The caperings of Australia’s own sovereign citizens and other ideological anti-maskers recall an old Onion joke about a libertarian wondering how to travel to a conference with his fellow ideologues without using any roads.
The white people — they’re always white people — who insisted police have no legal authority to pull them over and force them to comply with pandemic restrictions seemed perfectly happy to drive on the roads provided by the government, which they insist has no legal authority over them.
Presumably they wouldn’t knock back a trip to the hospital in the event of an accident or prevent their garbage being collected by the local council. Likely they have no problem with violent criminals being jailed by the state.
Then again no one ever accused these people of consistency. The now-notorious Bunnings woman — who presumably walked to the hardware store, carefully avoiding roads, footpaths and any government provided infrastructure — invoked the “1948 Charter of Human Rights”. That’s a document from the United Nations, one of the many forms of illegitimate government often targeted by right-wing groups.
Cherrypicking which laws, legal systems and legal doctrines they want to follow is the basis of the entire ideology. It’s an ideology best summed up as being happy to take the benefits provided by government, but being unwilling to accept any of the costs, such as taxes, or complying with the law.
The growth of such groups — which often begin in the US and then spread via lazy imitation, like a particularly lame reality show franchise, to other Anglophone countries — is a product of neoliberalism.
This is not because, as many on the left believe, neoliberalism is the cause of every social problem known to humankind, but in a way that reflects how neoliberalism and its consequences fit poorly in traditional left-right ideological divides and social hierarchiesl.
Neoliberalism is an alienating ideology, not merely for its relentless focus on individualism and its rejection of communitarian economic thinking or government activism, but because it creates a society in which the core message is an economic one.
In Anglophone economies, and especially in the US and the UK, populations have been told for several decades that their only worth is in their economic value (which they must maximise at all costs). Other forms of identity and community, especially class-based identity and community, are secondary to whether you are maximising your economic value.
The basic laws of maths mean that, at any time, half the population is therefore a failure in neoliberal terms, earning below-average incomes. Many people on above-average incomes but who are outside the top 10% of wealth may also feel like failures by basic social standards.
Inevitably, in response, people have sought out other forms of identity that don’t come with a 70% chance of feeling like a failure — and demanded recognition of them. This is not class-based identity — which has been suppressed and eroded — but religious identity, ethnic and racial identity, and sexual and gender identity.
But neoliberalism, at least in theory, also undermines other forms of social organisation than class. It is also antagonistic to white privilege. White workers in Western countries are expensive and unattractive to footloose international capital.
Workers from non-white, low-income countries offer a much cheaper workforce to exploit, either by relocating capital to where they are, or by convincing Western governments to allow high levels of migration either on a temporary (or better yet, permanent) basis.
Neoliberalism is uninterested in the colour of a worker’s skin, or their sexuality, gender, religion or political views; it is only interested in their economic value as a worker and consumer and how that can be maximised.
That’s why right-wing parties like One Nation are driven by middle-aged and old white people, and often old white males. Not merely have they had to endure the economic consequences of neoliberalism — a more precarious and competitive job market, less support for traditional industries in which their grandfathers would have been employed, a less reliable system of government support, services delivered by private providers rather than governments — but also the erosion of the privilege accorded to them as white people in Western countries.
They remain far more privileged than non-white Australians, of course. And minority groups and women still disproportionately suffer the consequences of neoliberalism, particularly when it is implemented by white people.
Even so, it is a harsher and more demanding economic and social environment for white people than 40 years ago — one closer to the kind of environment everyone else has always lived in.
Not merely do such people embrace their tribal and racial identities more as a result, they view the government that looked after their grandfathers now as an enemy that has abandoned them in favour of, as they see it, looking after others less deserving of support.
That’s why the thought of being lumped in with everyone else in being required to wear a mask, or comply with pandemic protocols, is so infuriating to anti-maskers and sovereign citizens. In the Australia of their imagination, that sort of treatment is reserved for Others (non-whites) while they are rewarded for being special by virtue of the colour of their skin.
The legal humbuggery, the vexatious litigation, the childish code words and magic phrases, the invocations of Magna Carta, the attempts to prove entire court systems that have no standing — these are all window-dressings for a resentment that racial privilege is no longer quite as central to society as it used to be.
Neoliberalism it turns out, sendeth rain on the white and the non-white alike.
Wrong. Keane has made this mistake several times. Half the population earns below median income, by definition. A lot more then half the population is paid below average income. An average income is substantially higher than a median income because of the extremely high incomes at the top end of the distribution.
For example: according to the ABS in 2017-18 gross average Australian weekly income was $2242, median was $1701.
Roughly half
Keane did not say roughly half and did not mean roughly half. Anyway, the number of workers on less than half average is not “roughly half”. “More than three-quarters of Australian workers earn less than the average full-time wage…”
Wrong, quite wrong; as explained perfectly by Rat. In the cohort Keane is talking about, it’s well known that a significant majority make less money than the ‘average’. Keane should know that.
It has been pointed out to him many times but hey, scribblers, wotcha gunna do, numerate they ain’t which is why they (try to) write.
The est proof of the fallacy of neolib nutbaggery is that all its proponents & boosters rely on salaries & the public teat.
When they try to be John Galt they fail miserably, eg Henry Ergas.
I think you’re missing something – most of the “ordinary” people I’ve seen & heard espousing these ideas seem to be somewhat unwell. They seem to be attracted to theories which feed into their paranoia. They need a bit of compassion and much better services and education.
It is however, very different for the public figures who are actually exploiting the vulnerabilities of such folk as a business model and / or political platform. THAT is utterly despicable. But this county has never been short of people who’ll take the lowest of low roads for fun and proft.
One would suggest sovereign citizens are joined at the hip or within a shared eco-system with neo-liberalism or radical right libertarian ideology; the latter ‘(fossil) fuelled’ by those promoting climate science denial.
From Canada, according to DeSmog’s recent article on the relationship between Climate Science denial and Covid-19, ‘How the UK’s Climate Science Deniers Turned Their Attention to COVID-19’, and one would throw Brexit in for good measure.
https://www.desmogblog.com/2020/08/10/how-uk-climate-science-deniers-turned-their-attention-coronavirus-covid-19
More local, Jason Wilson of The Guardian highlighted Malcolm Roberts as a ‘sovereign citizen’ in 2016, who now merits his entry in DeSmog’s database:
https://www.desmogblog.com/malcolm-roberts
Not just wheels within wheels but how to build coalitions of the crazies to win elections for radical right libertarian policies to be enacted by governments; leveraging evangelical (and other) Christians, (white) nationalism and conspiracy theories to muddy the waters.
To be fair to these people, I don’t think their resentment is due so much to others gaining as it is to them losing. An economic system that lifted everyone up, rather than dragging all but a very few down into the depths as neoliberalism does, would be much better received, even by old white males.
There’s considerable evidence against your view. Various psychological experiments have shown that many individuals, given a choice, want to increase the difference between their wealth and others, even if that means everyone in total has less and even if it means they themselves have less than would otherwise be the case. How else can they feel superior? They get no satisfaction from everyone rising together.
The concept of the ladder of superiority doesn’t stop there. Even those in the top 1% of income earners, whose income is stratospheric by most standards, are in an earnest race to see who can make the most money. Lucky enough to be a billionaire? Jeff Bezos is now approaching trillionaire status. Soon trillionaire will be the status all will crave.
Don’t ever get between a 1%er and a bucket of money.
That some might, I have no doubt. That many do, I am less convinced. Certainly not the majority: I think at heart we are social creatures who recognise the suffering of others, although I do acknowledge that cultural factors affect the extent to which this is so. A culture that pits one individual against the other in Darwinian opposition, such as the US (and, increasingly, Australia) is much more likely to breed destructive individualism than a culture that celebrates citizenship and the fundamental worth of every human being.
In certain circumstances the great majority of particular groups think that way, and while Mercurial has focussed on the super-rich I find the more striking examples among the most impoverished. Ther determination to see others kept down is for instance often blatantly evident in certain societies where members of one group depend for all their self-respect on maintaining themselves above another group. This can be class, sex, race or religious difference, in various combinations. The working class protestants of Northern Ireland have always been treated dreadfully but they take enormous pride, no matter how poor their own situation, in at least being better off than their working class catholic neighbours. For that reason they are the most fanatical and unreasonable defenders of the Union with the UK, no matter what it costs them. Just look around. It is clearly a common part of human nature.
I think there’s an interesting paradox in this. I agree with your positing of the ‘determination to see others kept down’, but at the same time I believe many of the people we’re talking about here suffer from ‘downward envy’, something which characterises almost every utterance of Pauline Hanson. This strange envy is directed towards the ‘undeserving’, who are not rich, parasitic property investors and tax evaders but the unemployed, various welfare recipients, immigrants, refugees, indigenous people and so on – they all seem to the envious group to be getting something – too much – for nothing, placing them, according to your earlier comment, too close on the wealth scale to themselves.
If you run a society based entirely on competition, you inevitably produce a lot of losers.
Competition = winner(s) and everyone else loses.
Throughout history, certainly since the Bronze Age, settled societies were based on me against my brother, we against our cousins, the family against the village, the village against the tribe – nations being a recent aberration, 500 years.
This seemingly eternal, gods ordained, arrangement came under threat during the brief interregnum post WWII in recovering Euroland.
The free universities churned out too many social studies graduates who couldn’t cope with the old Classics/Humanities never mind STEM.
In OZ this wanker brigade didn’t emerge until the 70/80s by which time the rest of the world had turned neolib and their fury was a thing to behold.
Some quickly became Thatcher’s children but most just whinged & whined and bred more resentful, non functional unproductive consumption units.