“We shot them under Article 301.”

An Armenian/Turkish journalist and ‘person of interest’ to Turkish authorities, Hrant Dink, had his funeral a few days ago, after having been murdered by a Young Turk. More than 50,000 people filled the streets of Istanbul in mourning (Turks and Armenians mourn journalist in rare show of unity, Sebnem Arsu and Susanne Fowler, International Herald Tribune, January 23, 2007):

…Dink’s weeping daughter, Sera, carried a picture of her father as onlookers tossed flowers and applauded in tribute. At one point, the entourage passed a billboard several stories tall advertising blue jeans with the headline “Make History”.

Many mourners held red carnations distributed by the local mayor’s office or waved black and white placards reading, “We are all Hrant Dink” in Turkish on one side and in Armenian on the other.

Still other signs read “Murder 301”, a reference to the Turkish law under which scores of writers and intellectuals, including Dink and the Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, have been prosecuted in lawsuits filed by [Turkish] nationalists.

Many of Dink’s friends and colleagues hold the government responsible to a degree for Dink’s death because it allowed nationalist groups to sue him, forcing him to stand trial where he was convicted on the charge of insulting Turkishness, and earning notoriety among [Turkish] nationalists…

Dink is not known to have collaborated with Turkish police in their efforts to apprehend anti-Summit protesters, but investigations are continuing. Other investigations have revealed that, late last year, four Turks were prosecuted under ‘Murder 301’ laws for publishing a Turkish translation of the book Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky. Publisher Fatih Tas said that “he had some 26 cases opened against him. A previous case for publishing another book by Chomsky in Turkish was dropped after the author flew to Turkey to attend the trial.” As with the prior trial in 2002, the publishers were acquitted.

Well, the title is actually borrowed from a book by Walter Lippmann, written back around 1921, in which he described what he called “the manufacture of consent” as “a revolution” in “the practice of democracy”. What it amounts to is a technique of control. And he said this was useful and necessary because “the common interests” — the general concerns of all people — “elude” the public. The public just isn’t up to dealing with them. And they have to be the domain of what he called a “specialized class”…

But when the State loses the bludgeon, when you can’t control people by force and when the voice of the people can be heard, you have this problem. It may make people so curious and so arrogant that they don’t have the humility to submit to a civil rule [Clement Walker, 1661] and therefore you have to control what people think.

And the standard way to do this is to resort to what in more honest days used to be called propaganda. Manufacture of consent. Creation of necessary illusions. Various ways of either marginalizing the general public or reducing them to apathy in some fashion…

Ross Reynolds : You write in Manufacturing Consent that it’s the primary function of the mass media in the United States to mobilize public support for the special interests that dominate the government and the private sector. What are those interests?

Chomsky : Well, if you want to understand the way any society works, ours or any other, the first place to look is who is in a position to make the decisions that determine the way the society functions…

Societies differ, but in ours, the major decisions over what happens in the society — decisions over investment and production and distribution and so on — are in the hands of a relatively concentrated network of major corporations and conglomerates and investment firms. They are also the ones who staff the major executive positions in the government. They’re the ones who own the media and they’re the ones who have to be in a position to make the decisions. They have an overwhelmingly dominant role in the way life happens. You know, what’s done in the society. Within the economic system, by law and in principle, they dominate. The control over resources and the need to satisfy their interests imposes very sharp constraints on the political system and on the ideological system…

David Barsamian : When we talk about manufacturing of consent, whose consent is being manufactured?

Chomsky : To start with, there are two different groups, we can get into more detail, but at the first level of approximation, there’s two targets for propaganda. One is what’s sometimes called the political class. There’s maybe twenty percent of the population which is relatively educated, more or less articulate, plays some kind of role in decision-making. They’re supposed to sort of participate in social life — either as managers, or cultural managers like teachers and writers and so on. They’re supposed to vote, they’re supposed to play some role in the way economic and political and cultural life goes on. Now their consent is crucial. So that’s one group that has to be deeply indoctrinated. Then there’s maybe eighty percent of the population whose main function is to follow orders and not think, and not to pay attention to anything — and they’re the ones who usually pay the costs.

In other news, Perth-based uranium mining company Paladin “plans to increase its production profile to 7.5 million pounds per annum by late 2008 after it brings its second project, Kayelekera, in Malawi, online. Paladin also holds a swag of assets in Australia. In 2003, Paladin shares were trading at about one cent.” Paladin also plans to keep pesky journalists away from Kayekelara.

With the full co-operation of local police, naturally.

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Vegan punk A Matter of Record

‘Cos it’s in The New York Times:

Strict Vegan Ethics, Frosted With Hedonism
Julia Moskin
January 24, 2007

ISA CHANDRA MOSKOWITZ, a vegan chef, does not particularly like to talk about tofu. Ditto seitan, tempeh and nutritional yeast.

“I think vegan cooks need to learn to cook vegetables first,” she said last week during a cupcake-baking marathon. “Then maybe they can be allowed to move on to meat substitutes.”

Ms. Moskowitz, 34, was born in Coney Island Hospital, lives in Brooklyn, and is a typically impatient and opinionated New Yorker. She can’t stand how slowly most cooks peel garlic, makes relentless fun of Rachael Ray and rolls her eyes at the mention of California hippies.

But as a vegan and a follower of punk music since age 14, she is also part of a culinary movement that helped turn the chaotic energy of punk culture of the 1970s and 1980s into a progressive political force.

“Punk taught me to question everything,” Ms. Moskowitz said. “Of course, in my case that means questioning how to make a Hostess cupcake without eggs, butter or cream.”

At 16, Ms. Moskowitz dropped out of the High School of Music and Art in New York to follow bands, live in squats in the East Village and cook for social justice.

“I learned knife skills by cooking for Food not Bombs,” she said, referring to the activist group that protests corporate and government food policy. “But I also learned to love Julia Child and Martha Stewart. Vegan food can and must be pretty,” she said, pounding a fist on the butcher-block counter.

Ms. Moskowitz’s kitchen, like punk music itself, has a strong do-it-yourself aesthetic. Her husband, a carpenter, builds more shelves when the ingredients threaten to take over, the oven needs frequent coaxing to get up to temperature, and if Fizzle the cat wants to sit on top of the refrigerator, the cupcakes must move over and make room…

Right on.

Posted in Anarchism, Cats, Media, Music | Leave a comment

REVEALED! Foreign provocateurs have long history of causing trouble

Paris’ dangerous classes and their “hobbies” now open for further bourgeois inspection and titillation:

Paris’ ‘dangerous classes’ and their hobbies
Paris: The Secret History, Andrew Hussey, Bloomsbury, 2007
Philadelphia Inquirer
(Reviewed by Liz Lopatto)
January 21, 2007

The French call them the classes dangereuses and, according to Andrew Hussey’s Paris: The Secret History, their hobbies include art, murder, philosophy, starving, literature, whoring, drinking, rioting, and revolution.

It is hard to go wrong with such subjects, and Paris is a tremendously entertaining read, despite the clunky subtitle. Not much in Paris is actually secret – rather, it is the history of the historically underrepresented “dangerous classes,” the poor, mostly. Hussey spends little time with the Parisian government (unless someone is aiming to overthrow it) and upper classes, so it is best to think of Paris as a supplement to an “official” history rather than the final word. The book is clearly a labor of love, and its light tone makes it a quick read.

Certain hobbies of the French that seem inexplicable to Americans (student riots, nearly legal whoring, dying in ill-advised wars, drinking at all hours) actually have long, proud histories. [Amazing: ignorant Americans.] Even if the reader suspects that getting drunk and starting a riot is not the best use of one’s leisure time, finding out that such riots have a history of nearly a millennium (the first was in 1229) makes the recent student strikes more understandable. As Hussey notes in his introduction, subtitled ‘Autopsy of an Old Whore’, “it is no accident that the word ‘Parisian’ has long been synonymous with the word ‘agitator’.” Indeed…

Hussey has also authored a biography of Guy Debord. According to Ken Knabb, “Andrew Hussey’s The Game of War: The Life and Death of Guy Debord (Jonathan Cape, 2001) is riddled with factual errors. The author’s crude interpretations of Debord’s supposed personal motives are derived primarily from hostile sources and reflect a very superficial understanding of Debord’s project and perspectives.” This doesn’t exactly inspire confidence.

See also : Review by Alan Riding, International Herald Tribune, December 26, 2006; World capital of revolution, Review by Carole Angier, Daily Telegraph, August 13, 2006; Review by Tim Martin, The Independent, July 16, 2006; City of Light’s Dark Side, Review by Donald Morrison, Time, July 9, 2006; Ian Pindar, The hidden city, “Ian Pindar enjoys Andrew Hussey’s tour of the erogenous zones of Paris”, The Guardian, July 8, 2006; Blood red – always ? la mode, Review by Peter Ackroyd, The Times, [?]; The Bonnot Gang, Richard Parry, Rebel Press, London, 1987.

In other news, a fatuous review of several new books on ‘punk’ displays the incomprehension typical of (other) cultural mediocrities: Punk wasn’t supposed to be for posterity, “Thirty years after God Save the Queen, the rock genre’s influence has outlasted its own predictions. But why, asks Robert Sandall, do we think it all began in Britain?”, The Australian, January 23, 2007.

‘We’ don’t, Chucky. In September 1976, The Saints independently recorded and distributed copies of their debut single “(I’m) Stranded”; the first ‘punk rock’ act to do so. And they came from Brisbane, not Birmingham, the single being recorded at Windows Studios and released on the band’s own Fatal Records. (Oh c’mon!)

Further, says Sandall, punk had a:

…self-proclaimed leader, Malcolm McLaren, a former art student who ran a fetishistic clothes shop on the King’s Road with his girlfriend, designer Vivienne Westwood. Having recruited a practically tone-deaf Johnny “Rotten” Lydon to sing with the Sex Pistols, “because this was the best selling point”, McLaren understood punk for what it was: an innovative approach to marketing. “If people bought the records for the music, this thing would have died a death long ago,” he once said.

And if his vaunted situationist rhetoric, culled from a French anarchist sect, flew way over the heads of most of the audience, there were lots of other cultural elements in the punk package that had a strong local appeal, and in some cases still do…

Fuck some people are stupid.

(Sandall’s scribblings were originally published as Seeing the Future, in The Times, January 14, 2007.)

Posted in Anarchism, History, Music, Poetry, Sex & Sexuality, State / Politics | 1 Comment

G20: Two more arrests

The Age reports that two of their Most Wanted have today joined with two other individuals arrested last week at Melbourne Magistrates Court, all four being bailed to re-appear on May 11; the date which most of those so far charged appear to have been allocated to have their day in court. Please note that the left should offer no comfort to these crazies, and we should do whatever we can to isolate them. They are wreckers. If they grow in Australia it will simply make it harder to build future protests and movements. The Age, Herald Sun, Crimestoppers, Operation Salver and the Victoria Police in general are therefore to be congratulated on bringing the anarchist crazies involved in the ultra-violence (and in no serious sense part of the demo) to justice. However, it should be noted that at least 40 New Zealand anarchists remain at large, as well as a considerable number of anarchists from Europe — England, Germany and Sweden in particular — and interstate. For the sake of building a revolutionary organisation that can participate in mass struggles, draw lessons from past victories and defeats and convince the working class of the way forward to socialism, further arrests of these apolitical hooligans is therefore absolutely crucial: we need to take a clear and unambiguous stand against these provocateurs.

Workers and bosses have fundamentally counterposed interests; we must take sides.

Two charged over G20 protests
Julia Medew
The Age
January 23, 2007

Three men and a woman involved in violent protests at the G20 meeting in Melbourne last November have appeared in court charged with affray and rioting.

The fresh charges come just days after police released 28 pictures of “people of interest” in their hunt to identify those suspected of attacking police and damaging property.

Police sifted through 10,000 still pictures and 3,500 hours of footage, including some from media organisations and the public, to compile the list.

Today two of the people pictured on the list, John Finlayson and David Nguyen, appeared at Melbourne Magistrates Court charged with offences over their involvement in the protests.

Sergeant Brent Scurry from the Salver taskforce said Finlayson, 36, of West Brunswick [previously reported as being 25], who is facing six charges including reckless conduct for throwing bins and bottles at police and intentionally damaging a police brawler van, turned himself into police after his picture was published last Friday.

“He walked into the Brunswick police station last week and said ‘I’m your guy’,” Sergeant Scurry said today.

David Nguyen, 22, of Coburg, whose picture was also released by police last week, appeared at the same court today charged with five offences including affray and reckless conduct for throwing a bottle [which must have been absolutely massive by the sounds of it] at approximately 12 members of Victoria Police.

Two other co-accused, Sina Brown-Davis, 39, of Caulfield North, and Eric Palsis, 37, of Carlton, also appeared at Melbourne Magistrates Court today charged over the protest.

Palsis faces seven charges including reckless conduct for throwing a metal pole at police and escaping from police custody.

Brown Davis is charged with four offences including possessing a prohibited weapon, namely a tonfa — a side-handled baton used in martial arts — and intentionally damaging a police brawler van.

Magistrate Duncan Reynolds extended bail for all four to appear in court again on May 11.

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G20: Arrest #28? // Josh Wolf

Apparently, this is arrest #28: buggered if I know how police have come up with that figure but. In any case, congratulations to the relevant employees at The Age and the Herald Sun on this, another small victory in the life-or-death struggle against the forces that daily conspire to destroy our Marvellous city and rend small babies limb from limb.

Or something.

On the subject of media collaboration with state law enforcement, you can read ‘A day in the life’ of a real journalist named Josh Wolf — imprisoned for refusing to provide police with his footage of an anti-G8 protest in San Francisco in July, 2005 — below. In 2006, The Society of Professional Journalists awarded Josh a Journalist of the Year award “for upholding the principles of a free and independent press.” Note that, as of January 19, 2007, the US state has awarded Josh with a lengthy prison sentence for the same crime, having already been in jail for over 150 days for Grand Jury contempt. In March, Josh will become the longest-serving journalist to be incarcerated in US history. Extensive Australian media reportage of Josh’s case may be found here.

Meanwhile:

Another man charged over G20 violence
[AAP]
The Age
January 22, 2007

Police have charged another man over Melbourne’s G20 riots, taking the number charged to 28.

The 25-year-old man from West Brunswick, in the city’s inner-north, was interviewed and charged on Monday, according to a police statement.

He will appear in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on Tuesday to answer charges of riot, affray, conduct endangering a person and criminal damage.

Victoria Police’s Operation Salver has been working to find those involved in the violent street protests centred on the G20 summit, which was staged in Melbourne in November.

The summit was a meeting of finance ministers and reserve bank governors from across the globe.

Josh Wolf: Journalist With Integrity

Sarah Phelan of the San Francisco Bay Guardian writes (December 19, 2006):

San Francisco freelance journalist Josh Wolf has spent [over] four months in prison for refusing to surrender outtakes of videos he took at an anarchist protest turned violent. Recently, Wolf wrote a letter describing his typical day inside, which should be of interest to Oakland freelance journalist Sarah Olson and Honolulu Star-Bulletin journalist Gregg Kakesako, since they both just received subpoenas demanding testimony about quotes they attributed to 1st Lt. Ehren Watada, who faces a court-martial after denouncing the war in Iraq and refusing to deploy with his unit. Wolf’s letter should also be a source of useful tips for San Francisco Chronicle reporters Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams, who face up to 18 months inside for refusing to reveal the source of closed-door grand jury testimony by Barry Bonds and other athletes about drug use. For a transcript of the letter, keep reading…

A Day in the Life of Inmate #98005-111 AKA Josh Wolf

At 5:30 AM each morning, I awake to the sound of the morning guard walking down the corridor and unlocking each cell. Breakfast is available for the next few minutes, if one manages to swiftly wake up and wander into the dayroom. More often than not, I elect to stay in bed—I’m eating too much in here anyhow, and lunch is usually served before noon. On the days that I do get up in time, we are usually served what amounts to a deluxe continental breakfast featuring some combination of the following: cold cereal, some sort of cake, hard boiled eggs, yogurt and a piece of fruit.

By 6 AM, I am almost fully awake and listening to Democracy Now! on KPFA. At 6:30 AM, the guard once again locks down our cell while the orderlies clean the unit; these prisoners mop the floors, wash the windows and clean the showers five days a week. After Democracy Now!, I usually listen to KPFA Morning Show and it is these two programs which allow me to stay current with the news. I do have a subscription to the Chronicle, but by the time the paper arrives it borders on being a historic document.

Sometime between 8 and 9 AM, the guard unlocks the door to our cell again and the counselor performs his inspection to make sure that all our personal property is stowed away in our footlockers and our beds are made. If our room fails to pass the inspection then we are liable to remain locked in our rooms until lunch.

On weekdays, we are usually taken out for Rec at some point in the morning. The Rec yard is a small slag of concrete with a basketball court and a pull-up bar; there is also a volleyball net. Only half the unit is taken out each day and we alternate between playing basketball and volleyball. Some of the guys work out and others walk or jog around the yard. Rec lasts for one hour and is our only real opportunity to breathe fresh air.

We are usually served lunch sometime shortly after Rec. Lunch consists of a green salad, the occasional potato salad, some sort of hot sandwich on most days, and cookies are frequently part of the meal as well.

After lunch, we are permitted to hang out in the day room or our cells until 2:45 PM, when we are locked down for count. During this time, I usually find myself conversing with friends or watching television. Sometimes we get a game of Scrabble going and at other times I choose to spend most of my time sitting on my bed reading.

The count is usually cleared shortly after 3 PM at which time we are released from our cells and mail is delivered. I spend some time musing over my mail and by 4 PM we are frequently being served dinner.

At 5 PM, I meet up with my work out crew and we generally exercise for about 45 minutes to an hour. Although there are no weights available in the detention center, we are able to exercise most of the major muscle groups through a combination of improvisation and the use of our own body weight. After working out, I generally prepare some sort of high-protein snack and shower.

Although I occasionally watch a bit of television during the evening, I try to devote the last hour or two before lockdown to responding to the correspondence I have received. Just before 8:45 PM, I go into the guard’s office and deliver whatever letters I have finished writing, and then fill up my mug with water from the drinking fountain. By that time, the guard has usually announced lockdown and we all scamper back to our cells where we wait out the rest of the night.

After being locked down at 8:45 PM, I usually talk to my cellie for a bit, get ready for bed and oftentimes respond to another letter or two. It is during this time that I usually write my daily entry in my journal.

At 10 PM, the station I listen to while I write switches to a talk-format and I usually start reading one of my books. The library in the detention center is pretty abysmal: three book carts stuffed with stale paperbacks–but fortunately I’ve had a plethora of books sent in to me from dozens of supporters. The entire time I’ve been here, I’ve always had an enticing book to dive into and the opportunity to loan out books to many of my fellow prisoners.

After reading for a couple of hours, I find myself falling sleep sometime around midnight. A few hours later, I find myself awake and living out the same story again and again.

See also : A reporter stands up to the army, Sarah Phelan, San Francisco Bay Guardian, January 9, 2007: “Sarah Olson fights a subpoena to testify against an antiwar soldier — and faces felony charges”; Journalist or not, he’s no criminal, Chris Peck, The Commercial Appeal, January 21, 2007

    “Although my plight has garnered some attention from the media, some people have been left to wonder why the story has been neglected by much of the mainstream press. The simple answer is that I am the canary in the coal mine that they are afraid to acknowledge.

    Canaries were used in mine shafts to act as early warnings that the environment had become poisonous – if the bird dies then the miners knew they would be next if they didn’t do something to remedy the situation.

    As an independent journalist and videoblogger, I am more vulnerable than my corporate equivalent. As an individual who focuses on civil dissent, this is doubly so. By throwing me in jail and asserting my rights as part of the free and independent press guaranteed in the Constitution, I should serve as a warning sign of things to come. It should trigger alarms to journalists far and wide; to some extent it has.

    At the same time, the mainstream media has not exactly embraced the so-called “citizen journalist” movement with open arms; some are afraid their careers may become obsolete. It may be a result of this defensive attitude that many news outlets have turned a blind eye to my situation – after all, I’m not employed by a multinational media conglomerate, so how can I be a “real journalist”? But like that canary, my situation is only a precursor to what is likely in store for the future…”

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REVEALED! HoWARd’s message to ‘Start A Fire Anti-Ministeries’

The black cat’s out of the bag:

    Hello there comrades.

    I am delighted to send my good wishes to everyone attending the 2008 Melbourne Anarchist & Autonomist Conference. Today is, of course, May Day.

    It’s a time when we celebrate our hard-won freedoms to destroy economic and social privilege as the unruly subjects of an illegitimate, racist and colonialist state — so blessed with an abundance of natural beauty.

    It’s also a time to reaffirm our commitment to shared values of direct action, mutual aid, self-managed struggle and our abiding fight against our enemy, Authority. Anarchism has been an enormous force for good and has done more than anything else to shape the lives, not only of millions of workers, but the character of contemporary global resistances to capitalism, patriarchy and the state.

    I congratulate the Melbourne Anarchist Club for bringing anti-authoritarian revolutionaries from many tendencies together for this celebration and I wish you all a riotous May Day.

    Your rejection of all forms of nationalism is deeply appreciated.

A Government spokesperson said Mr HoWARd did not regret providing the message.

“The Prime Minister provides messages for a wide array of groups,” the spokesperson said. “The Prime Minister does not regret providing the message. The contents of the message are entirely unexceptionable.”

[For anarchafairy]

Posted in !nataS, Anarchism, State / Politics | Leave a comment

G20: According to Newscorpse // FN: Internet geeks steal my heart

Yanqui citizen (since 1985), champion of journalistic freedoms, and owner of Newscorpse Rupert Murdoch‘s most widely consumed Orstralian newspaper the Herald Sun has an ‘In-depth Report’ on the cowardly thugs who held Melbourne to ransom last November. It also contains reportage on unsuccessful attempts by citizens gathered outside of the Hyatt to have a word or two with some of the leading architects of global capital (de-)regulation gathered in corporate luxury within.

Orstralia

I don’t live this life for me
In Orstralia land so free
Everybody lazing in the sun
Nobody cares so let’s have fun

We got no problems, got no wars
And you don’t need your brain no more
No sir

Orstralia goes in once again
We must remember all our friends
And to make sure all the way
That we support the CIA

We got no problems, got no wars
And you don’t need your brain no more
No sir

Hang your washing on the line
It’s okay, the weather’s fine
Your hubby goes out, don’t commit no crime
He always gets to work on time

We got no problems, got no wars
And you don’t need your brain no more
No sir

You know you’re blah blah blah
In Orstralia
In your own backyard
In Orstralia
So come on, let’s have fun
In Orstralia

… in the land of the hope ‘n’ glory …

See also: Columbia Journalism Review corporate timeline (1910s–2004)

W. James Au has written a really entertaining account (Fighting the Front, January 15, 2007) of a political struggle against attempts by French fascists and members of the Front National to infiltrate the online world of Second Life. It’s fuckin’ hilarious: the FN’s virtual HQ was attacked by good ol’ Thomas the Tank Engine, among others, and “One enterprising insurrectionist created a pig grenade, fixed it to a flying saucer, and sent several whirling into Front National headquarters, where they’d explode in a starburst of porcine shrapnel”! Ha ha ha! The fascist wankers were eventually forced to flee their HQ, and have since set up shop in another quarter (see below).

See also : Exploding pigs and volleys of gunfire as Le Pen opens HQ in virtual world, Oliver Burkeman in Porcupine, The Guardian, January 20, 2007 — note that ‘The Guardian‘s avatar… tracked down the Front National to Axel, another region in Second Life, where they had rebuilt their headquarters and were engaging a handful of opponents in relatively restrained debate. “Le Pen is the son of Hitler,” one protester ventured. “I know lots of people descended from immigrants who vote for the Front National because they’re not ashamed to be French,” a moronic Le Pen supporter countered, “and I think you’ll be surprised at how many people of an… immigrant background vote for Le Pen at the next election”.’ | Second Life bears political protest against right wing group, Mike Bantick, iTWire, January 21, 2007

Posted in !nataS, Anti-fascism, Media, State / Politics | 5 Comments

John HoWARd, Fun-da-mentalist, Playing with Fire

    “I like your Christ, [but] I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”

    “Those who say religion has nothing to do with politics do not know what religion is.”

    Mahatma Gandhi (1869–1948)

    And Jesus entered the temple and drove out all those who were buying and selling in the temple, and overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who were selling doves.

It seems that that the sheer hypocrisy of HoWARd and his Government really does know no bounds.

Despite constant whinging and whining about the supposedly unique virtues of ‘Australia’ and the preciousness of ‘Australian values’ — coupled with angwy denunciations of those who would supposedly imperil them — in the same week that David Hicks celebrated his fifth year of imprisonment in the torture camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, HoWARd has found the time to pwe-wecord a vewy special message for the benefit of local Christian fun-da-mentalist sect Catch the Fire, whose prosecution and conviction for religious vilification of Muslims, since overturned on appeal, generated much discussion.

Hello there.

I am delighted to send my good wishes to everyone attending the 2007 United Prayer meeting. Today is, of course, Australia Day.

It’s a time when we celebrate the freedom and privileges we enjoy as citizens of a great, prosperous and peaceful nation – so blessed with an abundance of natural beauty.

It’s also a time to reaffirm our commitment to shared values and our abiding loyalty to our nation, Australia. Christianity has been an enormous force for good and has done more than anything else to shape the lives, not only of millions of Australians, but the character of our nation.

I congratulate Catch the Fire Ministries for bringing Christians from many denominations together for this celebration and I wish you all [a] very happy Australia Day.

Your prayers for our nation are deeply appreciated.

But not as much as their votes, of course, or their many other contributions (alongside other fun-da-mentalist sects such as the Exclusive Brethren) as foot-soldiers in a cultural war against the social forces that oppose HoWARd’s political agenda for this “great, prosperous and peaceful nation” — including that “abundance of natural beauty” which HoWARd seeks to completely denude, not least through massively amplifying its uranium mining and — God-willing — nuclear power industries.

Hallelujah!

Peace & Prosperity

One might be forgiven for thinking that Australia was indeed a ‘peaceful’ nation, were it not for the fact that ‘we’ are currently at war: with the people of Iraq. And in this war, the HoWARd Government has distinguished itself by being the most loyal of President Bush’s foreign allies, bar none. Thus while the Australian military presence in Iraq is relatively tiny, on the world’s political stage, HoWARd’s status as loyal lackey to US state power is notorious. So too, the HoWARd Government’s complete and utter abandonment of one its own citizens to continuing torture by foreign soldiers: another case of Australian ‘exceptionalism’ joining with American.

Most recently, Adelaide private schoolboy and Australian League of Rights (ALOR) alumnus Alexander Downer has again been caught with his pants down, in this case for claiming that lies issuing from a US Embassy official in Canberra (Nance Haxtonis, US Embassy official identified as source of Hicks information, PM, January 19, 2007) constitutes firm evidence regarding Hicks’ perilous mental state. Previous to this latest political debacle, Downer distinguished himself by signing a pact (November 13, 2006) with the Indonesian Government intended to further the efforts of both Governments to destroy independence movements within the (claimed) territories of Australia’s northern neighbour: especially those of the (overwhelmingly Christian and Melanesian) population of West Papua.

Natural Beauty

As Jeff Sparrow has documented elsewhere, Pastor Danny Nalliah, like Downer, is an ALOR alumnus, addressing a meeting of the tired old racists in Albury-Wodonga in 2005. His comrades on the podium on that occasion included a vewy special foreign guest: Canadian professional Holocaust denier Paul Fromm. (Whom, incidentally, addressed gatherings of the Australia First Party on the same tour.)

Among its other activities, Nalliah and Catch the Fire specialise in denouncing Islam, their activities in this regard supported by the (no-doubt deeply appreciated) racist and sexist utterances of a number of local Islamic clerics. One, Sheikh Feiz Mohammed, the head of some mob called the ‘Global Islamic Youth Centre’ in Sydney, has recently come under the (national and international) public spotlight for releasing a DVD in which he describes Jews as pigs, and encourages Muslims to wage jihad (Radical Islamic cleric sparks outrage in Australia, AP, International Herald Tribune, January 17, 2007). And, in what is becoming his personal trademark, “Keysar Trad, head of the Islamic Friendship Association, said the jihad remarks might have been misinterpreted, but he conceded that they were not helpful to Australian Muslims”. Duh. (Australia Cleric: Remarks Misinterpreted, Meraiah Foley [AP], The Guardian, January 19, 2007.)

    Pigs are intelligent creatures, by the way. “They are smarter than dogs and every bit as friendly, loyal, and affectionate. When in their natural surroundings, not on factory farms, they are social, playful, protective animals who bond with each other, make beds, relax in the sun, and cool off in the mud.” Yay for pigs!

    An interesting discussion of the history of Islamic ‘anti-Semitism’ (see below) is provided in a paper [PDF] by Matthias Kuntzel (Technical College, Hamburg, and Research Fellow at the Vidal Sassoon Institute, Hebrew University, Jerusalem): ‘Hitler’s Legacy: Islamic Antisemitism in the Middle East’, presented on November 30 last year as part of Yale’s ongoing series of seminars on ‘Anti-Semitism In Comparative Perspective’:

    Anti-Judaism, or the controversial term coined in the 1870s by Wilhelm Marr [1819–1904], Antisemitism, is one of the most complex and, at times, perplexing forms of hatred. It spans history, infecting different societies, religious and philosophical movements, and even civilizations. In the aftermath of the Holocaust, some contend that Antisemitism illustrates the limitations of the Enlightenment and modernity itself. Manifestations of Antisemitism emerge in numerous ideological based narratives and the constructed identities of belonging and otherness such as race and ethnicity, nationalisms, and anti-nationalisms.”

    Note that Andrea Dworkin (1946–2005), in her Scapegoat: The Jews, Israel and Women’s Liberation (Free Press [Simon & Schuster/CBS], New York, 2000) erroneously describes Marr as an “anarchist”. On anarchism in Germany, see in particular the criminally-neglected life and work of Gustav Landauer (1870–1919).

In any case, last December, two Melbourne locals — Christine Hawkins and Chris Gemmell-Smith — ‘inspired’ by another cleric’s comments on women, their (supposed lack of) dress sense and subsequent reduction in status to cat food, decided to organise ‘The Great Australian Bikini March’ on a local Brunswick mosque. Like Tamworth Council’s decision to reject the re-location of a number of Sudanese refugees to their town, the March immediately attracted the interest and approval of local racists and fascists, especially those on Stormfront Down Under. One in particular, Perth-based convicted neo-Nazi criminal Ben Weerheym, grabbed the ball and ran with it (much to everyone’s considerable amusement), and the March, under pressure from local anti-racists, turned into a complete non-event… while the community BBQ organised by members of the mosque proved to be more enjoyable.

But the story doesn’t end there. Upon cancelling the March in December — a decision accompanied by much pissing and moaning about the nefarious role of local media in distorting their oh-so-innocent message — the organisers re-scheduled it for Australia Day, 2007… only to then declare that this March too, was cancelled, and, furthermore, the organisers would be taking their bat-and-ball back home to Endeavour Hills. At which point, others entered the fray, including one David Ross, a local Christian and ‘concerned citizen’; though Ross’ concerns don’t appear to extend much beyond the supposed dangers associated with the presence of Islam in Australia (rather than, say, the role of neo-liberal economics in destroying the social fabric and, hence, ‘the (bourgeois) family’).

While appearing to be a little isolated (to put it mildly) in his attempts to keep the flame of bigotry — first ignited by the anti-Arab and anti-Muslim pogrom in Cronulla in December 2005 — alight, the theme of Ross’ re-framed (non-)event — ONE NATION, ONE CULTURE, ONE RACE — certainly mirrors HoWARd’s eforts to consolidate unthinking submission to the state under the banner of ‘nationalism’. And as Ghassan Hage wrote in ‘Ayatollah John’s Australian Fundamentalism’ (Arena Magazine, February/March, 2001):

To say that John Howard is on the extreme right of the Liberal Party, or that he represents a conservative cultural backlash against what he and his supporters perceive as the excesses of the pro-multiculturalism and pro-Indigenous rights of his predecessor, would hardly be controversial. But to talk about ‘fundamentalism’ would easily lead one to be accused of getting too rhetorical and too carried away, or simply of just exaggerating for political point-scoring. I don’t mind some political point-scoring. But in this essay I would like to initiate the beginning of an analytical claim that there are important elements of John Howard’s politics that can be classified as fundamentalist. As importantly, I want to argue that his fundamentalism is beginning to mark our political culture in a significantly negative way.

In the Western world, fundamentalism is too easily linked with the ‘irrational’ and despotic movements whose highly dramatic visuals have filled the newspapers and televisions of the late twentieth century. To speak of fundamentalism is to almost inevitably conjure up images of politicised religious groupings with affectively charged members marching down the streets bent on re-introducing pre-modern cultural forms into our post-modernity. While there is no doubt that these forms of politics have been historically associated with fundamentalist politics, this link between form and content is not a necessary one. There is nothing that logically stops us from conceiving a rational/bureaucratic/democratic politics from being animated by a fundamentalist ideology.

John Howard and the essence of being Australian

The most basic feature of all fundamentalist ideologies is the belief in the existence of a social essence (core ‘fundamental’ values and beliefs) of which a national society is but an expression. Though such a belief is not in itself sufficient to turn someone into a fundamentalist, it is a necessary one. In Australia, the usage of a notion of ‘Australian values’ is something quite widespread among both the Left and the Right. However, we should begin by noting that no politician has used it as much as Howard does. No politician is as systematic as he is in deploying the concept, and no one positions it as the cornerstone of a holistic political vision of Australia as he does.

Whether addressing school-children or elderly Australians, business groups or immigrant associations, whether speaking on reconciliation or on Australia’s relation to Asia, John Howard’s political discourse is always woven around an explicit notion of Australian values. These values are Australian in a strong sense. That is, they differentiate Australians from other people in the world. They trace what Howard considers a unique ‘Australian way’.

What are these Australian values? There are some values that are constant in Howard’s prime-ministerial discourse, and some that come and go. Just looking at the speeches of 1998 offers us an incredible array of ‘values’. In his Australia Day speech for that year, Howard informs us that ‘the ethnic diversity and tolerance of our community gives Australia a unique standing in the world. This status is underpinned by the traditional Australian values of persistence, mateship, voluntary effort and optimism’. In an address to the Jewish community in Sydney we get another set of values:

    A great strength of the Jewish community has been the promotion of genuine Australian values common to all of us:

    * the primacy of family life and its importance in building strong and enduring communities;

    * the value of enterprise, the work ethic and reward for effort, and;

    * the active recognition of the obligation to give back where benefit has been received. (March 10, 1998, Israel’s fiftieth birthday celebration dinner, Sydney)

In his speech at the reconciliation summit a couple more values are added, ‘the values of decency, tolerance, fairness and down-to-earth common sense’ (May 26, 1997, Australian Reconciliation Convention, Melbourne). Talking to high school students Howard adds to the ever present ‘traditions of mateship’ the tradition of ‘treating people fairly on the basis of their contribution to society’ (July 10, 1998, St Paul’s School, Queensland). On the other hand, the speech to the Federation of Indian Associations stresses ‘the importance within the Australian community of … those enduring Australian values of tolerance and harmony’ (August 15, 1998, Federation of Indian Associations Dinner, Melbourne). And, in addressing a group of Australian business people, Howard urges his audience ‘to hang on to those Australian values of fairness and tolerance and equality and mateship’ (October 8, 1998, Australia Business Limited Annual Dinner, Sydney).

As pointed out above, the belief in ‘national values’ does not, in itself, set someone on the road to fundamentalism. However, the belief that these values constitute a causal essence firmly positions one in that direction. Such a belief supposes above all that values are considered an unchanging core and that they are quasi-genetically acquired by good nationals. As importantly, this belief implies that such values are responsible for giving the nation its enduring character amidst all the changes it can experience. There is little doubt that for John Howard ‘Australian values’ are such an essence. This theme is most developed in his address to the students of St Paul’s School:

    I remember when I left school … the Australia that I lived in in 1956 was a wonderful country … it’s important to understand that there are some things about our country that don’t change, and shouldn’t change, and we should fight hard to stop changing.

    … There are certain enduring Australian values that I still identify and are still as strong and as worthy and as valuable to us as Australians as they were when I left Canterbury Boys High School in Sydney in 1956.

    … There is that continuity, that golden thread of Australian values that hasn’t changed.

    And in turn, the Australia that your children will inherit when they leave school will also be different. But there will be a continuity, there will be a golden thread of basic Australian values that will be there. (July 10, 1998, St Paul’s School, Queensland)

In another of his addresses Howard asserts that Australia has managed to ‘preserve a core set of Australian values … connecting us now, in the last years of the twentieth century, with the early beginnings of the Australian federation almost 100 years ago’ (July 24, 1998, Address to the Chinese Chamber of Commerce, Perth). In fact some of the values go down even further than that:

    We are, as all of you know, a projection of Western civilisation in this part of the world. We have inherited the great European values of liberal democracy.

‘Values’ for Howard constitute an ‘essence’ not only in the sense of a historically unchanging reality but also, and as in all fundamentalist ideologies, in the sense of a causal force. Fundamentalism always offers a classically idealist conception of national society, in the useful Marxist meaning of the term: forget about economic relations, forget about power relations and forget about history, a nation is but an expression of the set of trans-historical values and beliefs upheld by its individual nationals. Furthermore, these values are never imagined to be contradictory. The nation that expresses its values is always ‘united’ by them. Fundamentalism always offers a normative conception of society as a coherent projection of complementary values. Howard refers to ‘the great Australian values that bind us together’ and about being ‘united’ by ‘a common love of Australian values’.

It is easy to give an intellectualised critique of the internal inconsistencies of such a discourse. This would not be about disputing whether specific values are really Australian values. Rather, it would be a questioning of the whole notion of a national people having and sharing distinguishing trans-historical values. The point is not, of course, that there is no such thing as distinct and recognisable Australian cultural tradition. To say that democracy and tolerance or even decency flourish in Australia more so than elsewhere because of how Australia has evolved historically, because of its resources and the wealth it has first managed to colonise and then to produce is one thing. But to see such historical continuities as the product of distinguishing values, something Australians are committed to more so than, or as opposed to, others is not tenable.

The key point about Howard’s values is precisely their current universality. Everyone in the world today would like to share such values. What does it mean to say that decency, or commitment to democracy, or tolerance, are specifically Australian values? It means making the ludicrous claim that there are whole national groupings in the world today who are less committed to them, or actually committed to opposite values. It means arguing that there are people who actually value intolerance, who are committed to being ‘indecent’ and who when faced with democracy freak out and try very hard to change it because it does not fit with their values! Or better still, that there are prime ministers who go to parliament and say ‘My fellow non-citizens we have had yet another great year of living up to our principles of being totally off the air’ (as opposed to Howard’s Australian value of ‘being down to earth’). We have successfully lived up to our principles of intolerance, disharmony, despotism and indecency that we have valued so much throughout the ages and that we hope to continue to value in the future.’

One has to be a lunatic-fringe racist to believe that national groupings who live in non-democratic, or war-torn, societies do so because this corresponds with their cultural values. I am not saying, of course, that Howard is a member of a lunatic racist fringe. I am simply saying that he seems unaware of the intellectual implications of his discourse. Any member of the intellectual elite could have told Howard this, but we know that he does not like or keep such company.

But Howard is not making these statements to be a consistent intellectual but a politician. I want now to move to what is perhaps the more important critique of the specific political effects and ramifications of Howard’s discourse.

Essence war: the archaeological fundamentalism of John Howard

A fundamentalist belief in a causal set of core values which remain unchanged throughout history needs two crucial supplements to transform it as a political project. First, it needs an accompanying prognosis that society and its people are drifting or have drifted away from the core and that there is a need to bring them ‘back’. Like all nationalists, fundamentalists who believe that their society is unproblematically living according to the fundamentals simply eradicate their very reason to exist as political subjects. There is no fundamentalist politics without fundamentalist whinging about some corruption of the core values.

Second, it requires a conviction that these fundamentals are Good. This might sound like stating the obvious, but it is necessary to state this clearly. For fundamentalist politics is always morally driven. The fundamentals, are not pursued just because they are ‘fundamental’ but also because they are worthy of being pursued. Recovering them is a recovering of a good moral society. And since society is but the expression of the beliefs of its people, fundamentalist politics is always about recovering the Good people who are, or the Goodness within people that is, silenced/oppressed/repressed, etc. by the Bad people.

In most fundamentalisms, the Good fundamentals are lost in the past, the political aim is to recover them from the past and re-inject them into the present. Such fundamentalism can be described as historical in the sense of looking at the past for inspiration. It might appear a surprising thing to note at first, but Howard’s fundamentalism is not based on nostalgia for the past. This is not because he does not believe that the past embodies what Australian values are all about. He clearly does. But here we come to the originality of Howard’s fundamentalism. He believes that the present continues to embody Australian values as well. But there is nevertheless a problem with the present. It is that the ‘truth/reality’ of this continuity has been covered up. It is no longer as apparent as it used to be because of the politics that has been pursued by an army of negatively inclined intellectuals and Labor Party politicians, and the anti-Australian-values lifestyle they have chosen to emphasise.

This is where Howard’s Bad people — his Great Satan — make an appearance: what he has famously referred to as the ‘black armband’ intellectuals, and the politicians inspired by them. These are the people who concentrate on the bad things that Australians have done and try, according to Howard, to imply that Australians are essentially Bad rather than Good:

    This ‘black armband’ view of our past reflects a belief that most Australian history since 1788 has been little more than a disgraceful story of imperialism, exploitation, racism, sexism and other forms of discrimination.

    I take a different view. I believe that the balance sheet of our history is one of heroic achievement and that we have achieved much more as a nation of which we can be proud than of which we should be ashamed. (November 18, 1996, Sir Robert Menzies Lecture)

For Howard, even during the reign of the Great Satan, there were people out there (the hidden mainstream) living the Australian way — as it has been initially projected by Western civilisation, of course. However, their non-negligible presence has been buried by a false emphasis on multiculturalism, Asia and Aboriginal land rights. Howard wants to bring back to light — not back from the past — these persisting core Australian values and the people living by them. Unlike the historical fundamentalism we have been used to so far, Howard’s is an archaeological fundamentalism. It is a fundamentalism of recovery and restoration. Here it is important to stress that this restoration is not only a social restoration but a psychological one as well. Howard has always seen himself engaging in a kind of political therapy project. For the black-armband politicians have not only threatened the reality of the enduring presence of Australian values. They have also propagated Guilt, thus attempting to make people living according to Good Australian values feel bad about themselves. As he indicated by his emphasis on making Australians feel ‘relaxed and comfortable’, Howard wanted people to feel good about `being themselves’ again and to regain the pride they ought to have when reflecting on Australia’s essential goodness:

    We are right to be proud of having built one of the most prosperous, most egalitarian and fairest societies in the world.

    We are right to be proud of our tradition of mateship in both peace and war.

    We are right to be proud of living in one of the world’s oldest continuous democracies. (Sir Robert Menzies Lecture)

Howard therefore sees himself as engaged in an Essence War with intellectuals (particularly historians) and politicians who are always concentrating on the Bad aspects of Australian history and society. They pick up on Bad deeds to pronounce Australians as essentially Bad. He picks up on the Good deeds to pronounce Australians as essentially Good. But this does not lead Howard into relativism. He believes that his claim that the essence is Good is a superior claim, and that his vision of Australia is a more objective one:

    The attempted re-writing of Australian political history over recent years by our political opponents should not be countered by an equally politicised re-writing to redress the balance. What is needed is a sense of balance, objectivity and honesty in drawing lessons from our past. (Sir Robert Menzies Lecture)

Constructing the ‘essentially good Australian’ from such past lessons contains some of the more comic elements of Howard’s fundamentalism. But it also points to some of its more detrimental effects so far: the rise of a form of political narcissism, unprecedented in our post-war political history; a numb and dumb sense of self-satisfaction (endlessly celebrated during the Olympics!) and a refusal to hear any voice other than one’s own.

Fundamentalism and the rise of political narcissism

In a well-known 1995 speech on ‘Politics and Patriotism: A reflection on the national identity debate’, Howard, while still Opposition leader argued:

    Inclusion rather than exclusion is also an essential part of the Australian identity. It is a value which featured prominently in pioneering days, although tragically it didn’t extend to Aborigin[es]. Nor was it much in evidence during the gold rushes.

Here we have the unbeatable logic of detecting the essential goodness of Australians in its clearest manifestation. It goes something like this. Essentially we are Good (we like inclusion). It is true that when we were Good we weren’t Good towards everyone (we didn’t include Aboriginal people). It is also true that sometimes we were bad rather than Good (we weren’t very inclusive during the gold rush). But this shouldn’t detract from the fact that we are essentially Good (we are essentially inclusive).

This has been the general structure of Howard’s argument throughout: we are realists. We recognise that we Australians have done good things and bad things. But the bad things we have done are conjunctural. We need not forget that we are essentially Good. Detecting the Good essence becomes an exercise in emphasising the good deeds of Australians and in silencing those who want to emphasise the bad deeds. Howard’s fundamentalism encourages a discourse of confirmation rather than a reflexive critical discourse. This tendency has developed into a pathological inability to listen to any voice other than one’s own.

Of course, all fundamentalist forms of politics do not encourage critical reflexivity. The national self needs to assert its essence and practise it rather than investigate it. As Howard has forcefully put it:

    You don’t indulge in some kind of intellectual exercise in trying to enumerate Australian qualities and Australian values, you practise them. (Address to the Chinese Chamber of Commerce)

Indeed, such critical reflexivity is a priori negative since it implies that the self can be questioned and changed. Fundamentalism is clearly more concerned with the never-changing nature of the Good self. We simply need to remember the Good self we are, and act accordingly. Critical reflexivity has been on many occasions explicitly dismissed by Howard as ‘navel-gazing’:

    We spend an enormous amount of time in this country navel-gazing about what kind of society we are. It seems that, on some occasions, we engage in a form of public fretting about what it really means to be an Australian. It always strikes me as rather unnecessary and rather odd and rather unproductive … You don’t write down what it means to be an Australian. You feel what it means to be an Australian. (Address to the Chinese Chamber of Commerce)

Again, this anti-navel-gazing is common to all fundamentalist ideologies, and commonly leads to forms of political narcissism. However, Howard’s variety has been particularly virulent given its combination with the pseudo-realism of the we-have-been-bad-but-we-are-essentially-Good variety analysed above.

In this political vision where the self ‘courageously’ admits the wrongs of the past but only to re-assert its fundamental goodness, the self is constructed as a know-all that has already submitted itself to a self-criticism. Howard’s discourse is peppered with these pseudo-realist acknowledgements of past wrongs. This discourse has led to the creation of political subjects who have successfully immunised themselves against all forms of criticisms and have become unable to hear any critical voice other than their own: ‘I don’t need someone else to tell me about my wrongs. I’ve already admitted them, but you’re making too much of them’. Thus, any voice that attempts at insisting that the misdeeds committed in Australia’s past and present cannot be so easily dismissed is immediately transformed into a ‘black armband’ voice, the voice of the Bad Other, the one hell bent on undermining the essential goodness of Australia and the pride of its people.

If someone emphasises racism, the Howardist response is that we have been essentially non-racist. If someone emphasises poverty, the response is that we have been essentially a ‘class-free’ society. And as happened lately, if someone emphasises the bad treatment of refugee claimants, the response is that we have an established history of being essentially a welcoming country. Anyone who tries to emphasise a different reality is clearly on the side of the Bad Other. This was to be the well-known fate of the United Nations in this pathetic display of belief in the self: don’t tell us we are bad. We don’t need anyone from the outside to tell us what we are. We know what we are. We are essentially Good. Go and find someone really bad and tell them they are bad. Perhaps, one of the clearest exemplifications of this exceptional state of mind has been Phillip Ruddock’s response to the organisations speaking in favour of the refugees. He threatened to withdraw funding while stating ‘We pay them to know better’.

Ruddock himself is a walking embodiment of this political narcissism. Living off the capital of his past Goodness on race issues — ‘he once crossed the floor against Howard on issues of race’ and ‘he was/is a member of Amnesty International’ — he has introduced some of the worst anti-immigrant-rights legislation. He did so while consistently implying ‘Don’t tell me I am bad, I am essentially good, I have crossed the floor and I am wearing an AI badge’.

‘We pay them to know better’ is a continuation of this tradition. One has to notice that if one is paying someone to know better, this assumes one does not know everything. But Ruddock’s statement assumes that ‘we’ Australians already know better since we are capable of judging whether the ‘better’ they produced is really better. If that is the case why pay them at all! But nothing can beat this self-immunised delusional sense of knowing all one needs to know and an expectation that only a discourse of confirmation of one’s point of view will do.

Of course, the issue in relation to the refugee organisations was not one of ‘knowing better’ but of knowing differently. Such organisations are not paid to know better but to put to the state the position from the refugee claimants’ point of view. The state’s capacity to listen to the tribunal is linked to its capacity to hear a view other than that of our own. It is this inability to encompass the point of view of the other, which is characteristic of our current political culture, that was ultimately re-confirmed.

Ghassan Hage is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Sydney. He is the author of White Nation: Fantasies of White Supremacy in a Multicultural Society, Sydney, Pluto Press, 1998, and New York, Routledge, 2000.

Posted in !nataS, History, State / Politics, War on Terror | 3 Comments

Jared Taylor: Speak to the hand

Poor old Jared Taylor. A notorious racist who (somewhat like the scientician J Phillipe Rushton) masquerades as a ‘race relations expert’ and scribbles for American Renaissance zine (among other activities), Taylor was once scheduled to enter into a ‘debate’ with David Divine at Dalhousie University on January 15: ie, MARTIN LUTHER KING JUNIOR DAY! Upon discovering the rather unsavoury nature of his debating opponent, Divine, The James R. Johnston Chair in Black Canadian Studies at the University, sensibly decided to scrap the event (Debater’s views too offensive for Dal: prof, CBC News, December 22, 2006).

This gave his dozens of fans on Stormfront (more) reason to cwy, but no matter: like Taylor, they’re notorious for being racist — ‘the Joos’ are Public Enemy Number One for the fascist twats who populate its diseased forums — and not-too-bright (as well as being vewy vewy sensitive). Undeterred, therefore, the rather s l o w Taylor persisted in making an unwelcome visit to the land of beavers, and brought his racial-surrealist, one-man comedy performance to the town of Halifax, Nova Scotia on January 16.

Well, tried to.

Canadian anti-racist activists, unamused by his pseudo-intellectual race-baiting, staged a successful intervention:

Concerned Halifax citizens prevent twat from delivering racist speech
CBC News
January 16, 2007

HALIFAX (CP) — Protesters have disrupted a speech in Halifax by an American who describes himself as a “race realist” but who critics say is a white supremacist.

Jared Taylor was pushed out the door of a downtown hotel room by a group of about two dozen people who opposed his presence. Police eventually led the protesters away, but Taylor never got to speak.

Taylor, who is with [ie, is editor of] American Renaissance magazine in Virginia, was originally supposed to debate racial issues with a Dalhousie University professor.

The university cancelled the debate after concerns were raised about Taylor’s background and beliefs.

[Nova Scotia] protesters force ‘race realist’ to cancel controversial talk
Melanie Patten
[Canadian Press]
January 16, 2007

HALIFAX (CP) – Shouting “Nazis aren’t welcome here,” a mob of protesters shoved a self-described “race realist” from a Halifax hotel conference room Tuesday night where he was about to give a controversial speech.

A couple of dozen people prevented Jared Taylor, who critics have described as a white supremacist, from speaking. Taylor, who argues against the mixing of races, insists he’s not a racist and doesn’t espouse hatred…

Taylor said he was surprised by the demonstration.

“I fully expected to make my remarks,” he said outside the conference room…

As I said: not-too-bright. Other reportage includes:

Crowd roughs up race speaker: Unruly mob prevents Taylor from delivering talk
Michael Lightstone
The Chronic Herald
January 17, 2007

Note that this article seemingly contradicts others which claim that police did in fact attend the event (Taylor is quoted as expressing his surprise that Halifax police did not provide him with an escort). It also records the fact that: the word ‘fuck’ apparently took wings during the course of the altercation; Taylor wore “a conservative business suit, white shirt and tie” whereas the “room full of rowdies” “hid their faces behind balaclavas or bandanas”; and Jon Goldberg of the Atlantic Jewish Council in Halifax seemingly failed to take his own advice (“The best thing you could have done was to ignore the guy,” he is reported to have said).

In a supplementary article by the same journalist — Taylor: Racism protesters “contemptible” (January 19, 2007) — Taylor, described as “a Yale-educated journalist and author who believes in freedom of association” (while those who interrupted his address are described as “young foul-mouthed demonstrators”), apparently maintains that “racial diversity in Canada, just as it is in the United States, is an ordeal — an agonizing, never-ending ordeal”.

In many ways, then, Jared Taylor may be thought of as an Amerikkkan equivalent — one of a number clustered around the same small number of racist propaganda outlets — to local Australian, University-educated, middle class, white-collar racists such as Andrew Fraser. Incidentally, while Taylor is a Canadian import, Fraser is a Canadian export, who claims that his original attraction to Australia was that it was allegedly populated exclusively by ‘sun-bronzed, blonde, blue-eyed’ people, the supposed virtues of this group often articulated as the ideology of ‘Nordicism’. Not exactly cutting-edge stuff, but the basis for many violent racial outrages. For example:

Progressive-Era America responded with hostility to most immigrants; however, Italians were at the “very bottom rung” because of the “Nordicism” that dominated American social thought. [Nunzio] Pernicone [author of a fascinating biography of Carlo Tresca: Portrait of A Rebel] testifies that Anglo-Protestant Americans often regarded Southern Italians as non-whites, as evidenced by at least 39 reported lynchings of Italians in the United States. Both Sacco and Vanzetti suffered the insults and indignities of this particularly racist period; but they adjusted rather differently to American life…

Curiously, an editorial in Halifax’s Daily Herald invokes the memory of Frederick Douglass (1818–1895) in order to denounce the actions of the two dozen or so protesters who shut down Taylor’s address. Thus:

On more than one occasion, pro-slavery protesters would attempt to stop Douglass from speaking. They would physically assault him, sometimes to the point where his life was in danger. He never allowed his enemies to intimidate him — or silence him…

In this sense, Douglass was ‘lucky’. Many others, however, were not. Included among them were Dangerfield Newby, Lewis Sheridan Leary, Shields Green and John Anthony Copeland, Jr, four members of John Brown’s legendary raiding party of 1859, executed alongside Brown. On his way to the gallows, Copeland Jr was heard to remark: “If I am dying for freedom, I could not die for a better cause — I had rather die than be a slave!” And of course, many blacks did die, and not only as slaves, but also as ‘free citizens’: wage slaves.

According to one source, sixty-one percent of all American slaves — nearly 145,000 — lived in (Taylor’s home state of) Virginia and Maryland, working the tobacco fields in small to medium-sized gangs. (Oh, and apparently a few people died on the way from Africa to America too.)

Best forgotten, really. No point shouting over spilt blood.

Besides…

Not only did the protesters shout Taylor down; they also forcibly removed him from the hotel room. Police were called, and the demonstrators were dispersed. Later, Taylor managed to speak to a few people who did not take part in the protest…

But freedom of speech is not like a garment that can be donned or discarded at whim.

It is one of the bedrock principles of a free society.

Freedom of speech means that even odious opinions have a right to be heard. It also means those opinions are open to criticism.

Freedom of speech means that the demonstrators had a right to heckle and harangue, rebut and refute, question and contradict.

But it does not mean they had a right to commit assault.

Frederick Douglass would not have approved.

In an opinion piece in the same edition, David Rodinhiser writes:

In a way, Jared Taylor represents a far less dangerous form of discrimination – one that’s out in the open and obvious.

Taylor describes himself as a “race realist,” but most of us would probably consider him a “real racist.” His speech, had he had the chance to deliver it, almost certainly would have included offensive opinions.

While I suspect I would have disagreed with almost every word he would have said, I firmly believe he had the right to say them – unless he incited hatred, which would be up to the courts to decide.

The protesters who dragged Taylor from the room he booked at the Lord Nelson should have been charged with assault.

Many masked their faces with bandanas, like cowards and criminals. They compared Taylor to the Ku Klux Klan, but he wasn’t the one wearing the hood.

By not letting Taylor speak, the protesters only drew attention to his cause and fuelled others of his ilk. They should have let him discredit himself through the stupidity of his own words.

As Taylor, himself, argued: “If what I have to say is either wrong or loathsome, it should be very easy to refute.”

I’ll bet it would have been.

Violence can’t defeat racism. Reasoned debate, like Paris has provoked, can.

David Rodenhiser believes Taylor’s attackers are no better than the MLAs who shout down Paris when he speaks in the legislatures.

Notwithstanding the political issues at stake in this debate — freedom of speech and countering racism, among others — it is disingenuous to use Douglass’ life and work in this manner. In what is probably his most famous speech, Douglass said:

Let me give you a word of the philosophy of reform. The whole history of the progress of human liberty shows that all concessions yet made to her august claims, have been born of earnest struggle. The conflict has been exciting, agitating, all-absorbing, and for the time being, putting all other tumults to silence. It must do this or it does nothing. If there is no struggle there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters.

This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, and it may be both moral and physical, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress. In the light of these ideas, Negroes will be hunted at the North, and held and flogged at the South so long as they submit to those devilish outrages, and make no resistance, either moral or physical. Men may not get all they pay for in this world; but they must certainly pay for all they get. If we ever get free from the oppressions and wrongs heaped upon us, we must pay for their removal. We must do this by labor, by suffering, by sacrifice, and if needs be, by our lives and the lives of others.

Frederick Douglass, 1857

See also : ‘Race realist’ chased from room, Paul Everest, The Daily News, January 17, 2007 | One People’s Project, CANADIAN RENAISSANCE: NOVA SCOTIA ANTIFA PROTECTS THEIR BORDER FROM JARED TAYLOR, January 17, 2007 | Musarium: Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America

Posted in Anti-fascism, State / Politics | 11 Comments

G20: OPERATION SALVER: A CRACKDOWN ON THE RIGHT TO PROTEST (Media release)

[Update : If your photo is in The Age gallery or on CrimeStoppers, these are good places to get legal advice:

Essendon Community Legal Centre: 9376 7929
Fitzroy Legal Service: 9419 3744
Western Suburbs Community Legal Centre: 9391 2244

See also: Police release G20 ‘people of interest’ photos, Dan Oakes, The Age, January 19, 2007: “Australian Council for Civil Liberties president Terry O’Gorman slammed the decision to release the pictures, describing as it as an “impermissible and unfair practice… Because of the longstanding court rules that where identity is an issue, photographs should not be published, the police, in publishing these photographs, have gone beyond what is permissible and should be criticised for it,” he said. But Liberty Victoria vice-president Jamie Gardiner said he believed that the police were entitled to release the pictures if they were acting in good faith in an attempt to identify and find the subjects. However, defence lawyers might have a different view, he said.” | G20 faces in frame, Mark Buttler, Herald Sun, January 19, 2007 | Stop the G20 witch-hunt!, Green Left Weekly, January 13, 2007]

Following today’s announcement of two more arrests in connection to last November’s G20 protest, and the launch of a joint police- and corporate media- sponsored publicity blitz in an attempt to identify 28 individuals police, as part of Operation / Task Force Salver, claim are in some way connected to their criminal proceedings, a collective that has formed in order to support G20 arrestees has released the following statement to local media:

OPERATION SALVER: A CRACKDOWN ON THE RIGHT TO PROTEST
January 19, 2007

Protests are an important part of participatory democracy. The aim of the arrests and house searches that have followed the G20 protests is to intimidate a group of young, politically-engaged people and stifle dissent more generally.

The laying of charges such as riot and affray constitutes a gross over-reaction by police, in the face of what was overwhelmingly a peaceful demonstration. Police have described their investigation — Operation Salver — as being concerned with “the upper end of criminality”. This statement is so exaggerated as to be absurd.

[See, for example, Police make further arrests over G20 protests, ABC, January 18, 2006: Superintendent Richard Grant says it is likely more charges will be laid. “These 28 people of interest are of significant interest to Victoria Police,” he said. “We’re dealing with an investigation that’s at the upper end of criminality. There’s serious offences of riot, affray, injuries to police and the damage to property.”]

In fact, the intimidation and mass arrests which have followed last November’s G20 protests is part of a wider process of the criminalisation of protest and the silencing of political opposition.

The protests surrounding the November meeting aimed to highlight issues discussed at forums such as G20, where decisions are made about war, poverty, labour rights and climate change that impact on the planet and its people.

The G20 protests were widely reported as being a raucous affair that, on occasion, tipped over into violence. Coverage of the protests has often been tinged with hysteria, and rumour has consistently been reported as fact.

In contrast to inflated and often inaccurate depictions of ‘protestor violence’, media coverage has overwhelmingly failed to mention or acknowledge the violence and excessive force used by police over the course of the weekend.

The posting of peoples’ photos along with the caption ‘Taskforce Salver’ and alongside media articles on the violence of the protests implies that those people are guilty or are implicated in actions, where they may not necessarily be facing any charges.

While police have yet to reveal whether the 28 people are witnesses or stated offenders, they are named on the Crime Stoppers website as ‘most wanted’. This implication of guilt has potentially severe consequences for the civil liberties and rights of those identified.

We refute the argument of Detective Superintendent Richard Grant of the Salver Task force that ‘Victoria police respect the rights of individuals and the community to protest and express their opinions lawfully’, as on many occasions peaceful protestors were treated with excessive force and prevented from lawfully protesting outside.

In particular, the peaceful protest outside Melbourne Museum on the Sunday was broken up by police with extreme and well-documented violence that left many injured, with one woman so badly hurt she required hospitalisation.

This media release was written by a collective in support of G20 arrestees.

For further comment contact: Jonathon Collerson on 0438 136 093.

Between November 18, 2006 and January 18, 2007, according to UNICEF estimates, approximately 1,830,000 children under the age of five have died as a result of poverty-related causes — chiefly hunger, malnutrition and disease; largely “easily treated or prevented killers such as pneumonia and diarrhoeal diseases“.

This is a real pity. Even tax-dodging multi-millionaire rock * (Sir) Bono says so. And contemplating the agony millions of children endure as they die each year of such easily-preventable diseases is possibly only matched by the distress he experienced when one of his former employees stole his Stetson hat. Contemplating his misfortune — soon remedied by the forces of law and order — did not, however, prevent Bono from condemning bad people at G20. And in turn, Australian Treasurer Peter Costello ‘said Bono spoke highly of the Australian economy. “He was very complimentary of Australian economic management and the progress that he’s observed in the Australian economy,” Mr Costello said.’

In any case, it’s not all doom and gloom.

Here’s the good — in fact, great — news:

Billionaire Bacchanalia
Edited by Luisa Kroll and Allison Fass
Forbes
March 27, 2006

In its inaugural ranking of the world’s richest people 20 years ago FORBES uncovered some 140 billionaires. Just three years ago we found 476. This year [2006] the list is a record 793, up 102 from last year. They’re worth a combined $2.6 trillion, up 18% since last March. Their average net worth: $3.3 billion…

Bill Gates retains his title as the world’s richest person for the twelfth straight year, proving that while it’s getting easier to make a billion, the same can’t be said for making $50 billion…

“An individual cannot know what he really is until he has realized himself through action … The interest the individual finds in something is already the answer to the question of whether he should act and what should be done.”

— Hegel, The Phenomenology of Spirit

Posted in Media, State / Politics | 3 Comments