Five, six weeks ago Nick Minchin used Four Corners to start a war in the Liberal Party that ultimately elevated Tony Abbott to the leadership — which may not have been Minchin’s intention, at least at this stage of the game.
Retrospectively, his intervention has become famous — “Oh you know green politics is like communism was, it’s just another move by the anti-industrial Left”.
And Minchin doesn’t do anything accidentally — save, of course, for getting Tony Abbott up one election too early — and the remark was a magnet dropped into a pile of iron filings, bending the party into tight circles at each end.
Now, the strategy was not without risk — chief among them that it will be quoted back at the coalition in a full election, to portray them as a bunch of conspiratorialists.
Kazart! Ever since Bob Hawke destroyed Malcolm Fraser’s claim if Labor gets elected, your money will be safer under the bed with the remark “oh you can’t put it there, that’s where all the reds are”, the tinfoil hat stuff has been a non-starter — save for a few rural areas, where RM Williams sells hats ready-lined with Alcan.
Consequently it was intriguing to see at least one commentator taking it seriously — our old mucker Christian Kerr, in the Oz Spectator (not online, or well-hidden if it is: I read it in the newsagents).
Argues Kerr, there’s no doubt that the radical left moved holus-bolus into the environmentalist movement in the late ’80s and ’90s, Kerr argues, noting the entrist push into the 1984 Nuclear Disarmament Party by the then Socialist Workers Party (later DSP) among others.
More acutely, Kerr sounds a note of caution: though environmental issues are a real problem, they’re ultimately a business problem, a question of cost — and people really believe that climate change is happening.
Pari passu, the upshot of this is, let’s create a conspiracy about the conspiracy — regard the whole green movement as communism by other means, but let the lumpensuburbatariat think that you really care about the issue.
By now, the whole issue has become so live, that it’s worth disentangling it a little — if only because it throws light on the Liberal Party’s separation from the mainstream.
Everyone knows, or should, that the Communist movement — the Old Left — wasn’t anti-industrial in the slightest. It’s about as wrong a definition as you can get.
The whole aim of Communist movements within capitalist countries was to build a movement within the industrial working class — and thus the growth and expansion of that class was vital to its task. In Communist countries, industrial development was vital to standing against the capitalist world.
Left, Old Left, New Left … by the 1960s Communist Party dominance of the left was starting to slide, as a more civilisational critique of industrial and organisational humanity came to a head — including our impact on nature. Silent Spring, One Dimensional Man, DeSchooling Society, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Steal This Book, Growing Up Absurd, The Dialectic of Sex, and a hundred others suggested implicitly and otherwise that the Old Left was part of a monolithic system of growth and alienation, whose victory would do nothing to solve humanity’s deepest problems.
Lord, by the time that official Communist parties had taken onboard this wider critique, they were irrelevant — and they often remained highly critical of much of its efflorescences. David “Burnout” Burchell fits well into The Oz’s op-ed page because as a CPA intellectual and editor in the ’70s and ’80s, a lot of his role was to hold back much of the “New Left” tide, both its macro-civilisational critique and its micropolitics of non-hierachical participatory organisation and frikkin face painting. He’s a grumpy sod, because those people were most of the readers of ALR, which he edited.
In Michin and Kerr’s account, the accurate part is that a section of the Marxist left — the Trotskyist “far left” groups — began to see the social movements of the 1960s and ’70s, as places for entry, activity and recruitment. Within the far-left there was keen debate about the dangers of “movementism” — of getting sucked into the actual cause, rather than building the party. “Far left” groups remained scrupulously agnostic about what form a socialist society would take — but their insistent motif was that environmental destruction was caused by the profit motive (often rendered rather unmarxistally as “greed”), and lack of social control of the economy.
Seen thus, a section of the Green movement was Marxism by other means. But it’s more complicated than that. Because Minchin, Kerr and others can give no credence to the Marxist argument about capitalism — that it must expand endlessly, and at ever greater velocity just to keep going, that the idea of a stabilised capitalism is an illusion of the pre-Marxist classical economists who thought of it as an eternal structure (hidden beneath centuries of bondage) — they can’t credit the possibility that left wing people would work in either a Marxist organisation or a Green one, because they believe the criticism to be correct.
Now, you would have to say that not only is there a strong case for this, but also that many people believe it — that our way of life, especially if it were generalised to all six billion people — would simply choke the planet dead. Many people aren’t prepared to actually change their life at this stage — which is why useless activities such as personal recycling are devised, to give the illusion of action — but hypocrisy is not the worst of vices.
Understand this clearly — more people now believe the Red-Green hypothesis, that capitalism is a system testing us to destruction in its current form, than go with the idea that it is some empty charade of communism by other means. The idea that it’s merely a “business problem” is one they’re increasingly rejecting, at least in thought.
To put it plainly, that group includes a lot of Liberal voters, and a high majority of Labor voters. None of them want to live in grass huts, but the idea that factors other than business will have to be brought into global economic calculus is one that appeals to them — including fairly radical schemes to make the electricity grid two-way with clean domestic power generation, relocalisation of parts of the economy, and drawing areas of life out of the commodity cycle. Ideas that are Green and, in a way, vaguely communistic.
Seriously, it’s early days for all that. But it will grow and grow — and voters will assess parties on their seriousness about addressing the deep problems of global growth, not in advancing cheap kludges that give the sense of appeasing a fringe.
The trouble for Minchin, Kerr and co is that they won the battle at one level — the privatisation of the economy — while culturally the new left prevailed in terms of a sense of what life is about. Now that the right’s victory delivered us a global financial crisis, the new left’s critique of its illusions is still there, and growing stronger by the day.
Beautifully written, Rundle – thank you. It’s a complicated argument to make, and not easy to sound-bite, but some day it will permeate.
Yes, thanks Guy. We do need as a starter a lot better system of education than we currently have, including an understanding of the ways in which private corporations dominate world politics. Perhaps the free market apologists would be prepared to accept the contradiction of an upper limit on the size of individual corporations in order to reduce their power and influence. Only then can any debate be meaningful.
Obsessive compare and competitive contrast seems to be one of the issues of the human condition. When is enough … enough? I keep thinking of Kings of the middle ages. So rich they could bathe every day. Drink milk. Have fresh vegetables – from the other side of the country even. Enjoy slave helpers.
Substitute machines for slaves and even the humblest blogger lives better than a king of the empire today. So how much is enough? Really?
Good analysis Guy. I’ve worked for both the trade union movement (BLF and the NSW Timber Workers Union) and the green movement (Greenpeace and [god help me] the Wilderness Society) and have to say that far from the greenies being the inheritors of the old marxist-leninist mantle, they are, to generalise, rabidly anti-working class and bereft of any politics other than that of environmentalism. Class analysis? Forget it. A gender or race analysis? Forget it again.
My sense of the broader green movement is that they are increasingly avoiding any pretensions of mass involvement or support and happy to engage in shady preference deals with mainstream political parties. See the recent Wild Rivers debacle in Cape York in which Premier Bligh announced the further economic disempowering of Aboriginal people by “protecting” Cape York’s river systems at the same time as actively pushing to dam another river in SE Qld. This in return for Wilderness Society support at the last state election.
It seems to me that sections of the “green movement” could just as well fit the definition of a quasi corporate fascist movement as much as they could be described as communist.
I’m stunned at the silence on the pathetic product, and service, that is TiVO in this country. I haven’t gone home yet, but as of yesterday evening the TiVo EPG still had ABC3 as “To Be Announced”! Even my paper-based Newspaper TV guides had ABC3 programme details!
Try to tape a show that’s not in the EPG — as best as I can tell, it can’t be done. Try and tape a programme that starts before the TiVo’s EPG time — as long as it’s not more than 5 mins early, it can be done if you’re prepared to go through a ludicrous amount of steps — but it’s a pain. My TiVo is my first and last, and I wouldn’t commend it to anybody.