To paraphrase Ferris, illiberal society comes at you pretty fast. What’s most remarkable about the suite of proposed new laws on facial recognition, extended detention, and other measures, is the absence of a concerted pushback. Announced a few days ago, with little proposed consultation, the laws have already disappeared from the front pages of the larger media. Surveillance and authoritarian policing is crossing a tech/state threshold, yet we’re already moving on.
Quite aside from the reasons for this, it’s worth looking at what else happened this week. Yesterday, the ABC announced a major shake-up of its news and current affairs approach, which will have Lateline disappear (among other things), to be “replaced” by investigative units across platforms. And at the beginning of the week, another part of the ABC revealed the absolute financial debauchery of the Adani Carmichael coal mine project — billions and billions of state funds being poured into a crisis-ridden company, which diverts billions to tax havens, and would provide less jobs than would direct investment.
What links these and other events? ‘Tis not often that this writer gets the chance to be straight-down-the-line Marxist, but it’s worth it this time: the last remnants of liberal capitalism are being shut down, by “liberals”, and we are moving to an authoritarian capitalist social model. The right, who labelled themselves “liberals”, are going along with it, restricting their complaints about state repression to abstruse matters of speech regulation, and wilfully ignoring wider challenges to liberty, and the notion of an independent public sphere.
The pretext for this new suite of measures is, presumably, the possibility that some Australians who went to fight with Islamic State may now be returning home, as IS loses its territory, and turns back to deterritorialised terror. Fair enough, that’s a reasonable thing to prepare for. But it’s something that requires — or would, in a still-liberal society — discussion about the threat level, and what balance of freedom and security we would like. Whatever the target of such measures, we know such laws will be abused, and rolled over to public protest in general — especially environmental protest.
State, market and public sphere are being squeezed together as one, in this period, with the state occupying the other spaces. Thus the state funding of Adani is so vast as to all but make it a state project. It’s part of a wider accumulation crisis of capitalism in the West, as measured by the decade of quantitative easing that has just been concluded. Trillions upon trillions of dollars has been transferred to the global financial sector, to prevent its collapse, very little has trickled down to the real economy, and the principal effect on the general public has been to create real estate bubbles, which makes basic housing unaffordable, and transforms the character of cities.
That quantitative easing — fancy term for giving money to banks to get their toxic assets off the books — is now coming to an end, because it is pushing interest rates into permanent negative territory. When that starts to bite, the pallid recovery the West has had will falter afresh, due to a lack of purchasing power. Social unrest will rise, and the new protest movement will be dealt with through … facial recognition surveillance in which every participant in a protest can be identified, tracked, data-matched. Masks, of course, will remain banned, and the bans will increase.
There is a need for a public sphere in which such things can be discussed. But just as it it is most required, it is starting to be wound up — with the winnowing of newspapers that aren’t demented ideological vessels like News Corp, and the rise of new news sites that specialise in “gotcha” investigative work, often useful, but lacking in a place for synthesis and argument. Lateline was one such place, in its heyday. It has suffered the usual trick — run it down so much that no one really misses it, when it goes — but the very fact that an end-of-the-day show of comment and debate (as could be), as carried by the national broadcaster, can be disappeared, demonstrates how the public sphere is undermined by an unwillingness to defend it, even as the ground shifts beneath it. The idea of debate itself, of interpretation and reasoning, done publicly, comes to have little value.
Yes, there are more proximate causes to all this. Politicians need Big Fear to distract, and their oppositions don’t want to be caught out. Police forces work to extend their power, regardless of the public good, and politicians in turn respond to that with a fresh round of new laws. Round it goes. Beneath the immediate processes, we need to understand the deeper effects, to fight it more effectively.
Facial recognition software would have saved Principal Rooney a lot of grief
Animal Farm?
C’mon Bill – have a go at stopping this stealthy theft of our freedoms.
C’mon guy when will you incorporate that freedom requires people to have responsibilities. Since the digital society everyone wants to be free but not responsible so then governments have to put those responsibilities into legislation. Please stop the rant and report the whole story.
we have responsibilities.
theyre codified in laws
don’t kill, rape, assault, steal, defraud etc etc
what other responsibilities are you referring to?
The biggie for me is don’t undermine the democratically elected government which issue motivated groups do. No matter what political, ideology, elite group they are, we have call them out & stop people hiding behind the word freedom. Freedom isn’t alive when the minority few subvert the majority view.
So issue motivated groups throughout history such as the Freefom Riders, campaigners for womens suffrage, opposers of slavery, campaigners for universal male suffrage, campaigners for workers rights to decent pay hours and safe work places all just need to shut up and wait until those in power decide to change?
Go read some history, mate. You don’t have the liberties you do because whoever in charge is nice. Each of them was fought for in the teeth of the resistance of the ruling class.
I have no problems equal rights, women, minorities but I do have a lot of problems when it includes violence or bullying. Organisations like Black September, Red Hand, White Supremacy, Daesh, Pol Pot genocide, current ethnic cleaning is not acceptable. Terrorism in Australia (domestic or foreign inspred) isn’t acceptable. I’ve read a lot of history & tried to help war ravaged countries as part of UN operation so fairly comfort in my views on detestation for violent issue motivated groups
So Ken, civil disobedience is out of your field of vision. No Ghandi”s, no Mandela’s, no protests etc, anyone undermine an elected government goes straight to jail. Freedom isn’t alive when the majority subvert the rights of the few.
And of course, no Getup. That’s so lacking in nuance.
We are moving into a post-democratic phase. In 20 years, or so, we might realise that we have surrendered most of our freedoms away. I suspect that most of us won’t, or if we did, won’t care.
post-liberal. democracy is perfectly capable of abolishing freedoms.
We surrendered democracy when we kept electing governments that are beholden to neo-liberal economics and sold off everything to corporations who now bleed the citizens dry.
It’s no wonder the citizens no longer care. We’ve all been turned into cattle for slaughter to feed the rich
I dunow.
Lately a sort of worrying set of thoughts has been bubbling in the remaining sludge of my brain. I need someone smart like Guy to put it into perspective for me.
One, the breakdown of political, Ethnic and regional groups and countries in to smaller entities. Is this a developing divide and rule?
The breakdown of groups within Countries onto smaller groups e.g white Americans into “Caucasian Cocoons”, then Hispanics, Blacks, etc.etc. May the strongest group win?
The bolstering up of surveillance, security forces and “law and order’ Forces. Keep the top at the top?
There are more similar concerns, But.
Then throw in The billionaires investing in rockets and space. Lifeboats to somewhere safe?
Better than remote properties or a Pacific Island
. The Pollies are up there with them, nearly all the Cold War Pollie funk holes are now known, and the blasted Peasants could get in.
Now throw in the possibility of a nuke war and uninhabitable planet. The rich and elite can hold out behind their defenses and fnally bunk off to Mars.
Or perhaps the Scientists have convinced those at the top that Climate change is going to wipe out Earth. What to do?
Easy carry on as normal, pacify the masses with BS, bread and Circuses. Use the security forces to put down any concern amongst the Lesser Social orders, the last thing wanted is a premature knowledge and mass panic with breakdown of Law n Order.
When it all gets too rough head for that nice city on Mars that Mr. Musk and various Govt agencies have built.
Mars sucks, some German game devs had this figured out in the 90s, the rich should escape to deep sea stations leaving everyone else to die on the surface.
Seriously though, I think you’re being too kind to the powers that be, I would not assume such a level of cooperation and planning from our political class for starters.
I thought I was the only one having that exact same nightmare mix.