Friday, November 25, 2005
Bully for us!
Sort of Follow up to Dim and DIMIA in New Matilda issue #59.
We have become accustomed to being ruled by bullies: in government, at work, and (too often) at home. We don’t produce the “loud roaring noise of sadness and despair” which could be expected from a population of Pooh bears who got their heads stuck in the honey jar of promised economic prosperity. We can manage a few muffled protests which will soon be totally silenced if the Counter-Terrorism laws come into force. And I mean Force. A Fraser or two (Andrew, Malcolm) may turn on a taunting bully but he will get done over by a system that cares more about suppressing emotion and partying on than it does about alleviating pain and preventing deaths.
Why on earth do we need even more repressive laws? Why do employers need to be encouraged by government to show their worst bullying tactics – and actually forbidden to devise more humane agreements? All this in the name of letting the market do its thing. Why do divorced fathers, no matter how violent and vile they may have been, be given even further licence to beastify their families under the changes to family Law?
What is it with us? We don’t seem to care if we get done over as long as some other poor bugger cops it even worse. The great Australian Masochistic Resentment streak that I noticed back in the 70’s has become a way of life.
Who holds the power in this country? It is not refugees, asylum seekers, single mothers, people on welfare (apart from corporate), the unemployed and people in public housing. Loud, bullying pollies pass repressive and inhumane laws and their media mouths beat up verbally on the most vulnerable in our society. Our public (and contracted) services do their dirty work.
The old French Foucault had it right: ”It seems to me that the real political task in a society such as ours is to criticise the working of institutions which appear to be both neutral and independent; to criticize them in such a manner that the political violence which has always exercised itself obscurely through them will be unmasked, so that one can fight them.” [1]
The instruments of government bullying are often public servants. As in “Serve you right, bloody public”. I am a coward and I know what it’s like to work as an instrument (no matter how ineffectual) of an unreasonable and despotic regime. I was an employee of the Department of Immigration for more than 12 years (viz New Matilda #59 Dim and DIMIA)
DIMIA is only a microcosm of the other organisations – public, private and community – perpetrating bad policies and worse practices. It is not one lone deviant, it is part of an overall grim picture. The immigration portfolio has long been used as a stalking horse for unpalatable legislation and policies. Like experiments on animals who can’t fight back.
Detention without charge or trial, privative clauses which stop people getting access to the courts, forcing the use of registered migration agents, imposing personal liability for costs on legal representatives[2], withdrawing government funding from NGOs who ‘advocate’, disadvantageous retrospectivity: all these democratic practices were well-honed by Immigration.
But we didn’t want to know about all that and we still don’t.
Many people in deteriorating situations (eg bully-run workplaces) try not to be noticed and even feel a certain schadenfreude of relief that it wasn’t them – this time.
But masochistic resentment is beyond schadenfreude. It actively seeks to put someone else down and possibly stand on them. Masochistic resenters don’t think that they may one day be affected by the strictures they gleefully apply to others.
Cowardice will destroy us unless we stand together and help each other. Surely anyone who knows anything about Pol Pot, Saddam, Nazi Germany, Chile under Pinochet, Argentina under the Generals, Ukraine under Stalin etc etc would understand something of what Pastor Martin Niemöller was saying in the 1940’s:
They came first for the Communists,and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.Then they came for the Jews,and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.Then they came for the trade unionists,and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.Then they came for the Catholics,and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant.Then they came for me,and by that time no one was left to speak up.[3]
It would be a great leap forward for Australia if all of us appealed to those in power - in government, in bureaucracies, in politics, in business, in families and elsewhere – to feel ashamed of the bullying they’ve perpetrated or condoned. If only we could encourage each other to come out fighting for people who are worse off than ourselves, instead of bullying, victimising and resenting them.
[1] Michel Foucault Human Nature Souvenir Press London 1974
[2] (see article in SMH 06/10/05 by George Newhouse: Immigration reform reaches a dead end )
[3] The version on the Boston (U.S.) Holocaust memorial
We have become accustomed to being ruled by bullies: in government, at work, and (too often) at home. We don’t produce the “loud roaring noise of sadness and despair” which could be expected from a population of Pooh bears who got their heads stuck in the honey jar of promised economic prosperity. We can manage a few muffled protests which will soon be totally silenced if the Counter-Terrorism laws come into force. And I mean Force. A Fraser or two (Andrew, Malcolm) may turn on a taunting bully but he will get done over by a system that cares more about suppressing emotion and partying on than it does about alleviating pain and preventing deaths.
Why on earth do we need even more repressive laws? Why do employers need to be encouraged by government to show their worst bullying tactics – and actually forbidden to devise more humane agreements? All this in the name of letting the market do its thing. Why do divorced fathers, no matter how violent and vile they may have been, be given even further licence to beastify their families under the changes to family Law?
What is it with us? We don’t seem to care if we get done over as long as some other poor bugger cops it even worse. The great Australian Masochistic Resentment streak that I noticed back in the 70’s has become a way of life.
Who holds the power in this country? It is not refugees, asylum seekers, single mothers, people on welfare (apart from corporate), the unemployed and people in public housing. Loud, bullying pollies pass repressive and inhumane laws and their media mouths beat up verbally on the most vulnerable in our society. Our public (and contracted) services do their dirty work.
The old French Foucault had it right: ”It seems to me that the real political task in a society such as ours is to criticise the working of institutions which appear to be both neutral and independent; to criticize them in such a manner that the political violence which has always exercised itself obscurely through them will be unmasked, so that one can fight them.” [1]
The instruments of government bullying are often public servants. As in “Serve you right, bloody public”. I am a coward and I know what it’s like to work as an instrument (no matter how ineffectual) of an unreasonable and despotic regime. I was an employee of the Department of Immigration for more than 12 years (viz New Matilda #59 Dim and DIMIA)
DIMIA is only a microcosm of the other organisations – public, private and community – perpetrating bad policies and worse practices. It is not one lone deviant, it is part of an overall grim picture. The immigration portfolio has long been used as a stalking horse for unpalatable legislation and policies. Like experiments on animals who can’t fight back.
Detention without charge or trial, privative clauses which stop people getting access to the courts, forcing the use of registered migration agents, imposing personal liability for costs on legal representatives[2], withdrawing government funding from NGOs who ‘advocate’, disadvantageous retrospectivity: all these democratic practices were well-honed by Immigration.
But we didn’t want to know about all that and we still don’t.
Many people in deteriorating situations (eg bully-run workplaces) try not to be noticed and even feel a certain schadenfreude of relief that it wasn’t them – this time.
But masochistic resentment is beyond schadenfreude. It actively seeks to put someone else down and possibly stand on them. Masochistic resenters don’t think that they may one day be affected by the strictures they gleefully apply to others.
Cowardice will destroy us unless we stand together and help each other. Surely anyone who knows anything about Pol Pot, Saddam, Nazi Germany, Chile under Pinochet, Argentina under the Generals, Ukraine under Stalin etc etc would understand something of what Pastor Martin Niemöller was saying in the 1940’s:
They came first for the Communists,and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.Then they came for the Jews,and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.Then they came for the trade unionists,and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.Then they came for the Catholics,and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant.Then they came for me,and by that time no one was left to speak up.[3]
It would be a great leap forward for Australia if all of us appealed to those in power - in government, in bureaucracies, in politics, in business, in families and elsewhere – to feel ashamed of the bullying they’ve perpetrated or condoned. If only we could encourage each other to come out fighting for people who are worse off than ourselves, instead of bullying, victimising and resenting them.
[1] Michel Foucault Human Nature Souvenir Press London 1974
[2] (see article in SMH 06/10/05 by George Newhouse: Immigration reform reaches a dead end )
[3] The version on the Boston (U.S.) Holocaust memorial