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Courtroom Drama: There is no off-switch in a courtroom. Neither is it possible to turn the page in disgust. Ill-formed and ill-defended opinions will be exposed ruthlessly and unapologetically. As Shakespeare put it: “Reputation is an idle and most false imposition; oft got without merit, and lost without deserving.” Sometimes the best course of action is to take no action at all.
UNFOLDING, IN A WELLINGTON COURTROOM, is a drama which
speaks directly to the defining issues of our time. What is racism? How central
is racial discrimination to the moral deficiencies of our society? What is Hate
Speech? More importantly, what is the relationship between Hate Speech and Free
Speech? And, lastly, what sanctions – if any – should be imposed upon those
whose opinions give widespread offence?
It is, of course, forbidden to comment upon the rights and
wrongs of a trial in progress. My apologies, then, to all those anticipating a
right royal roasting of either the plaintiff, or the defendant, or both, in the
matter of Sir Robert Jones versus Renae Maihi.
What can be observed of defamation cases in general,
however, is that it is possible to be too protective of one’s good name. A
court of law is a fearsome and dangerous place for those unaccustomed to having
their ideas and opinions publicly scrutinised and dissected by persons whose
ability to marshal and present contrary evidence has been honed by years of
legal training and experience. There is no off-switch in a courtroom. Neither
is it possible to turn the page in disgust. Ill-formed and ill-defended
opinions will be exposed ruthlessly and unapologetically. As Shakespeare put
it: “Reputation is an idle and most false imposition; oft got without
merit, and lost without deserving.” Sometimes the best course of action is to
take no action at all.
Let us then turn, then, to the broader issues at play in
that Wellington courtroom: Racism, Hate Speech, Free Speech, and the most
effective response to willful offensiveness.
Increasingly, in this country, as in other countries
dominated by Europeans, racism is being viewed as the fundamental driver of social,
economic and political injustice. Fifty years ago this was not the case. For
most of the Twentieth Century, unequal class relations were deemed to be the
primary cause of injustice. With the demise of actually existing socialism, however,
and the global triumph of neoliberal capitalism, class inequality has become,
to paraphrase Lord Alfred Douglas: the lack of love that dare not speak its
name.
The neoliberal ruling-class, with considerable political
finesse, has tapped into the energy once devoted to uplifting the working-class
(within whose ranks are many, many people of colour) and diverted it into
identifying and demanding atonement for the sins of slavery and colonisation committed
by the ancestors of contemporary Europeans. The process of elevating racism to
the status of the West’s original and abiding sin was greatly assisted by the inspirational
examples of Martin Luther King’s non-violent campaign for African-American
civil rights, and the African National Congress’s four-decades-long struggle
against Apartheid. The impact of these historical struggles on the indigenous
victims of European colonialism was direct and enduring.
The development of Maori nationalism in New Zealand offers an
excellent example of the process. As the neoliberal experiment gathered
momentum in Aotearoa, the formerly close ties between Maori, the traditional
left and the trade unions were broken. By the early 1990s, what Dr Elizabeth
Rata has dubbed “neo-tribal capitalism” was rapidly transforming Maori
nationalism into a vital political adjunct to the all-conquering neoliberal
project. The nightmare of working-class Maori and Pakeha making common cause
against what was fast becoming a strategically bi-cultural ruling-class faded
away, to be replaced by the new and rapidly expanding Maori middle-class’s
scorn for the irredeemably racist redneckery of the Pakeha proletariat.
In this context, any unabashed expression of white ethnic chauvinism is almost always construed by Pakeha intellectuals as an
unforgivable affront to the state’s steadily evolving anti-racist and
decolonisation projects. For those Maori deeply embedded in these processes,
however, such reiterations of white supremacist ideology are a godsend. Every
such outburst reinforces the anti-racist and decolonisation critique and
highlights the baked-in character of the colonisers’ prejudices.
Why then condemn such racially charged outbursts as “Hate
Speech” and seek to punish its purveyors? Surely, by constantly exposing their
racism, white supremacists provide ongoing and invaluable confirmation of the colonisers’ moral deficiencies? This may well be true, but it’s also
irrelevant. The decolonisation process can only be advanced in an environment
of hair-trigger outrage and demonstrable indigenous distress. Racism must,
therefore, be confronted and condemned whenever and wherever it raises its ugly
head, and the offending and offensive racists held accountable for the harm
they have inflicted.
It is, accordingly, entirely unsurprising that the
liberal-democrats’ passionate defence of the citizen’s right to freedom of
expression is viewed as a serious obstacle to the success of the anti-racist
and decolonisation projects. At the core of the free speech argument is the
proposition that every citizen is obliged to uphold the right of every other
citizen – even those whose views fundamentally contradict their own most
cherished beliefs – to express their opinions freely and without the fear of
any retribution beyond their opponents’ vigorous refutation.
The problems begin when the vigorous refutation of offensive
speech is no longer considered sufficient. When the paucity of intellect and
the absence of evidence so obvious in the arguments put forward by the racially
prejudiced cease to be the best reason for fair-minded people to reject not
only the content of those arguments, but also the morally dubious claims of the
people making them. When the citizenry, in their confusing and contradictory entirety,
are deemed inadequate to the task of determining the proper shape of their
society and its future. When the responsibilities of government are entrusted
exclusively to those powerful enough to determine which opinions are “correct”.
And when those who deviate from such opinions are subjected to the full rigors
of the law. At that point, it is possible to give these problems a name.
Totalitarianism.
This essay was originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Thursday, 13 February 2020.
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