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Saturday, August 8, 2020

Cancel culture & the Snowflake War: Do-gooders, No-gooders & Do-nothings

Cancel culture & the Snowflake War: Do-gooders, No-gooders & Do-nothings

By Ranting Panda, 8 August 2020

If one listens to conservatives, it would seem that lefties, or progressives at least, are waging a war on freedom and free-speech. Conservatives frame this non-existent war as a product of 'political correctness', or 'virtue-signalling', because of left-wing do-gooders, who are supposedly being overly sensitive snowflakes who manufacture offence and then meltdown in the face of this 'contrived' offence.

There is some truth in conservatives claims. There are times that progressives 'cancel' those who are perceived as having some moral failing, such as being racist or sexist. 

Many conservatives see themselves as thick-skinned heroes defending freedom ... they see themselves as victims of the Snowflake War. 

Anyone would think that conservatives are resilient people who would never indulge in 'cancel culture' or 'political correctness'. However, they have been guilty of these very issues themselves. The difference is that when progressives do it, it is because of abuse perpetrated by systemic discrimination or in response to someone harming others. When conservatives do it, it is usually because they are upset that someone thinks, acts or looks different to them.

Yes, believe it or not ... Conservatives are epic snowflakes, waging war on freedoms using their own brand of self-centred political correctness and virtue-signalling that dog-whistles to other conservative snowflakes.

'Conservative political correctness?', I hear you ask! Yep. Conservative political correctness usually revolves around respecting flags and statues, rather than people. For instance, patriotism is sacrosanct. 



One such example occurred in Australia in 2017, when a Muslim feminist writer named Yassmin Abdel-Magied, posted a tweet on Anzac Day which stated: 'LEST. WE. FORGET. (Manus, Nauru, Syria, Palestine...)'. Conservatives were so affronted by this innocuous tweet, that Yassmin was hounded out of the country. She received rape and death threats because of it and ended up leaving Australia to live in England. Many of the threats targeted Yassmin's religion and gender. I mean, being a Muslim and a feminist was never going to sit well with conservative snowflakes. Conservative commentator, Prue McSween, called Abdel-Magied a flea and stated that it was acceptable for her to feel unsafe in Australia, then compounded this disgusting tirade by stating that if she saw her, she would be tempted to run her over (BBC 2017). Ironically, many of the people who were offended by her tweet, claimed that Anzac Day commemorates those who fought and died for Australia's freedoms. Apparently, those freedoms don't include freedom of speech for young, feminist Muslim women, even though these same conservatives will claim that it's Muslims who hate Australia's freedoms ... 

In 2017, not long after the disgustingly racist and sexist abuse of Yassmin Abdel-Magied, the Australian Human Rights Commission made a submission to a parliamentary inquiry into multiculturalism, regarding the lack of non-Anglo-Celtic people represented in the public sphere. This may seem innocuous enough, however it triggered Rowan Dean, editor of The Spectator Australia, into racially attacking the federal Race Discrimination Commissioner, Tim Soutphommasane. This racist abuse was given a platform on Sky News, were Dean defiantly declared that Mr Soutphommasane should 'hop on a plane and go back to Laos'. It should be noted that Mr Soutphommasane isn't from Laos; he was born in France to Laotian parents. (BBC 2017).

Then there was Scott McIntyre, a former SBS journalist, who tired of the drunken nationalism that has taken over Anzac Day. McIntyre believed that Anzac Day had taken on a cult-like following, in which people glorified war and dehumanised the 'enemy'. McIntyre decided to remind Australia that some of our diggers were involved in horrendous crimes in the fog of war, such as rape and murder (Davidson 2016). These snippets of truth went down like a lead-balloon with conservatives, leading to McIntyre being sacked by SBS in response to howls of conservative rage.

The problem with this unquestioning nationalism is that it condones and perpetuates war crimes and other criminal behaviour by defence force personnel. For instance, when the ABC reported on the abuse of asylum seekers by Australian military personnel (Roberts 2014), then Prime Minister Tony Abbott accused it of being unpatriotic (Bourke 2014). Apparently waving the Aussie flag was more important that stopping the abuse of innocent people by the military. When the ABC reported on alleged war crimes by the SAS in Afghanistan (Willacy 2020), conservatives were angry with the ABC for reporting it, not because there may have been war crimes committed by Australian troops. 

Still don't believe that conservatives can be snowflakes? Tell them that their food is Halal. In their apoplectic rage, they will boycott the product, write angry letters to the company, to their local politicians, to the newspaper, and fire off incoherent tweets and social media posts. Yep, cancel culture, right there!

More fun can be had if one dares say 'Happy Holidays' at Christmas time. They will become proudly indignant and declare that it is 'Merry CHRISTMAS'! Even though many of these conservatives only look forward to Christmas for the presents, food, decorations and holidays. Most of them couldn't care less about it being the celebration of the birth of Jesus. Most of them have never set foot in a church. And those who have? Clearly, they love their dogma more than they love people. I mean, seriously, if someone wishes you well, then be thankful. It takes a special kind of spitefulness to complain that a season's greeting didn't meet the expected standard. As Benjamin Franklin astutely observed, 'How many observe Christ’s birthday! How few, his precepts! O! ’tis easier to keep Holidays than Commandments'.

There was a call to boycott Starbucks because their coffee cups were deemed 'anti-Christmas'. How can a coffee cup be anti-Christmas? When it is red. Well, when it is red only and does not feature Christmas trees, grimacing Santa Claus faces or (most appropriately) snowflakes ... because nothing screams 'Jesus is the reason for the Season' than a coffee cup covered in European winter symbols (Dvorak 2015). 

Conservatives can continue the rage and wallow in their victimhood straight after Christmas, when Easter Eggs appear on the shelves. Well, there will be rage if said egg dares not mention the word 'Easter'. God forbid selling a chocolate egg that doesn't say Easter. I mean seriously, What Would Jesus Do? We all know how that Jesus smashed down a big helping of Easter Eggs during the Last Supper. Over the years, conservatives have boycotted Nestle and Cadbury for both daring to produce Easter Eggs that don't meet the high moral standard set by privileged conservatives who clearly have nothing better to be offended at. Ironically, these symbols of Easter that they lose their collective minds over, have nothing to do with Jesus, but are pagan symbols of fertility. Easter has links to several pagan fertility religions, including Ishtar, the Mesopotamian 'Queen of Heaven' and goddess of sex, drugs and rock'n'roll. Although Easter was likely named after the German 'Eostre', it was a northern hemisphere celebration of fertility, that Christians appropriated to make their message more palatable to the locals (D'Costa 2013). Compromise, anyone? It seems that the early Christians weren't quite the snowflakes that today's conservative Christians are. 

Speaking of drugs, sex and rock'n'roll, how can we forget when conservatives waged all-out war on rock music: the 'Devil's Music'! This reached peak silliness when John Lennon made the astute observation that The Beatles were 'more popular than Jesus now'. People melted down, believing that The Beatles thought they were greater than God. Lennon clarified later that he was referring to how their fans saw them, not that he was anti-God or anti-Jesus. In response to this perceived insult, Christians bought Beatles albums and then burned them (think about that, take all the time you need ... cancelling a band by buying their stuff ... riiiiight). Tragically, this attempt to cancel The Beatles culminated in Mark David Chapman shooting and killing John Lennon in 1980. Chapman was a 'born-again' Christian, who stated that part of the reason he did it was because of Lennon's comment about The Beatles being more popular than Jesus (Jones 1992, pp 117-118). Chapman had also been upset with the songs 'God' and 'Imagine'. Chapman believed that Imagine was a Communist song, and subsequently wrote his own lyrics to it, which included 'Imagine John Lennon dead' (Jones 1992, pp 117, 189). 

Chapman's hatred of Communism wasn't his own invention. The last time Christians got so upset about Communism, they unleashed they sang the praises of Adolf Hitler ... and we know how that ended.

Conservatives are currently melting down over cheese. Yep, believe it or not, they are more interested in cheese than in ending racism. In fact, many of them don't believe in either systemic racism or casual racism. Systemic racism is evidenced by significantly higher incarceration rates of indigenous people or people of colour, higher suicide rates, poorer educational and health outcomes, and increased poverty. Casual racism is much more insidious, but just as harmful. It may include jokes or snide comments based on racial stereotypes, but it presupposes white superiority and the subjugation of people of colour. 

So, cheese. Australia's Coon Cheese was named after the man who invented the ripening process for cheese, Edward William Coon. The ripening process is also named after him and is known as cooning. Unfortunately, Edward Coon's surname is also a racial slur. For decades there were requests to change the name of the cheese. Keep in mind, that Edward Coon did not found or own Australia's Coon Cheese; it was merely named after him. It was created by the Warrnambool Cheese and Butter company, and launched by Fred Walker. In July 2020, it was under the ownership of Canadian company, Saputo Inc, who decided to change the name based on its association with the racial slur. 

And didn't the conservatives cut their collective cheeses over it! Now, the cheese could just as easily have been called Walker Cheese, WCB Cheese, or any other variant of its original or current owners. It's just a name. Saputo recognised that while Coon was the surname of the man who invented the maturation process, it can cause significant offence, so they changed the name. They didn't shoot Bambi. But conservatives carried on as if their first-born was being torn from their arms, and promised to boycott the cheese. Not that the boycott will do much, because some had already boycotted the cheese when it became Halal certified. Yep, conservative cancel culture: cancel cheese. Conservatives tackling the big issues. After all, cheese is more important than addressing racism. 

The man who drove the name-change is Dr Stephen Hagan. In retaliation for Dr Hagan daring to challenge the name of a cheese, One Nation member, Mark Latham, mocked him and suggested that 'evil snowflakes' would start targeting products that included the word 'white'. He included a photo of Paul's 'Smarter White Milk' product. Not surprisingly, several media outlets ran this as a factual story. So incensed were the racists who actually believed this puerile drivel, that Hagan received more than 30,000 abusive comments, hate mail and several death threats (Roe 2020). Yeah ... death threats over a fake story about the name of a milk product. Latham is leader of One Nation in New South Wales and a member of the NSW Legislative Council, the Upper House in the NSW Parliament. This is the standard of politics and media in Australia. It also shows just how sensitive racist snowflakes are in Australia: they will cry over milk and cheese. 

Speaking of racism, there was the matter of an NFL player, Colin Kaepernick, who kneeled during the national anthem prior to a football match in 2016. He was protesting against police brutality. Small-minded conservatives took this as a affront to US sovereignty. Yeah, I know ... how freaking sensitive does one have to be to interpret an anti-racism protest as an attack on US sovereignty? But such is the depths of nationalism that permeates right-wing media and group-think. In protest, many conservatives burned their own NFL jerseys and Nike shoes. Again ... take all the time you need to think about this ... protesting by burning something they've already bought. That's really going to hit the NFL or Nike's bottom line. The sad thing, when asked, many of these people had no idea what Kaepernick was protesting. Many thought he was opposing the flag, the anthem, or US troops, because of bigoted group-think manipulated by racist politicians and media. 

The anti-Kaepernick brigade were already so emboldened with nationalistic fervour and racism, that it didn't take much to push them over the edge ... and we ask how Germans could be so duped by Hitler? Indeed.

Speaking of football players, in Australia many indigenous people played in the rugby league and Australian Rules football codes. Throughout the years, many reported receiving racist abuse, including former Brisbane Broncos player, Steve Renouf (Pengilly 2020), and former St Kilda player, Nicky Winmar (NMA 2020). Adam Goodes had a stellar AFL career, playing more games than any other indigenous player, twice winning the coveted Brownlow Medal for being the best and fairest player in the competition, and in 2014, he won Australian of the Year. Despite his achievements, Goodes was subject to years of racist abuse. During the Indigenous Round in 2013, Goodes was racially vilified by a spectator. Goodes called her out for it during the game (McRae 2020). It transpired the spectator was 13 years old. The conservative response? Well, rather than agreeing that Goodes had every right to challenge racist abuse from a 13 year old brat, they attacked him, doubled down on the vilification and drove him from the game. 

Conservatives have a track record of prioritising racism over respect. Although, they also have a track record of claiming that 'kids of today have no respect for their elders'. Well, why should they, when their elders glorify such disrespectful behaviour.

Don't get conservatives started on statues. During the Black Lives Matter protests, there were calls to tear down statues of confederate soldiers because they had defended slavery. Conservatives, in their rather simplistic rationale, equated this to changing or erasing history. Hello ... there are things called books! These books actually record history. Ditching a statue of some slave-owning racist white supremacist is not erasing history, it is acknowledging history and raising awareness of the person's vile behaviour. Interestingly, many of the confederate statues were not erected during or immediately following the American Civil War, but were erected specifically in defence of racism (Robinson 2020). Many were put up during the early 1900s to defend the Jim Crow laws which legalised the disenfranchisement and segregation of black people. In the 1960s, many of these statues were erected in response to the Civil Rights movement which was calling for the dismantling of the racist systems established by the Jim Crow laws, and the attitudes and systems that had existed in America before, during and since slavery (Williams, Armitage & Stein 2020; Gunter & Kizzir n.d., p 11).  

Speaking of Black Lives Matter ... not surprisingly, many conservatives piously claimed 'ALL lives matter', not just black ones. This little act of defiance represented an incredible level of hypocrisy because these same ALM advocates have actively campaigned against, or voted for politicians who oppose, refugees and asylum seekers, LGBTIQ+ rights, same sex marriage, Islam, migrants, and the list goes on. Perhaps, the ALM brigade should look up the meaning of 'All' in the dictionary. Just to be clear, the Merriam-Webster dictionary defines 'all' as meaning, 'every member or individual component'. Everyone! Not everyone except for black people or gay people or Muslims or refugees! Funnily enough, those marching for BLM are also most likely to also march in defence of the rights of other persecuted groups; its BLM activists who actually believe that all lives matter, rather than the pious ALM proponents.

Nothing triggers some conservatives like suggesting that others have equal rights. Recent campaigns for same sex marriage resulted in conservatives boycotting numerous companies who expressed solidarity with the cause, such as Qantas, Virgin and Hallmark. 

Sadly, many conservatives see social justice and human rights as being an affront to their own rights. This is typical of the selfishnessness of conservatives who only sympathise with issues that impact them specifically. They couldn't care less about issues that impact others. This is why they oppose anti-racism campaigns, they oppose same sex marriage, they oppose other religions. Meanwhile, they will hurl insults at those who dare to stand up for these rights, labelling them 'do-gooders', 'social justice warriors', 'bleeding hearts', or accusing them of 'virtue-signalling', just because they want to help others. If you're not a do-gooder, then what are you? A no-gooder? A do-nothing? Seriously, if you're not wanting everyone to have the same rights as you, then you can't say 'ALL lives matter'. At best, you're a do-nothing ... at worst, well you're doing no good and maybe those words like bigot, racist, white-supremacist, may appropriately describe you. 

These conservatives label human rights and social justice as 'cultural Marxism'. Conservatives have been responsible for a lot of fear-mongering: fear of black people, fear of Islam, fear of a gay agenda, fear of communism. During the 1940s and 1950s, the 'reds under the bed' paranoia was cancel culture writ large. It culminated with witch-hunts led by Senator Joe McCarthy and a Congressional committee known as the House Un-American Activities Commission (HUAC). These witch-hunts resulted in the destruction of many people's lives and careers. Dozens of singers and actors suffered through this paranoia, including Charlie Chaplin, Harry Belafonte, Pete Seeger and Orson Welles. There were some who managed to rebuild their careers, others disappeared into obscurity, reputations destroyed by anti-Communist paranoia.

The new focus on 'cultural Marxism', or neo-Marxism, is just rebranding of McCarthyism, playing on the fears of gullible conservatives. Their fears are unfounded. President Donald Trump exploits these fears by accusing the far-left and Antifa of inciting violence during BLM protests. However, in the last 25 years, no-one has been killed by the far-left in the USA. Contrast this to the 329 people who have so far been killed by right-wing extremists in the United States (Pasley 2020). This indicates the danger of fear-mongering and demonisation is that people will focus on the wrong things. Racism continues and hate-crimes escalate, while conservatives wring their hands claiming 'All lives matter'. Some claim that they oppose racism, but will then boycott a business that supports Black Lives Matter ... nothing says anti-racism like boycotting a business that is actively anti-racist ... 




Conservatives love to play the victim, even though they are often the perpetrator. Their claim of 'Cultural Marxism' is ingrained in them by opinionated conservative commentators dog-whistling to their xenophobia and bigotry, which reinforces their feelings of victimhood (Wilson 2015). They will claim that free speech is under attack because of left-wing do-gooders. What they don't seem to understand is that free speech means that everyone is entitled to speak their mind. Just because a conservative is called out for their racist, bigoted or false claims, doesn't mean that their freedom of speech is being threatened; it means that someone else is exercising their freedom of speech in retort. 

I saw a statement recently, which said, 'Racism asks for your silence. Anti-racism asks for your voice'.

It is important to speak up and challenge racism. Speaking up is not the silencing of others. 

While there are some examples of left-wing cancel culture, it is blown well and truly out of proportion by conservatives who struggle with changing social norms, so react by manufacturing their inability to adapt into a national crisis (Hobbes 2020). 



We share the world with billions of people, which means that there will be billions of disparate views and values. Rather than trying to ban everyone or everything that we disagree with or don't understand, we would be much better off trying to understand others and learning to disagree without taking offence. Having said that, there are times when behaviours and systems need to be addressed. Racism, sexism and bigotry are harmful and should not be tolerated. This is not just a matter of agreeing to disagree. We need to reach a point where these behaviours and values are not acceptable. 

Why do conservatives feel led to defend racism, sexism and bigotry? Why do conservatives defend exploitative labour conditions and environmental degradation? Why do conservatives feel it is acceptable to condone violence against black people, women, Muslims, refugees, leftists and anyone else they don't understand? Why do conservatives deny science, but take the word of uneducated, unqualified shock jocks as gospel? They claim they are the victims, when they have no idea what being a victim of racism, sexism and bigotry means. 

Most conservative protests are to enforce their views on others, rather than defending the rights of  others. They think their opinions and values are superior to the rights of others.

Many conservatives value symbols over humanity. Their idea of morality is symbolic. Their idea of equality is that everyone should think, look and act the same as them; they do not value diversity, whether it be in culture, art or ideas. 

Until conservatives empathise with those who suffer discrimination, they won't change their behaviours. As the old adage says, 'Justice will not be served until those who are unaffected are as outraged as those who are'.




References

BBC News 2017, 'The Anzac post, outrage and a debate about race', 10 August, viewed 31 July 2020,

Bourke, L 2014, 'Prime Minister Tony Abbott says ABC not on Australia's side in interview with 2GB', ABC News, 4 February, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-01-29/tony-abbott-steps-up-criticism-of-abc/5224676.

Davidson, H 2016, 'Former SBS reporter Scott McIntyre repeats Anzac Day accusations on Twitter', The Guardian, 25 April, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/news/2016/apr/25/former-sbs-reporter-scott-mcintyre-repeats-anzac-day-accusations-on-twitter.

D'Costa, K 2013, 'Beyond Ishtar: The Tradition of Eggs at Easter', Scientific American, 31 March, viewed 8 August 2020, https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/anthropology-in-practice/beyond-ishtar-the-tradition-of-eggs-at-easter.

Dvorak, P 2015, 'The phony ‘War on Christmas’ is back, fueled by those alleged Jesus haters at Starbucks', 10 November, viewed 31 July 2020, https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/the-phony-war-on-christmas-is-back-fueled-by-those-alleged-jesus-haters-at-starbucks/2015/11/09/ed8471de-86f7-11e5-9a07-453018f9a0ec_story.html.

Gunter, B & Kizzir, J n.d., Whose heritage? Public symbols of the confederacy, Southern Poverty Law Centre, https://www.splcenter.org/sites/default/files/com_whose_heritage.pdf.

Hobbes, M 2020, 'Don’t Fall For The 'Cancel Culture' Scam', The Huffington Post, 11 July, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/cancel-culture-harpers-jk-rowling-scam_n_5f0887b4c5b67a80bc06c95e.

Jones, J 1992, I'm going to take you down: Inside the mind of Mark David Chapman, Villard Books.

McRae, D 2020, 'Adam Goodes: 'Instead of masking racism, we need to deal with it day-to-day'', The Guardian, 3 March, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2020/mar/02/adam-goodes-interview-racism-walk-away-afl

NMA 2020, Nicky Winmar’s stand, National Museum of Australia, 13 March, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/nicky-winmars-stand.

Pasley, J 2020, 'Trump frequently accuses the far-left of inciting violence, yet right-wing extremists have killed 329 victims in the last 25 years, while antifa members haven't killed any, according to a new study', Business Insider, 31 July, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.businessinsider.com/right-wing-extremists-kill-329-since-1994-antifa-killed-none-2020-7.

Pengilly, A 2020, ''It was crushing': Broncos apologise to Renouf for racist slurs during career', The Sydney Morning Herald, 31 July 2020, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/it-was-crushing-broncos-apologise-to-renouf-for-racist-slurs-during-career-20200731-p55hf2.html.

Roberts, G 2014, 'Acting Prime Minister Warren Truss defends Navy amid claims asylum seekers beaten and burned', ABC News, 18 February, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-01-22/australian-navy-accused-of-beating-burning-asylum-seekers/5211996.

Robinson, J 2020, 'Myths About Confederate Monuments - ACLU Deputy Legal Director Jeffrey Robinson exposed Confederate monuments for what they really are', Now This News, 19 June, viewed 1 August 2020, https://youtu.be/55ehKPUm7dc

Roe, C 2020, 'Anti-racism campaigner cops death threats over fake story', SBS News, 18 August, viewed 15 August 2020, https://www.sbs.com.au/nitv/article/2020/08/15/anti-racism-campaigner-cops-death-threats-over-fake-story.

Willacy, M 2020, 'Culture of Cover-up', ABC, 17 March, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-03-17/four-corners-sas-allegations-war-crimes/12028522.

Williams, P, Armitage, R,  & Stein, L 2020, 'As America grapples with its history of racism, relics of the past are being toppled by a new generation', 11 June, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-06-11/why-people-are-pulling-down-statues-in-the-us-in-protest/12343766

Wilson, J 2015, ''Cultural Marxism': a uniting theory for rightwingers who love to play the victim', The Guardian, 19 January, viewed 1 August 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/19/cultural-marxism-a-uniting-theory-for-rightwingers-who-love-to-play-the-victim.

Updated 19 August 2020










Saturday, July 11, 2020

All Lives Matter ... except for lives of black people, Asians, Muslims, homeless, refugees, LGBTIQ+, socialists ...


All Lives Matter ... except for lives of black people, Asians, Muslims, homeless, refugees, LGBTIQ+, socialists ...

By Ranting Panda, 11 July 2020

Picture this: you're walking down the street and hear someone screaming for help. What do you do?

(a) Ignore them
(b) Run the other way
(c) Help them

This is pretty easy, right? Most people would offer help.

Yet, this simple act of compassion and concern seems just a little difficult for some people to comprehend. The Black Lives Matter movement started because people of colour were screaming for help as they suffered under systemic racism manifesting itself through police brutality, deaths in custody, and disparities in health, education, employment, and wealth.


A lot of people who oppose Black Lives Matter protests are trying to change the narrative from justice for people of colour to being an anti-white movement. Instead of black lives matter, they are trying to make it about white lives and white guilt. Apparently, white privilege and white guilt are worse than the systemic racism that black people experience. What privilege to be able to do this. There was even a claim that white people who side with BLM are the real racists, because somehow this means they feel superior to black people. White people who support BLM acknowledge that white privilege was built on white supremacy, they are not saying that white people are superior. Yet, anti-BLM people somehow think that solidarity equals superiority ... perhaps they are just projecting their own white supremacy.



People committing crimes should be arrested, but black people are often arrested for crimes that white people are never arrested for, and they are treated worse when being arrested. The over-representation of black deaths in custody is testimony to this. On average, Indigenous Australians account for around 20% of deaths in custody, yet are only 2% of the Australian population, so have a one in 10 chance of dying in custody (Doherty & Bricknell 2020). Non-indigenous people account for 98% of the population, but 80% of the deaths, so have less than one in 100 chance of dying in custody. Can you imagine the outrage, the anger, the demands for justice, if non-indigenous people were dying in custody at such a rate? In the United States, black people are twice as likely as white people to die in police custody (Tucker 2020).

Even though Aboriginal people are only 3% of the population of New South Wales, they account for 12% strip-searches conducted by New South Wales police (Wellington 2020). However, legal experts believe these figures are greatly understated, as Police often don't record strip-searches. Even more disturbing, is whether the strip-searches are being conducted lawfully. For instance, there have been strip-searches conducted on children as young as 10 years old (Wellington 2020). In response to this information, the Redfern Legal Centre and the legal firm, Slater and Gordon, have commenced a class action lawsuit against the NSW Police.

People oppose Black Lives Matter claim that they aren't racist because they believe 'All' lives matter ... yeah ... about that ... these same people who claim that All Lives Matter, also oppose rights for people of colour, Asians, refugees, LGBTIQ+, Muslims, women, the poor, the homeless, Palestinians, the unemployed, the drug users ... you know, basically everyone who isn't a white Christian. In fact, ALM advocates tend to hate everyone who white Christians have attacked and subjugated for centuries.



Some of the racism from ALM advocates is demonstrated in their histrionic claims that black communities have significant social problems and that black people only want hand-outs. There are social issues in many black communities, but is that the fault of the residents or the policies, actions and inactions of government ... e.g. Stolen Generations, Stolen Wages, White Australia Policy ... you know ... the systemic racism that Black Lives Matter is drawing attention to. And hand-outs? What hand-outs? The 'hand-outs' that black people get, are no more than the same welfare that anyone is able to claim if they are out of work. They do not get free university, or free home loans, or free cars, or any other benefit that non-indigenous people don't get (Carlson 2016).

The media and certain politicians often inflame these racist stereotypes and enforce the concept of white victimhood. After all, if a white person is called out for racist behaviour, then the white person is the victim ... according to anti-BLM people. ALM logic is that the victims of racism are not the people who continue to be oppressed by the systems that were instituted by white settlement, but that white people are the victims because black people want equality and justice. This helps serve the myth that black people are living in the past and the world is now some racist-free utopia ... even though racism continues to oppress people to this very day.

What was the purpose of right-wing sites claiming that no media outlet reported a group of men of African appearance assaulting a 16 year old girl at Southern Cross Railway Station? The purpose was to demonise black people, inflame white victimhood and make it appear as though black people get away with serious crimes ... even though black people are over-represented in the justice systems, often arrested for things that white people are never arrested for. But back to this dreadful attack at Southern Cross Railway Station. The claim that it wasn't reported is garbage. It was reported in the Herald Sun, The Age, and even in British papers, the Daily Mail and the Independent.

Have a look at the track record of the Herald Sun. It has been voracious in its reporting of 'African' gangs, to the point where the police issued a statement saying that the reporting was misleading and over-represented the amount of crime being perpetrated by 'African' gangs, as well as ascribed some of those crimes to African gangs when they were committed by white people and often, not even by gangs (Dinham & Baker 2018). The purpose? Racist fear-mongering and dog-whistling.

Ironically, it is this very vilification of people of African appearance that is actually making the situation worse. By exaggerating the problem, the media has caused an entire community to be ostracised and rejected. Many businesses are refusing to employ people with African names. People who thought they were Australian, are isolated, demonised, and unemployed, making some of them vulnerable to recruitment by organised crime gangs which, by the way, are not necessarily African (Chiengkou & Dexter 2019). Want to reduce crime? Be more welcoming and inclusive.

Racialising crime creates in people's minds that there is a link between race and crime, which ignores the actual causes of crime, such as socio-economic factors (Budarick 2018). This indicates that either people are naively ignoring the real causes of crime, or they don't care about the real causes because they want an excuse to hate black people, to hate migrants, to hate refugees ... they want to justify their racism. While people are demonising 'African' gangs, people of African appearance have experienced an increase in racism and violent attacks against them (Budarick 2018; Diversity Council Australia 2018).

Interestingly, the media portrays Victoria as being in the grip of a crime wave, yet statistics show that youth crime has fallen by 40% over the last 10 years, with total crime experiencing its biggest decline in 12 years, with a 6% fall (Day 2018).

All Lives Matter advocates often share incidents of crimes committed by people of colour and then belligerently ask, 'where are the protests now?' Well, cabrón, the reason there are no protests is because these are isolated, individual incidents; they are not part of the systemic racism that people of colour experience every single day.

Hand-wringing ALM advocates will attempt sincerity in the claim that all lives matter, but it doesn't take much to expose their thinly veiled racism and bigotry. They'll try to hide it by saying that they have black friends or gay friends, or whatever. ALM advocates often roll out a person of colour who disagrees with the movement or who claims that they don't experience racism. This is typical of conservatives though: if it doesn't affect them, then it doesn't matter if it affects someone else. Instead, BLM is not about one individual's personal experience, but the systemic abuses, discrimination and subjugation that most people of colour do experience. Having said that, based on the conservative logic that a black person denying racism invalidates BLM, then white people acknowledging racism must validate BLM. Hmm ...

Some ALM advocates have complained that if they claim 'white power' or 'white pride', they are accused of being racist, whereas black people can have 'black power' and 'black pride', and it isn't considered racist. The difference is that black power and black pride are not about subjugating other ethnicities, but in claiming the same rights that white people have. White power on the other hand, is often used as an excuse to subjugate other ethnicities. Black power, black pride is not about black supremacy; white power, white pride is often about white supremacy.

Pauline Hanson's billboard in Rockhampton (Stunzner & Colliver 2020) 
Take Australia's perennial racist politician, Pauline Hanson, who funded a billboard in Rockhampton, Australia, with the words, 'All lives matter or bugger off' (Stunzner & Colliver 2020). Hanson founded a political party called 'One Nation'. However, her 'achievements' in parliament have indicated that she isn't interested in Australia being one nation, but that it should be a white nation. She has attacked indigenous people, Muslims, refugees, LGBTIQ+, migrants, socialists ... basically anyone who doesn't look, speak or sound like her. She is the epitome of a bigot. When she put up this billboard she clearly showed that all lives don't matter. She is a waste of political space, only interested in division, race-baiting, fear-mongering and dog-whistling.

All lives matter ... but some matter more than others ... to paraphrase Orwell. For BLM, it's not that black lives matter more than anyone else's, they just want to matter as much as everyone else. For ALM advocates, white lives matter more than black: they try to look like they care by claiming ALL lives matter to them, when clearly they don't.

Howtofightantisemitism.com (2020)
In the United States, President Donald Trump had the opportunity to unite his nation during the Black Lives Matter protests which followed the police killing of George Floyd. Instead, Trump created division, stoked the flames of fear and racism, and threatened to shoot protesters. But what can one expect from such a racist president. This is a man who labelled Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan as 'good people' after one of them murdered a woman who was protesting against their racism and hate. Trump's election campaign utilised Nazi imagery in attacking anti-fascists, by overlaying the Nazi symbol for political prisoners with the words Antifa.

During Trump's election campaign in 2016, he espoused 'America First'. Seems innocuous enough, right? He isn't the first American leader to claim that. In fact, the saying goes back at least 120 years, to President McKinley in 1896. However, the saying was also appropriated by the Ku Klux Klan. Surely any decent politician would avoid being associated with a hate group ... but not Trump, after all, he thinks the Klan are fine people. The Anti-Defamation League even advised Trump that he shouldn't use it because during World War II, the slogan was appropriated by an isolationist political party with pro-Nazi and anti-Semitic tendencies (Emery 2018). Trump obviously did not desist from using it, so clearly doesn't mind the connection with Nazism, anti-Semitism, racism or fascism ... which could explain his unjustified attacks on anti-fascist activists.

(Emery 2018)

Following on from this, the Trump campaign sold shirts that utilised Nazi imagery, by displaying an eagle with talons wrapped around a US flag in a circle. This bears remarkable similarity to the Nazi symbol that featured an eagle with its talons wrapped around a swastika in a circle.


Trump continues with his fascist, racist, white supremacist attacks on Black Lives Matter. Trump used his fourth of July 2020 speech at the foot of Mt Rushmore, to perpetuate divisions and social discord, to demonise his opponents, and to vilify Black Lives Matter. He even compared BLM to totalitarianism by portraying activists as violent mobs out to 'destroy justice and society' by unleashing a 'wave of violent crime' in order to dominate their political opponents (Nakamura et al 2020). Yeah, nothing like taking a leaf out of the Hitler playbook to stoke the fires of fear and animosity against minorities. What next? Will Trump start his own version of Hitler Youth by indoctrinating young people with his hate-speech and lies, simply because any school teaching facts is too left-wing for him. He is already setting the stage for this by declaring in that same speech, that 'children are taught in school to hate their own country and to believe the men and women who built it were not heroes but villains'. This statement is blatantly false and dog-whistles to his racist supporters, cementing their fear of BLM and turning them against teachers, education, and historical facts.



Just like the rise of Hitler, many Christians support Trump, his lies and his hate-speech. God knows what bible they read, but clearly not the one that says to do the following (just for clarity, the typical Trump-supporter response is in italics):


Yeah, it seems that Christians who stand with Trump, actually stand against Jesus!


There is nothing Christian in opposing Black Lives Matter.

There is nothing Christian in demonising BLM activists.

There is nothing Christian in defending systemic racism or denying that it exists.

There is nothing Christian in opposing anti-racism, because openly opposing anti-racism means you are blatantly racist ... so why do church leaders feel they need to oppose BLM? Why do church leaders share racist information that denies racism exists, or frame it as white victimhood? 

This is not Christianity and those church leaders and pew-warmers who do this, clearly have no concept of Christianity.  




To paraphrase John Heywood: 'There are none so blind as those who will not see'. Church leaders who vilify Black Lives Matter are clearly not Christian. Which begs the question about why they are leading churches and influencing people's faith. The character, Kristian Schaefer, in episode 2 of the TV show, Warrior Nun, nails it: 'You've built a career using faith as a stepping stone to personal power'. Church leaders who support Trump, who defend or deny racism, who facilitate fear-mongering and bigotry, are obviously not serving Christ or serving 'the least of these', but instead are serving themselves, their own power and wealth, and racist systems of black oppression.


Trump supporters spread false claims that BLM makes white people the enemy, rather than systemic racism, and incredibly, even claim that systemic racism is a hoax (Seitz 2020). These deliberate campaigns of misinformation demonstrate that Trump and many of his supporters do not lack knowledge of racism, but have deliberately chosen to vilify BLM through blatant lies and dog-whistles to the gullible, fear-driven, victimhood of many conservatives who lack the willingness, cognitive skills, critical thinking or emotional intelligence to fact-check these obvious falsehoods. It seems that no matter how obviously untrue these ridiculous claims are, many conservatives will believe them because they serve to confirm their racist biases.

Many opponents of Black Lives Matter claim it is a socialist ploy aimed at overthrowing society as we know it to implement a Marxist agenda ... whatever that may be! Clearly these critics do not understand Marxism, socialism, or racism. They clearly do not understand that it is they who are the biggest threat to the fabric of democratic society, as they embrace fascism ... or perhaps they do understand that, which is even more concerning; perhaps the racists are running a fascist ploy by weaponising hate to implement a Hitlerian agenda of ethnic cleansing and racial 'purity'.

The ALM propaganda is a wolf in sheep's clothing: it claims to value all lives, but clearly only values white lives.

Left-wingers and BLM advocates are often accused of being 'snowflakes' because they supposedly take offence at so many things that are an accepted part of society. Conservatives meltdown because of 'political correctness gone mad' and will accuse politicians or other celebrities of 'virtue signalling' dare they side with minorities, or stand up for human rights or the environment. Derogatory terms such as 'political correctness', 'do-gooder', 'Social Justice Warrior' and 'virtue signalling' are thrown at people who are simply doing the right thing. Apparently, believing in social justice is something to be ashamed of, according to conservatives. This says a lot about the values and lack of morals that characterise many conservatives, because they need to justify their selfishness, racism and bigotry, by tearing down anyone who dares to challenge their degeneracy and self-indulgeness.



Within every conservative is their inner snowflake just waiting to melt. One only has to watch them hit peak apoplexy when someone dares suggest tearing down a monument to some long-dead racist or genocidal maniac. Even more entertaining is watching them completely lose their proverbial shit dare it be suggested that a lolly have a name-change ... or a football team ... or a skin cream. Burn a flag and see how they react. Seriously, anyone would have thought the flag-burner had just barbequed Bambi in front of a pack of pre-schoolers. Can you see the pattern? Conservatives care more for symbols than lives, so clearly they don't believe 'all' lives matter.




One of the defensive points that anti-BLM people will raise, is that black people are more likely to be killed by other black people. This may be the case, however, it is also the case that it is likely the killer will be arrested, charged and convicted. This is not the case in cop killings of black people. The problem with making this claim, is that anti-BLM people are trying to distract from systemic racism, thus perpetuating systemic racism without holding police to account. It also assumes that violence is the only element of systemic racism claims, when it goes much deeper to include poorer health and education outcomes, wealth inequality and employment discrimination. Another defence that anti-BLM types will raise is that some cops who kill black people are themselves people of colour. In these cases, they often get away without being charged. This does not prove that the system is not racist, rather it confirms the racist bias of the system, in that the victim's colour matters when there is a killing by cop, because of the lack of action or concern taken in regard to it, regardless of the ethnicity of the police officers involved.

Conservatives often claim to be 'pro-life' because of their supercilious grandstanding against abortion. However, their contemptuous dismissal of BLM and denial of racism, show that they aren't pro-life at all. Rather than joining in the calls to end systemic racism and the violence and deaths caused by it, some conservatives have racially abused protesters or reacted violently (BBC 2020). There has been at least 50 incidents of cars being deliberately driven into BLM protesters (Democracy Now 2020). These attacks have resulted in at least one death, and multiple injuries (Evelyn 2020). What a way for conservatives to demonstrate being pro-life.

Some BLM protests were accompanied by violence in the form of riots and property damage. Anti-BLM people furrowed their collective brows, wrung their hands, pursed their lemony lips, and stated that the protesters were only hurting the BLM cause; after all, who could take BLM seriously when there's violence.

Indeed.

Why don't they protest peacefully, these anti-BLM hand-wringers helpfully suggested.

Protest peacefully, like Martin Luther King ... oh wait! He was assassinated by a white supremacist.

Protest peacefully, like Colin Kaepernick ... oh wait! President Donald Trump and many of the conservative snowflakes melted down when he took the knee, and declared him a traitor.

While the media focused on riots as a way to delegitimise BLM, a report by nonprofit Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, revealed that 93% of the protests were peaceful (Budryk 2020). 

Fredrick Douglass stated, 'Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe'.

Has BLM achieved anything? Well, yes. Sergio Tupac Uzurin, photographer and organiser, points out that "Confrontation works ... In the past 10 days, we've passed Breonna's law in Louisville. The NFL has expressed remorse for treating Colin Kaepernick like s***. The four police officers that killed George Floyd have been arrested. There was a nine-figure budget cut being proposed for the LAPD. The Confederate statues are being removed from the South. And that is in 10 days, half of those days involving rioting nationwide" (Tucker 2020).

The fake moralising of the 'All Lives Matter' brigade is misplaced. It assumes that BLM is an attack on white people. It assumes that BLM is after extra privileges that others don't have. What 'All Lives Matter' advocates miss is that BLM is not anti-white; it is anti-racism.





References

BBC 2020, 'Black Lives Matter protest disrupted by racist abuse', BBC News, 9 June, viewed 9 July 2020, https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-beds-bucks-herts-52979267.

Budarick, J 2018, 'Why the media are to blame for racialising Melbourne’s ‘African gang’ problem',, The Conversation, 1 August, viewed 11 July 2020, https://theconversation.com/why-the-media-are-to-blame-for-racialising-melbournes-african-gang-problem-100761.

Budryk, Z 2020, 'Over 90 percent of protests this summer were peaceful, report shows', The Hill, 3 September, viewed 5 September 2020, https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/515082-over-90-percent-of-protests-this-summer-were-peaceful-report-shows.

Carlson, B 2016, 'Here's the truth about the 'free ride' that some Australians think Indigenous peoples get', SBS News, 7 December (updated 27 January 2020), viewed 16 July 2020, https://www.sbs.com.au/topics/voices/culture/article/2016/12/07/heres-truth-about-free-ride-some-australians-think-indigenous-peoples-get.

Chiengkou, AD & Dexter, J 2019, '‘They are preying on these kids’: Victoria Police commander says African youths exploited by organised crime', SBS Dinka, 6 November, viewed 11 July 2020, https://www.sbs.com.au/language/english/they-are-preying-on-these-kids-victoria-police-commander-says-african-youths-exploited-by-organised-crime.

Day, L 2018, 'What statistics can and can't tell us about Melbourne's African crime issue', ABC News, 17 January, viewed 11 July 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-01-17/what-statistics-tell-us-about-melbournes-african-crime-issue/9336604.

Democracy Now 2020, 'Black Lives Matter protesters struck by motorists in Indiana, New York', Democracy Now, 8 July, viewed 9 July 2020, https://www.democracynow.org/2020/7/8/headlines/black_lives_matter_protesters_struck_by_motorists_in_indiana_new_york.

Dinham, A & Baker, N 2018, 'Police, African community leader warn against 'gang hysteria'', SBS News, 23 July, viewed 11 July 2020, https://www.sbs.com.au/news/police-african-community-leader-warn-against-gang-hysteria.

Diversity Council Australia, 2018, 'The facts on Victorian African crime', 3 September, viewed 11 July 2020, https://www.dca.org.au/position-statements/facts-victorian-african-crime.

Doherty, L & Bricknell, S 2020, 'Deaths in custody: 2017-18', Australian Institute of Criminology, Statistical Report 21, Figure 9: Deaths in police custody and custody-related operations by Indigenous status, 1989–90 to 2017–18 (%), p. 15, https://aic.gov.au/publications/sr/sr21.

Emery, D 2018, 'President Trump's oft-repeated slogan "America First" was also a credo of the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan organization', Snopes, 9 February, viewed 4 July 2020, https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/america-first-ku-klux-klan-slogan/.

Evelyn, K 2020, 'Drivers target Black Lives Matter protesters in 'horrifying' spate of attacks', The Guardian, 9 July, viewed 9 July 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/09/black-lives-matter-drivers-target-protesters-spate-of-attacks.

HowToFightAntiSemitism.com 2020, 'Trump campaign uses Nazi concentration camp symbols in Facebook ads', 17 June, viewed 27 June 2020, https://www.howtofightantisemitism.com/timeline/trump-campaign-uses-nazi-concentration-camp-symbols-in-facebook-ads.

Nakamura, D, Parker, A, Itkowitz, C & Sacchetti, M 2020, 'At Mount Rushmore, Trump exploits social divisions, warns of ‘left-wing cultural revolution’ in dark speech ahead of Independence Day', The Washington Post, 4 July, viewed 4 July 2020, https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-mount-rushmore-fireworks/2020/07/03/af2e84f6-bd25-11ea-bdaf-a129f921026f_story.html.

Seitz, A 2020, 'Facebook groups pivot to attacks on Black Lives Matter', AP Media, 6 July, viewed 7 July 2020, https://apnews.com/ca8c15794c65b1ae8e176deb9be5d718.

Stunzner, I & Culliver, P 2020, ' 'All lives matter' sign depicting Pauline Hanson pulled down after outrage in Rockhampton', ABC News, 3 July, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-07-03/pauline-hanson-sign-pulled-down-community-outrage-rockhampton/12419302.

Tucker, F 2020, 'Black Lives Matter protesters in New York: 'Confrontation works'', Al Jazeera, 8 July, viewed 9 July 2020, https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/black-lives-matter-protesters-york-confrontation-works-200629125851257.html.

Wellington, S 2020, 'Data that shows NSW Police target Indigenous people for strip-searches 'could be doubled': Legal experts', SBS News, 17 June, viewed 16 July 2020, https://www.sbs.com.au/nitv/article/2020/06/17/data-shows-nsw-police-target-indigenous-people-strip-searches-could-be-doubled.

Updated 13September 2020

Saturday, July 4, 2020

Nuke the poor! Morrison's solution to poverty.

Nuke the poor! Morrison's solution to poverty.

By Ranting Panda, 4 July 2020

Australian Prime Minister, Scott Morrison has announced a $270 billion defence strategy, which includes a missile acquisition program (Tillett 2020). The missiles will have long-range capability that could strike other countries because, according to Morrison, we need to 'prepare for a post-Covid world that is poorer, more dangerous and more disorderly' (Hurst 2020).

Few of Australia's neighbours pose a military threat, however, it is China that has shown itself to be the most aggressive in the Indo-Pacific region. It has expanded into the South China Sea, and regularly encroaches the waters of other nations, such as the Philippines.

Morrison claims that his missile program will provide a deterrent, however, it could cause China to react more aggressively by building up its armed presence closer to Australia. Morrison and his LNP predecessors have been defunding foreign aid to Pacific nations for some years. Since 2013/14, Australia has reduced its foreign aid budget by 36%. Australia's current level of foreign aid is 0.21% of Gross National Income (GNI), which is almost 3.5 times less than the UN recommendation of 0.7% of GNI. For Pacific nations, this has translated to a reduction in foreign aid of 26% from the Cook Islands, 5% from Fiji, 10% from Kiribati, 42% from the North Pacific, 14% from Samoa, 10% from Tonga, and 17% from Tuvalu (Lyons 2020). While Australia remains the largest provider of foreign aid, China is increasing the programs it provides to these nations as it seeks greater influence in the region. In 2018, China pledged $4 billion in aid to Pacific nations; which if delivered will be around four times what Australia contributes (Lyons 2018). It does not behove Australia for these nations to become increasingly indebted to China.

China has made no secret of courting these nations to establish influence in the Pacific. If Australia is so concerned about China's military ructions, it would do better to increase foreign aid so as those nations are not having to secure assistance from China.

The other nation which Australia has a love/hate relationship with, is Indonesia. In 1999, violence erupted through East Timor, then an Indonesian territory, after a successful vote for independence. Indonesia did not take the results of the vote very well and waves of violence erupted through the territory from pro-Indonesian militia and the Indonesian military. Australia backed East Timor's push for independence and sent troops to protect civilians against the violence. This greatly angered Indonesia. It is highly likely that Indonesia will not take lightly to Australia's new long-range missiles.

It is entirely possible that Australia's military build-up is going to cause a greater threat to Australia's security, than anything else.

For years, the LNP have banged on about 'debt and deficit' whenever they talk about the Labor Party's economic credentials. In response to COVID-19, the Morrison government unleashed a $214 billion stimulus (Karp 2020), which dramatically increased Australia's debt and deficit, while plummeting the country into recession (Jericho 2020). Rather than attempt to reduce this debt, Morrison has decided to splurge on unnecessary military hardware, which is more likely to cause harm to Australia, than to protect it. Imagine the reaction from the military might of China, if the military gnat from down under, launches a missile at it. Just how many missiles does Morrison expect to get for his money? How long will Australia last if it launches an attack on China?



Then there is the opportunity cost of this money. Since Covid-19, Australia's unemployment rate has skyrocketed to 7.1%, with more than 1.6 million people out of work. Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) reported that in May 2020, there were 129,100 job vacancies, meaning that there is now one job vacancy for every 12 people out of work (ABS 2020). Because of this, more than 600,000 people have stopped actively looking work, meaning they are no longer counted in the unemployment figures. The Australian Bureau of Statistics estimates that if those people were counted, Australia's unemployment rate would be 11.3%, the highest since the 1990s recession, while the youth unemployment rate would be 26.5%. (Hutchens 2020).

Rather than spend $270 billion on defence, which is not going to end well, Morrison would be much better off investing in the Australian economy to create jobs, with the corresponding increase in economic stability. With so many people out of work, the long-term impact on Australia's social fabric is going to be significant. Such a high level of unemployment is going to increase bankruptcies, poverty, crime, and a deterioration in education and health outcomes.

If Morrison predicts that poverty is going to cause a more dangerous and disorderly world, then is he proposing to bomb Australia's unemployed with his shiny new missiles?

Morrison had to stimulate the economy during COVID-19, however, the recovery stage of any disaster is always much longer than the disaster itself. Now is not the time for Morrison to cancel JobKeeper or other stimulus programs. It is the time to support those who are out of work, while also investing in job creation programs. It is not the time for missiles.

The priorities of Morrison and his predecessors have been decidedly archaic and short-sighted. Instead of investing in the future, they have conducted anti-intellectualist campaigns of disinformation, coupled with defunding or failure to adequately fund universities, public media, CSIRO, research programs, renewable energy, climate change, disability services, public health, and arts. According to Morrison, these are unnecessary, while fossil fuels and missiles are essential for securing Australia's future. To Morrison and his anti-intellectual peers, science is just a matter of opinion.


Missiles are not the answer to Australia's economic ills. If a poorer world will be a more dangerous world, it makes more sense to address poverty rather than the military.

Welfare is better than warfare. Job creation is better than military conflict.

Australia and many other nations are still wealthy even given COVID. It is time to share the wealth where it is needed, rather than accumulate it and risk poverty and disorder.

Missiles won't make us safer, meanwhile Morrison continues defunding economic aid, job creation & social security programs.

Morrison's smug short-sightedness is the biggest threat to Australia's future security, while doing nothing to alleviate poverty or to help the most vulnerable.


References

Australian Bureau of Statistics 2020, 6354.0 - Job Vacancies, Australia, May 2020, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/6354.0.

Hurst, D 2020, 'Australia to acquire long-range missiles as PM warns of dangerous post-Covid-19 world', The Guardian, 30 June, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/jun/30/australia-to-acquire-long-range-missiles-as-pm-warns-of-dangerous-post-covid-19-world.

Hutchens, G 2020, 'JobSeeker has about 700,000 more claimants than there are 'unemployed' people on ABS data', ABC News, 19 June, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-06-19/unemployment-numbers-still-mask-the-true-scale-of-job-losses/12370940.

Jericho, G 2020, 'Yes, Australia is in a recession – but worse is yet to come', The Guardian, 3 June, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/business/grogonomics/2020/jun/03/yes-australia-is-in-a-recession-but-worse-is-yet-to-come.

Karp, P 2020, 'Australian economic stimulus package: how much governments have committed to coronavirus crisis', The Guardian, 31 March, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/mar/31/australian-economic-stimulus-package-how-much-governments-have-committed-to-coronavirus-crisis.

Lyons, K 2018, 'Huge increase in Chinese aid pledged to Pacific', The Guardian, 9 August, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/aug/08/huge-increase-in-chinese-aid-pledged-to-pacific.

Lyons, K 2020, 'Australia slashes Pacific aid funding for health as region battles medical crises', The Guardian, 18 February, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/feb/18/australia-slashes-pacific-aid-funding-for-health-as-region-battles-medical-crises.

Tillett, A 2020, 'New missiles for defence in $270b arms build-up', Australian Financial Review, 30 June, viewed 3 July 2020, https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/new-missiles-for-defence-in-270b-arms-build-up-20200630-p557kg.





Sunday, June 28, 2020

Honour the victims, expose the perpetrators: monuments, statues and revisionist history

Honour the victims, expose the perpetrators: monuments, statues and revisionist history

By Ranting Panda, 28 June 2020

Statues across the world are being attacked, torn down or defaced by people protesting against the history of the person represented by the statue. Oftentimes, the statue represents some head of state or war-time leader, perhaps a founding figure for a particular city. In most cases, these people perpetrated or gave rise to abhorrent practices, such as genocide, slave trading, or racism.



Many people who are defending the statues do not even know who the statue represents, let why they have a statue or the terrible history of the person immortalised in stone. However, while we certainly should not revere people who committed genocide, such as Churchill, or who traded in slavery, such as Edward Colston, tearing down their statues may not be the best approach to raising awareness of their heinous histories. It's an educational opportunity lost to remove those statues.

Although, those who so vehemently defend the statues in the name of history, would have to then agree with replacing the statues with monuments, so the victims are honoured rather than the perpetrators. More on that later.

In relation to statues, it would be much better to add a plaque to the statue explaining that person's heinous deeds for all the world to see. This may prove a tad more educational that relegating them to the dustbin of history. At least this way, people can easily and quickly read a short summary of Tweet-length proportions which should reach those who won't ever go near a history book. Instead of tearing down statues, historian Max Barton believes it is time to 'educate not eliminate' (Parkes 2020).

Plaque added to John Batman statue in 1992 (CAMD 2017)
Critics allege that the protesters are rewriting history. Newsflash to the critics ... the protesters are not rewriting history, they are ACKNOWLEDGING it, unlike the critics who want to whitewash and deny the horrendous history behind many of those statues. If anyone is rewriting history, it is often the original plaques or inscriptions on those statues. Take John Batman for instance. Batman founded the Australian city of Melbourne. An inscription on Batman's statue at Queen Victoria Markets states that he founded the settlement 'on the site of Melbourne then unoccupied'. Unoccupied? This must have come as news for the thousands of Aborigines who inhabited the area for millennia. The history originally depicted on the statue is wrong. In 1992, Melbourne City Council added a plaque to the statue, which read 'When the monument was erected in 1881 the Colony considered that the Aboriginal people did not occupy land. It is now clear that prior to the colonisation of Victoria, the land was inhabited and used by Aboriginal people'.

In acknowledgement of history, keep the statues & add plaques that clearly state the true history, rather than the revisionist one that many statues depict.

Below are examples of statues that could do with being updated.
  • Winston Churchill, British Prime Minister
    • Responsible for the genocide of around four million people in Bengal during World War 2, after knowingly and deliberately exacerbating a famine by redirecting grain to British and other allied troops ... because their lives were more important than Indians, whom he described as a 'beastly people with a beastly religion' (Tharoor 2016, pp. 132, 158-160). Churchill's exacerbation of this famine was recently confirmed through a scientific study conducted into causes of famines in India (Mishra et al 2019, p. 2080). Churchill's policies included confiscating rice and boats to deny the Japanese from accessing them ... but the Bengalis were the ones who suffered (Safi 2019).
  • Edward Colston, British businessman 
    • Colston was a wealthy and influential merchant who donated much of his wealth to charity. He is recognised as one of Bristol's 'most virtuous and wise sons', however, part of his wealth was built through the transatlantic slave trade and exploitation (Parkes 2020). 
  • Lachlan Macquarie, Governor of New South Wales
    • while Macquarie had been relatively sympathetic to Indigenous peoples, he became frustrated with the ongoing violence between settlers and Aborigines. Macquarie ordered his troops to 'punish' local Aborigines, resulting in the mass murder of 14 men, women and children. Macquarie's principle aim was to 'strike the greater terror into the Survivors' by hanging the bodies of grown men from trees, which his troops complied with by hanging up the bodies of two men and one woman. Later, their heads were cut off and sent to Edinburgh University. Macquarie then lied to British authorities by claiming the group was given the opportunity to surrender, when they weren't. (ABC Fact Check 2017).  
  • Robert Towns, businessman, mariner, founder of Townsville, Queensland
    • Robert Towns was a wealthy businessman who founded Townsville and contributed to infrastructure projects in Queensland. He was also involved in 'blackbirding', which involved kidnapping South Sea Islanders from their homelands and trafficking them to Australia to be enslaved in forced labour on cane and banana farms (Haxton 2017). The South Sea Islander community is calling for the statue to include a plaque and a statue to pay tribute to the people who were trafficked to Queensland and forced to work in the canefields (Haxton 2017).
It's interesting that people get so upset about a statue being defaced or torn down, yet still don't care about the destruction of culture by government and big business. For instance, where was the outrage when Rio Tinto blew up two 46,000-year-old Indigenous sacred sites in June 2020. While Rio Tinto apologised for it, the fact is that the law allows this to happen with ministerial approval. Indigenous groups have long been requesting the legislation be amended to protect sacred sites (Smoleniec 2020).

It is understandable that people would want statues removed. Nancy Pelosi explained why she supported the removal of a statue of Christopher Columbus, 'Monuments to men who advocated cruelty and barbarism to achieve such a plainly racist end are a grotesque affront to these ideals. Their statues pay homage to hate, not heritage. They must be removed' (Macardle 2020).

It is a form of revisionism to ignore the history of a person who was responsible for abhorrent actions, such as genocide, slavery, war crimes, rape, racism. Those who defend the statues of such people while ignoring their heinous behaviours are no different to the societies of the time who empowered such people and who condoned such behaviours. Let's take the opportunity to correct this revisionism and ensure that people never forget the blood that was spilled, the lives that were destroyed by these 'heroes', often in the name of their countries and often while building their own wealth and power.

While tearing down statues is about acknowledging history, the banning or censorship of movies is about ignoring it, covering it up. For example, cancelling movies such as Gone With the Wind and Song of the South because of their racist content. WarnerMedia pulled Gone With the Wind from its streaming service, HBO Max, with the explanation that 'these racist depictions were wrong then, and are wrong today, and we felt that to keep this title up without an explanation and denouncement of those depictions would be irresponsible', and that it would return with a 'discussion of its historical context and a denouncement of those very depictions', while on its return, the film 'will be shown as it was originally created, because to do otherwise, would be the same as claiming these prejudices never existed'. The film has since returned with an introduction that places the film in its historical context and describing that 'when it is not ignoring the horrors of slavery, pauses only to perpetuate some of the most painful stereotypes of people of color' and that it sentimentalised 'a history that never was'. Jacqueline Steward, history professor, provides the introduction, and has stated that 'If people are really doing their homework, we may be poised to have our most informed, honest and productive national conversations yet about Black lives on screen and off'. (Blackwelder & Stone 2020).

Taking the opportunity to explain this is much better than banning it. If movies are banned, should we then ban the books they are based upon? We've seen where that level of censorship leads. It is a fascist act to ban art. If we want to ensure fascism never returns, then let's not start with a fascist act. 

Without a doubt, many movies are racist, but to bury this, ignores the injustices that were perpetrated against black people, or anyone seen as racially inferior. To purge art of everything that contains racist content would obliterate much of the historical record. Rather than eliminating history, we should be educating people about how such racist attitudes developed, why they were so wrong and what should be done to address the systems of racism that still exist today.

Sanitising history will not end racism or sexism, whether it be individual, systemic (institutional and structural), or casual. Far better to educate people on how poorly others were treated because of their race or gender, and then understanding why those behaviours were so wrong, and the importance of civil rights. Certainly, call out racism in all its forms; make it unacceptable.

It is understandable that people would want to ban movies that have racist content, but it is a band-aid solution that will not stop racists from being racist. Instead, it may well empower them as they argue about 'political correctness gone mad'. Far better to educate and highlight just how unacceptable and atrocious such attitudes are. 

Of course, when too much outrage is not enough, along comes the Murdoch press to inflame the situation. Australians from coast to coast were outraged ... apoplectic even ... when the Herald Sun reported that Aboriginal woman and Greens Senator Lidia Thorpe was 'demanding' that the state of Victoria should change its name so it is no long associated with 'someone who’s caused harm or murdered people'. This article did nothing but stir up racism and foment anti-Greens animosity. The story was a beat up. Lidia Thorpe had not called for Victoria to be renamed. Instead, the suggestion was put forward by the Herald Sun itself and she was asked to comment (Lewis 2020). When she said a name change could be considered, that was enough for the Herald Sun to twist that to sound like an Aboriginal Greens Senator was demanding that Victoria be renamed. And the predictable hate speech and vile attacks ensued, as the Herald Sun knew they would.



Better than maintaining statues to racists, mass murderers and slavers, would be to construct monuments that remember the victims. People who defend the statues and claim that tearing them down is to deny history, must surely be in favour of remembering history through such monuments.

An example of a moment that ensures the victims are remembered and history is not forgotten or revised, is shown in the preservation of the Nazi death camp, Auschwitz (Donadio 2015). More than 1.3 million people were murdered there, 90% of whom were Jewish, but Nazi victims also included dissenters, socialists, communists, the unhealthy, LGBTIQ+, and those who were considered 'racially inferior', which in addition to Jews, included Roma and people of colour.

The need to remember this history was highlighted recently, when President Donald Trump's campaign released an ad attacking Antifa by placing an inverted red triangle behind the word 'Antifa'. The Nazis had a classification system to identify demographics of its victims; the inverted red triangle was used to identify political prisoners (US Holocaust Memorial Museum n.d.).

Howtofightantisemitism.com (2020)
Revitalising a Nazi symbol of hate to promote President Trump demonstrates the need to ensure that history is not forgotten. This became even more pertinent when it was revealed that the Department of Homeland Security released a report on the greatest threats facing the United States. This report did not mention Antifa, however it did mention far-right extremists, such as the Boogaloo movement; but it was Antifa (which is an anti-Fascist ideology, not an organisation, by the way) that Trump and his campaign have targeted (Sargent 2020). It's disturbing that the Trump campaign resorts to Nazi symbols of fascism to demonise anti-fascists. Meanwhile, Trump's followers accept his growing fascism, hate-speech and racism, without challenge.




Not that this is the only Nazi symbol appropriated by the Trump re-election campaign. They are also selling 'America First' shirts with a logo that features an eagle with talons gripping an American flag in a circle, which bears a striking resemblance to the Nazi symbol that featured an eagle in a similar pose, whose talons were gripping a swastika in a circle (Elliott 2020).

Is it any wonder, that many of Trump's followers claim to be Christian? It was Christians who empowered Hitler, his white supremacy and his genocidal fascism. German Pastor Martin Niemöller blamed Christians for Hitler, which he highlighted in this speech (Niemöller 1947). This quote is disturbing on so many levels, given the parallels with Trump and his Christian followers, their attacks on black people, on leftists, and even on dismantling public health systems which 'cost the state money'.

'When Pastor Niemöller was put in a concentration camp we wrote the year 1937; when the concentration camp was opened we wrote the year 1933, and the people who were put in the camps then were Communists. Who cared about them? We knew it, it was printed in the newspapers. Who raised their voice, maybe the Confessing Church? We thought: Communists, those opponents of religion, those enemies of Christians - "should I be my brother's keeper?" Then they got rid of the sick, the so-called incurables. - I remember a conversation I had with a person who claimed to be a Christian. He said: Perhaps it's right, these incurably sick people just cost the state money, they are just a burden to themselves and to others. Isn't it best for all concerned if they are taken out of the middle [of society]? -- Only then did the church as such take note. Then we started talking, until our voices were again silenced in public. Can we say, we aren't guilty/responsible? The persecution of the Jews, the way we treated the occupied countries, or the things in Greece, in Poland, in Czechoslovakia or in Holland, that were written in the newspapers. … I believe, we Confessing-Church-Christians have every reason to say: mea culpa, mea culpa!'




Let's not forget our history, let's not deny our history.

A common adage repeated ad nauseam by many conservatives is that 'people should stop living in the past'. This is usually directed at people protesting racism. The people who say this, are also often the same ones vehemently defending statues of some long-dead genocidal, slave-trading, rapist racist. They obviously don't see the irony. They also don't understand that racism is still alive and destroying lives today. They don't understand that today's systemic racism exists because of the systems established years ago by these 'heroes' they defend and the revisionist history they believe. This is why we must never forget the past and it musts be used to help destroy existent systems of racism and discrimination that perpetuate the pain and suffering of victims here and now! Racism is built on the past and it is present in today's systems and in the attitudes of many people who clearly do not understand the harm it causes.

Honour the victims, expose the perpetrators.

References

ABC Fact Check 2017, 'Fact check: Was Lachlan Macquarie a mass murderer who ordered the genocide of Indigenous people?', 10 November, viewed 22 June 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-27/fact-check-did-lachlan-macquarie-commit-mass-murder-and-genocide/8981092?nw=0.

Blackwelder, C & Stone, M 2020, ''Gone With the Wind' returns to HBO Max with intro detailing historical context', Good Morning America, 24 June, viewed 27 June 2020, https://www.goodmorningamerica.com/culture/story/gone-with-the-wind-returns-hbo-max-commentary-71171554.

CAMD 2017, Melbourne’s John Batman statue, Council of Australasian Museum Directors, 1 September, viewed 20 June 2020, https://camd.org.au/melbournes-john-batman-statue/.

Donadio, R 2015, 'Preserving the ghastly inventory of Auschwitz', The New York Times, 15 April, viewed 27 June 2020, https://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/16/arts/international/at-auschwitz-birkenau-preserving-a-site-and-a-ghastly-inventory.html.

Elliott, J 2020, 'Trump 2020 campaign accused of ‘ripping off’ Nazi eagle logo', Global News, 2 July, viewed 4 July 2020, https://globalnews.ca/news/7130932/trump-nazi-eagle-logo-america-first/.

Haxton, N 2017, 'South Sea Islanders say statue of Townsville founder 'whitewashes' slave history', ABC News, 24 August, viewed 21 June 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-08-24/townsville-statue-whitewash-slave-history-islanders-say/8838984.

HowToFightAntiSemitism.com 2020, 'Trump campaign uses Nazi concentration camp symbols in Facebook ads', 17 June, viewed 27 June 2020, https://www.howtofightantisemitism.com/timeline/trump-campaign-uses-nazi-concentration-camp-symbols-in-facebook-ads.

Lewis, C 2020, 'Anatomy of a News Corp beat up', Crikey, 22 June, viewed 25 June 2020, https://www.crikey.com.au/2020/06/22/anatomy-of-a-beat-up-news-corp-lidia-thorpe/.

Macardle, M 2020, 'Columbus Statue to Be Removed from California State Capitol after 137 Years', National Review, 17 June, viewed 27 June 2020, https://www.nationalreview.com/news/columbus-statue-to-be-removed-from-california-state-capitol-after-137-years.

Mishra, V, Tiwari, AD, Aadhar, S, Shah, R, Xiao, M, Pai, DS, Lettenmaier, D, Drought and Famine in India: 1870-2016, Geophysical Research Letters, 28 February 2019, Vol.46(4), pp.2075-2083.

Niemöller, M 1947, 'Of guilt and hope', analysis by Harold Marcuse, University of South Carolina Beaufort, 17 September 2004, viewed 27 June 2020, http://marcuse.faculty.history.ucsb.edu/projects/niem/Niem1946GuiltHope13-16.htm.

Parkes, P 2020, 'Who was Edward Colston and why is Bristol divided by his legacy?', BBC News, 8 June, viewed 21 June 2020, https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-bristol-42404825.

Safi, M 2019, 'Churchill's policies contributed to 1943 Bengal famine – study', The Guardian, 29 March, viewed 21 June 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/29/winston-churchill-policies-contributed-to-1943-bengal-famine-study.

Sargent, G 2020, 'Leaked document makes Trump campaign’s use of Nazi-era symbol look worse', The Washington Post, 20 June, viewed 27 June 2020, https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/06/19/leaked-document-makes-trumps-use-nazi-era-symbol-look-worse/.

Smoleniec, B 2020, 'After blasting 46,000-year-old Indigenous caves, Rio Tinto backs calls for changes to WA heritage laws', SBS News, 5 June, viewed 25 June 2020, https://www.sbs.com.au/news/after-blasting-46-000-year-old-indigenous-caves-rio-tinto-backs-calls-for-changes-to-wa-heritage-laws.

Tharoor, S 2016, Inglorious Empire: What the British did to India, Kindle edition, Scribe Publications, London, UK.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum n.d., 'Classification system in Nazi concentration camps', Holocaust Encyclopedia, viewed 27 June 2020, https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/classification-system-in-nazi-concentration-camps.




Updated 4 July 2020