By. John Pilger
26 January 2004
I am a reporter, who values bearing witness. That is to say, I place
paramount importance in the evidence of what I see, and hear, and sense
to be the truth, or as close to the truth as possible. By comparing this
evidence with the statements, and actions of those with power, I
believe it's possible to assess fairly how our world is controlled and
divided, and manipulated - and how language and debate are distorted and
a false consciousness developed.
When we speak of this in
regard to totalitarian societies and dictatorships, we call it
brainwashing: the conquest of minds. It's a notion we almost never apply
to our own societies. Let me give you an example. During the height of
the cold war, a group of Soviet journalists were taken on an official
tour of the United States. They watched TV; they read the newspapers;
they listened to debates in Congress. To their astonishment, everything
they heard was more or less the same. The news was the same. The
opinions were the same, more or less. "How do you do it?" they asked
their hosts. "In our country, to achieve this, we throw people in
prison; we tear out their fingernails. Here, there's none of that?
What's your secret?"
The secret is that the question is
almost never raised. Or if it is raised, it's more than likely dismissed
as coming from the margins: from voices far outside the boundaries of
what I would call our 'metropolitan conversation', whose terms of
reference, and limits, are fixed by the media at one level, and by the
discourse or silence of scholarship at another level. Behind both is a
presiding corporate and political power.
A dozen years ago, I
reported from East Timor, which was then occupied by the Indonesian
dictatorship of General Suharto. I had to go there under cover, as
reporters were not welcome -- my informants were brave, ordinary people
who confirmed, with their evidence and experience, that genocide had
taken place in their country. I brought out meticulously hand-written
documents, evidence that whole communities had been slaughtered -- all
of which we now know to be true.
We also know that vital,
material backing for a crime proportionally greater than the killing in
Cambodia under Pol Pot had come from the West: principally the United
States, Britain and Australia. On my return to London, and then to this
country, I encountered a very different version. The media version was
that General Suharto was a benign leader, who ran a sound economy and
was a close ally. Indeed, prime minister Keating was said to regard him
as a father figure.
He and Foreign Minister Gareth Evans made
many laudatory speeches about Suharto, never mentioning - not once -
that he had seized power as a result of what the CIA called "one of the
worst massacres of the twentieth century." Nor did they mention that his
special forces, known as Kopassus, were responsible for the terror and
deaths of a quarter of the East Timorese population - 200,000 people, a
figure confirmed in a study commissioned by the Foreign Affairs
Committee of Federal Parliament.
Nor did they mention that
these killers were "trained by the Australian SAS" not far from this
auditorium, and that the Australian military establishment was
integrated into Suharto's violent campaign against the people of East
Timor.
The evidence of atrocities, which I reported in my
film Death of a Nation was heard and accepted by the Human Rights
Commission of the United Nations, but not by those with power in
Australia. When I showed evidence of a second massacre near the Santa
Cruz cemetery in November 1991, the foreign editor of the only national newspaper in this country, The Australian, mocked the eyewitnesses.
"The
truth," wrote Greg Sheridan, "is that even genuine victims frequently
concoct stories." The paper's Jakarta correspondent, Patrick Walters,
wrote that "no one is arrested [by Suharto] without proper legal
procedures". The editor-in-chief, Paul Kelly, declared Suharto a
'moderate" and that there was no alternative to his benign rule.
Paul
Kelly sat on the board of the Australia-Indonesia Institute, a body
funded by the Australian government. Not long before Suharto was
overthrown by his own people, Kelly was in Jakarta, standing at
Suharto's side, introducing the mass murderer to a line of Australian editors. To his great credit, the then editor of the West Australian,
Paul Murray, refused to join this obsequious group.
Not long
ago, Paul Kelly was given a special award in the annual Walkley Awards
for journalism - the kind they give to elder statesmen. And no one said
anything about Indonesia and Suharto. Imagine a similar award going to
Geoffrey Dawson, editor of the London Times in the 1930s. Like Kelly, he
appeased a genocidal dictator, calling him a 'moderate'.
This episode is a metaphor for what I'd like to touch upon tonight.
For
15 years, a silence was maintained by the Australian government, the
Australian media and Australian academics on the great crime and tragedy
of East Timor. Moreover, this was an extension of the silence about the
true circumstances of Suharto's bloody ascent to power in the
mid-sixties. It was not unlike the official silence in the Soviet Union
on the bloody invasion of Hungary and Czechoslovakia.
The
media's silence I'll discuss in a while. Let's look now at the academic
silence. One of the greatest acts of genocide in the second half of the
twentieth century apparently did not warrant a single substantial
academic case study, based on primary sources. Why? We have to go back
to the years immediately after world war two when the study of post-war
international politics, known as "liberal realism", was invented in the
United States, largely with the sponsorship of those who designed
American global economic power. They include the Ford, Carnegie and
Rockeller Foundations, the OSS, the forerunner of the CIA, and the
Council on Foreign Relations.
Thus, in the great American
universities, scholars generally served to justify the cold war - which,
we now know from declassified files, not only brought us closer to
nuclear war than we thought, but was itself largely bogus. As the
British files now make clear, there was no Soviet threat to the world.
The threat was to Russia's satellites, just as the United States
threatened, invaded and controlled its satellites in Latin America.
"Liberal
realism" - in America, Britain, Australia - meant taking the humanity
out of the study of nations and viewing the world in terms of its
usefulness to western power. This was presented in a self-serving
jargon: a masonic-like language in thrall to the dominant power. Typical
of the jargon were labels.
Of all the labels applied to me,
the most interesting is that I am 'neo-idealist'. The 'neo' bit has yet
to be explained. I should add here that the most hilarious label is the
creation of the foreign editor of The Australian who took a whole page
in his newspaper to say that a subversive movement called
Chomskyist-Pilgerism was inspiring would-be terrorists throughout the
world.
During the 1990s, whole societies were laid out for
autopsy and identified as "failed states" and "rogue states", requiring
"humanitarian intervention". Other euphemisms became fashionable - "good
governance" and "third way" were adopted by the liberal realist school,
which handed out labels to its heroes. Bill Clinton, the president who
destroyed the last of the Roosevelt reforms, was labeled "left of
centre".
Noble words like democracy, freedom, independence,
reform were emptied of their meaning and taken into the service of the
World Bank, the IMF and that amorphous thing called 'The West' - in
other words, imperialism.
Of course, imperialism was the word
the realists dared not write or speak, almost as if it had struck from
the dictionary. And yet imperialism was the ideology behind their
euphemisms. And need I remind you of the fate of people under
imperialism. Throughout 20th century imperialism, the authorities of
Britain, Belgium and France gassed, bombed and massacred indigenous
populations from Sudan to Iraq, Nigeria to Palestine, India to Malaya,
Algeria to the Congo. And yet imperialism only got its bad name when
Hitler decided he, too, was an imperialist.
So, after the
war, new concepts had to be invented, indeed a whole lexicon and
discourse created, as the new imperial superpower, the United States,
didn't wish to be associated with the bad old days of European power.
The American cult of anti-communism filled this void most effectively;
however, when the Soviet Union suddenly collapsed and the cold war was
over, a new threat had to be found.
At first, there was the
'war on drugs' - and the Bogeyman Theory of History is still popular.
But neither can compare with the "war on terror" which arrived with
September 11, 2001. Last year, I reported the "war on terror" from
Afghanistan. Like East Timor, events I witnessed bore almost no relation
to the way they were represented in free societies, especially
Australia.
The American attack on Afghanistan in 2001 was
reported as a liberation. But the evidence on the ground is that, for 95
per cent of the people, there is no liberation. The Taliban have been
merely exchanged for a group of American funded warlords, rapists,
murderers and war criminals - terrorists by any measure: the very people
whom President Carter secretly armed and the CIA trained for almost 20
years.
One of the most powerful warlords is General Rashid
Dostum. General Dostum was visited by Donald Rumsfeld, the US Defence
Secretary, who came to express his gratitude. He called the general a
"thoughtful" man and congratulated him on his part in the war on terror.
This is the same General Dostum in whose custody 4,000 prisoners died
terrible deaths just over two years ago - the allegations are that
wounded men were left to suffocate and bleed to death in containers.
Mary Robinson, when she was the UN's senior humanitarian representative,
called for an inquiry; but there was none for this kind of acceptable
terrorism. The general is the face of the new Afghanistan you don't see
in the media.
What you see is the urbane Hamid Karzai, whose
writ barely extends beyond his 42 American bodyguards. Only the Taliban
seem to excite the indignation of our political leaders and media. Yet
under the new, approved regime, women still wear the burqa, largely
because they fear to walk down the street. Girls are routinely abducted,
raped, murdered.
Like the Suharto dictatorship, these
warlords are our official friends, whereas the Taliban were our official
enemies. The distinction is important, because the victims of our
official friends are worthy of our care and concern, whereas the victims
of our official enemies are not.
That is the principle upon
which totalitarian regimes run their domestic propaganda. And that ,
basically, is how western democracies, like Australia, run theirs.
The
difference is that in totalitarian societies, people take for granted
that their governments lie to them: that their journalists are mere
functionaries, that their academics are quiet and complicit. So people
in these countries adjust accordingly. They learn to read between the
lines. They rely on a flourishing underground. Their writers and
playwrights write coded works, as in Poland and Czechoslovakia during
the cold war.
A Czech friend, a novelist, told me; "You in
the West are disadvantaged. You have your myths about freedom of
information, but you have yet to acquire the skill of deciphering: of
reading between the lines. One day, you will need it."
That
day has come. The so-called war on terror is the greatest threat to all
of us since the most dangerous years of the cold war. Rapacious,
imperial America has found its new "red scare". Every day now,
officially manipulated fear and paranoia are exported to our shores -
air marshals, finger printing, a directive on how many people can queue
for the toilet on a Qantas jet flying to Los Angeles.
The
totalitarian impulses that have long existed in America are now in full
cry. Go back to the 1950s, the McCarthy years, and the echoes today are
all too familiar -- the hysteria; the assault on the Bill of Rights; a
war based on lies and deception. Just as in the 1950s, the virus has
spread to America's intellectual satellites, notably Australia.
Last
week, the Howard government announced it would implement US-style
immigration procedures, fingerprinting people when they arrived. The
Sydney Morning Herald reported this as government measures to "tighten
its anti-terrorism net". No challenge there; no skepticism. News as
propaganda.
How convenient it all is. The White Australia
Policy is back as "homeland security" - yet another American term that
institutionalises both paranoia and its bed-fellow, racism. Put simply,
we are being brainwashed to believe that Al-Qaida, or any such group, is
the real threat. And it isn't. By a simple mathematical comparison of
American terror and Al-Qaida terror, the latter is a lethal flea. In my
lifetime, the United States has supported and trained and directed
terrorists in Latin America, Africa, Asia. The toll of their victims is
in the millions.
In the days before September 11, 2001, when
America routinely attacked and terrorised weak states, and the victims
were black and brown-skinned people in faraway places like Zaire and
Guatemala, there were no headlines saying terrorism. But when the weak
attacked the powerful, spectacularly on September 11, suddenly, there
was terrorism.
This is not to say that the threat from
al-Qaida is not real - It is very real now, thanks to American and
British actions in Iraq, and the almost infantile support given by the
Howard government. But the most pervasive, clear and present danger is
that of which we are told nothing.
It is the danger posed by
"our" governments - a danger suppressed by propaganda that casts "the
West" as always benign: capable of misjudgment and blunder, yes, but
never of high crime. The judgment at Nuremberg takes another view. This
is what the judgment says; and remember, these words are the basis for
almost 60 years of international law: "To initiate a war of aggression,
it is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international
crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within
itself the accumulated evil of the whole"
In other words,
there is no difference, in the principle of the law, between the action
of the German regime in the late 1930s and the Americans in 2003.
Fuelled by religious fanaticism, a corrupt Americanism and corporate
greed, the Bush cabal is pursuing what the military historian Anatol
Lieven calls "the classic modern strategy of an endangered right-wing
oligarchy, which is to divert discontent into nationalism". Bush's
America, he warns, "has become a menace to itself and to mankind."
Those
are rare words. I know of no Australian historian or any other
so-called expert to have uttered such a truth. I know of no Australian
media organisation that would allow its journalists to speak or write
such a truth.
My friends in Australian journalism whisper it,
always in private. They even encourage outsiders, like myself, to say
it publicly, as I am doing now.
Why? Well, a career, security
- even fame and fortune - await those who propagate the crimes of
official enemies. But a very different treatment awaits those who turn
the mirror around. I've often wondered if George Orwell, in his great
prophetic work 1984, about thought control in totalitarian state &
I've often wondered what the reaction would have been had he addressed
the more interesting question of thought control in relatively free
societies. Would he have been appreciated and celebrated? Or would he
have faced silence, even hostility?
Of all the western
democracies, Australia is the most derivative and the most silent. Those
who hold up a mirror are not welcome in the media.
My work
is syndicated and read widely around the world, but not in Australia,
where I come from. However, I am mentioned in the Australian press quite
frequently. The official commentators, who dominate the press, will
refer critically to an article of mine they may have read in the
Guardian or New Statesman in London. But Australian readers are not
allowed to read the original, which must be filtered through the
official commentators. But I do appear regularly in one Australian
paper: the Hinterland Voice - a tiny free sheet, whose address is Post
Office Kin Kin in Queensland. It's a fine local paper. It has stories
about garage sales and horses and the local scouts, and I'm proud to be
part of it.
It's the only paper in Australia in which I've
been able to report the evidence of the disaster in Iraq - for example,
that the attack on Iraq was planned from September 11; that only a few
months earlier, Colin Powell and Condaleeza Rice, had stated that Saddam
Hussein was disarmed and no threat to anyone.
Today, the
United States is currently training a gestapo of 10,000 agents,
commanded by the most ruthless, senior elements of Saddam Hussein's
secret police. The aim is to run the new puppet regime behind a
pseudo-democratic façade - and to defeat the resistance. That
information is vital to us, because the fate of the resistance in Iraq
is vital to all our futures. For if the resistance fails, the Bush cabal
will almost certainly attack another country - possibly North Korea,
which is nuclear armed.
Just over a month ago, the United
Nations General Assembly voted on a range of resolutions on disarmament
of weapons of mass destruction. Remember the charade of Iraq's WMDs?
Remember John Howard in Parliament last February, saying that Saddam
Hussein, and I quote, "will emerge with his arsenal of chemical and
biological weapons intact" unquote, and that it was "a massive
programme".
In a speech lasting 30 minutes, Howard referred
more than 30 times to the threat posed by Saddam Hussein's weapons of
mass destruction.
And it was all a deception, wasn't it, a
lie, a terrible joke on the public, and it was channelled and amplified
by an obedient media. And who in the universities, our power-houses of
knowledge and criticism and debate - who stood up and objected? I can
think of just two.
Nor can I find any report in the media of
the United Nations General Assembly resolutions on 8th December. The
outcome was remarkable, if not surprising. The United States opposed all
the most important resolutions, including those dealing with nuclear
weapons. In its secret Nuclear Posture Review for 2002, the Bush
administration outlines contingency plans to use nuclear weapons against
North Korea, and Syria, and Iran and China.
Following suit, a
British government has announced for the first time that Britain will
attack non-nuclear states with nuclear weapons "if necessary". Who among
you is aware of these ambitions, and yet American and British
intelligence facilities in this country are crucial to their
implementation.
Why is there no public discussion about this?
The answer is that Australia has become a microcosm of the
self-censored society. In its current index of press freedom, the
international monitoring organisation Reporters Without Borders lists
Australian press freedom in 50th place, ahead only of autocracies and
dictatorships. How did this come about?
In the nineteenth
century, Australia had a press more fiercely independent than most
countries. In 1880, in New South Wales alone, there were 143 independent
titles, many of them with a campaigning style and editors who believed
it was their duty to be the voice of the people. Today, of twelve
principal newspapers in the capital cities, one man, Rupert Murdoch,
controls seven. Of the ten Sunday newspapers, Murdoch has seven. In
Adelaide and Brisbane, he has effectively a complete monopoly. He
controls almost 70 per cent of capital city circulation. Perth has only
one newspaper.
Sydney, the largest city, is dominated by
Murdoch and by the Sydney Morning Herald, whose current editor in chief
Mark Scott told a marketing conference in 2002 that journalism no longer
needed smart and clever people. "They are not the answer," he said. The
answer is people who can execute corporate strategy. In other words,
mediocre minds, obedient minds.
The great American journalist
Martha Gellhorn once stood up at a press conference and said: "Listen,
we're only real journalists when we're not doing as we're told. How else
can we ever keep the record straight?"
The late Alex Carey,
the great Australian social scientist who pioneered the study of
corporatism and propaganda, wrote that the three most significant
political developments of the twentieth century was, and I quote, "the
growth of democracy, the growth of corporate power and the growth of
corporate propaganda as a means of protecting corporate power against
democracy".
Carey was describing the propaganda of 20th
century imperialism, which is the propaganda of the corporate state. And
contrary to myth, the state has not withered away; indeed, it has never
been stronger.
General Suharto was a corporate man - good
for business. So his crimes were irrelevant, and the massacres of his
own people and of the East Timor were consigned to an Orwellian black
hole. So effective is this historical censorship by omission that
Suharto is currently being rehabilitated. In The Australian last
October, Owen Harries described the Suharto period as a "golden era" and
urged Australia to once again embrace the genocidal military of
Indonesia.
Recently, Owen Harries gave the Boyer Lectures on
the ABC. This is an extraordinary platform: in six episodes broadcast on
Radio National, Harries asked whether the United States was benign or
imperial. After some minor criticisms of American power, he described
the foreign policy of the most dangerous administration in modern times
as "utopian".
Who is Owen Harries? He was an adviser to the
government of Malcolm Fraser. But in none of the publicity about his
lectures have I read that Harries was also involved with an CIA-front
propaganda organization, the Congress for Cultural Freedom and its
Australian offshoot. For years, Harries was an apologist for the cold
war and the initial CIA-run attack on Vietnam. In Washington, he was
editor of an extreme right wing journal called The National Interest.
No
would deny Owen Harries his voice in any democracy. But we should know
who his former sponsors were. Moreover, it is his extreme view is the
one that dominates. That the ABC should provide him with such a platform
tells us a great deal about the effects of the long-running political
intimidation of our national broadcaster.
Consider, on the
other hand, the ABC's treatment of Richard Flanagan, one of our finest
novelists. Last year, Flanagan was asked to read a favorite piece of
fiction on a Radio National programmer and explain his reasons for the
choice. He decided on one of his favorite writers of fiction: John
Howard. He listed Howard's most famous fictions - that desperate
refugees had willfully thrown their children overboard, and that
Australia was endangered by Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass
destruction.
He followed this with Molly Bloom's soliloquy
from Joyce's Ulysses, because, he explained, and I quote, "in our time
of lies and hate it seems appropriate to be reminded of the beauty of
saying yes to the chaos of truth." Well, all of this was duly recorded.
But when the programme was broadcast, all references to the prime
minister had been cut out. Flanagan accused the ABC of rank censorship.
No, was the response. They just didn't want "anything political". And
this is the same ABC that has just given Owen Harries, the voice of
George W Bush's utopia, six one hour broadcasts.
As for
Richard Flanagan, that wasn't the end of it. The ABC producer who had
censored him asked if he would be interested in coming on a programmer to
discuss, and I quote, " disillusionment in contemporary Australia." In a
society that once prided itself on its laconic sense of irony, there
was not even a hint of irony, just an obedient, managerial silence. "All
around me," wrote Flanagan, "I see avenues for expression closing, and
odd collusion of an ever-more cowed media and the way in which the
powerful seek to dictate what is and what is not read and heard."
I
believe those words speak for many Australians. Half a million of them
converged on the center of Sydney on February 16th, and this was
repeated proportionally across the country. Ten Million marched across
the world. People who had never protested before protested the fiction
of Howard and of Bush and Blair.
If Australia is the
microcosm, consider the destruction of free speech in the United States,
which constitutionally has the freest press in the world.
In
1983, the principal media in America was owned by fifty corporations.
In 2002, this had fallen to just nine companies. Today, Murdoch's Fox
Television and four other conglomerates are on the verge of controlling
90 per cent of the terrestrial and cable audience. Even on the internet,
the leading twenty websites are now owned by Fox, Disney, AOL, Time
Warner, Viacom and other giants. Just fourteen companies attract 60 per
cent of all the time Americans spend online. And these companies
control, or influence most of the world's visual media, the principal
source of information for most people.
"We are beginning to
learn," wrote Edward Said in his book Culture and Imperialism, "that
de-colonisation was not the termination of imperial relationships but
merely the extending of a geo-political web that has been spinning since
the Renaissance. The new media have the media to penetrate more deeply
into a receiving culture than any previous manifestation of Western
technology." Compared with a century ago, when "European culture was
associated with a white man's presence, we now have in addition an
international media presence that insinuates itself over a fantastically
wide range."
He was referring not only to news. Right across
the media, children are remorselessly targeted by big business
propaganda, commonly known as advertising. In the United States, some
30,000 commercial messages are targeted at children every year. The
chief executive of one leading advertising company explained: "They
aren't children so much as evolving consumers." Public relations is the
twin of advertising. In the last twenty years, the whole concept of PR
has changed dramatically and is now an enormous propaganda industry. In
the United Kingdom, it's estimated that pre-packaged PR now accounts for
half of the content of some major newspapers. The idea of "embedding"
journalists with the US military during the invasion of Iraq came from
public relations experts in the Pentagon, whose current
strategic-planning literature describes journalism as part of
psychological operations, or "psyops". Journalism as psyops.
The
aim, says the Pentagon, is to achieve "information dominance" - which,
in turn, is part of "full spectrum dominance" -- the stated policy of
the United States to control land, sea, space and information. They make
no secret of it. It's in the public domain.
Those
journalists who go their own way, those like Martha Gellhorn and Robert
Fisk, beware. The independent Arab TV organisation, Al-Jazeera, was
bombed by the Americans in Afghanistan and Iraq. In the invasion of
Iraq, more journalists were killed than ever before - by the Americans.
The message could not be clearer. The aim, eventually, is that there'll
be no distinction between information control and media. That's to say:
you won't know the difference.
That alone is worthy of
reflection by journalists: those who still believe, like Martha
Gellhorn, that their duty is to keep the record straight. The choice is
actually quite simple: they are truth-tellers, or, in the words of
Edward Herman, they merely "normalise the unthinkable."
In
Australia, so much of the unthinkable has already been normalised.
Almost twelve years after Mabo, the basic rights of the first
Australians, known as native title, have become ensnared in legal
structures. The Aboriginal people now fight not just to survive. They
face a constant war of legal attrition, fought by lawyers. The legal
bill and associated costs in native title administration alone now runs
into hundreds of million of dollars. Puggy Hunter, a West Australian
Aboriginal leader, told me: "Fighting the lawyers for our birthright,
fighting them every inch of the way, will kill me." He died soon
afterwards, in his forties.
The High Court of Australia, once
regarded as the last hope for the First Australians, now refers to
native title as having a "bundle of rights" - as if Aboriginal rights
can be sorted and graded - and downgraded.
The unthinkable is
the way we allow the government to treat refugees, against whom our
brave military is dispatched. In camps so bad that the United Nations
inspector said he had never seen anything like them, we allow what
amounts to child abuse.
On October 19th 2001, a boat carrying
397 people sank on its way to Australia. 353 drowned, many of them
children. Were it not for a single individual, Tony Kevin, a retired
Australian diplomat, this tragedy would have been consigned to oblivion.
Thanks to him, we now know the Australian and military intelligence
knew the boat was in grave danger of sinking, and did nothing. Is that
surprising when the prime minister of Australia and the responsible
minister have created such an atmosphere of hostility towards these
defenceless people - a hostility designed, I believe, to tap the seam of
racism that runs right through our history.
Consider the
culpable loss of those lives against the pompous statements of
Australian defence experts about our "sphere of influence" in Asia and
the Pacific - that allows the Australian military to invade the
Solomon's, but not to save 353 lives.
Threats? Let's talk
about threats from asylum-seekers in leaking boats, from al-Qaida. In
its annual report for 1990, the Australian Security and Intelligence
Organisation, ASIO, stated: "The only discernible threat of politically
motivated violence comes from the racist right." I believe, regardless
of subsequent events, nothing has changed.
All these matters
are connected. They represent, at the very least, an assault on our
intellect and our morality, yet even in our cultural life, we seem to
turn away, as if frightened. Last week, I attended the opening of a new
play in Sydney called "Harbour". It 's about the great struggle on the
waterfront in 1998 which attracted extraordinary public support. The
play is an act of neutering, its stereotypes and sentimentality make
history acceptable. Those who can afford the $60-odd for a ticket will
not be disappointed. The sponsors, Jaguar and Fairfax and a huge law
firm, will not be disappointed.
We must reclaim our history
from corporatism; for our history is rich and painful and, yes, proud.
We should reclaim it from the John Howards and the Keith Windshuttles,
who deny it, and from the polite people and their sponsors who neuter
it. You will hear them say that Joe Blow doesn't care - that as a
people, we are apathetic and indifferent.
It was the
thousands of Australians who went into the streets in 1999, in city
after city, town after town, who decisively helped the people of East
Timor - not John Howard, not General Cosgrove. And those Australians
were not indifferent. It was the thousands of Australians and New
Zealanders who stopped the French exploding their nuclear bombs in the
Pacific. And they were not indifferent. It was the young people who
traveled to Woomera and forced the closure of that disgraceful camp. And
they are not indifferent.
The tragedy for many Australians
seeking pride in the achievements of our nation is the suppression or
the neutering, in popular culture, of a politically distinctive past, of
which we there is much to be proud.
In the lead and silver
mines of Broken Hill, the miners won the world's first 35-hour a week,
half a century ahead of Europe and America. Long before most of the
world, Australia had a minimum wage, child benefits, pensions and the
vote for women. By the 1960s, Australia could boast the most equitable
spread of income in the western world. In spite of Howard and Ruddock,
in my lifetime, Australia has been transformed from a second-hand
Anglo-Irish society to one of the most culturally diverse and attractive
on earth, and almost all of it has happened peacefully. Indifference
had nothing to do with it.
I can almost hear a few of you saying, "OK, then what should we do?"
As
Noam Chomsky recently pointed out, you almost never hear that question
in the so-called developing world, where most of humanity struggles to
live day by day. There, they'll tell you what they are doing.
We
have none of the life-and-death problems faced by, say, intellectuals
in Turkey or campesinos in Brazil or Aboriginal people in our own third
world. Perhaps too many of us believe that if we take action, then the
solution will happen almost overnight. It will be easy and fast. Alas,
it doesn't work that way.
If you want to take direct action -
and I believe we don't have a choice now: such is the danger facing all
of us - then it means hard work, dedication, commitment, just like
those people in countries on the front line, who ought to be our
inspiration. The people of Bolivia recently reclaimed their country from
water and gas multinationals, and threw out the president who abused
their trust. The people of Venezuela have, time and again, defended
their democratically elected president against a ferocious campaign by
an American-backed elite and the media it controls. In Brazil and
Argentina, popular movements have made extraordinary progress --so much
so that Latin America is no longer the vassal continent of Washington.
Even
in Colombia, into which the United States has poured a fortune in order
to shore up a vicious oligarchy, ordinary people - trade unionists,
peasants, young people have fought back.
These are epic
struggles you don't read much about here. Then there's what we call the
anti-globalisation movement. Oh, I detest that word, because it's much
more than that. It's is a remarkable response to poverty and injustice
and war. It's more diverse, more enterprising, more internationalist and
more tolerant of difference than anything in the past, and it's growing
faster than ever.
In fact, it is now the democratic
opposition in many countries. That is the very good news. For in spite
of the propaganda campaign I have outlined, never in my lifetime have
people all over the world demonstrated greater awareness of the
political forces ranged against them and the possibilities of countering
them. The notion of a representative democracy controlled from below
where the representatives are not only elected but can be called truly
to account, is as relevant today as it was when first put into practice
in the Paris Commune 133 years ago. As for voting, yes, that's a hard
won gain. But the Chartists, who probably invented voting as we know it
today, made clear that it was gain only when there was a clear,
democratic choice. And there's no clear, democratic choice now. We live
in a single-ideology state in which two almost identical factions
compete for our attention while promoting the fiction of their
difference.
The writer Arundhati Roy described the outpouring
of anti-war anger last year as "the most spectacular display of public
morality the world has ever seen" That was just a beginning and a cause
for optimism.
Why? Because I think a great many people
are beginning to listen to that quality of humanity that is the antidote
to rampant power and its bedfellow: racism. It's called conscience. We
all have it, and some are always moved to act upon it. Franz Kafka
wrote: "You can hold back from the suffering of the world, you have free
permission to do so and it is in accordance with your nature, but
perhaps this very holding back is the one suffering that you could have
avoided."
No doubt there are those who believe they can
remain aloof - acclaimed writers who write only style, successful
academics who remain quiet, respected jurists who retreat into arcane
law and famous journalists who protest: "No one has ever told me what to
say." George Orwell wrote: "Circus dogs jump when the trainer cracks
the whip. But the really well-trained dog is the one that turns
somersaults when there is no whip."
For those members of our
small, privileged and powerful elite, I recommend the words of Flaubert.
"I have always tried to live in an ivory tower," he said, "but a tide
of shit is beatings its walls, threatening to undermine it." For the
rest of us, I offer these words of Mahatma Gandhi: "First, they ignore,"
he said. "Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win."
Source: Power, propaganda and conscience in the 'War on Terror'
Source: Power, propaganda and conscience in the 'War on Terror'