Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers please note that this article contains images and mention of deceased persons. It also contains depictions of violence and racism.
The image is repulsive. Consider the faded contours of the Kimberley pastoral station stretching into the vast distance to the left; how it’s partially obscured by the tin edifice that was the Wyndham prison around 1901, and how both speak to the unchecked avarice and prejudice that situated the group of boys and men in the dusty dirt at the photo’s centre.
Now focus on the two most striking parts of the frame: the handcuffed and chained existence of the boys and men, who are shackled together by neck chains weighing close to 2.5kg each. And behind them, pipe in hand, their keeper, a white man sporting a handlebar moustache and a hint of triumphalism.
In the way of so many signal moments that capture the nation’s bloodstained history, the frame is a portal into a world of injustice, where for more than a century until 1958 the systemic (though illegal) use of neck chains on Indigenous peoples persisted throughout Western Australia. This was so notwithstanding its parallels with the transatlantic slave trade, as well as the findings of the Roth royal commission of 1905, which found the “brutal and outrageous” practice was commonly justified by reference to spurious and unscrupulous allegations of cattle theft.
Spurious, because confessions of cattle theft were often extracted from Indigenous prisoners on threat of murder by gunpoint. And unscrupulous, because such claims scarcely concealed the usual, unvarnished purpose of the arrests, which was to expel Indigenous communities from their ancestral lands and, in some instances, press them into slavery.
Knowing the recommendations of the Roth royal commission were, for the most part, duly ignored, and knowing history dared to repeat itself with the royal commission into black deaths in custody some 82 years later in 1987, a thorny question arises: what do you see in the photo? Or perhaps more to the point, what do you want to see?
Something from the closed, distant past, or something with a legacy or parallel that writes the gap between the promise of our egalitarian ideas and the realities of today and tomorrow?
The question matters because among the most obnoxious yet potent lies peddled by the No campaign is the dangerously loose claim that a Voice to Parliament would run contrary to basal notions of equality and egalitarianism. In May, for instance, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton used a speech in Parliament to speak of a crisis in identity and national cohesion, warning the Voice would cast an “Orwellian” shadow over the nation where “all Australians are equal but some Australians are more equal than others”.
He worried the proposal would “re-racialise our nation” and “permanently divide us by race”. And he echoed (without attributing) Martin Luther King Jr’s “I have a dream” speech, telling the chamber the “great progress of the 20th century’s civil rights movement was the push to eradicate difference — to judge each other on the content of our character, not the colour of our skin”.
In recent days, 2GB host Ben Fordham has played on this sentiment, accusing Labor of trying to create “an exclusive group”, while Louise Clegg, a strong opponent of the Voice, has urged the country to heed Dutton’s warnings, pointing to the dangers of “affording a small group of people an elevated right above all others to a say on everything”.
And so on it goes.
To the minds of anyone unpersuaded by the merits of the Voice, the tenor or “vibe” of such arguments is at least superficially compelling.
On one level, it comfortingly invites Australians to reject the notion that ours is a nation in which Indigenous peoples confront anything approaching discrimination or structural bias in their day-to-day lives, let alone racism. Once that’s accepted, the Voice descends into something that’s liable to breed resentment and accusations of “reverse discrimination”, where instead of cautious reform designed to mitigate chronic Indigenous disadvantage, it’s recast as a cudgel that will inevitably hurt ordinary, non-Indigenous Australians.
Hence Clegg’s claim the Voice will have a “say on everything”, as opposed to at best a limited “power of influence” over laws that affect them in some material or distinct way, and the common but false refrain the Voice will violate principles of anti-discrimination.
But even to those not sold on the beguiling idea that racial discrimination is a thing of the past, much less the unreality of “reverse discrimination”, it’s possible the argument still holds some force.
These people, it bears emphasising, wouldn’t necessarily consider themselves racist, and nor would they oppose diversity or Indigenous reconciliation. On the contrary, at least to their thinking, it merely strains faith to conceive the Voice as something which doesn’t philosophically run contrary to liberalism’s promise of equal rights for all.
And it’s therein the true genius of Dutton’s sophistry on the Voice lies. By mawkishly evoking a common civic creed and monopolising the universalism of basic human rights — but skilfully ignoring the discrete rights of Indigenous peoples under the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which Australia has supported since 2009 — the No campaign has refashioned the Voice as something that promises to derail history’s bend towards justice.
Indeed, it’s a variation of what some have called liberalism’s “doom loop”, where cultural heterogeneity and true egalitarianism can be seen to pull against each other, as borne out by the curtailing of affirmative action in American colleges last month.
By contrast here, in the context of the Voice, it’s a subterfuge of the worst kind; a victory of theatre over substance, if you like, or a sideshow of deceit and unreality.
Scratch away at the rhetoric’s putative concern for egalitarianism, what lies beneath is an arid cultural nationalism that deliberately and dangerously pitches Indigenous peoples against the rest. Nowhere is this more vividly captured than in the corrosive words of former prime minister Tony Abbott, where he recently spoke of “two classes of Australians: the few, whose ancestry here could be traced back some 60,000 years; and the many, whose ancestry in this country dates only from 1788”.
It’s the sort of language that can quickly descend into something far uglier or reflexively contrarian, such as Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price’s claims this week that Victorians are “difficult” and devoid of “common sense”; former federal Labor MP and no campaigner Gary John’s suggestion that Indigenous people should be blood-tested for “all benefits and jobs”; John Howard’s claim today that the “luckiest thing” to have happened Australia was British colonisation, and Dutton’s sly and unsubstantiated claim in October, repeated in April, that child sexual abuse is “widespread” and “normalised” in Indigenous communities.
Stepping back, it’s a space which all too easily shades into illiberal populism, where outlandish lies and claims are weaponised against not just this fact or that minority but reality as a whole, leaving scant room for cool analysis.
One such lie, resurrected from the right’s graveyard of denial, is Dutton’s suggestion the long march of time has materially reduced First Nations disadvantage — never mind such claims find no reflection in the sobering statistics on Indigenous incarceration and low life expectancy. Nationally, almost one in three people behind bars is Indigenous, despite First Nations peoples comprising 3.8% of the population, while Indigenous men statistically reach only an age of 71, and Indigenous women 75, compared with 80 and 84 respectively for their non-Indigenous counterparts.
Distilled, such figures capture all the policy failures, historic wrongs, scientific triumphs and social sins of a nation in one fell swoop. They speak crude and truthful points that utterly dissolve the right’s false narratives about egalitarianism and fitful progress for Indigenous people.
Lost on those who veritably see the Voice as something which heralds inequality is the reality that equality, if it’s to be taken as a foundational idea, must take acknowledgement of inequality as its starting point. To do otherwise lands you in the realm of strained and artificial reasoning where it’s said — for instance — that everyone enjoys an equal right to the age pension (as the Federal Court recently decided), even if non-Indigenous Australians statistically enjoy it for significantly greater lengths of time due to longer lifespans unshaped by the consequences of more than two centuries of dispossession, marginalisation and disadvantage.
Or that everyone has an equal right to attend university, even if First Nations peoples are, in the choice words of Education Minister Jason Clare, more likely to “go to jail than go to university”. Or that everyone enjoys equal rights to live free from discrimination, even if these rights are more liable to recede and vanish in the lived experience of First Nations peoples.
Indeed, it’s the repeated failure of government to meaningfully partner with and consult Indigenous communities under the Closing the Gap agreement, the Productivity Commission points out today, which foredooms progress.
And so ultimately this, along with recognition of First Peoples as the “bearers of the first history of our continent”, is the strongest argument for a Voice. We’re technically all equal, yes, but some of us — most Australians — far more so than First Nations as a group. International law recognises that it’s this history of disadvantage, and the distinctive collective identity of Indigenous peoples, which justifies steps which ensure their views find reflection in mainstream laws that directly impinge upon them.
Yet instead of recognising this simple truth, the campaign has descended into a struggle for Australia’s identity, and one that pitches the country at a crossroads: one path promises the ugly nationalism and shattered trust fashioned by Dutton’s lies; the other embraces the generous, patriotic act of reconciliation the Voice extends to all Australians.
The path you prefer depends in large part on how you see or choose to see the photo of chained inequality above. Something that is of closed significance, or something that to this day reverberates in our prisons and the outcomes for Indigenous peoples across the nation.
The most amazing thing in all this is that the ‘No’ Campaign and the LNP say they are terrified of an Indigenous advisory body but view the wild irrational fear mongering, endless negative sloganeering and personal slandering tactics that politics has descended to over the last generation as perfectly normal and viable. I guess it’s just what we’re used to isn’t it?
Since Howards mythical Children Overboard and Weapons of Mass Destruction, Tony Abbott’s personal misogyny against Julia Gillard, Stop the Tax, $200 lamb roasts, Whyalla getting wiped off the map, Cigar Joe’s telling those who can’t afford to get a home Get Yourself a Better Job, Morrison’s endless lies, pork barreling, the Robodebt scam against the unemployed, the franking credits, The Bill We Can’t Afford, Have a Go to Get a Go this fear mongering and baseless nonsense has been the way the country has been governed rather than any attempt to have an actual policy or to change the country for the better.
Now we have “If you don’t know just say No”. Just another nonsense fear mongering slogan and no alternative policy at all.
They even brought back Tony Abbott from his well deserved exile after his bizarre failed 2 years as Prime Minister to spout more rubbish and eat a couple of onions or something. Now they are making nonsense nasty personal attacks on this Mayo guy and other indigenous figures. Meanwhile Tony who is personally responsible for destroying 5 or 6 Prime Ministers including himself and creating a precipitous decline in the electorate’s faith in our democracy is treated with respect?
I guess we’ve seen it all before. It’s just normal everyday stuff in the way have been Governed. But sensible forward thinking pretty much risk free policy like the Voice is just untenable and frightening right? Vote 1 for the scare campaign. That’s all we’ve known in this country for a generation and it looks like we’re about to go there again.
Wow! You have been watching.
“Fear is the currency of evil”, someone once said. Who was that? Great summary above. Thank you for your comment.
It’s incredible to think, after all the recent slipping of the mask, that so many mugs still have no idea that we’re ruled by a ravening pack of vampiric ghouls.
Yeh, the general theme would seem to go something like
if you don’t know,
stuff the fair go
maintain the status quo
and
just say No
Indeed. The statement “if you don’t know vote no” could also be applied to elections. I for one have no idea what the Coalition are trying to achieve since, as Jane Hume so eagerly pointed out on Insiders, we are the Opposition we don’t have to have policies. So I guess….
if you don’t know (what the opposition stands for) vote NO to a Coalition Government (at the next election).
Good article, well argued and well written. Shame that no one in the NO camp will ever read it.
Where is the YES campaign’s media coverage on this? Imagery is such an important part of grabbing people’s attention, and this image coupled with the verbal exploration and discussion would make a powerful TV ad.
I don’t know, Cate. Many would say “But I wasn’t even alive in 1901. This has nothing to do with me!” Others would add “ And this makes me think the Voice will ask for reparations, just like the ‘No’ campaign is saying”. Still others will say “Yes, it was terrible and I’m so sorry it happened, but it still doesn’t explain what the Voice will actually DO.”
The ‘Yes’ campaign needs to get its act together and get the info out there. They have to stop running this like a Labor election strategy- a slow drip of info, then a torrent in the last month.
This is a referendum, not an election!
They also need to use all the sports stars and celebrities who are on board and happy to help. They’ve got Jonathan Thurston, for heaven’s sake! One man who could swing Queensland!
Telling people of goodwill who are uncertain and on the fence to go read the Uluṟu Statement for themselves isn’t going to cut it and they’re the people who need to be reached. We’ll never get the racists.
This is the ‘Yes’ campaign’s to lose. If they keep travelling the same way, they will lose and that would be both tragic and utterly shameful.
I see the yes message out there all the time in the independent media and social media, plus those generous people who have doorknocked and stood at stalls, and attended town hall type information sessions. The only place I see the no campaign is on mainstream media which is biased towards the no, even the ABC; and the trolls and bots on social media. Murdoch and Dutton leading the fray go on about elites and division- two men who have used the power in a destructive mode.
Agree, meanwhile a former Lib minister from WA supports the Voice, but will not call out LNP RWNJs & RW media cartel’s divisive ‘No’ scare campaign.
In the area I live in in Melbourne while walking my dog I see many placards in windows for the yes vote. This is not a poor area, it’s a well educated one but obviouly a clear thinking one. Unfortunately, I think, it’s the less well educated that are taken in by the likes of Dutton; who obviously has a very good speech writer because he’s not educated enough to use the words and phrasings without serious help. Which is also shameful that someone would do that for money – we have truly followed the US into becoming a country filled with greedy, self-interested people.
If anyone working under Dutton has half a clue, they’d realise ChatGPT is probably going to be their most literate speechwriter.
Send them a copy!
Totally agree well written article. You can bet your bottom dollar the Liberal spin doctors will read it , they are running out of excuses to vote NO. Thank you Maeve.
Many will remember that the Howard government initially chose to describe asylum seekers as the sort of people who’d throw their children overboard. Later, perhaps thanks to a think tank somewhere, the racism was exchanged for faux concern for these same asylum seekers using the argument that all the government really cared about was loss of lives at sea.
So here we have it again, in place of the expression of pure racism we’re supposed to believe that Dutton and Co. are acting the way they do because they actually care about the rights of first nation people, when of course they don’t.
Ah yes, I remember it well. Howard ,Abbott & Morrison going from protecting the nation from the invading hordes to a faux concern for the poor hapless souls’ welfare. And of course the MSM allowed it, one of the biggest of the many free kicks the media gave Abbott & his horrible lot.
Along with ‘others’ inc. bipartisan and risible blaming of refugees, immigrants and population growth as ‘environmental’ issues from the same fossil fueled US/UK ZPG-SPA swamp of Tanton Network; white nativist or WASPish authoritarianism or eugenics, see outrageous statements being made by GOP and Tories on the ‘other’.
The problem is those that want a NO vote, either fear they have something to lose, if the YES vote gets up( Position leadership, Perks of their job) or they are just s**t scared of the skin colour of the Indigenous peoples of Australia.
Either way, after 250 years of being on top, they don’t want to share.
An excellent article that will probably be unread by the NO vote supporters.
Thank you,
Maeve McGregor, you have exposed the meanness, hatred and ignorance behind much of the No campaign. If if everything is ok for aboriginal people now, why are so many young aboriginals, including children, dying from rheumatic heart disease, an entirely preventable disease? https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/clinical/why-are-aboriginal-australians-still-dying-from-an
Noun: an Aborigine, or, too many incarcerated Aborigines.
Adjective: [STOLEN] Aboriginal land, or, systemic, government sanctioned Aboriginal disadvantage.
Too easy!
” . . . young Aborigines . . . ” please.
Are many indigenous folks comfortable with that old term? I wouldn’t have thought so…
Particularly given how offensive ‘Abo’ is… I’ve suggested using the rest of the word – ‘Riginal – as what seems to me like a pretty good retort, but it’s never got much traction.