Interesting article...

M

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2010 9:08 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Thailand: Challenging the "heroic revolution" archetype


Thailand: challenging the "heroic revolution" archetype

by Somtow Sucharitkul

ABC - Australian Broadcasting Corporation 
The Drum Unleashed

May 20, 2010

http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2905056.htm

I have been composing a long, day by day account of the "troubles" of the
last three days, which I have not yet posted. The reason is that I've been
getting a lot of mail asking me to explain "the truth" to people overseas.

A lot of people here are astonished and appalled at the
level of irresponsibility and inaccuracy shown by such major news sources as
CNN, and are attributing the most astonishing motives to this, such as
suggesting that they're in the pay of Thaksin and so on.

I don't think this is really what is going on. Rather, I
think that there are two basic problems: preconception and language.

CNN first became a force to be reckoned with during the
"People Power" movement in the Philippines. The kind of coverage we had for
this was amazing. There was a camera in every camp, and we could follow this
exciting revolution every step of the way. We knew exactly who to root for:
the oppressed masses led by the widow of the iconic Aquino, and we knew that
whenever President Marcos appeared he was Darth Vader, the symbol of an evil
empire. The arc of the story was simple and inexorable. A whole new way of
looking at the news was born, with all the excitement of a TV miniseries
and, prophetically, a reality show as well.

Of course, many of the little details of the story were conveniently glossed
over. Reality was not - never is - so black and white. But there are three
important things about this story: first, in its essentials, there was a lot
of truth. And all the protagonists spoke English.

The Philippines, as Filipinos never tire of telling me, is
the third most populous English speaking country in the
world. We will leave the definition of "English-speaking" to another blog,
but it's very important that the various sides in this conflict were able to
articulate their viewpoints in a language which CNN well understood.

The third important thing about the story is that it
fulfilled a vision of history that is an inseparable part of the inheritance
of western culture, that is so ingrained in western thinking that it is
virtually impossible for an educated member of western society to divorce
himself from it.

It is a vision of history as a series of liberations. From Harmodius and
Aristogeiton throwing off the tyrant's yoke to the removal of the Tarquins
and the establishment of the Roman Republic to the failed rebellion of
Spartacus, from Magna Carta to the Bastille to the American Civil War to the
Russian Revolution, there is this Platonic Model against which these big
historical movements are always compared. There is a bad guy - often a
dictator - who can be demonised. There is a struggling proletariat. The end
comes with "liberty and justice for all". This is Star Wars. The dark times.
The Empire.

The "People Power" coverage was riveting, compelling, and contained all the
emotional components of this mythical story arc. Finding another such story,
therefore, is a kind of Holy Grail for the international media. When a story
comes that appears to contain some of the elements, and it's too much hard
work to verify those elements or get all the background detail, you go with
the Great Archetype of Western Civilisation.

Now, let us consider the redshirt conflict.

Let's not consider what has actually been happening in Thailand, but how it
looks to someone whose worldview has been coloured with this particular view
of history.

Let's consider the fact that there is pretty much nothing
being explained in English, and that there are perhaps a
dozen foreigners who really understand Thai thoroughly. I
don't mean Thai for shopping, bargirls, casual conversation
and the like. Thai is a highly ambiguous language and is particularly well
suited for seeming to say opposite things simultaneously. To get what is
really being said takes total immersion.

When you watch a red shirt rally, notice how many English
signs and placards there are, and note that they are
designed to show that these are events conforming to the archetype. The
placards say "Democracy", "No Violence," "Stop killing innocent women and
children" and so on. Speakers are passionately orating, crowds are moved.
But there are no subtitles. What does it look like?

The answer is obvious. It looks like oppressed masses
demanding freedom from an evil dictator.

Don't blame Dan Rivers, et al, who are only doing what they
are paid to do: find the compelling story within the mass of
incomprehensible data, match that story to what the audience already knows
and believes, and make sure the advertising money keeps flowing in.

A vigorous counter-propaganda campaign in clear and simple English words of
one syllable has always been lacking and is the reason the government is
losing the PR war while actually following the most logical steps toward a
real and lasting resolution.

If the foreign press were in fact able to speak Thai well enough to follow
all the reportage here coming from all sides, they would also be including
some of the following information in their reports. I want to insist yet
again that I am not siding with anyone. The following is just information
that people really need before they write their news reports.

  Thaksin was democratically elected, but became
increasingly undemocratic, and the country gradually
devolved from a nation where oligarchs skimmed off the top
to a kleptocracy of one. During his watch, thousands of
people were summarily executed in the South of Thailand and
in a bizarre "war on drugs" in which body count was
considered a marker of success.

  the coup that ousted Thaksin was of course completely illegal, but none of
the people who carried it out are in the present government.

  the yellow shirts' greatest error in moulding its international image was
to elevate Thaksin's corruption as its major bone of contention. Thai
governments have always been corrupt. The extent of corruption and the fact
that much of it went into only one pocket was shocking to Thais, but the
west views all "second-rate countries" as being corrupt. Had they used the
human rights violations and muzzling of the press as their key talking
points, the "heroic revolution" archetype would have been moulded with
opposite protagonists, and CNN and BBC would be telling an opposite story
today.

  the constitution which was approved by a referendum after
the coup and which brought back democracy was flawed, but it provided more
checks and balances, and made election fraud a truly accountable offense for
the first time.

  the parliamentary process by which the Democrat coalition came to power
was the same process by which the Lib Dems and Tories have attained power in
Britain. The parliament that voted in this government consists entirely of
democratically elected members.

  no one ever disputed the red shirts' right to peaceful assembly, and the
government went out of its way to accede to their demands.

  this country already has democracy. Not a perfect one, but the idea of
"demanding democracy" is sheer fantasy

  the yellow shirts did not succeed in getting any of their demands from the
government. The last two governments changed because key figures were shown
to have committed election fraud. They simply did not take their own
constitution seriously enough to follow it.

  the red TV station has a perfect right to exist, but if foreign
journalists actually understood Thai, they would realise that much of its
content went far beyond any constitutionally acceptable limits of "protected
speech" in a western democracy. Every civilised society limits speech when
it actually harms others, whether by inciting hate or by slander. The
government may have been wrong to brusquely pull the plug, but was certainly
right to cry foul. It should have sought an injunction first. Example:
Arisman threatened to destroy mosques, government buildings, and "all
institutions you hold sacred" ... a clip widely seen on YouTube, without
subtitles. Without subtitles, it looks like "liberty, equality, fraternity".

  the army hasn't been shooting women and children ... or indeed anyone at
all, except in self-defence. Otherwise this would all be over, wouldn't it?
It's simple for a big army to mow down 5,000 defenceless people.

  since the government called the red shirts' bluff and
allowed the deputy P.M. to report to the authorities to hear their
accusations, the red leaders have been making ever- more fanciful demands.
The idea of UN intervention is patently absurd. When Thaksin killed all
those Muslims and alleged drug lords, human rights groups asked the UN to
intervene. When the army took over the entire country, some asked the UN to
intervene. The UN doesn't intervene in the internal affairs of sovereign
countries except when requested to by the country itself or when the
government has completely broken down.

  Thailand hasn't had an unbreachable gulf between rich and poor for at
least 20 years. These conflicts are about the rise of the middle class, not
the war between the aristocrats and the proletariat.

  Abhisit, with his thoroughly western and somewhat liberal background,
shares the values of the west and is in fact more likely to bring about the
social revolution needed by Thailand's agrarian poor than any previous
leader. He is, in fact, pretty red, while Thaksin, in his autocratic style
of leadership, is in a way pretty yellow. Simplistic portrayals do not help
anyone to understand anything.

  the only people who do not seem to care about the reds' actual grievances
are their own leaders, who are basically making everyone risk their lives to
see if they can get bail.

  the King has said all that he is constitutionally able to
say when he spoke to the supreme court justices and urged
them to do their duty. The western press never seem to
realise that the Thai monarchy is constitutionally on the European model ...
not, say, the Saudi model. The king REIGNS ... he doesn't "rule". This is a
democracy. The king is supposed to symbolise all the people, not a special
interest group.

The above are just a few of the elements that needed to be sorted through in
order to provide a balanced view of what is happening in this country.

There is one final element that must be mentioned. Most are
not even aware of it. But there is, in the western mindset,
a deeply ingrained sense of the moral superiority of western culture which
carries with it the idea that a third world country must by its very nature
be ruled by despots, oppress peasants, and kill and torture people. Most
westerners become very insulted when this is pointed out to them because our
deepest prejudices are always those of which we are least aware. I believe
that there is a streak of this
crypto- racism in some of the reportage we are seeing in the west. It is
because of this that Baghdad, Yangon, and Bangkok are being treated as the
same thing. We all look alike.

Yes, this opinion is always greeted with outrage. I do my
best to face my own preconceptions and don't succeed that often, but I
acknowledge they exist nonetheless.

Some of the foreign press are painting the endgame as the Alamo, but it is
not. It is a lot closer to Jonestown or Waco.

Like those latter two cases, a highly charismatic leader
figure (in our case operating from a distance, shopping in Paris while his
minions sweat in the 94°weather) has taken an inspirational idea: in one
case Christianity, in the other democracy, and reinvented it so that
mainstream Christians, or real democrats, can no longer recognise it. The
followers are trapped. There is a siege mentality and information coming
from outside is screened so that those trapped believe they will be killed
if they try to leave. Women and children are being told that they are in
danger if they fall into the hands of the government, and to distrust the
medics and NGOs waiting to help them. There are outraged pronouncements that
they're not in fact using the children as human shields, but that the
parents brought them willingly to "entertain and thrill" them. There is
mounting paranoia coupled with delusions of grandeur, so that the little red
kingdom feels it has the right to summon the United Nations, just like any
other sovereign state. The reporters in Rajprasong who are attached to the
red community are as susceptible to this variant of the Stockholm syndrome
as anyone else.

The international press must separate out the very real problems that the
rural areas of Thailand face, which will take decades to fix, from the fact
that a mob is rampaging through Bangkok, burning, looting, and firing
grenades, threatening in the name of democracy to destroy what democracy yet
remains in this country.

But this bad reporting is not their fault. It is our fault
for not providing the facts in bite-sized pieces, in the
right language, at the right time.

This article has been republished with the permission of the author. It
first appeared here. <
http://www.somtow.org/2010/05/dont-blame-dan-rivers.html>
Clarifications made by the author can be found here. <
http://www.somtow.org/2010/05/few-small-clarifications.html>

[Somtow Sucharitkul is a composer, author and media personality. He is
conductor of the Bangkok Opera and the Siam Philharmonic Orchestra.]

_____________________________________________

Portside aims to provide material of interest
to people on the left that will help them to
interpret the world and to change it.

Submit via email: [email protected]
Submit via the Web: portside.org/submit
Frequently asked questions: portside.org/faq
Subscribe: portside.org/subscribe
Unsubscribe: portside.org/unsubscribe
Account assistance: portside.org/contact
Search the archives: portside.org/archive


!DSPAM:2676,4bff4470177552267214669!


_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to