Our society and our culture is not a conspiracy.  There are no cynics at the
top of the pyramid who use their power to maintain an unnecessarily unequal
society.  Stratified society is perpetuated because of the self-interest
that everybody has in not sinking down.  People believe what it is in their
interest to believe.  Influential people believe that a stratified society
will always be necessary for economic growth and development.  Their
subordinates, the intellectuals of the middle stratum who maintain our
culture, sense the cues from above, then produce ideology for the
conservation of the current state of things, but are not conscious of the
reasons for their actions.

So, the objective function of our culture is to stop people from breaking
away from the hierarchy, but at the same time allow them to develop
specialised areas of competence and creativity so that they can participate
in production and even develop the economy.  Our culture treats you in two
different ways depending on whether you are born into, or moving towards,
the lower stratum or the middle stratum of society.

Workers need only limited intellectual tools.  After a basic education, the
face that Culture shows the lower stratum is one that has the objective
function of deterring them from unauthorised intellectual activity, that is
to use their language and their knowledge to analyse our society and their
position in it. 

It is therefore wrong, as the present prejudice does, to regard the lower
stratum as hopeless yobbos who refuse to participate in a cultural life that
would make their lives richer.  On the contrary, they are right in rejecting
most of our culture, but they throw out the baby, the useful intellectual
tools, with the bath water.  Most people unnecessarily have a bad conscience
for their lack of interest in culture.  They shouldn't.  Most of our art,
literature, history writing, philosophy, social thinking and so on really is
as irrelevant as most people think.  Not by accident, not because those who
made it are useless and isolated from real life, but because it is one of
the objective functions of our culture to deter most people from acquiring
intellectual tools. I think that much of our official culture exists in
order to scare the majority of the people away from acquiring the habits of
critical reading and analytical thinking.  And at the same time as our
schools often fail to interest children in reading and social and political
analysis or even convinces them that such activities are futile, students
are given the option of taking subjects like Soccer Excellence or Rugby
League Excellence or Film Studies at High School as if these are the
qualifications necessary for their futures.

And if people can't be prevented from independent thinking by means of
discouragement and strict formatting, there is a last net which catches
almost everybody who makes it that far.  I believe that most of what is seen
as progressive and radical thinking today in our cultural, academic and
intellectual life are simply diversions for keeping rebellious minds
occupied and isolated from the social predicament of the lower classes.

The great mistake of the Social Democrats of all countries is that they put
all their efforts into economic redistribution and failed to build a
movement that could take up the battle about the laws of thought.  The
Social Democrat leadership thought they were going to solve the problems
with some major reforms and settlements between industrialists and
representatives of the majority.  Now when the economy is changing, and the
Welfare State is being dismantled, the majority of the population are unable
to take part in the analytical debate about their future.

Of course many people will think it is outrageous when I dismiss much of our
contemporary cultural and academic life as being just a big
confusion-producing mechanism in the service of social stratification, that
keeps dissenters occupied and makes it difficult for people to analyse our
society so that they can organise themselves politically and try to rid
society of the things that divide us and consume our energies (drugs, crime,
ethnic conflicts, discrimination and so on).

But I have been driven to this desperate conclusion by the fact that our
current thinking can't provide any solutions to our problems.  And for
Aboriginal people, the prevalent analyses are more than confusing, they are
destructive.

Aboriginal Policy is weighed down by mixed-up confusion.  Many of the
conventional ideas and policies in Aboriginal Affairs - ideas and policies
which are considered to be "progressive" - in fact are destructive.  In
thinking about the range of problems we face and talking with my people
about what we might be able to do to move forward, the conviction grows in
me that the so-called progressive thinking is compounding our predicament.
In fact when you really analyse the nostrums of progressive policy, you find
that the pursuit of these policies has never helped us to resolve our
problems - indeed they have only made our situation worse.

Take for example the problem of indigenous imprisonment.  Like a broken
record over the past couple of decades we have been told that 2% of the
population comprise more than 30% of the prison population.  The situation
with juvenile institutions across the country is worse.  Of course these are
incredible statistics.  The progressive response to these ridiculous levels
of interaction with the criminal justice system has been to provide legal
aid to indigenous peoples charged with offences.  The hope is to provide
access to proper legal defence and to perhaps reduce unnecessary
imprisonment.  To this day however, Aboriginal victims of crime -
particularly women - have no support: so whilst the needs of offenders are
addressed, the situation of victims and the families remains vulnerable.
Furthermore, it is apparent that this progressive response - providing legal
aid support services - has not worked to reduce our rate of imprisonment.
In fact Aboriginal legal aid is part of the criminal justice industry which
processes Aboriginal people routinely through its systems.  It is like a
sausage machine and human lives are processed through it with no real belief
that the outrageous statistics will ever be overcome.

The truth is that, at least in the communities that I know in Cape York
Peninsula, the real need is for the restoration of social order and the
enforcement of law.  That is what is needed.  You ask the grandmothers and
the wives.  What happens in communities when the only thing that happens
when crimes are committed is the offenders are defended as victims?  Is it
any wonder that there will soon develop a sense that people should not take
responsibility for their actions and social order must take second place to
an apparent right to dissolution.  Why is all of our progressive thinking
ignoring these basic social requirements when it comes to black people?  Is
it any wonder the statistics have never improved?  Would the number of
people in prison decrease if we restored social order in our communities in
Cape York Peninsula?  What societies prosper in the absence of social order?

Take another example of progressive thinking compounding misery.  The
predominant analysis of the huge problem of indigenous alcoholism is the
symptom theory.  The symptom theory holds that substance abuse is only a
symptom of underlying social and psychological problems.  But addiction is a
condition in its own right, not a symptom.  It must therefore be addressed
as a problem in itself.  Of course miserable circumstances make people in a
community susceptible to begin using addictive substances, but once an
epidemic of substance abuse is established in a community it becomes
independent of the original causes of the outbreak and the epidemic of
substance abuse becomes in itself the main reason for why addiction and
abuse becomes more and more widespread.  The symptom theory absolves people
from their personal responsibility to confront and deal with addiction.
Worse, it leaves communities to think that nothing can be done to confront
substance abuse because its purported causes: dispossession, racism, trauma
and poverty, are beyond reach of social resolution in the present.

But again, the solution to substance abuse lies in restriction and the
treatment of addiction as a problem in itself.  When I talk to people from
Cape York Peninsula about what is to be done about our ridiculous levels of
grog consumption (and the violence, stress, poor diet, heart disease,
diabetes and mental disturbance that results) no one actually believes that
the progressive prescriptions about "harm reduction" and "normalising
drinking" will ever work.

A rule of thumb in relation to most of the programs and policies that pose
as progressive thinking in indigenous affairs, is that if we did the
opposite we would have a chance of making progress.  This is because the
subservience of our intellectual culture to the cause of class prejudice and
stratification is so profound and universal.  What we believe is forward
progress is in fact standing still or actually moving backwards.

Much of my thinking will seem to many to indicate that I have merely become
conservative.  But I propose the reform of welfare, not its abolition.  Like
all of you here tonight I am also concerned for the long term preservation
of our commitment to welfare as a nation.  If we do not confront the need
for the reform of welfare and to seize its definition, then we will lose it
in the longer term.

The fact is that Australia is at a critical time in the history of the
Welfare State.  Its reform is imperative.  It is worth remembering that Paul
Keating actually commenced the new thinking on welfare with Working Nation.

This country needs to develop a new consensus around our commitment to
welfare. This consensus needs to be built on the principles of personal and
family empowerment and investment and the utilisation of resources to
achieve lasting change.  In other words our motivation to reform welfare
must be based on the principle that dependency and passivity are a scourge
and must be avoided at all costs.  Dependency and passivity kills people and
is the surest road to social decline.  Australians do not have an
inalienable right to dependency, they have an inalienable right to a fair
place in the real economy.

There is an alternative definition of welfare reform that will take hold in
the absence of the definition that I have just outlined.  This alternative
definition sees welfare reform as a matter of moral judgment on the part of
those who have security of employment and who 'pay taxes' in relation to
people whose dependency is seen as a moral failing.  Indeed this alternative
definition is laced with the idea that welfare reform should be about
punishment of bludgers.  In other words we are seeking to reform welfare
because we are concerned about the sentiments of those who work and who pay
taxes - and welfare recipients owe these people a moral obligation.  Welfare
reform in this alternative definition could also be merely a means of
reducing government commitments and decreasing taxation of those who already
have a place in the economy.

I have departed somewhat from the traditions of this annual lecture in that
I have not explicated my vision about the Light on the Hill.  But in order
to have a vision one needs to have an analysis of ones' present situation.
I contend that people who want to be progressive today, are in objective
fact, regressive in their thinking.  This is especially and painfully
obvious if you know the situation in the Aboriginal communities of this
country.  Petrol sniffing is in some places now so endemic that crying
infants are silenced with petrol-drenched rags on their faces.  In one of
our communities in Cape York, among less than a 1000 people there were three
murders within one month a few months ago.  And we don't know what to do. 

And to be honest, in its cups, the late Prime Minister Ben Chifley's party
today does not know what to do now that the economy has changed and by
default its traditional political base is decreasing, and the class
divisions are widening.  Too many Australians remain with uncertain
prospects.  How could we be so bereft of solutions today when these
negligent thinkers and trustees in the academies and the bureaucracies who
most benefited from the Welfare State that was created from the sweat and
organisation of working people, have had a century to anticipate our current
predicament and to prepare us for this day - at the least prepared with
understanding?

Those of us who wish for social progress must realise that there are
important insights in the materialist interpretation of our history and our
culture, which the labour movement unfortunately left behind in favour of
the confusions that have preoccupied and diverted those academics,
bureaucrats and parliamentarians who became the intellectual trustees of the
Welfare State and the interests of working people and their families - a
responsibility which they grievously failed to fulfil.

Reply via email to