GUEST BLOG: Alastair Reith – Seek truth from facts – a reply to Ian Powell

12
733

Serious debate is politically healthy, so when I wrote a piece for Stuff about how the history of the 1981 Springbok Tour is being distorted, I was pleased to see Ian Powell publish something on his blog in response.

Unfortunately, he spends most of his time responding to arguments that were never made and doubling down on historical inaccuracies.

The entire premise of Powell’s article is false. He writes that “although Reith does not say so, the practical effect of his article is to assert that the anti-racist tour protests of 1981 were as morally (or immorally) equivalent as the anti-vaccination protests of 2022 (with particular emphasis on the Wellington occupation).”

If the author does not say something, it’s safe to assume it might not be their argument.

The article asked a simple question – why can’t we stick to the facts? It’s in the fourth paragraph from the bottom. Not far above, you’ll read “nobody is obligated to support the anti-mandate protests, even if you support the right to protest in the abstract. I wasn’t enthusiastic about the occupation myself.”

It’s difficult to see how a reasonable person could draw from that, as Powell did, the following: “If one read Reith’s article in complete isolation (without knowing anything more about him) one would find it difficult not to believe that he has much more empathy with the anti-vaccination protests than the earlier anti-racist tour protests.”

Despite what Powell claims, the Stuff article was not an attack on the anti-tour movement, and it certainly wasn’t ‘red baiting’. It did not comment on the morality of protesters either in 1981 or 2022, largely because there’s been too much moralistic commentary already. It’s more useful to focus on the facts.

Powell writes: “Reith identifies several cases of violence or allegedly [sic] violence but he lacks perspective… Further, Reith [sic] claims of violence have to be taken with a grain of salt. His reference to the use of a small truck to ram through gates at the first game in Gisborne is contradicted by a recent review article published by the Gisborne Herald (21 July 2021) which makes no reference to such an incident. frightening intensity .”

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

Firstly, if a news article written in 2021 doesn’t mention how protesters smashed through the Gisborne gates with a truck, that does not contradict the fact it happened. It could simply mean the authors failed to mention it.

Secondly, it did happen. Before the July 22 game in Gisborne, a driver smashed his Land Rover through the gates with three women in the car. They did several laps of the field, scattering broken glass as they went, before all were arrested.

A HART spokesman denied his organisation was involved, but he made no attempt to deny the incident took place. Why would he? A TV crew filmed it happening. Don’t take my word for it, you can see it with your own eyes. Start watching from three minutes in. In case there’s any lingering doubt, protester Mereana Pitman (described as an anti-Tour strategist) talks on camera about why she did it.

It appears Powell’s confident claims about what did and didn’t happen in 1981 should be taken with a grain of salt.

No doubt any response to this point will involve shifting the goalposts around our definition of ‘violence’, but I know one thing for sure. If the protesters outside parliament had scattered broken glass as a tactic, it would be condemned as violent and despicable by many of the same people who lionise all aspects of the anti-Tour movement.

Powell argues such tactics were insignificant and divorced from the movement, but Mereana Pitman seems to disagree. She argues it was a significant moment which inspired others to take similar action for a worthy cause. I see no reason to disagree with her, let alone condemn her actions, but given I hold that view I’m wary of indulging the hysteria about disruptive protesters who deny access to the grass outside Parliament today.

Perhaps the most egregious claim in Powell’s blog post is the following: “[Reith] then resorts to nasty anti-communist redbaiting against what he describes as the “…leading role of a radical Marxist minority, in Wellington most notably the Workers’ Communist League. These days the Party’s paper would be declared a source of extremist misinformation.” I didn’t agree with everything in the “Party’s paper” but his accusation, in addition to being false, is absurd. His rebaited [sic] target includes people I know well and greatly respect.”

At no point does the article say the WCL’s paper is or was a source of extremist misinformation. It says it would be declared such a thing today, as it was at the time. The role of Marxists in the 1981 protest movement is a historical fact. It’s not red-baiting to point that out. Forty years later, who’s trying to hide it? How many government appointments or career opportunities are being held back by previous association with the WCL or similar groups?

The anti-mandate protests today are condemned for being infiltrated and influenced by extremists. Well, so were the protests in 1981. Every protest is accused of this. There’s not much new under the sun.

Facts matter. They are stubborn things. Unfortunately, too many people have responded to the events outside Parliament by retreating into familiar, comfortable narratives, largely imported from the culture wars overseas. A consensus emerged across much of the left that the anti-mandate protests presented some uniquely dangerous threat, that they were an embryonic white supremacist uprising, and that therefore this justified calls for the police to go in early and hard with whatever means were required to clear the camp.

Thankfully – and on this point Powell and I appear to agree – cooler heads prevailed in the higher echelons of the state and its ‘bodies of armed men’. For the most part, when they eventually did disperse the protest, they used shields, pepper spray, and hands. They didn’t clear the grounds with a front line aggressively thrusting batons into ribs, even though plenty of New Zealanders would have cheered as bones got broken. They waited weeks, gave the protesters a chance to have their say, and gave them plenty of chances to retreat in good order. Unlike much of the left twittersphere, it appears New Zealand’s police leadership aren’t eager to violently repress people they disagree with. It could potentially have been avoided, but it could definitely have been worse.

What remains dangerous is the political precedent set by how so much of the left reacted. It’s worth thinking beyond the moment, as some seek to deepen a political consensus in favour of state repression toward disruptive protests. Hard pickets are mostly a thing of the past, but what will happen next time there’s a sustained strike which blocks ferries or shuts down airports, causes real disruption and refuses to be cowed by injunctions? What if we see a ‘progressive’ uprising in this country, similar to the anti-austerity revolts in Greece, Spain, Chile and elsewhere?

If things drag on, tensions will inevitably escalate and behaviour which is bad for PR will take place on the fringes. Violence will occur, unpleasant things will be said and done – including by the Goodies, depending on your point of view – and in this day and age, someone will capture it on video.

The media will zero in on this, not because of some conspiratorial agenda but because it gets the most clicks. Comment pieces will flow in about the role of dangerous far-left agitators, perhaps with ties to extremists overseas. Anyone who tries to argue against the exaggeration of organised radical influence will find themselves confronting an established narrative they very well might have helped construct.

If you called for police repression in recent weeks, good luck with the reception next time you condemn cops cracking skulls on a union picket line. It hasn’t happened on any significant scale for some time, but if history is any guide it will again. When it does, your friends may not see you as a hypocrite but plenty of other people will. They’ll be a lot less likely to listen.

Alastair Reith lives in Wellington and works near Parliament. He has participated in many protests, some of which were worth attending.

12 COMMENTS

    • Shit, Alastair Reith may be thinking ,,,, the first commentator to agree with my writing is a one-eyed uber zionist racist ….

      …. a idiot called Gaby,,, who can watch this clip https://youtu.be/8clMNOmX_kk?t=188 ,,, and claim the only terrorists are Palastinians ,,,, a people who he genocidaly proclaims do not exist and are in the dust-bin of history.

      Gaby is a ‘better dead than red’ right wing extremist ….

  1. So glad you wrote this Alistair.

    And I was glad you wrote your first article on this.

    I found the hypocrisy of the left (which I have always been a part of) unbelievable. Actually it lead to me thinking more about the issues the protesters were protesting about, when I had been very pro mandate, restrictions, masks etc.

    The parliament people were according to many on the left. Violent (some were), dirty (the Grenham common women were accused of this), a “river of filth”, nazis even ( I accept there were a very small number of white supremicists there. Ffs most of these people looked and acted like Green voters, think yoga, think herb gardens, think Rainbow flags (I saw one).

    But our nice Springbox protesters who didn’t cause any disruption (how dare the Wellington protesters be so horrible to yell at people wearing a mask!). And of course we (and I say we because I was part of the Tour protests) were better as our protest was more moral, blah, blah, blah

    Btw did Ian take his article down? I hav been unable to find it on this blog site. Maybe he had second thoughts. When I read it I thought he really did misquote you.

    • Anker. Some might say that a person referring to others as “ a river of filth “ or “ bottom feeders”, speaks of himself.

  2. the difference is the nature of the protest…. the greenham women were protesting against nuclear death the anti apartheid protesters were challenging the legitimacy of a racist regime…the beehive mob had THEIR PERSONAL feel feels all hurty werty by being expected to protect their fellow kiwis…slight difference in emphasis I think

    • But isn’t the point that freedom of speech means people are entitled to protest about whatever they want even if other people think there protest isn’t worthy?

      The protesters at parliament felt and experienced genuine hardship due to govt policy. They have a right to protest about that. End of.

      Btw in the main I am very pro govt covid response, so I didn’t agree with the protesters point of view. I kinda think it’s problematic to judge some protests as more worthy than others.

  3. Having been in the prime of my life in 1981 I can vividly recall the anti tour protests & know people that attended just for the chance to indulge in violence. That gives validity to your claim that “The anti-mandate protests today are condemned for being infiltrated and influenced by extremists. Well, so were the protests in 1981. Every protest is accused of this. There’s not much new under the sun.”
    The point you neglect to mention is that the anti tour protests were a worthy cause & contributed to the change in South Africa. The tin hat brigade in Wellington achieved nothing worthwhile & was based on false information.
    While I have sympathy for those who suffered in some way for refusing the vaccine I totally reject that this was some form of persecution. This was a choice they made for what were selfish reasons that they would rather believe a lie than do anything that could benefit others in the population. A guiding factor in my decision is ” Let nothing be done through selfish ambition or conceit, but in lowliness of mind let each esteem others better than himself. Let each of you look out not only for his own interests, but also for the interests of others.” which any fair-minded person can understand as applying in this situation. I do not dispute that some in the population have genuine medical reasons to not take vaccines & I totally support that right but this did not apply to the majority of those protesting.

  4. Anybody who was around in 81 and was at the business end of police battens, punches and tear gas is of the opinion that the cops were extremely restrained in 2022.
    Thats a good thing.
    Most of the Wellinton protestors in 2022 would have run a mile if confronted by red or blue squad.

    • Red Squad training chant–Eat more! Root more! Drink more piss! as recounted in Ross Meurant’s “Red Squad Story” of which I still have a copy.

      I was outside Eden Park on the final test and a cop in a skip bin near Uwanta Car Spares on Sandringham Rd tried a two handed downward baton blow on my bonce, only my shortish stature and motorcycle helmet saved me from more than a jarred neck. Kept the dented lid for years.

  5. Alastair is covering his arse here, nothing more. It can be a slippery slope when unionists start writing for the capitalist press as Chris Trotter discovered when he started writing for the National Business Review in the 1980s. I am sure he would freely admit the opprobrium he experienced from some colleagues in the Distribution Workers Federation of which he was a member at the time.

    Alastair attempted a false equivalence comparison with ’81 Tour violence and the 2020 convoy occupation incidents. End of.

  6. I don’t think it was Alistair who started this. I saw interviews with Alec Shaw, Trevor Richard and saw many on the left making assertions that the 81 protests weren’t violent. And that their cause was more noble.

    Perhaps we need a new Ministry of Protests who can dream which are worthy and which are not. Just so we all know

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.