One consequence of the “student politics to Parliament pipeline” is the unedifying spectacle of greying politicians using their taxpayer-funded pulpits to reignite campus debates from their university days.
It seems as though, if it were at all possible, some would surely reverse the inevitable march of time to eternally rehash their late teens, waxing lyrical about the philosophical profundity of raising the percentage of the Student Services and Amenities Fee going to the queer department.
Students’ story spiked
Case in point: on Tuesday last, federal politicians attacked the University of Sydney’s student newspaper Honi Soit for taking down a story on two academics’ links to Chinese government recruitment schemes. The researchers had also reportedly collaborated with sanctioned Chinese universities on research with potential military uses. Honi’s editorial team stood by the story’s substance, but worried that naming the academics could expose them to the threat of violence or Sinophobia.
Education Minister Alan Tudge bemoaned left activists forgetting “what freedom of speech means in an era of woke culture”, a line presumably recycled from his former tenure as president of the University of Melbourne’s student union.
Tim Wilson, who previously occupied the same position at Monash University, told the Sydney Morning Herald, “the progressive left would rather side with authoritarians by pandering to the CCP’s line than stand up for free discussion”.
Labor senator and China hawk Kimberley Kitching, whose husband once fled the country before legal proceedings over his leadership of the Melbourne University Student Union, also offered some criticism — albeit more restrained.
Dialling down the outrage a few decibels, it’s clear the student media group stumbled on a complex editorial decision which even mainstream media organisations struggle with. The Sydney Morning Herald, for instance, reported on the claims against the academics without naming them. There is no evidence to suggest Honi was swayed by pressure from or sensitivity to the Chinese government.
As Per Capita research fellow Osmond Chiu wrote, “it’s obvious there’s no conspiracy of external pressure but rather it’s people who are barely adults clashing while struggling to navigate complex geopolitical debates on China that even those with years of policy experience struggle on”.
Weaponisation of ‘wokeness’
So why didn’t these MPs cut the fledgling journalists some slack? Why the rush to whip up nationalistic outrage over the incident?
That’s probably because, over the last decade, Australian conservative media and political figures have increasingly tried to mimic Fox News and the Republican Party’s weaponisation of “woke” campus kerfuffles in the US.
I cut my teeth as a reporter and columnist for the University of Melbourne’s Farrago magazine, where I witnessed some of these blow-ups unfold. In 2019, The Australian unleashed a brief culture war against a local dance student, accusing her of “reverse racism” for a performance art piece in which white audience members were separated from their non-white peers as a statement on colonial history.
The free-speech deifying Institute of Public Affairs called for the performance to be banned. 2GB host Ben Fordham raged. Alan Tudge, who was multicultural affairs minister at the time, attacked the university administration for standing by the student’s freedom of expression.
The Oz has induced moral panics over Honi Soit editions before, including a cover featuring students‘ vulvas and another featuring a Palestinian suicide bomber. It has also amplified an ex-editor’s gripes about the “editorial board’s preoccupation with gender politics [and] ethnicity” at the Australian National University’s Woroni.
Our conservative media has repeatedly sensationalised routine excesses in student life as a means to aid a dubious narrative of “Marxist” groupthink in Australian universities.
The US should stand as a stark warning of where this editorial line leads. Their cable news bulletins are routinely dominated by cherrypicked, outrage-baiting stories of liberal students doing what young people do — pushing the boundaries too far or tripping over their inexperience.
Given they are a breeding ground for future leaders, student groups should not be immune from media criticism for genuinely poor behaviour. For instance, The Age has previously uncovered multiple allegations of assault by Young Liberal factional leaders, including a “rich kid of Instagram” who reportedly punched a female security guard. As this toxic culture is too often carried into Parliament (which recent allegations of sexual misconduct in Canberra show), addressing it at the source is welcome.
But outside serious questions of violence or misconduct, uni students should be afforded the freedom to experiment, learn and fail outside the electrified climate of national culture wars. Indeed, fear of negative coverage in the national media could stifle their free speech.
We need neither Beijing’s soft power nor America’s outrage machine on our campuses. Leave those kids alone.
Benjamin Clark is currently completing his final subject of a Masters degree at the University of Melbourne.
Gosh, and here’s me still waiting for the AFP to stage some spectacular media raids on the offices of conservative MPs Michael Sukkar and Gladys Liu, given their involvement with alleged Chinese agent of influence Huifeng “Haha” Liu.
Oh, but of course, that only happens to pesky lefty Labor MPs, doesn’t it.
The amount of time the govt spends on connected culture wars suggests they don’t have much to do. Certainly Porter didn’t have enough time to do anything about the ‘Respect at Work’ report, SfM doesn’t have enough time for climate change policy, Angas Taylor doesn’t have enough time for emissions reductions and Greg Hunt doesn’t have enough time to roll out vaccines. But they all have time to comment on and incite culture wars.
Maybe these pollies with their silvertail upbringings should just be grateful that they had university educations; many people didn’t/don’t have that luxury. Then they should just shut up about their spiritual successors in univerties to day..
Most of them also got theirs for free or at a substantially lower cost than today’s students. But whenever anyone mentions that, they’re very keen to change the subject.
Interesting overview of the ‘free speech’ promotional strategy, but misses some important elements.
This includes the Anglosphere cultural commonality with similar tactics/strategy in the US and UK, the (transnational) ‘architecture’ and the fulcrum, Charles Koch (whose AtlasNetwork includes IPA/CIS and IEA in UK).
https://www.charleskochfoundation.org/focus-areas/free-speech-and-peace/the-campus-speech-conundrum/
What is the objective of all this ‘freedom of speech’?
Projecting radical right libertarian values and socioeconomic ideology to university campuses via sponsored institutes, curriculum content e.g. antipathy towards gender or LGBT, and agitation for ‘freedom of speech’ rights, i.e. positing nativist libertarian conservatives as ‘victims’. Meanwhile denigrating others and discrediting peer reviewed science, especially on climate and environment…. and the future threat of diverse, educated and empowered younger generations.
Further, according to Amazon a relevant book is coming out November ‘Free Speech and Koch Money: Manufacturing a Campus Culture War Paperback – November 20, 2021by Ralph Wilson and Isaac Kamola.
The Australian establishment is totally in hock to Chine (coal, iron ore, tourism, international students etc.). China takes 38% of our exports. There is a spat on at the moment which has resulted in insignificant imposts on wine and barley. Trade in increasing with China despite this. Hence the establishment does not want to upset the applecart. But it loves the opportunity for a proxy fight. Honi Soit gave them the opportunity on a plate.