Cohn Bendit teaches Orban: “information must derange politics”

January 19, 2012 by Tjebbe van Tijen in the Limping Messenger

the illustrated and annotated version can be found here:

http://limpingmessenger.wordpress.com/2012/01/19/cohn-bendit-teaches-orban-information-must-derange-politics/

[tableau: "l'information doit déranger la politique"]

Daniel Cohn Bendit is an old style orator who loves to be on stage and debate, 
from the university back rooms of Nanterre in the mid sixties as a ‘young 
European anarchist’ and explicit anti-parlementarist, to the the front room of 
the European parliament in Strasbourg and Bruxelles as an elected deputé of the 
Green Party. Yesterday I saw on French television TV5 a snippet of his 
discourse against Viktor Orban, Hungarian President, comparing Orban’s position 
with that of Chavez and Fidel Castro.

To me his way of arguing on television  seemed to be a fallacy, as Orban is a 
member of a neo-liberal right wing party – Fidesz – that came to the fore 
because of its fierce anti-communism.

When I tried to find a more complete registration of that yesterday debate, I 
failed to do so, but I did stumble upon a similar oration of Cohn Bendit versus 
Orban exactly one year ago on January 19. 2011.

Here Cohn Bendit’s discourse is less crude and more to the point when he 
attacks the new press laws of Hungary, which lets a (Fidesz) committee decide 
on the objectivity and balance of news reporting. State censorship in short in 
the name of “balanced information” (l’information équilibrée). It is the 
European Parliament meeting where the EEC presidency of Hungary for that year 
is inaugurated.

“L’information équilibrée n’existe pas” (balanced information does not exist) 
declaimed the Green tribune, facing and pointing to Hungarian President Orban 
and sums – apostrophic and repetitive in the form of rhetorical questions – 
cases from history where state authority has been challenged by news media: 
from the Watergate scandal of burglary in the offices of the Democratic Party 
under Nixon to the Abu Ghraib prison abuse under George Bush.

“L’information doit déranger la politique..” (information must derange 
politics). With a grim face and fierce gestures Cohn Bendit finishes his 
display of exemplum by adding after a short pause  ”et ça fait mal quelquefois: 
(sometimes that hurts).

Cohn Bendit is fully equipped to propose this dictum, as he has been fiercely 
attacked personally several times in his life – often unjustly – by news media 
that had to fear no state control in his favour. From the right wing news 
papers in 1968 calling him ”un juif allemand” (a German Jew) (*) to the more 
recent attacks on him linking his sexual mores of  the sixties and seventies to 
pedophilia (**).

[link to Youtube video]

When one sees this Youtube version of the Cohn Bendit debate in the European 
Parliament not embedded here but on the Youtube page, scandalous racist hate 
viewer comments are on public display, as well as the moderate and supportive 
ones. All this seems ‘unmoderated’. This is not “information équilibré” and one 
must have a harnessed soul to read many of the comments. The relative anonymity 
 of the internet produces such reactions and its is up to any internet 
community to keep excesses under control.

We remain with the question whether the dictum ‘information must derange 
politics’ should also be applied to the public realm of digital social media.

[screen shot of insulting comments to Cohn Bendit on youtube]

—-

(*) 2 mai 1968 extreme right wing journal Minute writes: “Ce Cohn-Bendit, parce 
qu’il est juif et allemand, se prend pour un nouveau Karl Marx.” (this Cohn 
benit, because he is a jew and a German, takes himself for a new Karl Marx)
(**)   ”German MEP open about his paedophilia” is just one of the many 
descriptions (British Democracy Forum) of the belated reactions to a passage in 
his book “Le Grand Bazar” published in the year 1975 in which sexual tinted 
activities between him and some children are described. It took 26 years before 
a political opponent (German Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel of the FDP/Free 
Democratic Party) grabbed the opportunity to confront Cohn Bendit with his 
escapades in the early seventies of last century. In January 2001 Cohn Bendit 
answered by way of an interview in The Observer: “I admit that what I wrote is 
unacceptable nowadays.”


Tjebbe van Tijen
Imaginary Museum Projects
Dramatizing Historical Information
http://imaginarymuseum.org
web-blog: The Limping Messenger
http://limpingmessenger.wordpress.com/


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