Poor old Sam Cooke. Shot dead in 1964, he lives on in his most famous song, Change is Gonna Come; the anthem of the American civil rights movement in the 1960s. It’s a song of hope, used to inspire those fighting to end segregation and discrimination.
So why did the Sydney Peace Foundation used it at the beginning and the end of last night’s speech by the winner of the Sydney Peace Prize, journalist John Pilger?
His speech was anything but hopeful, containing a long list of the crimes of the US, Israeli and Australian governments, indigenous leaders who “tell us what we want to hear,” the NT intervention, the media and Barack Obama and so on.
“We dutifully celebrate the illusion of Obama, the global celebrity, the marketing dream. Like Calvin Klein, brand Obama offers the risque thrill of a new image attractive to liberal sensibilities, if not to the Afghan children he bombs.”
Pilger, 70, has always positioned himself as outside the mainstream media. But his age and location — he hasn’t lived in Australia since the early 1960s — mean that his criticisms of the local media are outdated.
“Today, most of the Australian media speaks for power, not people. Turn the pages of the major newspapers, look at the news on TV. Like border protection, we have mind protection. There’s a consensus on what we read, see and hear; on how we should define our politics and view the rest of the world. Invisible boundaries keep out facts and opinions that are unacceptable.
“It’s actually a brilliant system, requiring no instructions, no self-censorship. Almost instinctively, journalists know not what to do,” he said.
What invisible boundaries — doesn’t he read blog sites? Or look at the independent media?
Pilger at his best is an excellent journalist with an international reputation for uncovering corruption and injustice. But does that mean we can let him get away with this statement (made about the NT intervention)?
“Billions of dollars have been spent — not on paving roads and building houses, but on a war of legal attrition waged against black communities.” What billions of dollars? What war of legal attrition? If I want information about the intervention, I’ll read David Marr and Nicolas Rothwell, two journalists who spend weeks in the Territory researching and writing stories which contain eye-witness accounts and facts.
Nowhere in the speech, or in any of the articles about Australia which appear on his website, does it say that he has been to the NT since the intervention and actually witnessed the events on which he is opining. Is that good enough?
Listening to the speech reminded me of Auberon Waugh’s coining of the verb “to Pilger”, which is to “present information sensationally in support of a particular conclusion.”
Last night Pilger concluded that we “need to make haste. An historic shift is taking place. The major western democracies are moving towards a corporatism. Democracy has become a business plan, with a bottom line for every human activity, every dream, every decency, every hope.
“The main parliamentary parties are now devoted to the same economic policies — socialism for the rich, capitalism for the poor — and the same foreign policy of servility to endless war.”
And the evidence for that is…? Actually, there’s no point in analysing a Pilger lecture; like Scientologists, the audience is there to have their belief systems reinforced and receive the word of the prophet.
Last night’s audience, a mixture of my Birkenstock-wearing Balmain neighbours and UTS media students, loved it of course, and gave him several standing ovations. But I wanted to hear something new, and I was irritated by the misuse of Sam Cooke’s song.
And the next time I go to a Pilger lecture, I’m not taking the Prius. While John was eating his supper at Guillaume, I was still in the car park, trying to find my car.
Couldn’t agree more. Pilger leaves out what doesn’t suit his view of a situation. Journalism or comment? For an acclaimed journalist there is too much commentary for my liking.
I don’t know whether the inervention price tag has hit the billion dollar mark yet margot, but the ‘war of legal attrition’ has been a big part of it. The Rudd government has simply advanced dispossession – sometimes with the figleaf of 40 year leases – as a take it or leave it condition of getting houses built and other services. when people in such communities object and get legal representation, the govt then lawyers up – and blames the plaintiffs for ‘bogging down’ service delivery. The object is to simply to wear the plaintiffs down, which is attrition in my dictionary
Ther have actually been half a dozen stories about this on Crikey, so it hasn’t actually been shrouded in obscurity.
I was a bit taken aback by this intepretation of last night’s events at the Opera House. Why was the bit about the attempted shouting down of Pilger’s assessment of the Israeli/Palestinian situation omitted? Surely a highlight for those inside Pilger’s innercity party?
I resent being likened to a Scientologist – yes I was there – and I question whether Margot has been to visit those towns and communities in the Northern Territory to inform her own critical views. Not enough canapes to make the trip worthwhile perhaps?
The front row was filled with the people most affected by indigenous policies in Australia, and they were the first to stand. It was enough to suggest he had felt and expressed the frustrations of those ‘intervened’ upon. The National Indigenous Times should be heard on this too – http://www.nit.com.au/
I don’t live in Balmain or attend UTS ,and I don’t wear Birkenstocks. But I do recommend next time Margot takes the ferry. Maybe it will blow away all those unfortunate cobwebs and she’ll be better able to find her way back home.
Averil Bones
Great stuff Margot. While Pilger is occasionally a great voice for the downtrodden, he has a long track record as a professional knocker of Australia, and often loose with the facts.
I agree with John Pilger. I agree with him about the overwhelming majority of the media in this country. It wasn’t that long ago, that the media in Australia was rated very poorly as far as reporting facts as opposed to ‘looking at everything from the perspective of the real rulers of the world’. The US and Britain and Israel??
These are just two articles I received today via Information Clearing House. I can say without fear of contradiction, that I won’t be hearing about them or reading them in any form by Australian journalists!
Former UK Ambassador: CIA Sent People to be ‘Raped with Broken Bottles’
By Daniel Tencer http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23906.htm
EXCLUSIVE: Convicted CIA Spy Says “We Broke the Law”
By MATTHEW COLE, AVNI PATEL, and BRIAN ROSS
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23902.htm
All we get via the news(with a few remarkable differences) are the political reports from the perspective of ‘our alies’ – not the facts. Journalists didn’t question Howard/Bush/Blair re Iraq or Afghanistan. I found out about ‘The Downing Street Memo’ via the internet. I watched the videos about the Bush Administration on SBS – not put together by Australian journalists. I read about the questions being raised re 9/11 from books or AlterNet or Information Clearing House or John Pilger. – The news, current affairs etc with the exception of Frontline or Robert Greenwald or Robert Fisk and others did not cover the neo-con’s goal of global domination. Read, Project for a New American Century, and I still haven’t heard the truth about Afghanistan & Iraq re the quest for oil in Iraq, and a pipeline through Afghanistan for the $16 Trillions worth in the Caspian Sea. I didn’t hear or read via our media, that the Bush Administration told the Taliban and Pakistan that they intended bombing Afghanistan in October 2001- this was decreed in July 2001, prior to 9/11. I had to read and hear these things in a selection of newspapers, articles, essays or books initiated outside this country. There’s one major remarkable exception – GreenLeft – and articles from John Pilger! Alan Ramsay questioned Howard regularly in his weekly articles, but sadly, he’s retired!
I read articles in the National Indigenous Times, which are the realities of the aboriginal people themselves, not white journalists. I have a great deal of admiration for David Marr(who incidently wrote the truth about the Tampa via Dark Victory – I still haven’t read any indepth reports from any other journalists – they were in Howard’s ‘pocket’ the bloody lot of them – if not, he cast them aside?). He’s one of a few journalists with integrity. I’ve also read both of Margo Kingston’s “Not Happy John” and “Still not happy John”. Not many others, and I certainly won’t even read a hint of this in any Murdoch paper?
The intervention is 2 yrs old, and the Rudd govt is still operating with the same patronising, paternalistic and racist attitudes of Howard/Brough & Co!. There’s too much emphasis on what Noel Pearson has to say as opposed to the aboriginal people who insist on being heard, or who won’t comply with racist dogma – the quarantine of incomes has not helped the majority – it’s just caused more ‘trouble’ for those in remote areas, who have to pay huge amounts in taxi fares to do their shopping. The people living in houses in the camps that Jenny Macklin wants them out of were ‘notified’ by notices pinned to fences, front doors or posts? These people have been forced into the courts in order to receive justice that non-indigenous people would demand – and the media would support them. Even though history has shown, that if you don’t involve people in decision making processes, the whole thing is a flop. So what is the Rudd govt doing? Imposing laws and policies on them from above!
Tell me what part of this behaviour is new?
Why is almost every TV news item about the intervention accompanied by the same old footage – aboriginal people in parks who are drunk? Aboriginal people in remote communities that have been forgotten by successive govts for decades? You watch from today on and see for yourself? Where are all the paedophiles and rapists Howard and Brough alluded to? How many arrests have there been? They almost accused every aboriginal man of being an abuser. The alleged white perpetrators of sexual assaults of 20-30 yrs ago (at a school in NSW) who’ve recently been arrested and charged, have not lost their homes? They’ve not had their incomes cut in half? Why the different treatment in the Northern Territory? If you think it’s OK, then you’re part of the problem; certainly not part of the solution. There’s lots of new Toyota’s being driven around by public servants and other paid government people – not much has changed on the ground!
If non-aboriginal kids were suffering from Rheumatic Fever as the result of poor sanitation, inadequate housing etc, there’d be an outcry, and rightly so. This disease was almost wiped out after WW2 in non-indigenous areas with better housing and sanitation. The health of indigenous people has been a national disgrace for too many decades. Being an apologist for successive govts is a disgrace! Sadly, too many journalists have been complicit in either ignoring this, or permeating racism that turned the masses off, or caused even more antagonism between black and white! With all due respect to David Marr and the other journalist, it’s patronising to assert, that a couple of white folk who spend a few days, weeks or even months visiting up north, represent the reality of sadly, too many aboriginal peoples’ neglected and repressed lives! I think it’s a damned cheek on your part!
Whether it’s been El Salvador, Chile, Diego Garcia, Venezuela, indigenous Australians; the horrors of Gaza or Vietnam, John Pilger presented these and many other shameful parts of history passionately, accurately and with integrity. He earned his Sydney Peace Prize and the many other awards he’s received over the years! How many can you boast of?
Your words have just epitomised everything that is wrong with Australian journalists. You’ve just reinforced John Pilger’s just and accurate criticisms!