His words were stern, they were magisterial, they were no-nonsense, they were of great significance.
I speak of course of Paul Keating’s op-ed in The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald this morning (I will die in a ditch before I call them Nine papers) — Joe Biden also gave a speech at the UN or something — which marks the first clear and declarative statement against our return to being a junior member of the white imperial Anglosphere in the Asian century.
Aside from Keating, there has been pretty much crickets, apart from somewhat less powerful voices, such as myself, Vanguard — the Communist Party of Australia (Marxist-Leninist) paper — and Green Left. Strange times, strange times…
In a tone you only get to take when you’re an ex-PM, Keating excoriated not only the Morrison government but the supine Sinophobes in the Age/SMH, such as the haha “froth-mouthed” (Keating’s words) Peter Hartcher and the “lizard king” (my words) Chris Uhlmann. Keating makes the points that constitute the obvious opposition to the deal: that we are lacing ourselves into an old imperial alliance, working off a systemic misconstruction in which China — a land-based, internal power — is presented as if it were the next sea-based global imperium, as the UK and then the US had been in the past two centuries.
There was more to it than that, but what has been notable is the lack of concerted, institutional opposition to our new, willed dependency in a white man’s Burton. Labor fell into line dutifully, the ACTU said not a word, the left unions did not break away and speak away, the Greens emphasised the nuclear danger angle, there was no word from the churches against a willed drift to war.
This was a new development in our history. For more than a century, stretching back to the 1890s, we have had a left with some institutional bases, which saw the global question as intertwined with local questions. True, there was plenty of, um, falling short within these movements, like, um, systemic white-power racism, but there was also vast resistance, from the 1916 anti-conscription movement onwards.
Through the 1950s and ’60s we had a vigorous peace movement — which, being run largely by the Communist Party, had its biases — and then we had one of the world’s largest anti-war and anti-nuclear movements from the ’70s through to the 2000s. The active support of unions and churches was essential to such a movement, as was the presence of a more vocal and independent Labor left — and a Labor leadership that retained aspects of Labor’s dissidence. That this coalition is now absent is a disaster for the country.
I don’t believe for a second that it is indicative of a wider absence in society; I think many Australians have a deep disquiet about the direction being taken, the giddy, gung-ho commitment to a race-grounded imperial alliance. But the shifts in Australian society have been so great that there has been a split between elite power group leaderships, and an atomised population which is often to the left of the people leading them.
Labor’s inability to speak on these matters from some sort of independent point of view has been a long time in the making (and one PJ Keating must shoulder part of the blame). So too a union movement that’s capacity to resist capital and power has been so compromised by being bound up with the vast superannuation fund, and the petty games of Labor factionalism, that it cannot articulate the simple humanist message that should arise from the character of unionism itself: no to being marched to war, yes to global dialogue and co-operation. Kim Carr, usually the goodest of good soldiers, made some protest by calling for a Senate inquiry into the deal, and linking this new explicit dependency with the killing of our heavy industrial sector. That was about as much as he could say within the self-accepted discipline of the Labor frame.
The new “industrial left” group of unions hasn’t shown any will to do any actual politics — not a leaflet, not a publication — so there was no hope that its residual left, not to say Maoist, traditions might kick in.
The Greens led with opposition to nuclear activity on our shores, a reasonable choice but with an obvious electoral pitch to South Australian seats like Boothby and Mayo. In terms of social leadership, they should have started with opposition to the push to war — to the obvious imperial whiteness and racism at the core of it — and the attack on global multilateralism. They should come out big on this, leading with a resistance to the push to war, and making the nuclear aspect part of that. We need the Greens to step into that leadership space that has been vacated by others. This is demonstrated all the more by the failure of progressive outlets to identify the side they should be on, in stark terms, and with full urgency.
Guardian Australia was pathetic on this, and its failure to rise to the occasion shows how both centrist and out-of-its-depth its editorial centre is. Having nothing to say immediately, it then went to — or was this a contact-high hallucination from reading too many wellness articles? — John Blaxland for commentary. I’m all for pluralism in progressive media but I don’t think the authorised historian of ASIO should be its go-to. It got better/worse when it ran Neil James, head of that old Santamaria front the Australian Defence Association. Graeme Wise is really getting value for money over at the Guardian shop. Both were, you’ll be amazed to hear, uncritical.
Elsewhere the progressives “of colour” were largely silent. People who can spend two weeks debating whether a white author can write in an Asian character have little to say on a development that will necessarily redefine Australia as an Anglo/European society once more. Is it not now clear why the federal government was happy, and is still trying, to kill off the east Asian-oriented overseas student industry? Nothing better demonstrates the degree to which identity politics is an elite politics, happy to leave the big material stuff to the powers that be.
This gap, between the widespread disquiet about this move and a lack of leading political agency to express it, is a very disheartening development, albeit one which has been a long time coming. The hollowing out of the union movement (a self-carving wooden ashtray, that one); the destruction of industry that was a guarantor of independence, giving Murdoch the keys to the kingdom; the… well, you know what I’m getting at. And who.
To keep saying that one PJ Keating needs to account for how we got here makes you sound like a broken Mahler 78. Nevertheless, if we’re going to begin a decades-long reorientation from this situation, we are going to need some honest accounting about the decades of mistakes made that got us here. Some true confessions from the perpetrators would be an excellent start.
But it is going to take more than a few hacks to start a real resistance to this. The Greens, the churches, any left union with a skerrick of politics remaining — any or all are going to need to turn their diesel-powered guns to this. We have a evangelical-Christian-headed government, and our three big media orgs are headed by pro-militarist Christian types.
Whatever the US’s intent in this alliance is, we are being marched to civilisational conflict with a religious and apocalyptic overlay. This can be exposed and defeated, but it’s going to take a realisation by progressives that this is not a side issue to negative gearing or sombrero-wearing. Biden can tell the UN he doesn’t want a new Cold War; it’s the hot one our leaders want that I’m worried about. This is going to be, quite literally, the fight of our lives.
As a member of the Greens, I’ll have to say that Mehreen Faruqi said far more of what is necessary than Adam Bandt, whose “floating Chernobyls” line caused great cringing – inside the party and out.
Link from here. https://twitter.com/MehreenFaruqi/status/1438303368858849284
fair nuff, good to mention, and wasnt harshly criticising greens. but my poin
t was about institutions not individuals…
True. BTW Your article provided another important reality check, excellent article, ta GR.
I have not seen it better or more concisely said. Bravo.
I’m trying to work out why the Federal Labor opposition are either silent or in lockstep with the government on most issues. The only conclusion I can draw, is that Albanese wants to fight the election on COVID. He refuses to be drawn into argument with the government on anything else, to avoid the battleground shifting to one more comfortable for Morrison. The trouble is that it’s a bit of the discredited small target strategy that failed Kim Beazley.
I know that starting a fight with the Murdoch press is also a bad strategy, but Albanese might find the election becomes easier to win if people see him fighting for something. We shouldn’t have to rely on an aging Paul Keating, nor wish we were back in 1992 again.
The problem is Labor can’t win on such issues.
If they agree with the Government their supporters see them as having sold out.
If they oppose, the Government will paint them as weak on terror/crime/China/etc., a message that will be spread by Morrison’s marketing department i.e. 95% of the media in Australia.
And an election is due shortly. No gain for Labor, only pain. The whole thing is subject to an 18 month study anyway so if Labor do win, they have plenty of time to adjust the course of things…
I think your answer is spot on Wayne. The nation we live in, and most of the English speaking world, is controled and manipulated by the Turdoch media empire. Severely limits the scope as to where alternative parties can go. And this dominant flood of turdock manipulation is acting like a cancer on the philosophical group think of our nation. Mix that with the terror of the Anglosphere (“Oh my god. Were loosing our ability to dominate Planet Earth”), and the LNP are safe (until our young ones reach voting age). Labor thinks it has to look like a small target if it has any hope of gaining influence (or – at least – it thinks it does).
I have yet to see labor fight an election on bread and butter issues in a meaningful way. Their policies on affordable housing, climate change, cost of living are mediocre at best.
The salient point used to be “Guns or Butter” – for the Many or the Few?
I’d bet not one current Labor time serving, seat warmer would even understand the concept.
And the entire, job lot, is incapable of mounting a credible, much less creditable, defence or advocacy of … anything.
Not. A. Bean.
Agree, media has become part of the LNP and Anglo libertarian or ‘public choice theory’ architecture of influence which precludes anyone or anything else that may contradict the same, including Labor, being given legacy media airtime let alone ‘fair and balanced’ commentary and context.
Scared of the fight or heart not in the fight? With someone of the (very small) caliber of Richard Marles in a senior leadership I’d go for the latter.
Indeed – I’m stuffed if I know why there has to be a Left-Right faction squabble. I mean, what exactly is the difference between the left and right factions in the ALP? What is one denying the other in policy terms? What policies do the Shoppies want that the AWU or the CFMMEU won’t let them have, and vice versa?
Why not just appoint on merit, as they claim to be the principle?
The fiercest squabbles are always over the least consequence.
(Corollary also true, hence the theme of the article: consequence of gravest concern: not a peep.)
Name one LNP minister who has performed well for this country.
I like you have issues with Marles, Bowen, and sometimes Dreyfus.
Then I compare them to what the Government presents to us.
In terms of ability, impartiality, and intellect I cannot find one winner on the LNP side.
I hope that once the election has been announced that Albanese will start to speak up. Morrison hopes that Labor will criticise the latest diplomatic bungle of this government, as that would allow him to wedge Labor on security. Morduch press will rip Labor apart and the election will be focusing on Liberals being the master of economy, low taxes, low unemployment and keeping Australian save.. Most people will be fed the Morduch diet and social media will do the rest. Kelly/Palmer team, Hanson etc will give their votes to the Liberal and Australia is set to continue its down wards spiral for many more years to come. Everyone will be thankful that Australia has the best Democracy in the world. Hallelujah PS Morduch has already started telling us how clever this government is. According to the msh, while in the US, Morrison is having exclusive dinner with News Corp executive Robert Thomson. I am sure they will not discuss the Australian weather.
Great analysis here from GR – but wishin’, hopin’ and payin’ for ‘the left’ to arise from it’s somnambulance is futile. The ‘left’ and the ‘right’ are redundant classifications – there is now appears only ‘the centre’ or more correctly, ‘the consensus’. The rest of us reside on the margins, amongst the heretics.
thanks for that. also tho, i was talking about specific institutions, not a generic left….from unions to churches…
People who join a Party, as currently constituted, sign away their individual conscience.
A Mob is always less than the Sum of its Parts – by definition.
Well said.
On one side we have China, with global ambitions and a way of aspiring towards them that doesn’t include bombs, drones, missiles and vaporized families and then we have the US with global ambitions that do include bombs, drones, missiles and vaporized families, over and over again.
Not sure fron whece you get China having global ambitions. As PK and a few others point out its really got a problem with geography
I take global ambition to be referring to economic power and I don’t think there can be any doubt about that. Economic power confers global influence and makes it easier to pursue national policies. In this sense, China has observed and learned from history that the Industrial Revolution turned Great Britain into the factory of the world and enabled it accrue power, wealth and global influence. China also observed and learned that as the US succeeded GB as the global economic powerhouse, it too was able to accrue power, wealth and influence. The global dominance of GB and US also involved the humiliation of the former global economic powerhouse, China. (The Silk Roads were developed for a reason.) Xi has made it clear that is not to happen again.
The question is whether China would be content with the power, influence and wealth it will accrue from becoming the world’s economic powerhouse or would it seek and pursue territorial ambitions. It seems the UK and US fear it will act as they did, hence their concerns. Personally, I think they are wrong. I suspect the Chinese are smart enough to know that it is in nobody’s interest to waste money and blood on occupying foreign nations – economic superiority would be sufficient in a world where a war with weapons of global destruction could not be other than lose/lose.
Conquering distant lands (as opposed to contiguous ones) has never been part of Chinese thinking. I suspect what they have in mind, consciously or not, is something akin to the traditional tributary system:
a network of loose international relations focused on China which facilitated trade and foreign relations by acknowledging China’s predominant role in East Asia. It involved multiple relationships of trade, military force, diplomacy and ritual. The other nations had to send a tributary envoy to China on schedule, who would kowtow to the Chinese emperor as a form of tribute, and acknowledge his superiority and precedence. The other countries followed China’s formal ritual in order to keep the peace with the more powerful neighbor and be eligible for diplomatic or military help under certain conditions. Political actors within the tributary system were largely autonomous and in almost all cases virtually independent.(Wikipedia)
I totally agree with this view, having been to China a few times I sense no military expansion from Chinese soil is on the cards.
PS they back up their economic aspirations with MAD nuclear abilities. And that is enough.
Thinking further about this I guess I mentally glossed over the Spratly islands and that China may indeed have some desire to spread into other countries. I do firmly believe their tactics will be mercantile and not military.
Good for you you only saw what you wanted to and you only see what you want to see. No doubt the concentration camps for minorities weren’t on your list either
I saw more than your tiny brain can imagine
Thanks for that just reinforces what I said
“Concentration camps” for Islamic separatist terrorists (in Xinjiang) – as opposed to bombing them into submission, US-style (eg, in Afghanistan)? Maybe the ‘concentration camps’ ARE much needed de-radicalization camps, as claimed by China.
Meanwhile I suspect you have scant desire to see an UN that can maintain an effective international rules-based system, not a fake system based on US global hegemony. (Feel free to correct me).
Biden claims to defend ‘democracy and freedom’, but I contend blacks living in poverty-ghettos in the US are not “free”.
Whereas Xi’s vision of “common prosperity” IS a necessity for universal freedom.
Hoc est taurum stercore, or shi in mandarin
I don’t see the equivalence in those terms. The Latin applies to your comment, but otherwise you appear to not know what you’re on about
You need to stop looking in the mirror and talking about yourself
Seriously? Building Aircraft Carrier groups, artificial Islands, unilateral imposition of no fly zones/navigational challenges around islands claimed by the Phillipines, Japan, Vietnam and others? That all sounds like military preparation to me. The single purpose of an Aircraft carrier is to project power at considerable distance, They, like submarines, are offensive weapons, not defensive.
Do you believe we will ever see China invade a foreign land?
Not likely, not in the way the US does regularly.
China will back itself with almost every manner of military technology, but I cannot see it extending into foreign invasion. It is simply a “don’t mess with us” reality that supports its global economic aspirations.
That would be a good model for the defence of this country – plus we have Girt deMaris for even more security.
How about we acquire nuclear devices – preferably the fabled& apocryphal neutron bomb which doesn’t badly affect property values – but build them into the main civic centres.
It is not bombs per se which are dangerous but delivery systems to elsewhere.
Where could they be safer and ensure that they are NOT a threat to neighbours?
–
How would you feel if you had over 200 potentially hostile US bases ringing your nation, as China does. The west seems to have no problem with having, collectively, dozens of aircraft carriers or hundreds of destroyers and sub marines. But China and Russia might…
What, you haven’t realised that China has been encircled by the United States and its clients since the late 1940s?
That’s nice – I agree with you all through. Thanks for taking the time. My guess PK would be i accord too.
Agree
The British empire succeeded so well, for so long, precisely because satraps were always the preferred administrators.
The Han view servitude beyond the Celestial Realm as anathema, to be endured in obesiance but never welcome.
i think china has global ambitions, and is hardly less politically ruthless than the US. The difference is in extension of power….
Belt and rail/road?
It is too oft misunderstood that the Dragon to the East is free, random creation/destruction, akin to Shiva and his fearsome consort.
Roads and railways are always as straight as possible, a sign of their base servitude to the temporal power of the day.
You’re right about the old broadsheet newspapers, Guy. It makes feel uncomfortable every time I think of them being owned by an entity called Nine Entertainment.
Hartcher and Uhlmann in particular are just living in some demagoguery dream. I can’t stand either of them.
I agree, but unlike GR I think they should be explicitly labelled Nine Papers at every opportunity, to remind people who their masters are.