Category: the Right

01 Oct

Comments Off on Premature celebration? The Bolt verdict & the Left’s missing critique of the state

Premature celebration? The Bolt verdict & the Left’s missing critique of the state

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In this blog post I want to argue that the Bolt verdict is a problematic “victory” against the right-wing pundit and the Right more generally. Without wanting to diminish abhorrent and manifestly racist character of Bolt’s attack on “fair-skinned” Aboriginal people, I think that any celebration of the result by the Left is premature and […]

11 Sep

Comments Off on Ten years since 9/11: What have progressives really learned about war & Islamophobia?

Ten years since 9/11: What have progressives really learned about war & Islamophobia?

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  The tenth anniversary of 9/11 has seen TV outlets promo tribute after tribute, where the message is clear: the tragedy of the twin towers requires of us an uncritical outpouring of grief.  The now ten years old footage, which has been replayed so very many times, is still raw and powerful: people jumping from burning […]

26 Jul

Comments Off on Australia’s Islamophobes & right-wing ideologues praised in Breivik’s manifesto

Australia’s Islamophobes & right-wing ideologues praised in Breivik’s manifesto

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Keith Windschuttle UPDATE 26/7/11: It is apparent that Breivik was pretty committed to lifting material straight out of other far Right tracts. His praise for Howard and Pell appears to to have originated here and the Windschuttle comments here. Thanks to David Brophy for pointing out the former reference. As with all the links to far Right sites […]

25 Jul

Comments Off on Terror in the eye of the beholder? Norway, the far Right & the state-media complex

Terror in the eye of the beholder? Norway, the far Right & the state-media complex

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This weekend was a salutary lesson in how terrorism is treated by the media and political establishment. The lesson may surprise you, because there are two narratives constructed: Firstly, with outrage, linking of associations on the basis of zero evidence, calls for continued military action and tightening of domestic security (read: curtailing civil liberties) to […]

03 Jun

Comments Off on SlutWalk: Not the right ‘kind’ of women’s movement?

SlutWalk: Not the right ‘kind’ of women’s movement?

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  It seems each day there is a new item in an Australian newspaper or online forum about the nature, intention and value of SlutWalk. My lunch breaks of late have been reduced to reading articles and poring over the comments. The related discussion on Twitter seems equally unstoppable, and just when I think the […]

Filed under: feminism, Guy Rundle, the Right

31 May

Comments Off on Barry O’Farrell: From modern managerialist to old-fashioned class warrior

Barry O’Farrell: From modern managerialist to old-fashioned class warrior

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> A funny thing happened on the way to Macquarie St. Before the March NSW election, Barry O’Farrell was a seemingly banal, workmanlike and mild-mannered Liberal leader who spent years rebuilding his party’s broken morale, even at the cost of reining in powerful far Right factional elements. Rather than projecting the leader he would be […]

24 May

Comments Off on Thin edge of the wedge: Economic nationalism & the skilled migration ‘debate’

Thin edge of the wedge: Economic nationalism & the skilled migration ‘debate’

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To his credit Bob Brown was one of the clearest opponents of Pauline Hanson when she rose to infamy in the 1990s, not something the major party leaders could have been accused of at the time. But more recently he has pushed both population limits arguments and a line against skilled migration. Yet Hanson used […]

11 May

Comments Off on How to become part of the political mainstream #47: Learn to dog-whistle

How to become part of the political mainstream #47: Learn to dog-whistle

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Have the Greens decided to join the chorus of anti-immigrant racism that has bedevilled Australian politics for over a century? It seems so, with Bob Brown using the term “queue jumpers” to describe skilled migrants entering the country. Criticising Julia Gillard’s “Malaysian Solution” to deport asylum seekers, he argued: We know more than 90 per […]

11 Jan

Comments Off on After Arizona: The sickness at the heart of American society and its aetiologies

After Arizona: The sickness at the heart of American society and its aetiologies

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Despite shock being professed around the world, the shootings in Arizona over the weekend shouldn’t be surprising. The United States stands out for its high levels of political polarisation in a rich, industrialised country, and as Gary Younge points out, this polarisation has reached new highs during the presidency of Barack Obama. It is this […]

18 Dec

4 Comments

Which side are you on?

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The horrifying deaths of refugees near Christmas Island this week produced two notable responses. The first, recycled endlessly in recent times, was the call for people to not use the tragedy to gain political advantage, a ridiculous idea given that Australia’s current refugee policy has few reasons for existing except in the service of politics. As Left Flank […]