OUR FREEDOM
(To the Editor.) Sir _i n a leader on Saturday headed "The" Future of Freedom" "The Post asks this question: "Why all this; fass about freedom, which we in thus country have taken, almost without thought, to be part and parcel of our inheritance so firmly rooted in our institutions that the possibility of its disappearance has never entered the average mind?" "The Post" has only to ask the average business man, the merchant, the manufacturer, the shopkeeper, the working tradesman, the employer, if he has freedom to pursue his avocation in New Zealand. For nearly forty years our Politicians h^ been making laws to curtail freedom in all walks of life, and not one has suffered more than the working man For instance, trade unionism £»».™ ftroyed the freedom of the worker^and the pride he once had m the^excei lence of his craftsmanship.-I am. etc, SILAS X.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXI, Issue 4, 6 January 1936, Page 6
Word Count
149OUR FREEDOM Evening Post, Volume CXXI, Issue 4, 6 January 1936, Page 6
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