Creation of Super-State?
The New Zealand High Commissioner at Ottawa, Mr. David Wilson, told the Canadian Club, at a luncheon, that efforts to achieve permanent world peace must begin by giving every citizen at least the bare necessities of life. He pointed out that there was a tendency to believe that the present world condition stemmed from the war, but actually, he said, half the people of the globe were underfed before the war. He added that New Zealand believed in full use of all the world’s natural resources for the benefit of people who needed them. Mr. Wilson declared that the United Nations had to be a success. He expressed the opinion that this entailed the creation of a super-state, with power at least to control war. .Mr. Mackenzie King, the Canadian Prime Minister, was in the audience. —Ottawa, March 19.
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Greymouth Evening Star, 21 March 1946, Page 10
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142Creation of Super-State? Greymouth Evening Star, 21 March 1946, Page 10
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