How a relentless progressive orthodoxy is politicising life and crushing debate in Australia. By Greg Sheridan in The Australian.
Welcome to Australia, the nation Labor rigged. Not just Labor, but the progressive left establishment across society has established a state ideology, a system of orthodox beliefs (more unrelenting than medieval Christianity), which is increasingly imposed across all walks of life. The tendency is towards a one-party state, even if different party labels are preserved.
The Albanese/Chalmers budget is a giant step towards creating a southern hemisphere European welfare state. This relies on ultimately ruinous levels and types of welfare.
It greatly exaggerates the power of the state in all spheres of life, and tends to crony capitalism and corporate state structures. It brings a vast machinery of political orthodoxy — progressive ideology — which it’s increasingly difficult to be free of.
In a democracy the state is meant to be, as far as possible, politically neutral. In Australia, institutions that should be neutral have been politicised, while fresh institutions have been created for political purposes. Governments spend billions of dollars to coerce Australians into seeing reality through a leftist, progressivist lens, then enforcing them to live their lives accordingly. …
Ever bigger government now funds one side of every political debate:
Governments have established a vast forest of wealthy organisations designed to propagate a progressivist left worldview.
The Australian Human Rights Commission is a prime example. With a few exceptions it takes a progressivist/left view of human rights. It has very little to say in defence of free speech. Before the Bondi terror attacks it had little to say about antisemitism. But a Critical Theory and ideological view of the alleged fundamental injustice of Australia permeates its work. Thus this week we had the absurdity of the Sex Discrimination Commissioner expressing concern that transgender women could be discriminated against on the basis of potential pregnancy. …
Australian Human Rights Commission president Hugh De Kretser claims the fundamental injustice of British settlement in Australia has never been addressed, and advocates treaties with Aboriginal groups as a way of improving the human rights of Aboriginal Australians. A classical view of human rights would emphasise universal citizenship, with race having no part in official civic life. Why should the government fund the propagation of only one side, the left/progressivist side, of this issue? …
The government funds the Environment Defenders Office to litigate against development projects. This involves enhancing, magnifying, helping political campaigns against these developments. Those who believe in development get no such government money.
Super and the unions have become another center of big government/leftist power:
The Australian superannuation industry has acquired vast financial power. As a result it also has political power. …
Compulsory super in Australia is really a form of tax. Many super funds have union officials on their boards. Super funds shouldn’t campaign politically about the treatment of super funds. These funds have also become part of the progressivist consensus in industry and investment.
Governments funnel huge amounts of money to trade unions. Unions now represent just 9 per cent of the private sector workforce, yet they’ve never been richer or more powerful. Government money is given to them for training and many other purposes. …
Universities:
University research grants are often enough mocked for their absurdity — anti-racist dentistry, drag shows for scientists, etc. But this nuttiness is a sideshow. It’s the deep, pervasive, overwhelming orthodoxy throughout publicly funded universities, with exceptions, that is simultaneously intellectually stultifying, corrosive in its exaggerated hostility to Western traditions, and ultimately undemocratic.
An autocracy doesn’t need an opposition ready to take over the reins of government, obviously. The opposition is just ceremonial, if it is allowed to exist at all.
There are thousands of other examples. The Albanese government, perhaps the most profligate in Australian history, found one area where it could economise. It cut staffing levels for the opposition.
In nearly 50 years of journalism, I can never remember House of Reps question time, the only part of parliament regularly broadcast to a large TV audience, being so rigged against giving the opposition any chance to make a point effectively, or meaningfully contest ideas and policies.
Totalitarianism is where government asserts total control over the lives of its citizens, regulating nearly every aspect of public and private behavior through coercion, repression, and propaganda. It is characterized by a single-party rule, the suppression of all opposition, and the enforcement of an official ideology that permeates education, media, and morality.
Clearly that is the direction in which Australia is currently headed.
Australia is one of the oldest continuous democracies in the world, but this relentless left/progressive orthodoxy is inherently authoritarian. It politicises normal areas of life such as school education, while ruling many normal views out of order for actual political discussion.
The best study of such tendencies remains George Orwell’s 1984. Big Brother determines the thoughts of its citizens. Subtlety and nuance are crushed. The only permitted opinions are double plus good, or double plus bad. This reflects the simplistic binaries that always underlie left/progressive orthodoxy, notwithstanding its pompous jargon and blather. For the left, the world is simplistically divided between oppressor and oppressed, hate-filled reactionary and enlightened progressive.
The author said “authoritarianism,” but technically “totalitarianism” fits the bill better, though we aren’t fully there yet. Perhaps it is fairer to say we are heading in an increasingly totalitarian direction, led by an authoritarian government. Obviously we still have many freedoms, but not as many as five years ago, or 20 years ago, let alone 80 years ago.


