Interview with Sir Robert Menzies - Ludovik Kennedy

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  • čas přidán 21. 01. 2013
  • Menzies Research Centre - www.menziesrc.org

Komentáře • 59

  • @hannahchambers4294
    @hannahchambers4294 Před 9 lety +31

    "I will defeat communism with the power of my eyebrows" -Robert Menzies

  • @jorologo
    @jorologo Před 9 lety +11

    So Eloquent was Sir Robert Menzies -

  • @MothyEmms
    @MothyEmms Před 2 lety +7

    What a legend 🔥🇦🇺

  • @davidmorrison2739
    @davidmorrison2739 Před 2 lety +7

    He was always worth listening to no matter the subject, even if you didn't always agree with him. Clyde Cameron, a very leftist Labor man, said the most brilliant sppech he ever heard was by Menzies, and Cameron agreed with hardly a word of it.

  • @patrickdowdle5121
    @patrickdowdle5121 Před 7 lety +23

    What a great statesman Sir Robert was . Turnbull with all his blustering and B.S , will never come close to this great man , no matter how much he tries to snow us

    • @Wapak95
      @Wapak95 Před 3 lety +1

      Would you argue that Menzies is the father of modern Australia?

    • @thonks8729
      @thonks8729 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Wapak95 That's gotta be Arthur Phillip primarily, but Menzies is definitely up there and a top statesman either way

    • @saveyourbacon6164
      @saveyourbacon6164 Před 2 lety +2

      Since you made this comment, the Liberals dumped Malcolm and took on Scott Morrison. Malcolm missed his cue. He should have said, 'Pardon me for thinking this is still the party of Menzies'. What would you say about Scott Morrison? I made a comment on another video that, compared to John McCain, Donald Trump is just something left on the pavement when a dog crouches down. I would say the same about Scott Morrison, when compared to Robert Menzies.

  • @TheMonkeymonkeyking
    @TheMonkeymonkeyking Před 6 lety +27

    L: "Would you say that Australia was still a land of opportunity for those that wish to go there? "
    M: "Well I would of course, tremendous opportunity."
    L: "And people don't need a great deal of capital to start?"
    M: "I think the greatest capital that people need is a willingness to work and take a chance, just as our grandparents did when they came to Australia"

    • @Liam-yr4uf
      @Liam-yr4uf Před rokem +3

      Different times back then. The doors of opportunity are now firmly shut.

  • @princephilip-v5t
    @princephilip-v5t Před 3 lety +10

    What a brilliant man. We have suffered since his departure. Compare the strength of the man compared to those of today. I feel we have failed them. They were a great generation.

    • @martinjenkins6467
      @martinjenkins6467 Před 9 měsíci +1

      They had giants in leadership back
      Then. Now the west is surrounded by
      Idiots like Biden.

  • @barryballsit4944
    @barryballsit4944 Před 8 lety +12

    "And people who migrate don't need a great deal of capital to start?" - no, not in 1955 they didn't. Not when unions were strong and people earnt a decent wage. House prices were three times the average income. Since Howard house prices are nine times the average income. People who migrate need to be millionaires to get a start. John Howard: "I never met anyone who complained to me that their house was increasing in value." Menzies would not have said that but he knew we needed a strong middle class, not a society of debt slaves.

  • @josephlandrut4154
    @josephlandrut4154 Před 9 lety +6

    As a British migrant in 1965. Robert Menses Liberal party had been in power 16 years..

  • @savvasperisanidis
    @savvasperisanidis Před 5 lety +6

    What has happened to our accent ?
    His vocation and oration is Omni brilliant

    • @jamesreynold6711
      @jamesreynold6711 Před 3 lety +5

      Until sometime around the 80s the Australian accent Menzies is using here was specifically taught in private schools to differentiate the poor and the wealthy. Hawke ended this immediately when in office which is one of the reasons why Fraser was the last PM with this accent - although come to think of it I think Turnbull may have it too? Not certain on that.
      Anyway, this accent was known as Received Pronunciation or RP.
      It was a way of commonly associating the powerful from the powerless, upper class and lower/working class, white man and black man, etc. whereby those with RP had a greater chance of securing higher regarded jobs, status, influence and so on while the majority of born Australians with the amalgamated “rough” accent, to quote Menzies directly, were consequently relegated to lower positions in Australian society.
      The RP accent is still very much around and won’t die out but it isn’t instituted as it used to be and in many ways is now looked down upon in Australia for the reasons stated above^

    • @savvasperisanidis
      @savvasperisanidis Před 3 lety +1

      @@jamesreynold6711 thanks mate cheers.

  • @ecowanderer6099
    @ecowanderer6099 Před 5 lety +5

    Wow, Aussies had such a British sounding accent back then

    • @adrianjackson2696
      @adrianjackson2696 Před 5 lety +9

      Not a British accent its an Australian accent. The interviewer has a British accent. Australians don't talk like Paul Hogan you know. Also Sir Robert was born in the late 1890's and was a lawyer by profession and lawyers speaks well too.

    • @howto7755
      @howto7755 Před 4 lety +4

      J Lord although upper class Australian’s don’t sound anything like that now.

    • @blueycarlton
      @blueycarlton Před rokem +2

      Roosevelt's accent was different to the general American accent.

    • @martinjenkins6467
      @martinjenkins6467 Před 9 měsíci

      It varied Sir Robert was from the ruling class. The workers had the Aussie accent. Especially in the
      Country side.

    • @kevinsakwa6665
      @kevinsakwa6665 Před 7 měsíci

      @@adrianjackson2696 like it or not mate it’s a British accent….

  • @Wapak95
    @Wapak95 Před 3 lety +4

    "Sentimental ties are not to be dismissed as not practical." In agreement.

  • @rebecca1431
    @rebecca1431 Před rokem +1

    HE WAS A HERO.

  • @malcolmmenzies4958
    @malcolmmenzies4958 Před 2 lety +2

    God Bless.

  • @greggraime2738
    @greggraime2738 Před 19 dny

    Yes, he was a good prime minister, but also a lucky prime minister being in office during stable economic times. He was also a politician and 1954 was probably the greatest re election stunt ever with the possible exception of the Tampa in 2001.

  • @voicesoftoday7583
    @voicesoftoday7583 Před 4 lety +2

    Regarding the accent, I suspect that Ming was somewhat putting on the UKRP. If you check the following video you can hear that he lapsed into a more Aussie twang when being interviewed in Australia: czcams.com/video/JhvmsV9bnxQ/video.html

  • @RexColt
    @RexColt Před 2 lety +5

    Hes got bushy eyebrows

  • @ewtwetrwerwteet
    @ewtwetrwerwteet Před 9 lety +4

    It's funny how things are so important at the time, but now they're all dead. Everything they do eventually gets undone/redone etc etc, and round we go.

  • @ozwunder69
    @ozwunder69 Před 6 lety +2

    Had churchill poisoned slowly so he could be lord warden of the cinque ports

  • @saveyourbacon6164
    @saveyourbacon6164 Před 2 lety +2

    Comparing Robert Menzies and the government he led, and its policies with Scott Morrison and his government and the Liberal Party of today, which has deserted the centre and embraced right-wing extremism, I have no doubt Menzies would be horrified, and express utter condemnation.

    • @thonks8729
      @thonks8729 Před 2 lety +6

      What on earth are you on about

    • @MothyEmms
      @MothyEmms Před 2 lety +4

      Right wing extremism 🤣🤣🤣???? What rock are you living under??? It is literally the opposite.

    • @saveyourbacon6164
      @saveyourbacon6164 Před 2 lety +2

      @@MothyEmms Robert Menzies said in his 'Forgotten People' address on radio on May 22, 1942, 'The rich can look after themselves'. He identified the suburban family as the heart of the nation, and established that the suburban family should be the basis of government policy.
      During his sixteen years as Prime Minister, real wages rose, there was prosperity shared by everyone, and the national debt, which had reached 120% of GDP because of the war, was steadily paid down.
      Compare that with the Liberal governments since 2013: Wage stagnation, tax cuts overwhelmingly benefitting the rich, and the national debt growing from $257 Billion in 2013 to $853 Billion as at November 2021, and headed for over $1 Trillion soon. Which would you choose?
      After his retirement, the Liberal party drifted away from the character it had under Menzies, and in 1974, he commented privately, 'The idiots now running the Liberal Party will drive me round the bend'. He believed that salvation for the Liberal Party would only come when Malcolm Fraser became leader. But Fraser and his government were a disappointment to Menzies during the remaining two and a half years of his life.
      Inflation in the USA is now at a 40-year high, because of the program of 'Quantitative easing', which is a euphemism for the Federal Reserve buying US Treasury bonds, because no one else wants to. But that creates money, because the Fed simply writes a cheque on the credit of the United States, which the Treasury deposits in a bank, which can then make loans using this credit. This is completely contrary to the Fed's main mission, of controlling the money supply, to make sure it matches the total value of goods and services in the economy. Quantitative easing causes a lot of extra money to flood the economy, causing inflation.
      I was shocked to learn on the ABC news finance report, by Alan Kohler, that the Reserve Bank has been doing the same thing here, and that will be the reason inflation is rising here too.
      If Robert Menzies was alive to see this, he would say, 'The incompetent idiots now running the Liberal Government will drive me round the bend'. How does that make you feel?

    • @user-db1ji3wq7j
      @user-db1ji3wq7j Před 4 měsíci

      Embraced right wing extremism??? 😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @Paisly17
    @Paisly17 Před 3 lety +6

    He wanted to be English not Australian

  • @1957MCL
    @1957MCL Před 8 lety +8

    His bastard spawn of course were Howard and Abbott.

    • @hedylamarr1637
      @hedylamarr1637 Před 4 lety +4

      abbott & howard have actually followed the policies of whitlam.the pair may worship Menzies but policy wise nothing in common.

    • @peterkirgan6850
      @peterkirgan6850 Před 3 lety +1

      How true what's new amongst the liberals??

    • @mattayres5147
      @mattayres5147 Před rokem +1

      @@hedylamarr1637 Correct 120%

    • @ozwunder69
      @ozwunder69 Před rokem +1

      @@hedylamarr1637 menzies kept the ipa in check and didn't became an absolute atlasnetwork baitch

    • @ozwunder69
      @ozwunder69 Před rokem

      @@hedylamarr1637 except the rascism