Wednesday, April 23, 2014


Learning to act right (41)… a smile of shame
Torrey Orton
April 23, 2014

 It was a smiling shame, what I did…

...and the scooter driver picked it, but wrongly, the minute he pulled up next to my driver’s side window. My mistake enraged him and powered my shame more intensely, as he pointed out that my smile was an indication of my pleasure at his endangerment by my pulling in front of him as he was trying to pass in the curb-side lane. I had completely missed him in the blind spot of the rear-view mirror, partly because I was making a late decision to go for a parking space next to the bread shop and partly because I was coming off a reasonably intense couple of hours witnessing Catholic anti-abortionists harass patients at the Fertility Control Clinic.


Cause aside, I was so stricken at my near mushing of man and scooter that I didn’t even think to apologise and he was gone before I pulled myself out of my dumb smile in the light of my exposed incompetence – a variant on struck dumb in the lights of the hunter – now doubly self-condemned for not having acknowledged my fault.


But for this mistake, I would still not know that I, too, can smile at being caught out in error. Not something I’d ever experienced before, but never before had there been a possibly catastrophic error for an innocent other. For years I have thought and taught that it is a cultural characteristic of Chinese to stand in the face of a public event like a car accident and smile broadly at the remains of the victim(s).


I’d seen it happen often enough in Shanghai to know my experience wasn’t a peculiar oncer. My Chinese acquaintances and friends explained fluently that such smiling and laughing was an expression of embarrassment. So it was something recognisable to them, as well. Anxiety, guilt and shame are universally available in human cultures, but their expressions differ so conflictedly that imagining the ‘wrong’ other’s version is near impossible. They just don’t pass the knife/fork vs. chopsticks test – eating looking wrong can be intimately offensive from whichever privileged angle you look at it.

 
But understanding the feeling-behaviour connection has never been simple. For us (native English speakers?) a blank or frowning look is appropriate for publically played out personal disasters. Little have I ever thought I would be able to pull off with such precision what I thought a major cultural difference. Hopefully, unlike other differences which I have mastered with intent, this one I fluked through inattention will be the oncer. I suspect that the conditions of its occurring this time will not often recur and so cannot be pre-empted even with practice. The slighter flushed downcast expression of embarrassment (cousin of guilt and shame) warns only weakly of the overwhelming energy unleashed in my smiling shame.


Maybe this is what a thick skin protects for those prone to exposing themselves in public.

 

Sunday, April 6, 2014


Learning to act right (40)… Skating on thin ice…

Torrey Orton

April 6, 2014

 

 Learning to predict a terminal fall at the boundary between solid and fluid

 

Learning to calculate risks is a basic achievement for the conduct of everyday life. I’m talking here of things like how many steps to take in one bite on the way up or, more saliently, down life’s stairways. How good is my chance of crossing the street against the lights between legal crossings without getting scrunched by the bus coming one way and the truck from the other? Cultural variants on this theme, and adult opportunities to re-experience childhood learnings, can be found here: http://diarybyamadman.blogspot.com.au/2014/03/travel-funnies-2014-china-torrey-orton.html .

 

As these things do, the idea of my learning to skate on thickening ice came into recent view. Especially to skate on clear ice. Clear ice means this: when you walk on it you can see straight into the water. On very clear ice it’s hard to tell that the ice is there. It is the colour of the underlying water. I grew up looking down a hill big enough to provide an extremely beginners ski slope (20 meter rise) onto a small New England pond (about 200 meters by 50 meters), the sort which seems to make up about ¼ of the surface area of the region.

 

We started learning about ice when we were in nappies…which is to learn about the progress of winter from turning of the leaves to slight freezing of the ground with increasing periods of frost on grass and puddles along the way to earth frozen to a concrete consistency and ice carrying a hundred people sliding around with greater and lesser finesse. Snow may or may not appear anywhere along this transition.

 

So by age four or five we would amble down to check the pond’s willingness to be crossed dry-footed. New ice can be safe yet cracking, the progress of skating being a pushing along the wave of the ice flowing down and up as one passes. If you haven’t experienced this phenomenon, tough. I can’t think of a similar elsewhere in nature except for a lava flow which fails the similarity test by starting with death from the ride rather than ending with ice, though ice is also greatas the poet said (Robert Frost, appropriately, in Fire and Ice, refusing to complete the implicit ‘nice’ for a rhyme).

 

Then, there was the problem of varying ice depth across the pond, arising from the faster flow of the stream part of the pond in some areas, and not just the obvious ones near where the stream ran into it and out of it. This danger is perceptible with practice (usually including some drops into the water). Skill growth is marked by a reduction in the number of feet dropped together and how far (also feet in those days!). Skill improvement requires the perennial favourites: cautious and a delicate testing touch with toe or stick, often noted by their absence among risk takers.

 

What we learned to solve here was a repeated pile of rice problem: at what height of added grains will it collapse. For skaters the collapse of the ice will be wet feet at least and drowning at most. Learning to judge the risk involves a lot of factors underpinned by the ignorant fearlessness of the young and sustained by their invariable superiority to adults in perceptual sensitivity and reflex action speeds, coupled with their relative lack of weight! A rice collapse will just be a mess, unless you are in a storage silo.

 

I don’t know that I’d try a newly glazed pond surface these days, but my chance of seeing one are slim. I don’t usually go north for winter. That dogs and deer often fail this learning test is one sign of its difficulty, especially when the ice surface is snow-covered – a degree of difficulty in discernment beyond most people’s capability.

Thursday, March 20, 2014


Travel funnies 2014 - China

Torrey Orton
March 20, 2014

 
Travel funnies – where everything is of interest that can be a bit strange, unusual, unexpected…in short, a threat to my normal preconceptions, understandings and values. The shock of the new is often a laugh of surprise, which isn’t what people are talking about when thy say they are just having a laugh. Now, here we go again…overseas that is, to China mainly Shanghai and Beijing quite a lot, with an opening glance at Hong Kong, which really is China but for the lingering effects of years in the fold of the lion.

 
As long as 35 years ago on my first to China I noted some at the time amazing facts of street behaviour between vehicles, mostly bicycles, and pedestrians, as well as between vehicle riders and drivers themselves. In my field notes of those days (10 Oct – 25 Nov, 1979) I remarked at length such things as what follows here, modified but not moderated by the shift from the largely self-powered transport (bicycle) of those days to the dominance of self-driven transport in these days (cars and motor scooters – electric and petrol).


The underlying theme here for me is cultural constants and their consistency under pressure of material change. Cultural resilience shows up even now in simple ways: five days ago one Chinese colleague from 35 years ago pointed out, unprompted by us, that her floor of a three year old apartment tower had six flats on it, numbered 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7 as do all the other floors in the 25 story building except for level four which doesn’t exist. Guess why? The number four in Chinese sounds like the word for death, which should never be spoken lightly. Our aversion to 13 is a weak sibling of that four.


“… a Nathan Road cabbie in the way.”


Six days earlier we were on Nathan Road, Hong Kong on a fully peopled Friday arvo with barely a car’s width of passage on our taxi’s route. Another taxi was ensconced in a no stopping zone, the driver standing by his closed door about a meter into the available roadway looking at something in the near distance without the slightest glance our way and just stood there as we passed almost brushing his jacket. Not looking and not flinching are the key facts. This behaviour has been repeated in my view dozens of times in the following week in Shanghai and Beijing. I have never successfully learned it until almost now, though I started 35 years ago and had a two year stint as pedestrian and cyclist in Beijing in the early 80’S, with repeated medium term stays in Shanghai in the mid ‘90’s and early Noughties.


In the last week I have consciously tried to mimic it on street corners and crossings. The learning requires two acts of faith: that I have the right to take any space I choose if I can get to it first, and second that others will respect that right by giving way or altering their approach trajectory not to collide once I’ve made my move. At the corner of Huaihai Lu and Maoming Lu in downtown Shanghai one morning I crossed with the pedestrian light as three cars were waiting to turn into my path (as they legally may when their light is red) and I managed not to look at the nearest driver or to pause in my walk while the driver started his creeping turn, timing it so that I felt the pant leg of my trailing foot brushed slightly by the passing car going through the turn. And, did not feel a rush of fear at that perception!!


This rule system applies to any public passing, not just vehicular, in China. I know the rules and only this trip have noticed their working beauty in the intensely loaded pathways of Beijing and Shanghai. They really work, until they don’t! (the story of which is recorded daily and annually, locally and nationally, in traffic accident reports). But as they are working they make for a driving and walking experience of continuous flow which is essential to progress in a traffic-jammed economy. Unfortunately Beijing and Shanghai are not far away from all day gridlock. The rule for managing that are unclear.


BTW, these rules are not just some fantasy of mine. I have tested them repeatedly with PRC origin Chinese and never had my understanding of them challenged. Interpretations of their application, of course, differ because correct use requires exquisite judgment about (1) one’s ability to take the front position anywhere and (2) the other’s capacity to respect that decision (the stopping distance judgment) or override it with incontrovertible power. The latter effect can be achieved by daring in many circumstances. The balance of power tilts somewhat in pedestrians’ direction because the law favours them over cars: a car smashed pedestrian is presumed to have been in the right. Of course, having been smashed one may not be around to enjoy the presumptive right, so we’re back to judgment. In the process of field=testing my understanding of these rules I’ve gotten spontaneous feedback from others that they apply in other Asian cities, too.

Self-organising (dis) order??

It is not surprising that Westerners have so much trouble in China. We cannot accept that humanity can be run by such rules and to be placed in the full and open command of the rules is radically disempowering. They cannot easily be learned because they are so counter-intuitive. Try driving on the “wrong” side of the road for a sampler of the personal change demands.


The same challenge is also the case for immigrant or tourist Chinese in Australia. They may just step off the curb wherever it strikes them, working automatically from the understanding of their origin which will get them killed here, and /or the object of vilification by Oz locals. Mirroring western amazement at their home town behaviour, they often remark on how rule abiding Melbournians are by contrast with home. We stop at stop lights without police supervision and police presence is remarkably less noticeable than in China.


I used to use an exercise I called Beijing Bus in cultural awareness training for Australians going to work in China or having Chinese colleagues coming to work with them in Australia. It was a usually successful attempt to induce the feeling of oppressive crowding which is typical of Chinese city life. It gave entry to a world where not taking control of your space means someone else will without compunction.

A stray phone… “No one’s in charge here…it’s whacky”

Another version of this story occurs on planes. A few days ago we were enroute to Beijing…a two hour run from Shanghai. While the airline gave extremely clear and careful instructions about turning off all phones completely on take-off and landing, a number of people were close to the wire on take-off and one started up his tool on touchdown well before we’d taxied to the gate. The hostess seated two seats in front of and at eye contact range said nothing. The hostess on our side looked away from the offender as did her colleague. She subsequently was shamed by passengers who jumped up to get first go at the luggage compartments well before taxiing stopped – another major no-no clearly stated by staff beforehand. Her shame was expressed by her head hung down and away from subsequent offenders of her effort to remind the first ones of the airline rules, which they disregarded.


This passenger behaviour has always been my experience on passenger planes in China. It has a historical precursor – the Beijing Bus again – perhaps the original of what is now known in the West as the psychosocial distortion FOMO (fear of missing out). For the Chinese this has been a well-founded fear, not declining with increased wealth. I commiserated a bit more with the hosties dilemma of public disregard as I watched the mostly Chinese masses at Beijing airport wander through outgoing carryon inspection talking on their mobiles at all stages in the process…while surrounded with clear multi-lingual and visual exhortations of some vigour to keep their mobiles buttons!!! Everyone, including endless uniformed agents of state security, acted as if no such exhortations existed (which the folks in homey Melbourne incoming lines polices with persistence in my experience, as do air hosties).


Those in charge don’t take charge. Maybe it’s like the libertarians’ favourite enemy: “taking offense”. A dangerous self-indulgence for others.

30% discount surprise!!

There we were at the end of a 3 hour reunion dinner in the revolving restaurant of the Xi Yuan Hotel in west Beijing with two Chinese couples we had not seen for thirty years. The setting was much of the charm of the event; the food was buffet and workable but not notable. The view actually worked (smog was way down!) and revolutions under us were seriously plodding. Conversation had been wandering in that way that pleasant recollection does when supported by some very deep shared experiences in the past. When I called for the bill, the lead waiter called for our passports and hukou (local residence permits in China) because over 60’s got a 30% discount on meals!! It wasn’t advertised anywhere, but was not a surprise to our friends except that it was applying in an upmarket establishment.


Whose engineers don’t know human dimensions??

 
Once again I have had the not to be repeated (in my imagination) cramped toilet experience of Toulouse four years ago.  There the hotel bathroom design engineers had assumed an average adult height somewhere like 10-15 cm short of my 191. This left me scrunched between the loo lip and the wall, whatever business I was doing. At the Xi Yuan in Beijing I’ve had a near repeat this trip. My knees nearly bang the glassed shower enclosure in this recently renovated hotel. Even I know that Chinese kids of our friends’ children’s generation are massively taller than their parents. The field test for that proposition is a walk in the streets of Beijing.  35 years ago I pretty much towered over everyone else in the street. This is certainly no longer the case. What world are design engineers living in??


Grain pillows, 35 years later


One of the unmentioned treats of our 1979 stay in Beijing was grain pillows… pillows of high grade dried buckwheat with a fine aggregate-like consistency and weight. They provided a reliably firm head rest for sleeping which also worked even for those with down pillow backgrounds, as were many a foreign student’s in those days. Real Chinese beds share this firmness without the aggregate effect – a slight crunchiness to the touch.


Here we were in the Xi Yuan Hotel (at much less per night than city-centre branded hotels require)  and under two duck-down pillow variants on the twin bed hunkered two grain based models of yore. Small reminders of basic needs…

 

 

Saturday, March 1, 2014


Learning to act right (38)… The line at the Fertility Control Clinic
Torrey Orton
March 1, 2014


Reaching points of no return. This is one of them.

 
Tariq has always had a fine feel for the line and a finely tuned capacity for drawing it. It comes upon him in a flash he often doesn’t quite notice himself. We close to him see it arrive before it is in his conscious awareness carried in a change of expression and posture which takes all feeling from his face and settles a calm readiness in his body. I know it is a human look of cold anger because I can mimic it to others not present and see the fear flash on their faces. It comes when certain lifelong value lines are crossed – for Tariq, ones to do with religion, family, identity and others.

 
He has to defend himself both from going over his own line (breaking his own rules) and allowing others to come across it to him (allowing others to break his rules). This, as it sounds, poses perilous problems of balance, since a perception of another’s approach or of his own need to enforce the line can provide a mutually supported but unintended energy to breech it, one way or the other, or both ways at once.

 
This conflict is clear at the Clinic for all of us present who are engaged in defending our respective sides of the line of protest. As the pressure to defend the line increases the likelihood of a transgression increases, too. Tariq bears this pressure more than the Friends* because he’s always there as security guard.

 
For example, the other day one of us was running interference for patients being subjected to the usual “offer of help” from two of the HOGPI’s** most intrusive providers, T and W. These women uniformly disregard the known council rules for street proselytising in Melbourne City Council domains: you may offer a pamphlet, a talk, a hello but you must stop when the other signals (verbally and/or gesturally) their refusal of interest. T and W’s refusal to stop offering their help is the key point of enragement for us. We are powerless to stop them. We can only intervene physically by stepping between patients and T and W once patients signal no interest in their offer. This is the point, at times, where our frustrated, powerless anger flairs verbally like this: “They said no, T.” loud enough to be heard 20 meters away, and definitely by patients 2 meters away.

 
We have spontaneously erupting feelings of offence at patient treatment. These lines are drawn in a deep and broad rush of blood to our extremities, but mostly expressed in our voices - “They said no, T.” Trouble is, this can scare the patients more than it inhibits T and W. Others of the HOGPI persuasion wilt in the face of “they said no”, signalling their retreat by withdrawing to their designated side of the line on the footpath and not participating in direct patient harassment.

 
On occasions, as this one, the Friends energy aggravates patient fear/anger and attracts expressions of those feelings in threatening forms, which we’re inclined to treat as rejection of our offer!! And so, unknowingly, it is. Arriving patients have enough to concern them without reading breastplates advertising our label (Friends of the FCC). Even calm passers-by have trouble with that. Fortunately these events occur in 30 seconds, each being a new beginning as the patients arrive. There are few repeat participants in the street drama, except us and the HOGPIs.  The vocal and physical intervention moments are so hard to describe my effort leaves too much to the imagination, but it is just to feed imagination that I’m writing!! Its difficulty reflects the difficulty of our efforts on the line at the Clinic.

 

* Friends of the Fertility Control Clinic – volunteers seeking to reduce harassment of arriving patients.

** Helpers of God’s Precious Infants

Saturday, February 8, 2014


Learner therapist (41)…… Creating a couples work agenda through shared needs and wants

Torrey Orton
Feb 8, 2014

 

Guidelines for partners (and therapists)

What follows is a self-administered exploration process for couples. The purpose of this paper is to guide them through the process. It may also be used by therapists in session where it is necessary that a therapist direct the process to provide the discipline for focussed work. It is the fifth in a set of couple technique papers under the “Learner therapist” header at www.diarybyamadman.blogspot.com.*

Rationale: couples work is notoriously difficult because the stakes are high and the aggregated injuries, flashpoints and communication incompetences are often close to immovable in the eyes and hearts of couples by the time they show up for therapy. Functionally, a lot of shared ground has been lost or forgotten or lies obscured in the smoking residue of repeated failures to have needs met. The creation of actually shared ground, including the ground of their unmet needs, is an essential anchor for any new efforts to relate more effectively.

Objective: to develop a detailed, specific assessment of the needs and wants the couple has of each other as a basis for starting negotiation of those needs/wants in a manner which models shared ownership and conduct of the exploration process and models a process for developing agendas between them. This technique is particularly useful when the couple cannot start anything without descending into uproar - noisy or silent; hot or cold war!

Principles: that all needs/wants of both persons are included in the initial stage of the process; that respective needs and wants reflect the individuals’ thinking style expressed in their natural language; that engagement of the needs/wants is put off until the most thorough lists possible for the couple are completed; that clarification of meaning only is allowed in the list creation stage; that the agenda has to be chunked down to a workable bit in a context which assures that other bits are kept in view; and, that two levels of management are required – managing the whole process (decisions about what they are doing, how, when, etc.) and doing the work agreed to – exploring understandings, feelings, needs, etc. The first level is the most important, because it is what is missing from their processes: joint management.

1 - Process steps: in rough language that could be used with patients

a) Create a list of your wants and needs of the other and what you imagine he/she needs and wants of you in a format like this – do not consult your partner’s list until you both have finished your own lists.

 
Mine
His/hers
Wants
 
 
 
Needs
 
 
 

 

b) Share your lists, clarifying items as necessary. Do not engage the items yet. Rewrite them if necessary to acknowledge any clarifications. Notice shared knowledge of each other’s needs/wants.

c) Create a shared list out of the two individual lists, without leaving anyone’s items out unless you both agree they are essentially the same. Resolve any dispute by keeping disputed items in the list. Where differences seem merely linguistic keep them in the list because language differences often reveal differences of perspective, value, intensity, etc.

d) Order the list from most important to least, with emphasis on the order of the first 4-5 items. These will provide the starting point for in-session work, preferably one item you both want to start with.

e) Send the joint list to the therapist before the next session.

f) If you cannot do steps b, c, d, or e tell the therapist so and the session will start from step a. In that case, send both lists separately to the therapist and bring copies of your own to the session.

2 - Process management steps in session one – therapist directions

a)      Set out the objectives, principles, and steps of the process and provide background papers (e.g. Needs and Wants here)

 

b)      Check clarity, appropriateness and, then, agreement to this process.

 

c)      Continue checking these aspects of the process as you work through the steps

 

d)     If doing the joint list from nothing live in session, set out the process as above and then take items one at a time from one person and then the other and back again, writing them up on a whiteboard or chart in the language the person uses themselves; do not summarise in your own words without agreement of the speaker.

 
Check that each item is clear to the other as you write them up and stringently do not allow any exploration of the items at this step; this usually requires stopping any counter-assertions or exploratory questions; allow only clarification at this time (Eg - Can you give me an example of…?).

This will often take a whole session. They take away the results for further additions, ordering and selection of the starting point issue for the next session.

 

e)      Before finishing this session point out that they have just experienced a way of handling their continuing development agendas and suggest they use it at home.

 

f)       The next session is the beginning of practicing approaches to managing the systemic communication dysfunction and developing increased communication effectiveness and problem solving by working on live issues of concern to the couple. The need to engage the issues provides the focussed motivation to try new skills and test new attitudes.





My experience is that these short posts are quite readable by patients, so I often offer them as part of their preparation.

Friday, February 7, 2014


Digital outrage with comic relief

Torrey Orton                                                                 

Feb. 7, 2014

Ozemail error…

… the drop down notification remarks every time I attempt (successfully) to download my emails from my Nokia Lumia 625, a recently arrived baby of just 3 weeks age which has had synching problems from birth despite guarantees that its genetic provenance was the same as my laptop – Windows 8! When the drop down first occurred two days ago I said almost loudly ”Oh shit”, as my recently found facility of emailing by phone seemed to go out  the window. Relief was just a restart away. The next time I tried to receive email the message “Outlook synchronising” loped across the top of the screen in 6 point print for a second or two and down came the email and then this drop down denial of access, viz :

We’re having a problem downloading messages. Make sure you have a connection and your account information is correct, then try again.

Last tried 2 seconds ago

Error code: 80070018

This has happened over and over for the days since (2), a system which threatens with one hand the service it has given with the other. My most secret fear – system failure mid-living – is prodded unrelievedly (so far) by an unintended (but therefore egregiously effective!) confirmation of the fear’s strong evidence-based foundations.

Outrage??

As I discussed this with a very experienced IT systems friend, I learned in passing the meaning of a word I have not till now really mastered – outrage. This is the rage which flails itself into hyperventilating laughter howls. We made quite a nice footpath display for the youngers munching burgers and such around us in Bridge Road. Two old guys falling around screaming, almost.

All of which prompted us to disclose inadvertently wells of techno-rage we knew were present but we had not given voice to in that way a fit of mutual story telling of technicians’ incompetence can do it…a sort of self-inflating sequence of despair, reduced only by realising that the system changes which assault us are assaulting the technicians faster than reports on them can reach the webpages of Microsoft and/or Apple specialists.

That’s not an excuse, so they still get the blame. But it makes the prospect of their getting blame again higher than their pay should warrant. Telstra techos had spent 5 hours in three chunks over three months trying to synch my Windows phones to Windows computers…finally giving up the ghost to my computer set-up techie a week ago who did it (granted with a lead from the last Telstra guy) in 40 minutes…time required to repackage the Outlook Calender in a new Outlook-only email address for my Outlook account…itself an unpublished requirement of Microsoft efforts to mimic (I‘m told) Apple’s success welding buyers to their whole suite of apps by requiring them to open an Apple account to set up their products.

Comic relief…

Having trouble finding the comic relief part here? It’s only outrage at best. When I set out to replace my old self-destructed phone, failed and then was forced to replace my computer by a hard drive failure … I could no longer avoid what has emerged above, plus a gaggle of other inconveniences which arise from systemic interaction glitches. What underlies the rage part of the above is that Microsoft’s new phone company Nokia‘s Windows should synch like the old (2011) Samsung Windows phones did via a downloadable three click app called My Synch.

It didn’t. They just forgot to tell me, or even us, that their Nokia purchase had nothing to do with customer service, increased or otherwise!! Monopoly capitalism where are you? Is there an equation here: that, once large enough, companies either do not or cannot ‘care’ about customers at the level of the individual even though they have the technologies (web, mobiles…..) to deliver person-level emerging information to customers, especially at the junctures of their systems?

Monday, February 3, 2014


What’s normal now (5)…Turning science into ignorance and “illegals” into offense

Torrey Orton
Feb.3, 2014

 
Blurring boundaries with intent

I’m reading for the first time a book called Agnotology – The making and unmaking of ignorance (2009) which is a collection of reflections on how ignorance is the boundary of knowledge. It includes some treatment of how the boundaries of ignorance are maintained by the satisfactions of current knowledges. Esoteric? Only until I read the chapter on how in the early 1950’s in the US Big Tobacco, with the active collusion of PR major Hill Knowlton, set about defeating good science and pursued it successfully for 60 years to this date. A recent stage in debasing the science of smoking-induced cancer is presenting the industry as “responsible manufacturers of a risky product”. A satisfactory knowledge is profit producing. There are some others like self-esteem enhancing and identity supporting ones.

The flow on from this PR learning process, driven by the need to protect pre-existing knowledge and interests from threatening truths, can be seen in the debasing of science in the climate wars. If the government can call victimising of refugees a “war” and struggles about class (income imbalance) and consciousness (history) wars, then climate war is a no brainer. “War” is a condition which removes the right to any other conditions, the condition which smooths all kinds of legal-ethical-conceptual tangles. ‘War’ has history as a promotional threat of preference in the US – see the 1960’s war on poverty and the 1980’s war on drugs (the latter lead by a “drug czar”) for historical instances. Only the war on poverty made some headway, while the war on drugs amplified the depth and spread of drugs into a multi-national crisis.

A low grade but high impact variation on this theme is the “illegal boat people” meme which has been imposed / plastered on the ignorant public with special energy since the Howard government’s SEIV-X campaign at the turn of the election in October, 2001.

Demonising sticks, mud clings and the past catches up with you

This piece of clearly intentional deception has created a mud which sticks to refugees these days, to the tune of 60% of our citizenry agreeing “illegals” are not dealt with harshly enough by the government of this day…as if they were some kind of bikie gang or alcohol-fuelled one-punch mongrels who should be punished into submission to normal behaviour routines…a policy unlikely to succeed as others have noted in those spheres. Repetition of “illegal” eventually produced an unquestioned label in the minds of the unaffected public – a label for something to be avoided, a reverse brand, so to speak as we can now see building up with the war on “illegal bikie gangs” (Campbell Newman at the borders of Queensland turning back the bikies??)!!

The “illegal” boat people meme may also give the offense-can-only- be-taken crowd (summarised in ON OFFENCE - THE POLITICS OF INDIGNATION by Richard King; Scribe, 2013) something to think about. If you give offense to the defenceless by berating, debasing, and denying their humanity and that adds to their defencelessness, have you given offense which they could just not take by choice? I suspect so. Work on anger and male rage / violence would suggest otherwise, too.

An observation about how long term vilification effects shared truth

It will take years to recover the moral ground that has been eroded by these years of inhumanity to the defenceless. Much the same can be expected for the recovery from years of deriding the only form of empirical knowledge we can have agreed confidence in – natural science. Of course, the recovery may not happen and the defenceless parts of the world which have been injured may slide slowly out of sight, their after images lingering on the wings of the latest political spins. Do I hear ‘responsible providers of end of life services’ for instance, which are offered by the privatised health and incarceration industries which manage our prisons and refugee holding pens now (Serco, etc.)?