Otago Daily Times

Suppressio­n is not the solution

- CHRIS TROTTER

TRANSGRESS­ION is extraordin­arily appealing to the young. Giving voice to opinions that cause older people to throw up their hands in horror is always great fun. Almost as much fun as listening to music dismissed by the old folks as ‘‘noise’’, or wearing clothes calculated to provoke Mum into inquiring: ‘‘You’re not going out dressed like that — are you?’’ Adolescent psychologi­sts put this sort of behaviour down to young people’s need to ‘‘test the boundaries’’ of the adult world. A comingofag­e process which helps to firm up the outlines of their future adult selves.

Politics, too, has its own forms of adolescent transgress­ion, and this past week New Zealand has been introduced to two of its more notorious exponents: Lauren Southern and Stefan Molyneux, both hailing from the mildmanner­ed nation of Canada, have turned testing the boundaries of political discourse into something of an art form. (Or, at the very least, into a million views on YouTube!) Like the normal adolescent, who is concerned to discover exactly how far he can go before his parents/teachers/friends bring the hammer down, political adolescent­s seek to discover how broadly or narrowly society has set the bounds of tolerance.

When I was a young person, political transgress­ors hailed almost exclusivel­y from the left of the political spectrum. This was hardly surprising, since the prevailing social mores of most western nations in the 1950s and ’60s were those laid down by the mainstream Christian churches. Throughout most of the Cold War era, the dominant political values were similarly conservati­ve: unflinchin­gly hostile not only to the claims of communism and socialism, but also to all but the most anodyne forms of social democracy.

Yet, to the horror and fury of the RSA, young antiwar protesters attempted to lay wreaths commemorat­ing the millions killed in ‘‘imperialis­t’’ wars — with special reference to Vietnam’s civilian dead. Scandalisi­ng the nation’s editorial writers, student leaders (like Tim Shadbolt) and visiting feminist luminaries (like Germaine Greer) uttered the word ‘‘bullshit’’ in public places. Youngathea­rt poets also joined the provocatio­n game: most memorably with James K. Baxter’s A Small Ode on Mixed Flatting.

Baxter cited the example of Robbie Burns ‘‘that sad old rip/From whom I got my fellowship’’. A man who liked, as the bearded poet reminded his readers, ‘‘to toss among the glum and staid/A poem like a hand grenade’’.

Fifty years on, however, most of the rhetorical bombthrowe­rs (like Southern and Molyneux) hail from the Right — not the Left. What happened?

In a nutshell, the cultural revolution of the 1960s and ’70s congealed into an allembraci­ng liberal establishm­ent. Over the course of 50 years, the transgress­ive ideas of what Colin James dubbed The Vietnam Generation became the orthodox beliefs of the 21st century’s ruling elites.

Accordingl­y, young women like Southern are calling ‘‘bullshit’’ on what they see as the constantly encroachin­g claims of an evermorein­tolerant feminism. Intellectu­als like Molyneux are loudly insisting that what they call ‘‘the scientific evidence’’ must override the plans of ‘‘politicall­y correct’’ socialengi­neers to obliterate even the most obvious human distinctio­ns.

Across the Western world these rightwing firebrands are igniting bonfires of controvers­y over the meaning of nationalit­y; the desirabili­ty, or not, of unlimited diversity; and the limits of religious toleration. Whether their agitation constitute­s a rebirth of Enlightenm­ent values, or (as the Left insists) the resurgence of ideas more commonly associated with extreme nationalis­m, even fascism, there is no disputing rightwing populism’s impact on the political complexion of the times we are living through.

Which is why, in my opinion, the Auckland Mayor, Phil Goff, erred in denying Southern and Molyneux access to all the public platforms controlled by the Auckland Council. Quite apart from turning the pair into freespeech martyrs (to the undoubted benefit of their YouTube accounts) Mayor Goff’s actions represente­d an authoritar­ian solution to a democratic problem.

The Youth Revolt of the 1960s was not quelled by jailing the Chicago Seven or allowing the Ohio National Guard to shoot down student protesters. Suppressio­n merely fuelled the New Left’s sense of grievance and drove an iron spike of intoleranc­e into its soul.

Friedrich Nietzsche, a philosophe­r of whom the AltRight are inordinate­ly fond, wrote: ‘‘That which does not kill us makes us stronger.’’ Those who believe they can kill rightwing extremism by denying it a stage are in for a very unpleasant surprise.

Chris Trotter is a political commentato­r.

[Disclosure: Chris Trotter is a spokesman for the Free Speech Coalition which is seeking a judicial review of Mr Goff’s decision.]

 ??  ?? Previousge­neration rebel . . . Tim Shadbolt with son Reuben in 1971, photograph taken from the book Bullshit and Jellybeans.
Previousge­neration rebel . . . Tim Shadbolt with son Reuben in 1971, photograph taken from the book Bullshit and Jellybeans.
 ??  ?? Lauren Southern
Lauren Southern
 ??  ?? Stefan Molyneux
Stefan Molyneux
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand