Thursday 18 July 2024

Gut Reactions.

Trump Writes His Own Story: Would the “mainstream” media even try to reflect the horrified reaction of the MAGA crowd to the pop-pop-pop of the would-be assassin’s rifle, and Trump going down? Could it even grasp the sheer elation of the rally-goers seeing their champion rise up and punch the air, still alive, and still telling them to fight-fight-fight!

AS ANGRY TRUMP SUPPORTERS filed out of the Butler showgrounds, many paused to hurl abuse at the media pack. As they vented their anger upon the assembled “mainstream” journalists, I couldn’t help recalling the behaviour of an even angrier crowd as it filed out of Hamilton’s Rugby Park on Saturday, 25 July 1981.

Tens-of-thousands of Waikato Rugby fans had turned out to watch their team take on the Springboks. When the actions of anti-tour protesters caused the game to be called off they were furious. The abuse they hurled at the broadcasting box, along with unopened cans of beer, reflected their instinctive grasp of the media’s power to shape political perceptions. The Rugby fans knew in their gut that what had just happened would be reported to the advantage of the anti-tour activists, and to the disparagement of New Zealanders like themselves – hence their fury.

When he learned, through friends and media reports, of the violence that had swept through Hamilton following the cancellation of the Waikato-Springboks match, the eminent, Austrian-born, left-wing economist, Wolfgang Rosenberg, who lectured at the University of Canterbury, observed that it reminded him of Kristallnacht (generally translated as “night of broken glass”) when, on 9-10 November 1938, Hitler’s Nazi regime attacked Germany’s Jews, burned their synagogues, and smashed the windows of their businesses.

News of Rosenberg’s dramatic comparison swept through the ranks of the anti-tour movement, further lifting its morale, and conferring a powerful historical dignity upon what had been a frightening and painful (albeit non-fatal) political experience. Rosenberg’s comparison did something else. Wittingly or unwittingly, this refugee from 1930s Austria had compared pro-tour New Zealanders to the Nazis who perpetrated Kristallnacht. A struggle against the importation of South African racism had been upgraded to a struggle against fascism.

Liberal journalists found it almost impossible to resist this significant redefinition of the moral issues at stake in the already deeply divisive Springbok Tour. The principal inspirers of the anti-tour movement were no longer the stubborn Ces Blazey, Chairman of the New Zealand Rugby Football Union, and his chief political enabler, Prime Minister Rob Muldoon. Now they were fighting the good fight against the fearsome shadow of Hitlerism itself. Those who supported the Tour ceased to be simply misguided, and became, instead, the representatives of a much darker system of belief.

In taking on this Manichean aspect, the most significant factor in the Police decision to call off the Waikato-Springbok game faded rapidly from public consciousness. Commissioner of Police, Bob Walton, had been made aware that a stolen light-aircraft, piloted by an anti-tour activist, was en route to Rugby Park, and that if the game was not called off, the plane would be flown into the main stand – killing and injuring hundreds of human-beings.

This was a terrorist threat, pure and simple, and Walton could not be sure that the pilot was bluffing. The likelihood that the man at the aircraft’s controls would actually carry out his threat may have been low, but it wasn’t zero. And if the Police Commissioner made the wrong call he would be guilty of failing to prevent an unprecedented national calamity. Not surprisingly, Walton ordered the game’s cancellation and the evacuation of the stadium.

It is worth pausing and reflecting upon this extraordinary incident. In the years after 1981, the pilot of the aircraft became something of a folk hero. He had presented the Police with a bluff which they could not possibly call. The game was abandoned, the plane landed safely, and nobody in the stands was hurt – win/win. But, paying the blackmailer does not render extortion any the less reprehensible. Walton capitulated because there were hundreds of helpless men, women, and children being threatened with death, and he was not morally entitled to gamble with their lives.

Since 1981, the anti-tour movement has sought refuge in the age-old argument that the end justifies the means. But when the means encompasses turning human lives into bargaining chips there can be no justification. It doesn’t matter that the pilot, an RNZAF veteran, would never have carried out his threat. Walton didn’t know that, and the man flying the plane wasn’t about to tell him. He needed the Police Commissioner to be terrified of what he might do, and he used that terror to secure his political objective. That is the definition of terrorism.

The crowd filing out of Rugby Park did not know about the stolen plane, but they knew that what was happening was being transmitted all around the world. The rest of the planet would not see terrorism in the game’s cancellation – only the heroism of the protesters and the murderous rage of the crowd in the stands. Nelson Mandela, himself, would later describe the effect of the Waikato cancellation as “like the sun coming out”.

“Hamilton” is still presented as a great moral victory – the greatest of the ’81 Tour. But, on the day, the embittered Rugby fans knew in their gut that the people and the technology in the broadcasting box were absolutely central to the anti-apartheid movement’s victory – and to their own defeat. That’s why, in lieu of anything more effective, they hurled their beer-cans skyward.

As Trump’s supporters made their way out of the Butler showgrounds, and past the media box, they, like those Hamiltonians of 43 years ago, would have understood that the story that all but a handful of the journalists present at the event, and their networks, would tell would never be their story. It would not capture the horror of the pop-pop-pop of the would-be assassin’s rifle, and Trump going down. Nor would it reflect the sheer elation of seeing their champion rise up and punch the air, still alive, and still telling them to fight-fight-fight!

Oh sure, there is always social media – and Fox News – but what “X”, TikTok and Instagram deliver, and what Fox broadcasts, will never carry the same weight as the media messages directed at college-educated Americans. Just as the wholesome movies made in the Evangelical Christian studios are never as good as the movies made in Hollywood, the Right’s media content will never be accepted as anything more compelling than “misinformation”.

Even when the people in the MAGA caps make a deliberate personal choice to abandon the “lying media” and its “fake news”, a still, small voice continues to insist that the alt-reality they’ve just embraced will always be dismissed by the people with the good jobs and the big houses as “deplorable”.

The high-and-mighty said it to these “deplorables’” ancestors in the Middle Ages, and they’re still saying it today:

“Losers ye are, and losers ye shall remain.”


This essay was originally posted on The Democracy Project substack on Monday, 15 July 2024.

4 comments:

  1. In the extraordinary failings of the Secret Service, whose leader cited health and safety concerns for her staff going on the very same roof as the assassin, as agents groped around for their sunglasses, as short female agents dived behind the ex president, not in front of his 6'3" body, did the world just wake up to the overriding principal of hiring in the Secret Service nowadays, namely, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, is as stupid and as failing us as the rest of woke dogma?

    That not selecting the best and most physically able is not only ridiculous but outright dangerous?

    That being a Secret Service agent is not a game of dress ups?

    Will the real world wake up and say enough?

    Lets hope so!

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  2. Interesting analogies Chris. As a thirty year old I sat in front of the TV with a mate, and with a few beers were waiting with anticipation for that game to begin. We didn't give a toss about the protesters and were disbelieving as the events unfolded. Judge me as you will. Of course the pilot and the protesters didn't realise they had made history but they had. I believe the now deceased shooter who attempted to assassinate Trump at the Rally, thought he would change history for the better by eliminating Trump. History will now show that because of his failure he has 'virtually martyred' Trump, and almost certainly paved the way for Trumps re election. The shooter wouldn't have considered the consequences of failure. Trumps rise to 'virtual saint hood' by his worshipers, was clearly shown on the Breakfast news where a group of supporters held up a banner depicting Trump with an Arnie Schwarzenegger body, bare chested and holding some sort of huge assault rifle. These people see him as invincible now. Time will tell.

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  3. Forty years have passed and if the massive decline in public trust of the MSM has not convinced you that they no longer have the power to shape perception of events that they had in 1981, or even in 2001, then surely the even greater decline in TV ratings, listeners, subscribers, and readers of the MSM, plus the massive and seemingly unending layoffs of reporters and other MSM staff, and bankruptcies from Newsweek to Stuff ($1 each) to Newshub should do so.

    And from the opposite side of the story is this news, which normally would not make it from Minnesota to NZ but thanks to the Internet does so, former Minnesota TV anchor and reporter wins awards on new news channel. As she describes it herself:

    ...rising to the highest-rated weekend anchor in the Twin Cities, awarded with numerous Emmy awards and all those things that you think really matter — to then —- in a matter of days -— being permanently demoted, silenced, and canceled.

    Thanks to the George Floyd incident, the Springbok Tour event of it's day, with vastly greater fallout in terms of violence and impact, including on Liz Collin. She now with an outfit called Alpha News, which actually does reporting, including investigative reporting. I'm sure the remaining Lefties glued to her old WCCO TV station will scoff, but via YouTube, Rumble, X, Facebook and just the Internet in general, she and her new outfit have gathered millions more viewers than they have.

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  4. There are at least seven conspiracy theories now about the Trump shooting. From the left and from the right apparently. Even Alex Jones has one.😇 There are still unanswered questions it seems to me – like why have we not heard exactly what caused Trump's injuries? Why did the Secret Service allow him to stand there in full view of the shooter waving his fist? Why did they let him collect his shoes? Why was he not wearing his shoes in the first place?😇 could that thing in his hand via gel capsule full of fake blood? Probably not I must admit, a little disappointing though. I'm in two minds about these conspiracy theories. I think for one thing it serves the Republican movement right that there should be talk about crisis actors when one of their own is shot, but it does piss me off that the left seems to be just as susceptible to conspiracy theories as the right.

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