Anyone paying attention to the latest fever dream of the right’s No campaign would be forgiven for doubting there exist limits to its commitment to mendacity and disinformation. No claim, it would seem, is too large; no lie too brazen or heroic; no words too redolent with fear or division; and no conspiracy too ensconced in the trappings of bad faith to warrant reconsideration, however harmful or unpatriotic.
On the contrary, sustained withdrawals from reality for those on the right are no longer a portent of an unwell mind but conversely a Pavlovian response to the times — an emblem, if you like, of reflexive partisan loyalty and faith. And so it was for little-known Queensland Liberal-National MP Colin Boyce last week, whose daring foray into civic vandalism and delusion produced this mordant rejoinder from Anthony Albanese (before he reduced Boyce’s question to “a conspiracy in search of a theory”):
I do say that, as a new member, [the member for Flynn] should be wary if no-one up the front will ask a question.
What we have here are conspiracy theories colliding with each other. They’re struggling to get their scares straight. I mean, what role did Marcia Langton play in the faking of the moon landing? What was the role of the Uluru Statement from the Heart in that? This is absolutely nonsense.
Boyce’s accusation of “deception” over the Voice, for what it’s worth, turned on Sky News host Peta Credlin’s much-vaunted claim that the 439-word, publicly available Uluru Statement from the Heart does not — at least on her reckoning — fit on one A4 page, but rather extends to some 26 pages.
Like other lies peddled by the No campaign, what’s striking but not unique about this particular claim is its audacity; it’s lazy and intellectually unserious, easily disproved with a simple Google search. The additional 25 pages, released under freedom of information, are nothing more than a collection of documents detailing accounts of the historic regional dialogues that ultimately shaped and gave expression to the Uluru Statement six years ago.
But truth and reality mean little to nothing to the right. If anything, eminently provable facts to the contrary appear to embolden those who proselytise in delusion, as Credlin’s salty reaction to the National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA) correction of her Uluru Statement lie shows. Instead of retracting her claim, she doubled-down, suggesting — without evidence — the government had “bullied” the NIAA into submission.
For Credlin’s part, however, this is all par for the course for the No campaign. Since its inception, it’s made no secret of trafficking in sinister assaults on reality, and ones aimed at annihilating the concept of truth itself. Some 50 claims from those loosely associated with the No campaign have been found to be false by the independent AAP FactCheck unit in the past 15 months, with RMIT’s FactLab eclipsing this with even higher figures.
Among the most recent array of false and groundless suspicions are claims the Yes campaign is secretly taxpayer-funded; that the Voice will force landowners to pay 1% of their income in rent to an Indigenous council, convert all private property into native title or otherwise see all land passed into conservatorship; that it offends and runs contrary to racial discrimination laws; and that it will result in a “Black state” being carved out of the Northern Territory.
These are bizarre and outlandish claims, and ones that by rights belong to the preserve of the unhinged. But they also speak blunt and tragic truths about the complete lack of good faith on the part of the right’s No campaign and its will to win at all costs.
Aside from its epistemic nihilism, what unites it is its slippery tendency to dispense with what Harvard academic Nancy Rosenblum calls the burden of explanation, with the entirety of the claim resting on an appeal to fear, hatred of other, and grievances of old. Credlin’s lie over the Uluru Statement is in this respect one of the purest, most inane distillations of this dangerous phenomenon.
By design, the claim is intended to evoke an immutable haze that, despite appearances, things are not really as they seem, though it’s difficult to explain how. As Albanese intuited, to call it a “conspiracy theory” would be to lend it a weight it doesn’t deserve. It’s bare assertion — a “conspiracism”, as Rosenblum says, with no room left for movement from point A to point B, no demand for evidence of a plot, no connecting of the dots, leaving many people to fill the void with a mangled sense of reality.
Here, the implication is the 25 additional pages suggest a radical project of civic deception. One that incidentally comports to former prime minister Tony Abbott’s fears the Voice is a “Trojan horse” destined to give way to a broken, dystopian nation divided by race, where Indigenous peoples regain the “sovereign power over the future of the country” to the detriment of all others.
The claims are slippery and disorienting precisely because they so cleverly eschew the need for any loose sense of explanation or evidence — they set fire to our shared modes of understanding the world, making it impossible for Yes campaigners to answer them on common ground. Innuendo supersedes fact, common sense recedes and epistemic fog invades. “It is like Whac-A-Mole,” said Uluru Dialogue co-chair Professor Megan Davis last week. “Nobody is fact-checking; it’s astonishing.”
What’s particularly galling about this mindless pablum, though, is not so much that it exists, but the extent to which the opposition has validated it by using the machinery of government to weaponise it. Joining Boyce’s attack on the Voice in Parliament last week were senators Jacinta Nampijinpa Price and Michaelia Cash and, in the lower house, Deputy Liberal Leader Sussan Ley, the latter of whom attempted to have the 26 FOI-ed pages on the Uluru Statement tabled before manufacturing a scare campaign over the Makarrata commission.
It’s one thing for a politician to pursue partisan advantage; it’s quite another to knowingly engage in civic arson to that end by spreading conspiracies that undermine faith in democratic institutions.
The deep irony of the current moment, though, is that it increasingly appears it is the No campaign, not the Yes campaign, that is harbouring a dark agenda, one focused not only on undermining the referendum, but on destroying recognition of Indigenous disadvantage.
The sketches of so much find reflection in argument the Voice will fundamentally divide Australians by affording Indigenous Australians special rights. Putting aside the fact the Voice creates no such rights, it’s telling the No campaign refuses to accept that the extent of Indigenous disadvantage is such that two classes of citizen already exist. On every metric of lived experience — health, education, life opportunity, incarceration rates — ours is a nation already divided by race.
But with powerful elements of the No campaign cynically insisting otherwise, a central fault line over the reality of racial inequity looms. Such a possibility is fomented by Abbott’s rhetoric over what he called the dangers of “entrenching victimhood in our constitution forever”, his claim that “this generation of Indigenous peoples are not victims” and that there’s nothing “fundamentally wrong with this great country”.
Taken to their logical endpoints, views like these cast doubt on the utility and fairness of investment in Indigenous communities, and by extension hang a question mark over the reality of Indigenous identity. This much is apparent in prominent No campaigner Gary Johns’ claim that First Nations peoples ought to submit to blood tests for “all benefits and jobs”, and Abbott’s casual lie that the NIAA already receives “something like $30 billion a year” for Indigenous programs to no avail, when the true figure was $4.5 billion.
Unreality and populist discontent, in other words, have become the crucible in which a new counterinsurgency against Indigenous peoples is being forged before our eyes.
The concern, former Liberal opposition leader John Hewson pointed out on Saturday, is that these lies are taking root. It’s true most of the people who discern force in these arguments won’t have started out as racists, and nor would they see themselves as racist. But once they’ve convinced themselves that an invisible (Black) hand is manipulating the country, the reality is they’re a few Sky News headlines away from being swept up in a torrent of racial resentment.
The dangers of the No campaign’s gambit, from this vantage point, aren’t confined to the prospect of the referendum’s defeat, but extend to the very real prospect the nation might be carried backwards on Indigenous reconciliation. You need only look at the right’s carry-on in the past week over the “divisive” Welcome to Country, with some suggesting it should be reversed.
These people aren’t true conservatives; they’re reactionaries bent on returning the country to a faded world with a modern twist, being the delegitimisation of basic democratic norms. After all, the No campaign is inviting the country to thoroughly mistrust government and expert guidance on the Voice. The logical upshot such a lack of faith in basic institutions is liable to occasion is a country with the hallmarks of democracy but an absence of the conditions required to properly sustain it.
All of which supposes one certainty in this uncertain world: the referendum’s defeat will not only herald the death of reconciliation. It will resurrect in its wake a museum of racial resentments, a perpetual prison of inequality for Indigenous peoples, and a damaged civic space marked by disrespect and vanishing norms. The dangers couldn’t be clearer.
Should Labor get down and dirty in fighting back against the lies from the No campaign? Let us know by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
Part of a blatant attempt by the RWNJs to import Trumpian “post-truth” politics from America, courtesy of their “Dear Leader” He Who Must Not Be Named…………………………..
If we let this slide there will be no return to normality.
We’ll end up with the same “Reality Politics” now normalized in America………………
…….no plot, no script, no actors, just endless, increasingly outrageous (and blindingly obvious) lies.
I don’t recognise the Liberal party anymore. Even though I was never a fan, it saddens me how quickly they embraced The Republican Party’s Trumpism conspiracy nonsense and culture wars.
The Libs are attracting extremists, racists and bigots. They have certainly lost their way, hopefully to a point of no return. Perhaps conservatives voters will continue supporting the (teal) Independents. Make their vote count.
We could call it the Trump effect, or the Moloch Factor, but whatever the causes, the lines between LNP-Right, the alt.right and the far right are becoming more fluid or more blurred by the week.
I agree. These usually rich old pale stale male rwnj’s are destroying democracy.
Well, when you don’t have the intellectual wherewithal, you just absorb that which is attractive to you.
OR preached to you via biased msm. A particular stable is destroying democracy here and abroad. Just ask the UK and the USA.
So true, so frightening that we are sliding into the chaos of American politics despite the warning signs flashing red on red on red. How Dutton Abbott Mundine etc can look themselves in the mirror defies belief. We have a chance to crawl out of our timid little selves and embrace a First Nations people and culture and grow and prosper forthwith but no, fear and lies are more attractive.
Maybe I am naive here, but I am not convinced we are sliding into US politics. I think we are just not polling anyone younger than GenX (they are not likely to answer a poll phone call are they…) and this is distorting the polls. I think News corpse and Seven Mining Holdings are largely ignored by anyone under 50
I’d agree with you on the polling……………
……….who still has a landline? and who answers unknown mobile calls?
But where I think we are sliding into the void is when I see pollies spouting utter bollocks on TV and NOT GETTING CHALLENGED.
It’s time for the ABC to forget any nonsense about “balance”……………….
BOLLOCKS IS BOLLOCKS AND SHOULD BE SHOT DOWN LIVE, REAL-TIME WITH MAXIMUM PREJUDICE.
If it makes the relevant pollie look like a donkey, so much the better.
Who is going to challenge them, and who cares anyway? If all you read is Murdoch and all you watch is Ch7 news where are you seeing the challenges?
This is true for many people who would consider themselves fair-minded. They don’t realise there’s another ‘reality’ out there and their own inputs are skewed. I recall one thoughtful, retired teacher who was convinced she was seeing both sides by watching Fox News and CNN with regard to Trump. Sigh!
I’d agree with you on the polling……………
……….who still has a landline? and who answers unknown mobile calls?
But where I think we are sliding into the void is when I see pollies spouting utter b.o.l.l.o.c.k.s on TV and NOT GETTING CHALLENGED.
It’s time for the ABC to forget any nonsense about “balance”……………….
B.O.L.L.O.C.K.S IS B.O.L.L.O.C.K.S AND SHOULD BE SHOT DOWN LIVE, REAL-TIME WITH MAXIMUM PREJUDICE.
If it makes the relevant pollie look like a donkey, so much the better.
(Tried a workaround to avoid the Madbot)
Also evidence of push polling amongst above median age &/or low/no inform voters, banking on ‘No’ agitprop and trying to create the ‘bandwagon effect’, encouraging voting for the perceived winning side….
Perceived benefits of the ‘bandwagon effect’ are countered by ‘support for the underdog’ which is a peculiarly Australian characteristic. Maybe we need to push this line?
All academic anyway, as I fear the majority are already swayed to the negative. This is my understanding on keeping an ear to the ground.
Living in Perth I just love “Seven Mining Holdings” it is all we have , but not worth buying. In realty a clone of News corpse.
Flooding the zone with sht, as the shamelessly vile Steve Bannon put it.
Yes, a firehose of manure. And the media just reports what they say, in a sensational format, without question: ie it’s raining, when a look out the window will tell them it’s not.
It seems that the Madbot has now been programmed to disallow “B.o.l.l.o.c.k.s.”………………..
………what utter B.u.l.l.s.h.i.t.
Maybe the question could be phrased so that No means Yes, for example “Do you want indigenous people to continue having lower health, education and housing standards than the rest of the country?”
Great idea! That’s what life used to be like, to quote an uncle “when men were men, and women were scared”…
And worsening Government as the Right just try to gain power.
Its of interest that one of the Liberal Party’s fundamental ideals is “to keep the ALP out of Power” as approved in 1943/44. Its a bloody thin gruel upon which to claim your competence to run a Country.
The conga line of influencers whether politicians or ‘press’ represents the hard nativist Anglosphere right and runs across LNP/ON, Koch linked think tanks, Tanton NGO and that agitprop ‘outlet’; the more this negative campaign runs, more holes appear…..
It is all very well for us moderates to bleat, but who brings them to heal for all their false hoods? Fact check doesn’t seem to be able to get a repeal their spurious claims. I seem now to be an isolated Yes voice amongst my friends and family. With the No vote gaining the ascendency. The pamphlets will not help as it is also full of mistruths. May be, I am the one being succored in?
Did you mean “heel”…. Bless my sole, I think that might be a pune, or play on words (#STP)…
Thanks Kim for your comment yes it did mean heel.
But please address the issue, who draws the line on the false hoods? and why can they continue to make them.
Luckily it’s a free country, one in which people like to be noticed by taking the hard line on everything, apparently. They do it because they like to hear the sound of their own opinions (like all of us) even tho they know jack sh1t about it (unlike us). Empty vessels make the most noise, echoed by other empty vessels (sorry noers [I just made up a new word], including your associates). Yessers are in for the long haul, whichever way the vote goes, because we are right. The noers will forget their trivial, lying motives and come around eventually, as soon as we have a leader, if ever. So hang in and be nice to your friends and family in the meantime.
signed… Agony Aunt
Is anyone surprised by Credin’s mendacity? After all, she saw no shame in admitting she had helped destroy the ‘carbon tax’ on a lie, for political advantage.
She represents the epitome of the vacuity that has been the Liberal Party since the mid 1960s.
Robert Menzies, their revered Founder, ensured that he had no competition/threats during his long tenure. So when he left in 1966, there was no-one of any merit or even worse, competency to step into his shoes. The closest anyone of his successors got was John Gorton. Since then there has been a veritable drought of talent oozing up through the Liberal Party ranks.
And the Country Party which became the National Party when they realised they no longer represented Rural and Regional Australia, has been consistently even worse.
No, she was probably the architect of Abbott’s yearly trips to aboriginal towns when in power which turned out, surprise surprise, to be a complete fraud.
The first promise an elected PM Abbott broke. During the election he promised to spend time with an Indigenous group in Nth Qld within a week of election. Well, he didn’t. The media’s response (stretching the definition of that word to its limits)- “Ride the bike again Tony!!”.
A broken election promise by the LNP? Surely, you jest?
Heartless Cruella Credlin of no credibility.
She trashed Australian during her time with Onion Man
Former Minister for Women too! What an oxymoron…. I guess the blessing there was at least he didn’t assault people (common assault) by “laying hands” on unsuspecting members of the public. Small mercies!
Why do we continue give this woman airspace? Media can be their own worst enemy
So, on a purely practical level, how do we expose Maeve’s incandescent arguments to the potentially millions of minds that actually need to be changed?
This is a very good question. The main problem is that nearly half the country would rather not know about facts, evidence, research, or statistical analysis. All of this is as close as your computer or device, but it’s ignored because many folks would rather believe what they want to believe than face the ogre of cognitive dissonance and empirical contradiction. This is why the Yes campaign is falling on deaf ears for the unconverted.
The other problem is that, for our attention-challenged culture, conspiracy theories and dramatic flourishes are so much more interesting than research and analysis. Those folks in this culture have a word for folks like us. Wankers. It’s sad but true.
Somehow, we need to get attention. Make the case more interesting, get some good speakers like Micallef or Denton, people who can entertain as well as carry information. Fight fire with fire and claim that Dutton is really a clone of Hitler… No, forget that. A lot of No-leaning folks watch linear TV. What are the sympathetic commercial channels prepared to do? They’re in the business of entertainment; they may have ideas.
My hairdresser I think sums up the No campaign. When I bought it up I gave my leaning to a generous and heartfelt desire to help First Nations people where we can, she instantly agreed. But then slipped into the no propaganda of fear at what might come of it, especially as it’s in the constitution and can’t be removed. She’s undecided and will probably decide on the day. But her heart is in the right place, it’s just been infected by Dutton. We need to sell the heart, generosity, compassion, caring for all Australians as we do when they are in need. Sell this line, drench the public in it so when they get in the booth on their own it will be their conscience that ticks YES.
Perhaps we can try and get the message out that the no campaign’s chief slogan – ‘if you don’t know, vote no’ is shorthand for saying to its support base – ‘You’re ignorant. Stay that way.’
Which is a pretty insulting and contemptuous way to curry favour….
Yes, I think “Deplorables” is much subtler. 😉
‘if you don’t know, vote no’ is shorthand for saying to its support base – ‘You’re ignorant. Stay that way.’
Unfortunately I think it’s more a case of “If you don’t want to know, vote no”. It’s the re-imagined Johnnie Cochran catch phrase for your local closet bigot.
please include dignity in the list of need to sell
Firstly, it can be removed, albeit by another referendum…. Secondly, Social, Environmental and Governance principles, thirdly, that is just a cornerstone of possible improvements not just for First Nations here, but globally…
But as the old saying goes “you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink”…
Hopefully, enough people use their EQ to make the right choice at the referendum…
Oh, I rather suspect it comes down to the algorithms, as to what appears on a feed…
Culture-jamming viral bots?
That would be undemocratic, Nick.
One good place to start would be to revoke Sky’s broadcasting licence immediately, and let them to to disprove their repeated lies in court to get it back.
Freedom of the press…. They are based in USA, so their Constitution applies, I would think?
Someone with a law degree might need to check that and, of course, relevant jurisdictions…
unfortunately the language used by Maeve is beyond the understanding of the millions of minds that need changing. I doubt most of them would know what “mendacity” means let alone have a hope of understanding what a Pavlovian response is
“Mendacity” = Latin for Scott Morrison.
I would use Annus Horribilis, personally, when it comes to Latin for our cosplay PM…
For starters, share this article and every other article like it with all the fence sitters you know. Forget about the stident “No” voters. Go for the undecided.
Excellent suggestion. I’m already doing it. Perhaps we can also coopt The Matildas into supporting the yes campaign.
We can start now by passing the article to someone we know will read it. I plan on doing this post haste.
I am hoping the tidal wave of “No” panic pleateaus after they get all their craziness out in the open, and there is a pause of “what happens next?” – and then the “Yes” group counter-punches with the most amazing ad campaign ever, that clearly deals with all the lies, assuages the unfounded fears and gets the focus back on the original purpose of the referendum, in a way that is both intelligent and also cuts through to the heart, and appeals to the notions of “australian-ness” that binds (most of) us together.
Unfortunately, what i think is going to happen is that the “yes” movement will simper to the finish line trying to maintain its quiet dignity, without landing a single blow.
I heard Dan Andrews the other day, and he let the “No” bunch have it, and he didn’t dance around the point. He called out their bs arguments and their inherent meanness and he was unequivocal. More of this, Yes camp, and less quiet dignity and unconvincing waffle. The weakness and lack of clarity are sending the undecided over to the No side in droves.
I did try to make a suggestion to the Greens (with no apparent success, other than an automated reply)…………….
Why not make a TikTok consisting solely of screengrabs of LNP Pollies saying “NO” and make it a rhythmic chant: like
“No, no, no, no, no-no,
No
No
No”
etc………..
And finish up with a written and spoken message…………
“Hmmmmmm
So it MUST be a good idea”
Any TikTok artists out there? At my advanced age I would have no idea about how to start,
but the resulting ear-worm would surely stick in Millenials minds…………..
Check YouTube for a song called No Limits by 2 Unlimited. It starts off with “Let me hear you say ‘Yeah’” a few times and then after an instrumental break it goes No No No No No No No No No No – there’s no limits. Could dub in 10 noes by the Sky and Liberal crowd. I’d post the link but the comment wouldn’t be approved.
Albanese couldn’t sell water in the desert. Linda Burnley is a genuine tryer but doesn’t have the presence and charisma. Put Jason Clare on the job – he rescued Labor when Albanese was in Covid quarantine after ‘gaffegate’>
Really? I don’t agree, Glenn. On so many different levels…
Water pouring on a stone, and all that (metaphor)…
But everyone is entitled to their own opinion, I guess we’ll see what happens on the day.
They have always lied about the impact of native title on property owners. In fact, they lie so much that if Peta Credlin or Peter Dutton claim the sky is blue, we should all probably check if the sky is still blue.
Aurora Borealis, and Australis on that one…