Stop me if this sounds familiar: you’ve spent the past two days doomscrolling and inhaling footage of unruly protesters causing a ruckus in the streets of Melbourne. You feel awful. What is the world coming to?
I’m an internet reporter who has been following this anti-vaccine movement in Australia for the past two years and I’ve seen quite a few of these protests, encouraged by conspiracists and extremists. Between the broken bottles, flares and hi-vis vests, I think there’s real reason for optimism — not despair.
We’re on day three of protests against a vaccine mandate in the construction industry. The Victorian government has temporarily shut the industry down after major outbreaks and shockingly high numbers of non-compliance on public health measures on sites. Zooming out, we’re on day 200+ of lockdowns in Melbourne. People are worn down from forced isolation and income insecurity. But looking at the problems clearly should give us some hope.
Leaders in the labour movement, like John Setka and Bill Shorten, have tried to chalk up the protests to non-union members, non-construction workers, as “fake tradies”. Screenshots of messages encouraging people to pretend to be workers or flyers telling people to “blend in” went viral. Actual evidence supporting this is scarce.
Nine’s Ben Schneiders — who is well sourced within the CFMMEU in Melbourne — says people within the union think that more than 80% of protesters on the first day were construction workers. There were definitely some of the usual suspects from conspiracy and fringe groups but for the most part those who know about these things think it wasn’t a false flag operation by anti-vaxxers.
We mustn’t let anti-vaxxers turn us into conspiracy theorists.
Such a response from this industry shouldn’t be a surprise. The ABC’s Max Chalmers pointed to research from Melbourne University’s Melbourne Institute on vaccine hesitancy by industry which found construction and utilities employees had the highest level; 35% saying they were unwilling or unsure about vaccination. We know there’s a problem in the industry and the union has been reluctant to use its might to get members vaccinated.
So what’s the case for optimism? Estimates were that up to 1000 people protested on Tuesday. While that looks like a lot when they’re singing Daryl Braithwaite’s “The Horses” on a bridge, it’s actually a tiny number of Melburnians. It’s a very, very vocal minority.
I’ve seen protests spike when restrictions were the strictest. They peaked during Melbourne’s second lockdown, and in the past few months as many cities went back into lockdown. It’s natural that the harshest restrictions would elicit the biggest response. It’s not surprising that a vaccine mandate and then industry shutdown would get people active from a group of workers used to taking industrial action.
The good news is I’ve also seen them dissipate soon afterwards. Protests largely stopped when lockdowns stopped. In Australia’s two most populous cities, lockdowns will probably lift in the next month and a half. Soon there will be little to protest against. Momentum will leave the movement like air in a deflating balloon.
There’s another number that’s important: 43,056 vaccines were administered in Victoria yesterday. On Monday Australia passed a milestone of 15 million Australians having had their first dose. There have been 25 million doses administered and it was our best Monday yet for total doses. Australians are overwhelmingly getting vaccinated. They’re getting less sick when they catch COVID-19. Every dose is also an advertisement about the institutions that invented, manufactured and distributed these miracles.
And while it might feel like anti-vaxxers are having a moment, evidence suggests they’re not. Different pollsters have found that vaccine hesitancy has precipitously dropped from earlier this year. The University of Melbourne’s vaccine hesitancy tracker reckons it just about halved (from 19% to 10%) in May. Some combination of education campaigns, dangled incentives and the normalisation of seeing every man and his dog get the vaccine means that fewer and fewer people are hesitant.
Anti-vaxxers are losing ground, and fast. While some have organised into groups using tech platforms, various setbacks including arrests and disunity mean they’ve been unable to build the movement into anything more than a series of disconnected protests so far.
It’s not all good news. I am very concerned about vaccine-hesitant people becoming more emphatic about their beliefs. We know that far-right extremists, racists and full-blown conspiracy theorists hope to recruit people from these groups and are exploiting vaccine anxiety. In an online event featuring unionists talking about the protest last night, it’s clear that members are concerned about their reactionary streak in the movement.
We can see people who are even a bit worried about vaccines (which I empathise with, even if I understand it’s misguided) are being brought into these movements by being introduced to online spaces like Telegram channels filled with misinformation, fear and rage. These connections pave the way for further radicalisation.
Even a small proportion of the overall population with these harmful beliefs is a large number of people. Increasingly spurned from society, we should be worried about what happens when a disgruntled group is allowed to fester. Bringing them back into the fold must be a priority.
But let’s not lose the forest for the trees: Australians are getting vaccinations as fast as they’ll give them. Our country has avoided the catastrophic number of COVID deaths that have happened elsewhere. It is not long until restrictions will be loosened and lifted altogether. There’ll be nothing left to protest against. The pub beckons. COVID? Never heard of her.
The protesters walking through the streets right now are the dying gasps of a losing movement. Vaccines won.
Those unruly protesters how quaint a description for the lawbreaking superspreading thugs dressed in hi vis pretending to be construction workers
While I wouldn’t be surprised that some right wing nutjobs joined the protests as solidarity / opportunism, I was a bit surprised to see those on the left quick to dismiss it as fake tradies, as if a real tradie is somehow immune to the tribalism and propaganda that makes conspiracy theorists out of the rest of us. Tapping into discontent is the basic tool of populists, and tradies have plenty to be angry about.
Agreed. People who are rusted onto either the Left or the Right can fall for the ‘obvious’,dismissive option.If you think tradies have a lot to be angry about, spare a thought for the industries that will take years to recover. For example : the arts and entainment sector got a bullet behind the ear on Day 1.
By the way you may not be aware that the CFMEU does not support mandatory vaccinations, but it does recommend vaccination yet strangely enough there were the right wing Trump degrade nut is complete with Trump flags outside a CFMEU
Of course the media jumped on that and aligned the CFMEU with the thugs and conspiracy theorists , the Coalitions home grown version of the Trump supporter.
There’s a lot of people who have lots of reasons to be angry at this situation – some more than others, true, but it’s not a competition. There’s no one truth of righteous fury to which all others pale in comparison. Anger is anger, and most of the anger is legitimate. It is a pandemic after all…
Glad I’m not one of those people who have to come up with policy to try to navigate those concerns, or make decisions that will be very much life or death and leave a trail of suffering and hardship no matter the outcome. Even the best of all possible solutions will negatively impact a lot of people.
Anger is not a very useful emotion in a pandemic. Care for your fellows, patience, and gainful collaboration will get the best results.
But it is difficult to avoid feeling a bit of anger towards selfish lnuckleheads…
It may very well not be, but it’s a very human response. It’s part of the sociopolitical fabric, as is anxiety, fear, despair, etc. This pandemic is putting all sorts of hardships onto people, and acknowledging that is the very least we can do as empathetic beings.
It’s not to say that anger means bad behaviour is justified (IS does not entail OUGHT), but that the anger is itself justified by the circumstances. I think the reason we are imploring each other to be kind and to show understanding is because we know these are trying circumstances. It’s a pandemic – if you don’t have multiple reasons to be angry then you’re one of the lucky ones!
I see you have fallen for the CFMEU anti-union builders rubbish that the Murdoch media is now pushing whereas in fact more reputable sources advised that the protest yesterday was hijacked by telegram anti vaxxer conspiracy theorist thugs the same knot who injured police and property on the weekend
Reports of high vis workwear being handed out nice and you and shiny were common.
And now this lot of vulnerable migrant workers who makeup a large part of the exploited construction industry workforce are crawling all over the shrine of remembrance with their anti vaxxer and conspiracy theorist supporters
That’s quite the trick seeing as the amount of Murdoch media I consume is the same as the amount of ivermectin I consume.
Why is it hard to believe that someone can be a tradie AND believe in conspiracy theories? Why is it a problem to think that some of those who came out to protest might be angry at the rules as they stand and bring susceptible to the narratives that feed on that anger?
At no point am I denying that the rally may have been used by people who aren’t tradies. Indeed that was my first sentence. What I am saying is that the kind of thinking that lends itself to conspiracy theories is mundane and common – so many books have been written by psychologists detailing this – so it would be a mistake to think that such thinking is absent among those who chose to protest who are also workers in this situation.
Of course someone can be a tradie (a union member even!) and believe in conspiracies. It’s neither a pro or anti union stance to say this. It’s just a fact of how our cognition works.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-22/how-antivaxxers-conspiracy-theorists-far-right-melbourne-protest/100481874
Plenty to be angry about? Like not being able to use the tea room for a while?
Have to pull you up there Kel. “Tradies have a lot to be angry about”! What exactly? They have been the one industry largely unaffected by Covid while everyone else has been taking a lot of hits for the team. No, Shorten was right, this is a bunch of man-babies. Everyone has taken bigger hits than tradies. Everyone.
I cannot be bothered even to refute your idiocies.
Do you honestly (look it up..) think that anyone here takes the slightest notice of your ravings?
I’m glad I was not trapped on Westgate Bridge inside a motor vehicle (with young kids on board) surrounded by ‘unruly protestors’ realising my vehicle was being damaged by F***Wits.
I would not be so quick to dismiss ‘anti-vaxxers’ whatever that means, and the make up of the same ‘cohort’. There is evidence elsewhere i.e. in Germany and the UK that they have been joined at the hip in the background with (radical right) libertarians (and far right) hitting the streets creating disruption (provoking police action), attacking science and promoting their US style ‘freedom and liberty’.
Further, DeSmog blog also linked much of the same with US based KochNetworks’ climate science denial (aka IPA), suggesting it’s neither just about vaccinations nor ‘freedom and liberty’ but to keep much of the electorate sceptical on climate and other sciences, higher education, skills of analysis, critical literacy, ‘elites’ etc.; required to keep citizens ‘quiet’ on most issues and respect their authoritative Christian political elders….