect ATSIC?

Would they say "sorry" to the aborigines and open the floodgates for endless litigation for compensation.

Would they change our flag and make another attempt to bring in a republic?

Would they continue the zero tolerance of drugs that John Howard at least pays lip-service to  or will they follow  mis-named "harm minimisation?"

Is the way they have steamrolled their branches over candidate selection an indication of the way they they would run the country - by  showing a total contempt  for grass roots opinion?

The promotion of the 1970s feminist radical Julia Gillard to the position of Deputy Leader indicates the prevailing mindset among the ALP is "we failed in 1973, this time we'll be smarter and do it right and they won't stop us".

Statement issued May 7th, 2007 on behalf of One Nation (NSW Division)
By Bob Vinnicombe Publicity Officer
For more information ring Bob Vinnicombe 0407949963 / (02) 96454910

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