Finding The Right Words: To an electorate grown weary of the bland rhetoric of parties content to play politics-by-numbers, Kim Dotcom's invitation to "bring down the government" has a novel and, for a great many younger New Zealanders, irresistible appeal.
ARE YOU READY FOR A REVOLUTION? When was the last time
anybody asked a crowd of young New Zealanders that question? Seriously? When
was the last time a political party, with a reasonable chance of putting at
least five people into Parliament, had five candidates for whom the idea of
participating in a revolution wasn’t utterly abhorrent?
Honestly? The last time such a thing happened was nearly 100
years ago, when Peter Fraser openly admitted that, were he in Russia, he would
be a Bolshevik; and when Labour’s first parliamentary leader, Harry Holland, in
his maiden speech, informed the New Zealand Parliament that:
“We of the Labour Party come to endeavour to effect a change
of classes at the fountain of power. We come proclaiming boldly and fearlessly
the Socialist objective of the Labour movement throughout New Zealand; and we
make no secret of the fact that we seek to rebuild society on a basis in which
work and not wealth will be the measure of a man’s worth.
“We do not seek to make a class war. You cannot make that
which is already in existence. We recognise that the antagonisms which divide
society into classes are economically foundationed, and we are going, if we can, to end the class
war by ending the causes of class warfare.”
Both Peter Fraser and Harry Holland were former members of
the militant trade union organisation known as the “Red Feds” (The New Zealand
Federation of Labour) and were well versed in the ways of inspiring their
mostly young audiences. Being good Edwardians, they would have shied away from
the public use of Anglo-Saxon expletives but, as good Socialists, they would
not have hesitated to state in 3,000 impassioned words what a boisterous crowd
of Canterbury students this week condensed into just three. Confronted with
this government’s and this prime minister’s record, the essence of Peter
Fraser’s and Harry Holland’s message would also have been: “Fuck John Key!”
The young advisers to the Internet-Mana Party, at whose
urging the in/famous FJK clip was posted on YouTube (21,665 hits and counting)
knew what they were doing. Quite apart from accurately anticipating the
reaction of their peers, they also hazarded a shrewd guess as to how the
“offensive” clip would be received by the political and media guardians of the
status-quo.
And they have not been disappointed. Almost to a person, the
conservative commentariat has condemned Internet-Mana in the most extravagant
terms. PR maven and political commentator, Matthew Hooton, tweeted that the
clip contained images reminiscent of a Munich beer-hall circa 1920, thereby
setting in motion a Kim-Dotcom-as-Adolf-Hitler meme that within hours would
infect huge chunks of the mainstream media. Curiously, very few media
commentators appeared to consider how gratefully such criticism might be
received by a movement whose primary objective is to be seen as the antithesis
of everything old and well-behaved and conventional and boring.
The over-riding goal of Internet-Mana is to be branded as
dangerous and transgressive. The Powers-That-Be have co-operated splendidly.
Then again, they may have had no choice. The internal
polling of the major political parties may well be detecting the invisible
effects of what the visible manifestations of Internet-Mana’s efforts are
signalling. The packed halls and enthusiastic chanting of the hundreds of young
people who have turned out for the party’s public meetings may simply be the
tip of a vast iceberg of political re/engagement on the part of those who usually
keep well away from the electoral fray. The pool of voters may be expanding;
bringing into play for the first time since 2005 the marginalised, the
disillusioned, and – most alarmingly for the forces of the Right – the angry
and aggrieved. The sort of people who need very little excuse to begin chanting
– “Fuck John Key!”
This is the stuff of nightmares for the Right. Rising
participation in the electoral process has always spelled doom for conservative
administrations. John Key’s best-case scenario has always been one of mass
political somnambulance: in which hundreds of thousands of voters, convinced by
the pollsters and their journalistic interpreters that the election was already
won, would march, zombielike, into the polling-booths and make the media’s prophecies
come true. Kim Dotcom’s unparalleled ability to disturb and disrupt has put
this fantastical scenario to the sword. Even worse (from John Key’s
perspective) the political spell he has cast cannot now be recalled.
Even were all the rumours of dark secrets soon to be
revealed proved correct, the effect of their release would likely be very
different from that anticipated by their purveyors. The Establishment, in its
hysterical reaction to the FJK clip, has already demonstrated a willingness to do
almost anything to upend Internet-Mana’s campaign. Even the most scurrilous
revelations will now be received by the insurgent party’s target audience as
yet further proof of the extraordinary lengths to which the Powers-That-Be will
go to bring Dotcom down.
The optimum strategy to derail Dotcom was always to
completely ignore him. But even that option is now denied his enemies. In his
Auckland Town Hall meeting of the 15 September Dotcom has laid a trap which the
National Government cannot escape. If it attempts to persuade the news media to
stay away from the meeting and/or wilfully misrepresent its significance,
Dotcom’s case will be made against Key with a force equal to or greater than
any evidence he may, with Glenn Greenwald’s internationally visible assistance,
produce.
Like Brer Fox and his Tar Baby, Kim Dotcom has, in
Internet-Mana, created an object which the Prime Minister and his allies simply
could not resist. In his version of the story, however, there will be no Briar
Patch into which the Prime Minister can, like Brer Rabbit in “Uncle Remus’s”
famous tale, be conveniently thrown and thus escape his fate. If all goes
according to Dotcom’s plan, the refrain upon which this story ends will not be
“Born and bred in the Briar Patch, Brer Fox! Born and bred in the Briar Patch!”
but “Fuck-John-Key! Fuck-John-Key! Fuck-John-Key!”
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Friday, 8 August 2014.
6 comments:
As someone who runs an internet business selling creative Kiwi IP to the world, no political party would be more damaging to NZ internet businesses than the (wrongly named) Internet Party.
Writers, photographers, everyone in the multi billion dollar film and tv industry, artists, software writers, website creators, graphic designers, advertisers etc - all have a lot to fear from someone who has constantly make his money by ripping other people off - as seen by his long list of convictions for embezzlement, fraud, insider trading etc.
Thanks anonymous, want to go off topic any further? What about all the small business people who feel this government is about the old boys club? What about the manufactures sector who see this government selling them down the river for a high dollar? What about a government that say's it pro-business and has created a interface with IRD and other government departments which are virtually imposable to penetrate?
No blame a fat German immigrant, who pisses off FJK.
Dotcom's long list of transgressions were mostly done before he was 18. The insider trading charge – okay but that's not particularly clear-cut if you read the background. Anyway, I don't care – I just love the way he's shafting the right. At first I thought this arse should never have been let into the country, but I think I've changed my mind :-).
The media has to be there because if one of, say, the TV channels isn't then their opposition gets a scoop. More likely would be the scenario that they gave it the once over lightly and try and move on. It will depend on what is revealed on the night as to whether they are forced to follow the story further. I imagine the period of time between the announcement and the election has been calculated not just for impact on voters feeling but to give enough time for the penny to drop and questions to be asked of a lot of people in the lead up to election day
Fuck John Key!
It rolls off the tongue so easily...
"Peter Fraser openly admitted that, were he in Russia, he would be a Bolshevik"
Hi Chris,
For the sake of context, when did he make that remark?
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