'Go back to where you came from' is an ugly trademark of Australian racism | Antoun Issa | Opinion
The rightwing brigade is on a rampage. The level of hate being directed at any commentator not of Anglo-Celtic ancestry or appearance who dares utilise their democratic right and question matters of public interest is alarming.
Letâs begin with senator Eric Abetz â" the Liberal hawk at war with Australiaâs cultural mosaic â" who last month called on Yassmin Abdel-Magied to move to an âArab dictatorshipâ. Her crime? Criticising Australiaâs parliamentary system, and suggesting reforms were needed to make our democracy more reflective of society.
Itâs a benign subject thatâs debated daily not only among Australians, but many in the democratic west who are questioning failing political and economic structures â" Bernie Sanders, Jeremy Corbyn, say hello. Perhaps if Abdel-Magied were a white male, Abetz would show the level of respect and courtesy expected of a man who holds public office.
Then came Mark Latham, who blasted former colleague Tony Burke in a poorly-worded column for the Daily Telegraph for embracing Australiaâs rich cultural diversity, as well as the âethnicsâ that live in Sydneyâs suburbs.
This was followed by yet another outburst, this time from the far-right commentator Rowan Dean, who used his platform on Sky News, to racially insult the race discrimination commissioner, Tim Soutphommasane, based on his Asian heritage.
What all three cases demonstrate is the obvious hypocrisy on display by the rightwing brigade.
For some, Australiaâs democracy and freedoms are reserved for Anglo-Celtics only. The vulgar retort âgo back to where you come fromâ has been an ugly trademark of Australian racism dating back decades, as my Guardian column last year discussed. It is the standard rebuke for racists in this country when non-Anglo Australians dare attempt to participate in democracy on an equal footing, and question core assumptions of our socio-economic and political foundations.
Incitements to hate from media pundits have flow-on results. In the past few days, racist posters calling for violence against politicians and media personalities of diverse backgrounds were plastered across Sydneyâs inner west.
The surge in overt racism is not an isolated case of a âcouple of bad apples,â as Abdel-Magied put it, but neither is it solely an Australian development. It is the consequence of the Trump effect, and the distasteful re-emergence of far-right white nationalism. The election of Donald Trump as US president has energised once-fringe far-right movements â" see Pauline Hansonâs toast to Trump moments after his election â" and is dangerously shifting them into the mainstream.
Aiding this development is certain sections of the rightwing media. It is no coincidence that many have congregated on outlets such as Sky News, the Daily Telegraph and co. Their attempts to divide society along racial lines through controversial programming and personalities who peddle racial division are also not unique â" it is a formula replicated across rightwing media to pernicious effect in the United States and Britain.
The damage is not only the harmful content emanating from such outlets, but the bar it is setting â" or lowering â" for other Australian media. Instead of defending Australiaâs multicultural makeup and the right of all Australians to engage in democratic debate equally, Channel Seven, for example, decided to join in the racist bashing of Abdel-Magied with a disgraceful poll asking whether she should leave Australia.
The poll was subsequently taken down after Seven discovered most Australians are not as racist as they thought, but that doesnât absolve the network of what appears to be its soft promotion of racism over a number of years. Even while Hanson was adrift in political wilderness, Seven continued to call upon her for political âcommentary,â and had no qualms in allowing her to use the network to amplify her racist viewpoints.
The ethical responsibility of the likes of Seven and Murdoch media needs to be called into question. The role of the media is to hold the powers in society accountable for their actions, and keep the public informed of key issues. The media operates â" in an ideal world â" for the public interest. The apparent promotion of racism by Murdoch media and Seven stirs up division in Australian society. Their actions are harmful to Australians, and run against our public interest.
But for all the wealth and influence of the rightwing brigade, they cannot alter a reality that is progressing on course: Australia is already a multicultural nation, and it will continue to be so for many years to come.
Nearly half of Australians are either first- or second-generation, with 28.5% born overseas â" the highest percentage in over 120 years. In the last 10 years, Australia has increasingly become home to a colourful mix of immigrants, with migration rates up for Nepal, Brazil, India, China, and Bangladesh, among others. And what you wonât hear from the rightwing brigade is that immigrant unemployment rates in Australia are among the lowest in the OECD, and most children of migrants are proficient in English by the age of 10.
But statistics only reveal part of the picture. Do Dean and Latham enjoy a nice Australian espresso or latte â" among the best in the world â" from time to time? They can thank our non-English speaking Italian and Greek migrants for that. Or have they ever dined in one of Melbourne or Sydneyâs highly-rated fusion restaurants? Perhaps theyâd feel more comfortable if our chefs withdrew the Asian and Middle Eastern influences on modern Australian cuisine. The cultural blend within Australian society is already far beyond the fear-mongering ignorance on display in sections of the media. Sorry rightwing brigade, youâre about three decades too late.
The resurgence in racial division is a momentary backlash against this reality, steeped in denial at the changed face of our nation. We are no longer a British outpost reserved for northern European subjects. We are a multicultural nation with an Indigenous heritage and a British legacy.
To attack Australiaâs multiculturalism, and divide our society into racial tiers, is to attack our nationâs foundation and identity, which is fundamentally anti-Australian.
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