Lost in the mist of the right’s fusillade of historical denial and absurd lies over the Voice to Parliament these past days came an ominous portent of what such racist pandering might ultimately provoke.
“Liberal Jews,” declared a flyer shared by Donald Trump on his social media platform, had “voted to destroy America”. The apocalyptic-sounding post, which coincided with the conclusion of the Rosh Hashanah holiday on Sunday, went on to say: “Let’s hope you learned from your mistake and make better choices going forward. Happy New Year!”
This wasn’t by any means the first time the former US president’s stance or rhetoric has pulsed with grotesque anti-Semitism, much less undisguised intimidation and demagoguery. But it was nonetheless a disturbing nod to the footing such alt-right nationalist thinking continues to enjoy in the man who, perversely or not, remains the most powerful force within the Republican Party today.
The relevance to the present moment of such thinking lies in its instinctive allegiance to the “great replacement” conspiracy theory, an iteration of which — as Crikey explained earlier this week — finds loose reflection in much of the incendiary rhetoric of the right’s No campaign.
At the heart of this racist theory are imaginings of a monolithic force shadowing white civilisation: one that invokes the spectre of a sinister plot on the part of leftist or Jewish elites to increase or fortify cultural diversity through non-white immigration and various social policies, and one that has as its menacing object the “ethnic and civilisational substitution” of white sovereign power.
Like all conspiracy theories picked from the seedbed of unreality, such thinking is little more than fevered fantasy. But it’d be a mistake to dismiss the theory’s capacity to anchor and shape understandings of the Voice across the full spectrum of the right.
So much is distilled in a video created by neo-Nazis Blair Cottrell and Joel Davis some months ago and broadcast on social media. Seized with anti-Semitism and eugenics-inspired vitriol, the pair of white supremacists framed the Voice as something destined to supersede or dangerously erode the “sovereignty of white Australia”. On their telling, the Voice could rightly be perceived as the latest frontier in the ongoing “war on white Australia”, which — so their theory goes — owes its existence almost entirely to the anti-racist, multicultural “agenda” of various people drawn from the Jewish community since the fall of the White Australia policy 50 years go.
To the minds of both Cottrell and Davis, the perceived influence harboured in the pro-Voice positions of former shadow attorney-general Julian Leeser and prominent lawyer Mark Leibler, both of whom are Jewish, are the final threads that bring this disturbing tapestry of reality to completion.
The point of providing this cursory, sanitised insight into this white supremacist thought isn’t to platform it or overwhelm anyone’s mental real estate, but to expose its parallels to some of the thinking associated with the right’s No campaign.
Take, for instance, former prime minister Tony Abbott, who’s warned the Voice is a “Trojan horse”, concealing what is, he claims, a way for Indigenous peoples to use “recognition” and “consultation” to snatch the “sovereign power over the future direction of the country” away from those whose “ancestry in this country dates only from 1788”.
Or prominent No campaigner Gary Johns, who in June directly echoed these screeds and referred to Indigenous peoples as an organised lobby group “crawling all over Canberra”. Or Kerry White, who’s similarly declared First Nations peoples will use the Voice as a vehicle to destroy Parliament and modern Australia’s way of life: “The Voice will end up taking over,” she’s said, “and all the white people here will be paying to live here.”
And, not least, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton himself, who’s likewise dipped a toe into these dystopian seas via his indulgence in aligned conspiracies and false descriptions of Indigenous “elites” and the “Orwellian” future that awaits should the referendum succeed.
It’s not that these arguments expressly or consciously draw on the language of replacement, still less any conspiracy involving “Jewish elites” (as opposed to “Indigenous elites”). It’s that it’s easy to discern in them the gradual peregrination of replacement theory from the margins of white extremism to what now passes for mainstream thinking on the right.
White supremacists, for their part, appear to laud the No campaign’s success, but despise a seeming pusillanimity in its appeal to the sanctity of “colourblind” equal rights to win ordinary Australians to its cause. “This framing is just so poisonous,” Davis told fellow traveller and neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell in a video broadcast to social media two weeks ago. “There’s a kind of soft self-erasure of the white man in civic nationalist ideology that makes it more pernicious [than leftism].”
What’s interesting, however, is that Sewell didn’t fully subscribe to Davis’ point of view: “You see the centre-right of politics doing thinly veiled pro-whiteism, and they’ve always done thinly veiled pro-whiteism — and that’s always been an undermining feature within conservatism [in Australia],” he told Davis.
“And you [can] see how far the centre-right of politics has come in the last five years — they are mimicking and echoing our radical, extreme talking points from three or four years ago. And they’re mimicking them in the public space.”
This isn’t, it bears emphasising, some pedestrian political observation or throwaway line steeped in grandstanding. It’s a coldly accurate observation that goes to the altered character of the Coalition as a political force. Since the days of the Howard government, it’s retreated ever inward, finding itself unmoored from its pragmatic, Burkean conservatism. What’s emerged under Dutton is a populist, nihilistic movement that has, as matter of course, elevated fear, bigotry and disdain toward minorities — from refugees to welfare recipients and First Nations peoples — into the organising principles of its warped ideology.
This is why it’s inaccurate to view the right’s (intellectually dishonest) insistence on equal rights in the Voice debate as a matter of either sincere concern or a cynical ploy limited to visiting a devastating political blow to the government. On the contrary, the long game is to make racist assimilationist thinking look respectable once again, as Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price’s incursion into historical denialism so usefully confirmed last week.
We see this in the right’s hysteria around Welcome to Country ceremonies; in its suggestion that land agreements represent “an attack” on the rights of all non-Indigenous people; its lies about “vast”, wasteful expenditure on Indigenous peoples; and its increasingly emboldened use of racist, dehumanising language to describe First Nations peoples. Indeed, mere weeks after Abbott referred to Indigenous Elder Noel Pearson in The Australian as a “tribal chieftain”, we’re yet again left to wonder how the strikingly similar phrase “noble savagery” passed the broadsheet’s editorial process.
On any fair-minded view, we’re entering the lowest points of a campaign defined by a series of nadirs. What’s truly alarming is that while the right looks to assimilationist thinking, trying it on for size across different policy fronts as though no-one can see or hear them, white extremist groups are planning to mobilise and capitalise on the racist resentment its antics have unleashed.
The No campaign, Sewell said in the same video two weeks ago, had “really galvanised” the “entire right wing and the majority of the country”. This “pissed-off energy” gives the alt-right “a couple of options”, he told Davis, “and one of those is to transmute this energy over to the Jewish question, to transmute it over to focusing on white Australia and white power”.
Davis was of a similar view, suggesting their bid to bring people “into white consciousness” might do well to focus on people aligned with the freedom movement where they’ve met success before: “There’s a bunch of Australians that have been pissed-off that maybe weren’t that political before — we’ve got to figure out how to take that pissed-off energy and move it to the immigration issue.”
It’s such insights as these that show why it’s irresponsible and no longer possible for anyone to pretend the sum of the right’s actions is a form of harmless pandering to bigotry, unreality and no more. In much the same way Trump’s politics “changed the paradigm” or tenor of debate on racial issues in the United States for the worse, the right’s approach to the Voice debate heralds a shift in the alt-right’s trajectory now and in the years to come.
There is, in other words, a sense of dangerous static energy enveloping the country. And once the lightning strikes, we may find ourselves hostage to the illiberal and extremist currents that come to animate our society.
“I’m just gonna wing it,” Sewell said. “We’re going to start off soft … then we might amplify as we get to see how the media reacts and the left reacts. That I’m gonna play.”
There lies the potential future direction of our country. And it’s frightening.
Absolutely frightening. I was once convinced that climate change threatened the livelihood of our 5 year old granddaughter. Not any more. The above poses for her a community completely fractured. I lived and worked for remote ATSI organizations for over 35 years I witnessed (and had to deal with) the frustration and bewilderment of the people when a new programme or policy for their “benefit”was introduced by the Federal Gov. with the inevitable waste of dollars. For example building new homes in the community to a dollar amount and not suited to individual or family obligation needs, as we are able to do. I heard the stories from the old people of family members murdered by white station hands, having to sew by hand a dress out of a potato bag to wear. Winessed the murder of Mr Pat by the police in Roebourne WA. Children conceived to unknown white miners in remote WA in the 70’s. Watched the ABC doco about the Snowy river hydro scheme what stood out for me was the residents of Adaminaby and Jindabyne were more than adequately compensated for having the property flooded by the new dam. The only compensation that Aboriginal people received for their land being stolen from them was to be shot, poisoned and hunted (escaped) into the missions. And Australia hasn’t got the guts or the decency to stand up to the rightwing politics and media and deal with this part of our history. Probably badly quoted “Those who deny history are doomed to repeat it”
Neil Ewart
Those who deny history are planning to repeat it.
The White Australia policy was racist. Denying Aborigines the vote was racist. Abbot and Howard are white supremacists. They think Britain civilised Australia. Racism is alive and well in Australia. It is deeply ingrained in the Anglo-Saxon colonial culture that prevails. Look at our parliament. It does not correctly reflect multicultural Australia. We are not sleepwalking to white supremacy — it has always been there since the First Fleet.
And the date of Australia Day continues to commemorate the date of invasion, rather than say, the date of Federation.
Australia is a racist country.
Proudly racist. We have endorsed colonialism twice now.
Great article. Members of the governing class seeking to leverage white supremacy are irredeemable.
However, It is important to note that the tactics and messaging of Sewell, Cotrell and so on tends to gain the most traction in times of economic hardship. The same is true in the US, where the rise of the most recent iteration of white supremacy can be traced fairly accurately to the direct aftermath of the GFC (yes, it did accelerate with the rise of Trump). This does not excuse their message, of course, but it can be helpful to view such hateful thinking as a symptom of a very sick system (neo-liberalism), rather than as a cause of our current malaise. That said, personal responsibility is important too – not everyone experiencing economic hardship chooses to punch sideways or down. Many choose to punch up or not punch at all.
Capitalist societies rely greatly on two things (among many others) – continuous growth and and an uneven distribution of wealth. Losers (in an economic sense) are fundamental to the system. In Oz, these losers are disproportionately represented by women, particularly older single women, and by Aboriginal people of all ages. Thus, the ‘pissed off’ energy that Sewell et al refer to has always existed, only now it’s being experienced by a demographic unused to it (youngish white men). It is a true tragedy that white supremacists are the only ones (that I’m aware of) keen on recognising the anger and harnessing it. Their grievances are real – but it would be beautiful to see the newly disenfranchised link arms with the historically disenfranchised and all punch up together.
No one wins when the working class fights each other. Despite everything they have said and done, I would still seek to understand the minds of white supremacists, and terrible anger that pours forth.
” No one wins when the working class fights each other.”
The politics of division has this very outcome in mind. A divided, angry and fearful country votes conservative. This is the aim and outlets such as Sky News work hard to make it happen.
Wasn’t it a US plutocrat who boasted he could hire half the working class to kil the other half?
Probably Jay Gould, 19thC railway robber baron. He said that he could hire enough of the working class to protect him from the rest. Especially union organisers.
The detective agency Pinkertons began a private muscle for mine & railway owners.
Racism is more or less an invention of capitalism; part of its necessary infrastructure. Fckwits like Sewell and Cotrell are a handy pressure relief valve for the enemies of us all.
Check out ancient (and many current isolated) languages to see that Othering long predates any idea that “Racism is more or less an invention of capitalism”.
The Hellens called anyone who didn’t speak Greek a barbarian because their speech just sounded like ‘bar-bar-bar…’, and those primal capitalists, the Romans, ostensibly did not care a whit about ethnicity.
Those who claimed Civis Romanus Sum had the full might of her Legions behind them in foreign lands.
More or less. The choice to emphasise rather than curtail hardwired tribalist tendencies in post-tribal societies is plainly a divide and conquer strategy of the dominant hierarchy, is my point.
OKAY, Credit where and when due!
Only a couple of hours AND on Sat. arvo. so I thank the soft machine chained to the madBot for human intellect and early release.
It would be appreciated, perhaps not only by me, to know the trigger word/s that caused the automaton conniptions.
Not even going to try to dodge the madBot – wait for Monday arvo.
Anyone who can find trigger word/s in the blocked reply deserves some sort of medal.
Yeah nah. Racism has been around a lot longer than anything called capitalism.
Just like Brexit and the rise of Trump it is the Left’s caving to neoliberal economics that led to the fertile political soil that the racists and the populists use to take control of the narrative and further their agenda, which ironically does little to make the lives better of the poorer classes who are duped.
In the case of the Voice, Big Australia has killed it.
Yep. But instead of coming together and fighting the system, we’d rather accuse each other as racists and cry crocodile tears over housing while feeling morally superior.
We don’t see the middle mass who share talking points or values filtered via MSM, but the minority we see in public are extremist and/or stupid narcissistic rump.
However, they did not cook up Anglo eugenics or social Darwinism, colonialism, white Australia policy or related later policies on refugees and border security, immigration restrictions, population control and dog whistling with MSM support.
It has become common knowledge offshore in US, Canada and UK that it’s part of the now long standing Tanton Network of deceased white nationalist John ‘passive eugenics’ Tanton, was on the fossil fueled ZPG, admired the white Oz policy, visited and was hosted by a local ‘environmental’ NGO; described by SPLC as ‘the racist architect of the modern anti-immigration movement’ e.g. Brexit and Trump.
Too many refugee and migration policies in both the Anglosphere and the parts of the EU have been influenced by the same.
An excellent overview by KPBS journalist Binkowski on Tanton ‘Eugenics, Border Wars & Population Control: The Tanton Network
The increasingly blatant bigotry in immigration discourse is the culmination of decades of targeted influence by an assortment of largely unknown groups known as the Tanton network.
The Tanton network is, as its name suggests, a criss-crossing mesh of politicians, lobbyists, think tanks, non-governmental organizations, pundits legitimized by op-eds in major newspapers, and billionaire money.’
https://unicornriot.ninja/2022/eugenics-border-wars-population-control-the-tanton-network/
As they say, ‘follow the money’ the article for the US includes a chart of wealthy donors, also quelle surprise related to fossil fuels ‘Koch Network’….
The one ray of hope is that Australia has an independent electoral commission, no gerrymanders and preferential compulsory voting, unlike the US where an inefficient and rorted electoral system allows entrenchment of white minority rule.
Of course the danger is that the Coalition moves to the far right with enough tribal loyalty to hold on to votes.
I see the Price phenomenon as akin to the Joh for PM/One Nation 1998 that burned through regional Queensland and was absorbed by the Coalition via Tampa.
The confidence I had that the passing of the Howard battlers might have led to generational replacement by more progressive voters is now shaken.
I lived in Bjelke Petersen’s Queensland. Only courageous patient struggle can banish the forces of darkness.
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Dutton’s appalling Trumpian attack on the AEC is a worry, though. It’s one thing for cookers to come out with crazed ideas. It’s another to have the leader of the opposition undermine the independence and integrity of this institution. Inevitably, if the Yes case wins (which is still possible), Dutton will argue the result can’t be trusted because, so he will claim, it was rigged, and all those taken in by his lies along with these white supremacists will follow suit. Democracy in a country like ours won’t fall overnight, and that’s not what the article is arguing. It’d be a gradual unspooling. So, like you, my confidence is also shaken.
And that is why all of those are under attack by the right, including some of the most senior Liberals. The independence of the judiciary should be added to your list, and of course that is getting attacked too. Authoritarian governments can always be relied on to replace the rule of law with a judicial system under party control.
Kristall Nacht surprised many “good Germans” in Germany too. Dutton is playing with fire and he is either (a) too stupid to realise it, or (b) a very dangerous person. Let’s hope it is the former and not the latter.
He started off as a very dangerous person; a Queensland cop.
Pretty sure it’s (b). Have been saying Dutton is the scariest and most dangerous person in Government for over a decade now.