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The protesters shacked up in Canberra, along with other, more aggressive and more extreme protest movements elsewhere — in New Zealand, in Canada, in the UK, and their far-right enablers and promoters in the US — remain characterised by a variety of motivations.
They range from anti-vaxxers to white supremacists, sovereign citizen types, anti-lockdown/mandate protesters, anti-Semites, self-identified Indigenous land rights advocates, QAnon dead-enders, Putin supporters and the chancers and grifters feeding off them all.
Don’t discount the potential for violence from some — not merely from fascists lurking within their ranks but individuals becoming obsessed with the constant rhetoric of hatred directed at the political and media classes in general and high-profile politicians in particular. Some politicians, like Craig Kelly and Gerard Rennick, will continue to encourage and promote them, regardless of the potential for violence.
But however disparate, the protesters do share ideas about, and consequences of, community.
Amber Schultz’s excellent piece for Crikey yesterday on the stories of some of the protesters shed a lot of light on the experience of community among them. Protesters who had travelled long distances to forge bonds with like-minded people, some after becoming alienated from their families or losing their job because they refused to be vaccinated.
It’s a story many of us have heard: families no longer on speaking terms because of arguments over COVID; Christmases spent apart because unvaccinated family members weren’t welcome. Anti-vax grandparents cut off from their grandkids. Nurses and teachers who’ve lost their jobs because they wouldn’t get a vaccine (but insist they’re not anti-vax).
These people have severed themselves from their kith and kin, from their communities and livelihoods, motivated by irrational beliefs, conspiracy theories or childlike assertions of privilege against being compelled to do something for the broader community. But notice what they do next: seek out other, replacement communities where they feel more at home.
Those communities might be fascists, or anti-vaxxers, or QAnon, or simply people swapping experiences of being alienated from their families, but that need for community is what they all have in common.
The need for community has been one of the great disruptors of modern politics, in a way that has not yet been properly appreciated, certainly not by political journalists focused on the here and now. Much of the economic and political history of the past 40 years is one of communities and how we identify with them.
One of the consequences of neoliberalism — and no, this is not yet another “neoliberalism is to blame for everything” argument — was to act as a solvent of community.
Fundamentally it replaced a more communitarian economic philosophy that emphasised economic security with an individualist economic philosophy that offered greater freedom. Zygmunt Bauman called it the transition from solid modernity to liquid modernity, with individuals losing economic security in exchange for the potential for greater wealth, consumerism and personal choice. We were told we were on our own, we could no longer rely on our communities to keep us secure — that was now in our own hands, along with the opportunity to prosper.
But however appealing greater individualism and the material benefits of neoliberalism were, they couldn’t nullify the need for community and the certainty and security it can provide. Most of us, it turns out, aren’t up for rugged individualism; even libertarians prefer to hang out with other libertarians. Indeed, in a society that embedded in us the idea that our only value as individuals was an economic value, the need for community became even greater given that, at any one time, half the population will have below average economic outcomes and only the top couple of per cent would demonstrably prosper. Abandoning security for freedom, transitioning from solid to liquid, ignores that people want the certainties and security of community.
The tribalism, reaction against globalisation and nativism that drove much of Western politics after 2015 was fuelled by this reaction against the core message of neoliberalism, as people — especially white, middle-class people — looked to familiar communities for security from economic competition. The relentless growth of identity politics on the left, and the obsession with constructing elaborate matrices of privilege, and the co-option of much of that by reactionaries, is part of that as well.
Some of this wasn’t new. We’d seen populism and nativism in Australia in the 1990s, in reaction to 15 years of liberal economic reform, as those who perceived themselves as losers from neoliberalism looked to those who offered the comforting certainties of racial and cultural nostalgia. Unsurprisingly, one of the avatars of that early iteration of anti-neoliberal reaction, Pauline Hanson, reemerged to exploit it in the 2010s.
The pandemic, in addition to shattering the neoliberal economic consensus, has only fuelled that process, even if those alienated and in search of communities remain a small minority.
Like many communities, especially those created under pressure, these communities will soon fracture and divide internally. QAnon, always at least implicitly and often explicitly anti-Semitic, is now fragmenting as extreme anti-Semites attempt to co-opt adherents.
Like religious sects, such groups can often violently split over subtle points of doctrine. And some members will invest more and more of themselves in such communities, losing perspective, losing contact with the real world (indeed, convinced they live in the real world while the rest of us as deluded) and becoming cut-off from their families. It happened with Trump supporters and QAnon adherents, and now it’s happened with vaccines.
As Parliament debates which particular minority should be excluded from the community protections that most of us take for granted, as it decides whether Christian communities can exclude trans kids but not gay kids, we should recall that who we welcome and who we reject can have serious ramifications beyond the individual lives we’re harming.
We’re plagued by total idiots who spread conspiracies
about this rotten virus as they flaunt their “expertise”
with crazy, nut-job notions that attract the sort of folk
who need a new community so wear the protest cloak
that’s offered by those charlatans who make a claim to fame
by peddling arrant nonsense to immortalise their name.
They say the virus is a hoax, pandemics don’t exist,
and anything an expert says is instantly dismissed
down convoluted rabbit holes that haunt the internet
and glorify stupidity whatever chance they get
with crap about infringing rights and selfish points of view
that risk the lives of others with the nonsense they pursue.
And venal politicians seek to profit from these fears,
betraying truth and ethics for some empty-headed cheers,
a stance that’s very dangerous and threatens health campaigns,
increasing stress on hospitals and sabotaging gains
that vaccinations can produce by triggering a war
that undermines the greater good and violates the law.
Gazza – have you just joined this site? I am accustomed to reading your BTLs over on TGA but have not seen you here before.
Great to see your work spread around – idiots, nut jobs, charlatans, venal politicians – the list is seemingly endless. My mother used to say “you can live too long” and I am now feeling that I have done so.
Yep, just dipping my toe in the water courtesy of the 21-day free trial.
We lost First Dog on the Moon some time ago and I reckon a daily poem from an intelligent wordsmith such as yourself would fill that aching gap.
Thank you for the vote of confidence. Trading cartoons for poetry…interesting idea!
Stay Gazza
Worth the money here, mate. But see you at the Graun anyway, too.
“…given that, at any one time, half the population will have below average economic outcomes…”
Not true. Not even close. Keane does not understand the difference between average and median. That’s quite shocking for someone who keeps giving opinions on economic matters, but he’s got form on this. Because most of the wealth is concentrated in the hands of very few, far more than half the population has below average economic outcomes.
Even the abysmal standard of language here is far exceeded by the innumeracy on constant display.
It is certainly a distinction our dominant political groupings are anxious to avoid.
I worry that sooner or later we’ll have a Jo Cox incident in Australia.
That seems increasingly probable, though things in Australia have not yet sunk to the level of the UK or USA. Canada is clearly going the same way too.
Jo Cox, as you mention, was shot dead in the street during the Brexit campaign. UK MP David Amess was stabbed to death at a constituency surgery about 15 months ago. This week UK Labour leader Keir Starmer was set on by a howling mob whipped up by PM Johnson’s vicious lies about Starmer, which Johnson borrowed from far-right web sites. Johnson also gave out the home address of the SNP’s Westminster leader and MP Ian Blackford while making and repeating false allegations about him so that Blackford’s family was deluged with death threats. (The Tories hate the SNP and Blackford in particular because they have been very effective in the UK parliament exposing the failings of Johnson’s government.) And so on. That’s before considering what happens on so-called ‘social’ media. It should be noted that Johnson’s colleagues still support him and defend the lies he tells even when they know he is encouraging violence against politicians. This from the party of law and order, supposedly.
The attacks and intimidation against politicians in the USA, including the murderous insurrection at the Capitol on 6th January, makes all the rest look like child’s play. It is easy enough, for example, to wonder at the almost total lack of anyone in the Republican Party resisting the Trump madness, but it becomes a little more understandable when you see the insane murderous fury unleashed against the person and family of anyone who does take a stand.
We have plenty of politicians who are no good, but death threats and actual violence is not going to improve the ones we have or attract better candidates to take their place.
Interestingly this tactic by Johnson comes not long after he linked up with Lynton Crosby in an effort to mend his reputation (!). This deflection is straight out of the Crosby play book.
Or maybe Crosby learned it from Johnson? For some reason this site does not let me post anything with a link, but the following was in a recent piece by Laura Keenssberg on the BBC website discussing Johnson’s tactics. Note the date of the Johnson quotation.
It’s hardly the first time he’s had to wriggle through controversies. Here he was confessing to his strategy many years ago:
“I’ve got a brilliant new strategy, which is to make so many gaffes that nobody knows which one to concentrate on,” he told the BBC’s Booktalk in 2006.
“They cease to be newsworthy, you completely out-general the media in that way, and they despair.”
He added: “You shell them, you pepper the media… you’ve got to pepper their positions with so many gaffes that they’re confused.
“It’s like a helicopter throwing out chaff, and then you steal on quietly and drop your depth charges wherever you want to drop them.”
Oops. Sorry; delete ‘Keenssberg’, insert ‘Kuenssberg’
If you want to post a link, use this format: crikey dot com dot au and your readers will manage to work it out.
Nope, tried that before, gave it another go now, and it still gets modbotted
No, Crosby has been doing this since Johnson was a political baby in the mayoral cradle.
Crosby, Cummings, Credlin, Gaetjens and Bannon are birds of a feather. Malevolence writ large.
Not just UK Tories, but like the LNP, this modus operandi is simply replicating the ‘owned’ GOP eco-system of influence and permanent campaigning.
Nicely put.
A few things went through my mind as I read Bernard’s very thoughtful and insightful article.
Firstly, there is this extract from the Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx (1848) (page 16 of my online copy)
“The bourgeoisie has torn away from the family its sentimental veil, and has reduced the family relation to a mere money relation”
Secondly, there is this infamous statement made by Margaret Thatcher in 1987:
“They’re casting their problem on society. And, you know, there is no such thing as society. There are individual men and women, and there are families. And no government can do anything except through people, and people must look to themselves first. It’s our duty to look after ourselves and then, also to look after our neighbour. People have got the entitlements too much in mind, without the obligations“.
Margaret Thatcher’s credo was embraced with great enthusiasm around the western world. You have to ask yourself the question, “After some 35 years, are we in a better state, the same state or a worse state than before we adopted her view of how individuals should conduct themselves? To me, this question is purely of a rhetorical nature.
Then there was an article written by:Minouche Shafik entitled “The Pandemic and Our Broken Social Contracts”, in Project Syndicate on 21/1/22. Minouche Shafik is Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science and an author.. An interesting excerpt from her essay reads as follows:
“As a result, (of a number of societal changes) there is a confusing and increasingly untenable mismatch between citizens’ expectations and reality. When a society can no longer provide what it once promised, and when individuals find that their contributions are no longer rewarded as they once were, distrust and alienation duly follow. This kind of breakdown is evident in many countries, where it offers a far more complete explanation for today’s anger and unrest than the frequently cited problem of stagnant or declining living standards. The latter explanation is superficially similar, but ultimately inadequate. While there is no question that inequality and poverty are linked to a wide variety of social ills, they alone cannot explain the rise of political extremism, conspiracy theories, drug addiction, and vaccine refusal among the rich world’s middle classes. The epidemics of loneliness and depression among affluent, educated populations show that social alienation reflects more than material deprivation. Personal well-being depends heavily on one’s sense of belonging and contributing to a community – exactly the sort of things that a social contract is supposed to underpin.”
If western civilization continues along its present path then I am not sure that it will survive. At best, it will not survive in a form that we cannot currently relate to; at worst it will be replaced by something that will most likely be akin to a return to some Dark Age. We had all better ‘get our heads out of the sand’, or more to the point, away from frivolous pursuits and more directed toward the things that really matter, if we are to get our of our current predicament.
Seems to me that economic inequality to the degree we are seeing now is antithetical to democracy and that being “middle class” is irrelevant, since it is now the 1% wealth outliers who have usurped control of everything. Inequality is not about material deprivation per se but about the social correlates of control over resources. There is heaps of evidence now that it is not poverty per se but relative access to resources (including both material and social correlates) within a given society that is crucial to its well-being.