“You’ll be exposed as a racist to your family, your friends, your work colleagues” was New South Wales premier Chris Minns’ warning to the state’s small but apparently growing (or at least emboldened) cohort of neo-Nazis. The threat, designed to terrify them, is that of being unmasked, named and shamed.
For Victorian neo-Nazi leader Thomas Sewell, who had travelled all the way to Sydney by bus with a couple of dozen buddies, this was not a problem — he’s well known and proud of his convictions (of both kinds). Staring down a large contingent of NSW Police who had cornered the neo-Nazi horde at North Sydney Station, Sewell was happily mask-free and proclaiming “it’s not illegal to be racist” for the benefit of the evening news.
Well, he’s right — it isn’t. Even if we go the whole hog and bus every one of these good ol’ boys into the desert so they can reenact Lord of the Flies before dying of terminal stupidity, we can’t make them accept that they’re not the master race. If spending 12 hours on a bus with each other hasn’t convinced them of that, nothing will.
But this latest outburst of black-clad professional dickheadedness, a new thing for Sydney (thanks, Melbourne, we really appreciate the export), points to what is still a small problem but showing every sign of becoming a large one: what to do about our Nazis?
Clearly, they’re not going away and the growth in their numbers and self-confidence reflects global trends towards authoritarianism and racial nationalism. The Holocaust is generations past, its lessons receding as rapidly as democracy’s gloss is fading.
The modern Australian Nazi has distinct characteristics: young, white, male, clad head-to-foot in black and — mostly, for now — masked. Like all uniforms, theirs serves a dual purpose: to give them the comfort of tribal belonging, and to send a simple message to everyone else. The message of Nazism is simple: fear us.
We should always remember that fascists are funny, until they’re not. It’s the same with this crew, self-evidently thick and deluded as they are. They are in deadly earnest, and the only thing keeping them from acting out their understanding of Mein Kampf is their cowardice. That will dissipate with numbers and impact. Left alone, they will multiply and they will perpetrate racist violence. That’s fact, not probability.
So far, governments have responded with uniformity of rhetoric — this is intolerable, we will not tolerate it — and a ratcheting up of laws specifically targeting the visible symbols of Nazism: first the swastika and SS insignia, then the stiff-arm salute. None of this has had any effect, as could have been predicted (also, I predicted it). If anything, it plays directly into their hands, as we’d know if we remembered anything about Hitler’s rise.
So, what then? We can’t criminalise racist belief, or the colour black, or marching. And banning their flags — while helpful in that it means the rest of us don’t have to see these symbols of hate paraded — won’t slow them down. What will?
Minns’ theory is that public shaming is the key to success, and he’s far from alone. In legal theory, it’s pure vigilantism; the only reason to do it is because we know how the mob will respond. I would summarily terminate any employee who turned out to be a neo-Nazi, and disown any I happened to know. Nazis get the benefit of the same doubt they give the objects of their hate: none.
Still, we would be wise to pause for breath before taking such a radical step as Minns’ comments imply: the government-sponsored exposure and vilification of individuals, solely for their beliefs. It would be a huge departure from modern concepts of privacy, freedom of expression and association, and the presumption of innocence.
To be clear, this would go a long way beyond what is currently available. NSW Police can force a person to unmask so they can be identified, and anyone charged with a crime can be named (with some exceptions). We’d be naming these guys because they turned up.
It would also, we should admit, build a new slippery slope. Black-clad neo-Nazis we can identify and categorise easily; their lack of imagination makes it easy. However, we are having this conversation at the same moment as some individuals on the extreme fringe of the Zionist movement in Israel are openly expressing attitudes and intentions towards Palestinians which are breathtakingly racist and genocidal. If that sentiment were to be imported here, how would we feel about naming and shaming then?
Nazis have a way of finding the uncomfortable intersection points between rights and wrongs. It’s their basic modus operandi, how they manoeuvre towards social acceptance and, ultimately, power, along the tightrope of tolerance. They weaponise our instincts and values — and consequently our laws — against us.
Keeping them down requires a playbook that is sophisticated and adaptable. Our responses have to be thoughtful and thought-out. We have to be alive to their unintended consequences, but equally conscious that the consequence of not taking Nazis seriously — as seriously as they take themselves — will always be worse.
Who’d have thought this would be a conversation at all, so soon? But here we are.
Maybe the media should deliberately ignore them like they are deliberately ignoring the pro palestinian rallies that are held each weekend in every capital city. Rallies that are growing bigger each week, that are non violent and which we really need to be aware of.
Does this tell us things about the media?
I find it interesting that every media outlet is complicit in this self censoring, even SBS, the ABC, the Gaurdian and even Crikey.
What’s going on?
The rallies have certainly been on SBS news, though not every week. A lot of rallies don’t make it onto the news, specially if they’re not in Sydney.
No, I have attended to support the Palestinian peoples and there were no MSM journalists. None.
I have seen the rallies on the TV news, not every week it’s true – maybe not at the one you were at.
The media self-censoring the reporting of the Anti-Zionist rallies, also won’t make the number of people and the belief go away.
OH! Sorry, I must mention Oct7th or I will be accused of being Anti-Semitic, which must tickle the ribs of every Ultra-Orthodox Jew who believes that Israel should not exist, just as my Jewish grandfather did.
As the Palestinian death toll rises, so do the numbers of people who think the same thing.
When assassinations occur within a hospital, the feeling becomes more entrenched!
Does anyone realize that all this pro-Israeli media coverage is part of the fuel for thew Nazi’s?
Yeah, funny how the Zionists obsess over October 7th 2023, yet conveniently ignore the State-sponsered terror Palestinians on the West Bank are subjected to 365 days of every year over the last 40 years.
Actually, the Zionists obsessing over October 7th remind me of those gung-ho Americans who insist the world remember September 11 2001 for all time, yet want the world to forget about September 11 1973…..when those same gung-ho Americans worked with Pinochet to violently overthrow the democratically elected government of Chile.
Great post ratty. It deserves more than just an ‘up tick’. I totally agree with you (and your Jewish grandfather).
I certainly share your concerns about this menace Michael. I always think that the best approach to dealing with a problem like this is to find out the causes of it and then try to deal with those. But in this day and age of ‘individual responsibility’, ‘libertarianism’ and ‘minimal state intervention’, this will be easier said than done.
I was very pleased that in the preantepenultimate paragraph of your essay, you recognized a much more immediate and existential threat. The religious fanatics to whom you refer, are carrying out (as I write) the most abominable crimes against humanity imaginable (and we subscribers here at Crikey are not even allowed to talk directly about it. What an absolute disgrace this is!!
Thanks for the article, Michael.
A lot of self reflection is needed. A tool which Australians do not have. I wish we had this tool to maturely self reflect but as a nation, we’re highly immature and spoilt.
Yes, we are forgetting the lessons of the Holocaust, but we’re hardly alone, as is hinted at in the article. One of the few worthwile flowers to bloom from the Holocaust’s slag pile of horrors was of course the fourth Geneva convention, and the “Jewish State” is widely regarded as having been in violation of that convention ostensibly since its first creation.
Meanwhile you have Zionist lobbyists crying “antisemitism” at people who take an ethical stance on a geopolitical issue based on beliefs that are fundamentally antiracist, all whilst there are REAL antisemites organising in our suburbs.
Dumb censorialist binary tribalism was of course the hallmark of the political culture in inter-war Germany. People who can’t join these dots are aiding and abetting the opposite of what they claim to be wishing for.
I heard an interesting conversation on the ABC about how a female senior police officer took on bikie gangs to reduce their power. She didn’t close down the actual gangs, she just deprived them of all the things they liked to get together to do, like closing down their clubhouses because of planning rules, and setting other kinds of limits on their associations.
Just make their rotten and pathetic lives really difficult by setting up all kinds of minor but legal hoops for them to jump through before they actually get to be neo-Nazis all together in their little cubbies. Yes, they’re entitled to be racists, but maybe not wearing costumes and masks. Remove the things that keep them together as a group so the group cannot function. Shut down their internet access, etc.
And also make sure that not one single police person has any sympathy for their cause. Weed out the would-be fascists at the recruitment stage.
Ultimately treat them like any other ‘club’ and make them obey the laws of association to the letter.
Highly recommended https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/conversations/deb-wallace-policing-gangs-cabramatta-5t-strike-force-raptor/102354650
Michael Bradley, would you comment please?
Through my work I met a former white supremacist. If you’ve ever met a former alcoholic who has to tell you how bad they were when they were an alcoholic, he was like that – except about white supremacism. He just could not believe he’d been so awful.
Some of these guys who were on the bus are psychopaths, some are sociopaths, some are socially inadequate – I’ll guarantee there is a few incels in there – and just about all are very mediocre individuals who want to feel superior for a change. Some of them will eventually work out they’re in bad company, and that their beliefs are abhorrent.
Ban their insignia and salutes, and when they break the law through vilification or violence arrest and charge them.
People don’t start to go feral like this in large numbers unless inequality becomes too great. If we address that we shouldn’t have too big a problem.