A personal view of Australian and International Politics

Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement. MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.

Tuesday, 10 December 2019

Australia needs to challenge authority if we’re going to confront water, fire and climate crises

Extract from The Guardian

Opinion
Australian police and policing

Jason Wilson
Governments increasingly make laws to curtail rights of protest, assembly, property and privacy and we need to suspect and resist that
@jason_a_w
Mon 9 Dec 2019 12.59 AEDT Last modified on Mon 9 Dec 2019 16.24 AEDT

Police use pepper spray against protesters.
‘We once again have occasion to compare the myth of our national character against the limits that have been imposed on our capacity to voice political dissatisfaction.’ Photograph: Craig Golding/AAP

Any shame white Australians might have felt about the country’s origins as a penal colony has long since disappeared.
For many decades those with convict ancestors have tended to proudly claim them. By the time of my primary education in the 1980s, the crimes of those transported tended to be minimised by teachers. Almost all, the comforting story ran, had stolen loaves of bread.
By then the condition of our ancestors had folded into a self-congratulatory mythos: our convict past, as Russel Ward first asserted in the 1950s, was the font of our subversive, anti-authoritarian sense of humour.
More recent Australian history forces us to consider another side of those penal arrangements: even an open-air prison requires snitches and screws. The uniformed men who flayed or executed troublesome prisoners also formed the country and sired children – the administrators of this exceptionally brutal system were the country’s original ruling class.
Prisons function only if most people, most of the time, bring themselves to knuckle under. A prisoner’s personal position might well be improved by throwing a likewise incarcerated person to the wolves.
With this in mind a case might even be made that for a proud liberal democracy Australia is more and more authoritarian. Governments increasingly legislate to curtail rights of protest, assembly, property and privacy. Police and security services frequently trample the civil rights that do exist. Feral, rightwing media hound prominent dissenters and millions of citizens acquiesce. Some even cheer.
At the federal level governments and oppositions, at the behest of security services, have eroded what few protections exist in our age of ubiquitous surveillance. Last year’s anti-encryption measures were hurriedly passed without serious challenge from Labor.
The measures compel tech companies to help police spy on people and undo encryption. Tech companies consider Australia an unsafe place to store data. These powers have been used extensively against journalists and to circumvent the few protections that reporters have over their information.
There is no widespread protest against such laws, even if opposition to them has provided a rare show of unity across media organisations.
The last year has been equally concerning at the state level.
This year the Queensland government criminalised certain forms of nonviolent protest involving the self-immobilisation of protesters. At the same time it expanded police powers to allow search and seizure of devices that protesters might use to lock themselves in place.
Their target was Extinction Rebellion protesters, and among that group’s concerns is the Adani coalmine.
There was some muted concern from the Queensland government’s allies in the trade union movement, but they didn’t take any action. There was reporting in outlets including Guardian Australia, but not much concern was evident among ordinary citizens.
Just two months earlier, the same government stripped native title holders of land rights, also to facilitate Adani’s mine. White Australia’s original destruction of Indigenous sovereignty was repeated in miniature for a project that will accelerate climate crisis.
Separate climate protests in Melbourne in the early part of this month were marked by police beating protesters, one officer apparently flashing a white power hand signal (his social media posts were later found to be festooned with 4chan memes), and another sporting a sticker reading “EAD (eat a dick) hippy” on his chest-mounted body camera.
The officers were subject to a day or two of critical coverage across a range of outlets and Victoria police expressed disappointment. But the men are still serving. And there was no broader, more searching consideration of how widely such attitudes were held among police, and whether they were compatible with the duties involved with policing protests.
Police are still given the benefit of every doubt in Australia; even the most egregious and obvious exemplars of bias and corruption will find defenders. Coverage and debate often seems to begin with the premise that police are constitutionally incapable of wrongdoing.
Often police are coddled by the same media organisation that mounts extended campaigns against people who express public opinions – most enthusiastically when they are members of marginalised groups.
Attempts to crush protest and dissent and the repetition of Indigenous dispossession are not the actions of a cheeky, irreverent or anti-authoritarian people.
I am far from the first to critically point to the hollow nature of contemporary larrikinism, and Australia’s apparent thirst for authority. I’ll likely not be the last either — the climate emergency, a consequent increase in the flow of refugees, and the increasing probability of economic headwinds will lead to righteous anger and protest in the future.
If current trends are any guide, they will be met by an increasingly authoritarian response from the state and police. And we’ll once again have occasion to compare the myth of our national character against the limits that have been imposed on our capacity to voice political dissatisfaction.
There is an element of our penal past that we can draw on in resisting that outcome. A subset of convicts were Irish rebels, political prisoners of rebellions against the colonial British government in Ireland. Some of these people also fed political rebellions in Australia, like the one at Castle Hill in 1804.
The rebellions failed but they originated a strain of Australian radicalism that really was anti-authoritarian, which was visible in the labour movement in its best moments, the struggle against conscription in the first world war, resistance to authoritarian populists such as Joh Bjelke-Petersen, protests against apartheid and the Vietnam war, the long struggle for Indigenous rights, and actions against refugee detention such as those in Woomera at the turn of the century.
Climate protesters and those who protested the death of Kumanjayi Walker this month are the heirs of that.
We’ll need to rediscover that determination to place limits on authority – to suspect and resist it – if we’re going to confront the powerful vested interests who don’t want us to address mounting crises (water, fire, land degradation, climate) and the injustices wrought in our names on Indigenous Australians, refugees and migrants.
If we don’t, Australia might start looking like a prison again.


  • Jason Wilson is a Guardian Australia columnist
  • Comments on this post will be pre-moderated
Posted by The Worker at 6:26:00 am
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

About Me

My photo
The Worker
I was inspired to start this when I discovered old editions of "The Worker". "The Worker" was first published in March 1890, it was the Journal of the Associated Workers of Queensland. It was a Political Newspaper for the Labour Movement. The first Editor was William "Billy" Lane who strongly supported the iconic Shearers' Strike in 1891. He planted the seed of New Unionism in Queensland with the motto “that men should organise for the good they can do and not the benefits they hope to obtain,” he also started a Socialist colony in Paraguay. Because of the right-wing bias in some sections of the Australian media, I feel compelled to counter their negative and one-sided version of events. The disgraceful conduct of the Murdoch owned Newspapers in the 2013 Federal Election towards the Labor Party shows how unrepresentative some of the Australian media has become.
View my complete profile

Translate

Search This Blog

Popular Posts

  • Federal government accused of AI policy retreat as US tech giants plan Australian investments.
    Extract from  ABC News By Steve Cannane, Lesley Robinson , Lara Sonnenschein and Kate Ainsworth Four Corners Topic: AI 4 hours ago AI comp...
  • Anthropic sounds the alarm as the AI bubble takes off.
    Extract from  ABC News Analysis By Alan Kohler Topic: AI 4 hours ago Anthropic wants to slow the development of AI. (Reuters: Dado Ruvic/Ill...
  • In the great data centre boom, will the benefits flow offshore again?
    Extract from  ABC News Analysis By chief business correspondent Ian Verrender Topic: Data Centres 1 hours ago Outside of the US, Australia h...
  • Fuel shock spurs business uptake of green equipment including batteries and EVs.
    Extract from  ABC News By business correspondent David Taylor The Business Topic: Renewable Energy 19 minutes ago Hamilton Marino powers thr...
  • Iran weekly briefing: Day 100 of this war marked by escalation between Israel and Iran.
    Extract from  ABC News By Middle East correspondent Matthew Doran in Jerusalem Topic: Unrest, Conflict and War 1 hours ago A streak of ligh...
  • How do you want to live? Both James Valentine and the pope have offered a challenge to humanity at a crossroads.
    Extract from  The Guardian Opinion AI (artificial intelligence) Peter Lewis Both public figures have urged us to be active makers of the wor...
  • Six countries sanction enablers of settler violence in occupied West Bank.
    Extract from  aljazeera News | Israel-Palestine conflict The UK, Australia, Canada, France, New Zealand and Norway also say they will take...
  • Broken Hill pays homage to champion of outback's Silver City Cinema.
    Extract from  ABC News By Kristina Rosengren and Andrew Schmidt ABC Broken Hill Topic: Movies 1 hours ago Silver City Cinema is the last su...
  • More Palestinians killed by Israeli military and settlers across occupied West Bank in last 3 years since Gaza hostilities than previous 17 combined - Oxfam.
    Extract from  Oxfam   Oxfam Press releases Published: 10th June 2026 ...
  • Palestinians 'trapped' between Israeli forces, settlers and Hamas, UN report finds.
     Extract from  ABC News Topic: Unrest, Conflict and War 8 hours ago A UN report says Palestinians are caught between the "mass atrociti...

Favourite Links

  • Australian Council of Trade Unions
  • Australian Labor Party
  • Queensland Council of Unions
  • ALP Queensland
  • Whitlam Institute
  • Chifley Research Centre
  • John Curtin Prime Ministerial Library
  • The Australia Institute
  • Tim Flannery ~ Australian Climate Council
  • Dr. James E. Hansen explains Climate Change
  • David Suzuki Foundation
  • The Environment Time capsule
  • Solar Citizen
  • Cape Grim Greenhouse Gas Data
  • The Jane Goodall Institute Australia
  • RenewEconomy
  • Basic income Earth Network
  • Skeptical Science
  • Lucinda's Song and Dance

Blog Archive

  • ►  2026 (499)
    • ►  June (41)
    • ►  May (92)
    • ►  April (97)
    • ►  March (72)
    • ►  February (82)
    • ►  January (115)
  • ►  2025 (1158)
    • ►  December (120)
    • ►  November (104)
    • ►  October (111)
    • ►  September (150)
    • ►  August (125)
    • ►  July (106)
    • ►  June (101)
    • ►  May (78)
    • ►  April (66)
    • ►  March (77)
    • ►  February (59)
    • ►  January (61)
  • ►  2024 (921)
    • ►  December (60)
    • ►  November (69)
    • ►  October (79)
    • ►  September (64)
    • ►  August (45)
    • ►  July (74)
    • ►  June (72)
    • ►  May (80)
    • ►  April (68)
    • ►  March (110)
    • ►  February (101)
    • ►  January (99)
  • ►  2023 (877)
    • ►  December (101)
    • ►  November (82)
    • ►  October (70)
    • ►  September (91)
    • ►  August (56)
    • ►  July (90)
    • ►  June (55)
    • ►  May (60)
    • ►  April (55)
    • ►  March (84)
    • ►  February (72)
    • ►  January (61)
  • ►  2022 (1195)
    • ►  December (84)
    • ►  November (107)
    • ►  October (45)
    • ►  September (83)
    • ►  August (129)
    • ►  July (137)
    • ►  June (84)
    • ►  May (82)
    • ►  April (87)
    • ►  March (116)
    • ►  February (135)
    • ►  January (106)
  • ►  2021 (2138)
    • ►  December (101)
    • ►  November (286)
    • ►  October (236)
    • ►  September (150)
    • ►  August (116)
    • ►  July (168)
    • ►  June (171)
    • ►  May (161)
    • ►  April (138)
    • ►  March (220)
    • ►  February (221)
    • ►  January (170)
  • ►  2020 (1868)
    • ►  December (145)
    • ►  November (156)
    • ►  October (98)
    • ►  September (152)
    • ►  August (145)
    • ►  July (164)
    • ►  June (146)
    • ►  May (158)
    • ►  April (99)
    • ►  March (150)
    • ►  February (190)
    • ►  January (265)
  • ▼  2019 (1888)
    • ▼  December (207)
      • Fact checking Angus Taylor: does Australia have a ...
      • When Greta Thunberg met Sir David Attenborough
      • Sydney lord mayor says climate change is the issue...
      • 'It's nice to meet you': Greta Thunberg and David ...
      • Victoria bushfires: hellish wait for those who fle...
      • Greta Thunberg: 'I wouldn't have wasted my time' s...
      • The environment in 2050: flooded cities, forced mi...
      • 'You have utterly no clue': why 'climate emergency...
      • Greta Thunberg and David Attenborough unite to cal...
      • DANGEROUS SUMMER: ESCALATING BUSHFIRE, HEAT AND DR...
      • Explainer: Australian Federal Government Fails on ...
      • Meet Daisy, Student Striker
      • Australia's environment minister says up to 30% of...
      • Climate change denial was defeated in 2019. But wh...
      • 'You have utterly no clue': why 'climate emergency...
      • Volunteer NSW firefighters to be compensated, gove...
      • Scott Morrison announces compensation payments for...
      • Betelgeuse: The Eventual Supernova
      • We cannot indulge in the luxury of despair. We nee...
      • Australian miners hit by lowest thermal coal price...
      • Is Betelgeuse, the red giant star in the constella...
      • Hot blob: vast patch of warm water off New Zealand...
      • Wheels of Justice - James Hansen
      • More US voters than ever care about climate – but ...
      • From Mediscare to Chisholm’s signs: it’s time for ...
      • Science made astonishing progress. It was also hij...
      • Rising temperatures could imperil future of Boxing...
      • PM’s office refuses to release drought reports Bar...
      • I've been a firefighter for 20 years. The Blue Mou...
      • Australians create 67 million tonnes of waste each...
      • Extreme heat due to climate change could send cric...
      • Yes, Australia has always had bushfires: but 2019 ...
      • Silicosis cases in Australia rising, with thousand...
      • Cape Grim Greenhouse Gas Data - CSIRO
      • Australians aren’t asking for miracles from Scott ...
      • An end to Morrison’s mean-spiritedness is the Chri...
      • Australian bushfires: the story so far in each state
      • Factcheck: why Australia’s monster 2019 bushfires ...
      • NSW bushfires destroy almost 1,000 homes as Christ...
      • Bushfires see RFS volunteers skip Christmas festiv...
      • Earth to Scott Morrison! Michael Pascoe gives the ...
      • South Australia’s clean-energy shift brings lowest...
      • ‘I never understood wind’: Trump goes on bizarre t...
      • Home affairs warned Australian government of growi...
      • Scott Morrison says compensation for volunteer fir...
      • Scott Morrison says Hawaii holiday was like taking...
      • The humming of Christmas beetles was once a sign o...
      • I lived through Aids denialism in South Africa. Sc...
      • Australia has changed its historic data on carbon ...
      • Waiting for a megafire: the battle against Austral...
      • SA premier says 72 homes destroyed in Cudlee Creek...
      • Scott Morrison returns from holiday and signals no...
      • Prime minister, you need a credible climate policy...
      • The Australian Prime Minister Morrison has shown i...
      • NSW fires live: PM concedes link between extreme w...
      • It's been a lost decade for progressives and for t...
      • Australian bushfires: death toll rises as fires sw...
      • McCormack concedes Australia must do more to fight...
      • Fireball Earth: The Permian Extinction - History D...
      • Carl Sagan - Cosmos 4 - "Heaven and Hell"
      • Shields and Brooks on Trump’s impeachment reaction...
      • Nova: Permian Extinction
      • Carl Sagan - Pale Blue Dot
      • Scott Morrison's Hawaii horror show: how a PR disa...
      • I'm the 13-year-old police threatened to arrest at...
      • Dutch supreme court upholds landmark ruling demand...
      • Can Morrison's 'she'll be right' strategy on clima...
      • Australian bushfire crisis deepens with record bre...
      • How big are the fires burning on the east coast of...
      • No relief in sight from Australian bushfire crisis...
      • Climate of chaos: the suffocating firestorm engulf...
      • Prime Minister Scott Morrison pulls pin on Hawaii ...
      • Should volunteer firefighters get paid?
      • As the nation breaks new heat records, the Governm...
      • Goldman Sachs abandons coal as investors look to l...
      • Stephen Colbert: 'Trump's presidency is just a TV ...
      • 2019 wasn't just protests and Fleabag: it was the ...
      • Scientists fear surge in supersized bushfires that...
      • Temperature hits 49.9C and roads melt in remote SA...
      • Climate, economy, drought, bushfires and the elect...
      • Donald Trump's impeachment might seem like politic...
      • Is Donald Trump still President? What does his imp...
      • Too hot for humans? First Nations people fear beco...
      • Martin Parkinson on Australia's decade of climate ...
      • Pelosi says Democrats have 'no choice' but to impe...
      • Australia and world not moving fast enough to avoi...
      • Climate crisis: Australian businesses back net zer...
      • Australia's heatwave registers new hottest day on ...
      • Sydney facing day of oppressive heat, smoke and fi...
      • What does Donald Trump's impeachment mean? Five qu...
      • Scott Morrison's holiday is not the problem, his l...
      • 'Hugely disappointed' emergency chiefs to hold bus...
      • More than 700 historians call for Trump to be impe...
      • Australia weather: records forecast to be broken a...
      • Australia found to be much less divided on need to...
      • Climate change has cut Australian farm profits by ...
      • End Permian, 251 million years ago, 96% of species...
      • What you’d spend to prevent climate change — and w...
      • Climate change denial is delusion, and the biggest...
      • NSW bushfires: 60-70m flames confront firefighters...
      • Governments must act on public health emergency fr...
      • Australia took a match to UN climate talks while b...
      • Myefo is a portrait of a failing economy, yet the ...
      • Trump impeachment: House releases report showing '...
      • 'Hugely disappointed' emergency chiefs to hold bus...
      • Climate talks at COP25 a 'disappointment' as Austr...
      • A skinny surplus is easier to sell, but the Federa...
      • Australia, Brazil sought to 'undermine efforts' on...
      • UN climate change talks in Madrid end with no agre...
      • In Their Own Words: Meg McGowan
      • Trump impeachment: Lindsey Graham will 'not preten...
      • The UN climate talks are over for another year – w...
      • 'How do you transform an entire economy?' The firm...
      • The lies have it: Republicans abandon truth in Tru...
      • Trump threatens Comey with 'years in jail' over FB...
      • Trump impeachment: Democrats fume as Republicans r...
      • UN climate talks end with limited progress on emis...
      • Dire predictions for future Kimberley heatwaves, b...
      • Australia Calling: A look at 80 years of Radio Aus...
      • Putting Einstein first: It's time to stop lying to...
      • UN COP25 summit ends with anger with global warmin...
      • Homes lost in NSW 'mega blaze' as firefighters tac...
      • We need politicians to have the guts to admit it's...
      • Rupert Murdoch says 'no climate change deniers aro...
      • Shields and Brooks on articles of impeachment, FBI...
      • Donald Trump on brink of impeachment after charges...
      • Bushfire emergency reveals Scott Morrison's leader...
      • Michelle Obama sends Greta Thunberg message of sup...
    • ►  November (216)
    • ►  October (202)
    • ►  September (193)
    • ►  August (151)
    • ►  July (151)
    • ►  June (87)
    • ►  May (120)
    • ►  April (166)
    • ►  March (156)
    • ►  February (122)
    • ►  January (117)
  • ►  2018 (1793)
    • ►  December (207)
    • ►  November (193)
    • ►  October (212)
    • ►  September (195)
    • ►  August (162)
    • ►  July (189)
    • ►  June (175)
    • ►  May (139)
    • ►  April (33)
    • ►  March (126)
    • ►  February (94)
    • ►  January (68)
  • ►  2017 (2094)
    • ►  December (70)
    • ►  November (97)
    • ►  October (109)
    • ►  September (123)
    • ►  August (161)
    • ►  July (217)
    • ►  June (201)
    • ►  May (223)
    • ►  April (170)
    • ►  March (243)
    • ►  February (302)
    • ►  January (178)
  • ►  2016 (1016)
    • ►  December (165)
    • ►  November (163)
    • ►  October (103)
    • ►  September (109)
    • ►  August (66)
    • ►  July (44)
    • ►  June (57)
    • ►  May (68)
    • ►  April (61)
    • ►  March (74)
    • ►  February (50)
    • ►  January (56)
  • ►  2015 (874)
    • ►  December (72)
    • ►  November (69)
    • ►  October (73)
    • ►  September (109)
    • ►  August (71)
    • ►  July (104)
    • ►  June (102)
    • ►  May (80)
    • ►  April (44)
    • ►  March (51)
    • ►  February (32)
    • ►  January (67)
  • ►  2014 (1022)
    • ►  December (65)
    • ►  November (88)
    • ►  October (104)
    • ►  September (90)
    • ►  August (73)
    • ►  July (60)
    • ►  June (87)
    • ►  May (120)
    • ►  April (77)
    • ►  March (128)
    • ►  February (67)
    • ►  January (63)
  • ►  2013 (730)
    • ►  December (50)
    • ►  November (70)
    • ►  October (51)
    • ►  September (48)
    • ►  August (52)
    • ►  July (83)
    • ►  June (116)
    • ►  May (91)
    • ►  April (44)
    • ►  March (36)
    • ►  February (45)
    • ►  January (44)
  • ►  2012 (137)
    • ►  December (20)
    • ►  November (32)
    • ►  October (43)
    • ►  September (24)
    • ►  August (18)
Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.