The 1% who run this society, the capitalist ruling class,
speak to the rest of us i.e. the general public, a majority of whom are working
class, mainly through the media, that is via a series of intermediaries –
politicians, TV producers and presenters, news readers, newspaper editors,
journalists and so on. It is true that not all ‘politicians’ are establishment
lackeys and not all journalists are careerist hacks, but most are and they set
the tone. What we see and hear on the media is mainly what our rulers want us
to see and hear.
Some people react to this by dismissing the mainstream media
as ‘all lies’. This is indeed the case at some fundamental level but, of
course, it is not literally true: newspapers and TV News contain much factually
accurate information and we all know this. More important than the actual
‘lies’ they tell is what media fail to
report or barely report and especially the
way they report things, the subtle spin they build into their reporting to
ensure that events and the world are seen from the point of view of the ruling
class.
What follows are a few critical reflections on the language
politicians and media use for this purpose. This is based mainly on current
Irish practice but some of it will apply internationally
Populism.
One of the most important functions of the media is to
discredit any opposition to the system. This is more important – for them –
than actually trying to persuade people that all is well with the world. So
long as people can be got to believe there is no viable alternative to the
present set up i.e. capitalism, most people will accept it albeit reluctantly.
To this end it is important to devise pejorative labels for political opponents
of capitalism. Once upon a time the favourite label was ‘anarchist’. Thus, for
example, Jim Larkin used to be described, in the papers of the time, as an
‘anarchist’. [This had nothing to do with Larkin’s beliefs but was probably
because some actual anarchists had been doing armed robberies and throwing
bombs elsewhere in Europe .] After the Russian
Revolution, Bolshevik or Bolshie became, for a short while, the label of
choice. Then, especially during the Cold War, it became Communist. Today it is
‘Populist’. Why?
Our rulers are aware that internationally the political
establishment, which they like to think of as ‘the centre’ is losing ground
both on its right and its left flank – to Trump and to Sanders, to Le Pen and
to Melenchon, and in Ireland to Solidarity and People Before Profit and some
left independents. They have decided to describe this phenomenon as ‘the rise
of populism’ for two main reasons. First because it suggests that the far left,
us, are some how the same as the far right, including the racist, fascist and
Nazi right like Le Pen and Golden Dawn, when in fact they are opposites and
profound enemies. The far left, especially the revolutionary left are far more
strongly opposed to the far right than are ‘the centre’ and, as history has
often shown, the establishment would prefer the victory of fascism to the
victory of real socialism. Second because it suggests that articulating the
anger of ordinary people at austerity is
‘irresponsible’. Responsible politics, implication is, involves inflicting pain
and suffering on people ‘for their own good’. Any one who suggests there may be
an alternative to cutbacks and wage restraint is irresponsibly and dangerously
raising the hopes and expectations of working class people.
While on the subject it is worth mentioning that this use of
‘populism’, borrowed from academia, is of recent origin – it has only become
prevalent in the last few years – but is now almost universal and it is used
usually without explanation and as if it were a politically neutral statement
of fact. Was this planned somewhere? I don’t know but my guess is that probably
was but it also relies on the intellectual laziness of so many journalists who
once they hear a new buzz word simply repeat it so as to seem ‘in the know’
Extremists and
moderates.
The use of the extremists versus moderates dichotomy is much
older than ‘populism’ but serves similar functions. It is VERY politically
loaded. Imagine there is a conflict - an election or a war – in Mongolia about
which you know nothing at all. Then you hear on the news that it is between the
extremist Xs and the moderate Ys. You now know immediately a) who ‘the West’
[US, NATO, EU etc] supports and b) who you are supposed to support. And these
messages have been transmitted with having to tell you directly which might
compromise the image of media ‘impartiality’.
This is not a question of logic. Was it better to be
extremely opposed to Hitler or only moderately opposed to him? But it is a
question of established usage and it works pretty effectively. To this we must
add the way in which ‘extremist’ has now come to signify terrorist and probably
Islamist terrorist. Again this is not a question of logic. Personally I am an
‘extreme’ leftist, certainly not a ‘moderate’, but I am also ‘extremely’
opposed to the use of terrorism (planting bombs etc) as a political strategy or
tactic. But logic is not the point here – that is how it is used.
Recently the left has been countering this labelling by
referring to the establishment as ‘the extreme centre’.
Radical
Another example of the insidious way in which the ruling
class is able to manipulate language to serve its purposes is provided by the
media’s use of the word ‘radical’. A radical used to refer to someone who
advocated far reaching and progressive reform or social revolution. Of course,
Conservatives and right wingers viewed radicals with contempt but the left
claimed the term with pride. There was a great radical tradition stretching
from the Levellers and the Diggers through to modern times. Tom Paine, William
Blake, Michael Davitt, Sylvia Pankhurst, James Connolly, Countess Markiewicz, Mother
Jones, Paul Robeson, Che Guevara, Aneurin Bevan, Arthur Scargill, Tony Benn
were all ‘radicals’. Eamonn McCann, Paul
Foot and John Pilger are radical journalists. Bernie Sanders, Jeremy Corbyn,
Jean-Luc Melenchon, Julio Iglesias can all be described as ‘radical’ left.
But by systematically attaching the term to Islam or Islamic
and using it in the context of terror attacks politicians and the media have
done their best to pervert and tarnish the term. It is now common to hear of
the production of guidelines to ‘spot signs of radicalism’ and programmes to ‘counter radicalisation’.
‘Moderate’ mosques and Muslim leaders are urged to ‘do more’ to combat ‘radicalism’.
Of course it would have been possible simply to urge them to combat terrorism
but using the terms ‘radicalism’ and ‘radicalisation’ creates – for our rulers
– a very useful ambiguity and amalgam.
Jobs
When it comes to legitimating the system as a whole and the
specific actions of government and businesses there is very little to compare
with the mantra of ‘Jobs!’.
Propose increasing taxes on the rich or the corporations
(Apple for example) and they will immediately scream about ‘Jobs!’ Propose
closing down any heinous institution (e.g Direct Provision) or ending any
horrible practice ( allowing the US
to use Shannon for extraordinary rendition
flights or bombing missions) and you will be met with the cry that this will
cost jobs. And in a sense it is true. If
Auschwitz was operating in Connemara, or there was a poison gas factory in Cork closing them down
would cost jobs.
But the slogan of ‘Jobs’ functions much more widely than
just as an alibi for disreputable operations. Ask any billionaire how they
justify their immense wealth and the chances are they will cite the jobs they
have created for people. Indeed if it were the case, as the capitalists claim,
that they somehow ‘create’ jobs and that without them nothing would be made or
get done at all then capitalism would indeed have found its perfect
justification as an everlasting system. Of course this is an absurd claim;
jobs, as in work that needs doing and that human beings do, existed for tens of
thousands of years before the first capitalist was ever thought of. But most of
the time most people don’t think historically or in terms of thousands of
years. Therefore, the fact that, in the immediate situation and for as long as
people can remember, the capitalist as a class have, by virtue of their
possession of the means of production, cornered the market in ‘jobs’, makes it
appear plausible that they do actually ‘create’ work for people.
Another factor in our rulers’ emphasis on jobs is that it is
precisely through employing the labour of working people – and paying them less
than the value of the goods and services they produce – that capitalists make
their profits. Thus focusing relentlessly on ‘jobs!’ enables the bosses to pass
of the very means through which they line their pockets as an act of social
benevolence.
We
The way this very simple little word is used is of crucial
importance. When it is used in political discourse by the 1% and their media
spokespersons it usually refers to the nation and its people as a whole. ‘We’
in Ireland
do this or that; we, the Irish, tend to think such and such or should do the
following. ‘We’ will be hit hard by Brexit but ‘we’ feel very close to the
Americans and so on.
Sometimes ‘we’ refers to the actions of the Irish
government, other times it used to create the impression that there is an Irish
identity or character or set of views which ‘we’ all share. This is manifestly
not the case in reality but speaking as if it were helps to reinforce the
currently dominant attitude or views which are often the views of the dominant
class, the 1%. Moreover, it tries to subsume those of us who don’t share the
dominant view or else to erase our existence.
The same practice is also adopted in relation to other
countries. It is common to hear that Germany or the Germans think
something or have said or the French have taken a certain view when in fact
what is being talked about is simply the views or actions of the German or
French Government. This is particularly misleading and ideologically loaded
given that most current governments – beginning with the Irish Government – are
actually elected by quite small minorities of their national population. For example, Trump, far from being elected by
the American people as a whole, was actually only voted for by about 20% of the
adult population.
Above all this persistent use of ‘we’ serves to mask what is
by far the deepest the division in interests and attitudes in Ireland and in every other
capitalist society –the division of class.
The public –
taxpayers, customers and workers.
In so far as differences among the people or the public are
acknowledged at all, social class, the most significant division, is barely
mentioned. Much more frequently deployed are the terms ‘taxpayer’ and ‘customer’
and the way they are used is important.
Whenever there is a proposal involving state expenditure –
for example on health, education, welfare or some other public good – the
‘taxpayer’ is sure to be invoked, or often ‘the hard pressed taxpayer’. Fair
enough you might say in that it is a matter of fact that public expenditure
must come out of taxes. But the way
in which the tax payer is invoked suggests, almost always, that there is a
special category of people who are ‘taxpayers’ as opposed to others who are not
and who are particularly imposed upon. Hear mention of ‘the taxpayer’ and there
immediately springs to mind a comfortable middle class manager with BMW and
semi in Dublin 4 who bitterly resents how much of his hard earned income goes
to bail out the indolent and feckless scroungers.
This is nonsense, of course. There is no special category of
taxpayers. Every single citizen in Ireland pays taxes in one form or
another. Even schoolchildren pay VAT on some of the things they buy. But logic
and facts count for little here – its how the term is used that matters and it
is used with the political effect of expressing the resentment of the middle
classes.
‘Customers’ are another group of people who are very much
approved of by business, politicians and the media – at least in words. Businesses
always claim to be devoted to the welfare of their customers; you would almost
think they were charities. ‘The customer is always right!’ they proclaim.
Except, of course, a business that really operated on that principle would not
last a day since ‘customers’ would be able to determine prices, if they paid at
all. Health service and transport
managers want their patients and passengers to see themselves as ‘customers’ so
as to spread the ‘business model’ of life to as many aspects of society as
possible. Everything – health, education, personal relations, sex, love, water
– should be about cash transactions, everything should be up for sale and this attitude
to life should be infiltrated into our language and our consciousness as much
as possible.
‘Customers’ really come into their own whenever there is a
strike. On thing you can be sure is that
when there is a strike the media will approach the dispute from the standpoint
of badly affected ‘customers’. If there is a strike by bus or train drivers the
media will look for stranded commuters to interview, preferably ones missing
vital appointments such as job interviews. If it is a nurses strike it will be
patients whose operations or appointments are postponed; if it is teachers then
the first port of call will be concerned parents worried about their child’s
exams or education. In this way the
strike is always seen as a ‘bad thing’ and the striking workers are always
presented as a, probably selfish, minority in contrast, not to their employers
but to the public or community as a whole. In this way the report will
invariably serve to undermine the strike and back up the position of the
employers without ever having to say this explicitly (which would compromise
the media’s image of neutrality).
In contrast to taxpayers and customers (or consumers)
workers are invoked relatively little. When they do get a positive mention from
establishment politicians it is usually in the form of ‘hard- working people
and their families’. These phrases are always loaded. It is only workers who
‘work hard’ that are wanted or deserve to be represented [NB Leo Veradkar said
this week he wanted ‘to represent people who get up early in the morning’] with
the implication there a lots of lazy workers out there who don’t merit
representation. There has always been a theme in capitalist ideology of trying to
divide the ‘deserving’ and the ‘undeserving poor’ (George Bernard Shaw wrote
about in Pygmalian) , the
‘respectable’ and the ‘unrespectable’ working class, and to set the former
against the latter. And this is always done with a high moral tone. It is never
mentioned, of course, that capitalists make more profits the harder they can
get workers to worker.
Politics and
Politicians
Most people don’t like politics or politicians. This is
perfectly understandable given the way most politicians behave and much
politics is discussed. But actually the establishment are quite happy for large
numbers of people to be turned off politics and to be apathetic and through the
media they endorse and encourage this state of affairs. One tactic used for
these purposes is to promote the idea that any really important issue should be
‘above’ or ‘outside politics’. ‘This is not about politics, this is about human
rights/justice/health/ethics/ fairness/economics/ people’s lives etc.’ Sport,
religion, art, music, poetry, are all
areas we are told ‘politics’ should kept out of. But if politics is not about
human rights/justice/health/ethics/ fairness/economics and the things that are
really important in people’s lives, then it is an entirely frivolous activity –
a kind of game being played out by small and strange group of people divided
into various rival teams who compete for the sake of it.
In reality all the most basic matters of life and death, all
the things that have the most vital effects on the lives of the mass of people
– war, peace, wealth, poverty, health, housing, education etc – are the very
stuff of politics. But if this is hidden from the mass of people and politics is presented as
just a game played by politicians, of interest only to a tiny minority, then
this enables that tiny minority to get on with organising how these issues of
life and death are handled without interference from ‘the people’.
Consciously or unconsciously this has a big influence on the
way politics is discussed in the media. It leads to a quite disproportionate
focus on the personalities of individual politicians and how they are currently
performing in the game - Veradkar v
Coveney, May v Corbyn – at the expense of discussion of actual issues. And if
ordinary people, people who are not professional politicians, try to assert
themselves politically by any more effective means than ringing Joe Duffy, this
is seen as very threatening indeed – ‘mob rule’ beckons!
I’ve been very clear
about this
The professional establishment politicians have evidently
been trained by their media and PR consultants to proclaim their own clarity on
all possible occasions, and they do so with a vengeance. ‘I’ve been clear about
this from the beginning’, ‘I want to say very clearly’, and ‘I am saying very
clearly’ and so on ad nauseam: the trouble is these proclamations are
immediately followed by statements and exclamations that are as clear as mud
and go to any length to avoid answering the question they have been asked.
This combination of self proclaimed clarity and actual lack
of clarity serves their purposes very well because, in fact they are more than
happy for the mass of people not to understand an issue being debated. They
know that if people feel that they cant understand an issue – that its ‘over
their heads’ – this will make it easier for the elites to carry on getting away
with things. Consequently politicians on talk shows and the like, faced with an
awkward question, follow the rule: talk as long as possible without drawing
breath and try to sound clever – throw in a few statistics and terms people
don’t really understand. If people don’t know what you’re talking about it
doesn’t matter, indeed it’s greatly preferable to them actually sussing what
you are up to.
Transparency
Along with ‘being clear’ another favourite buzzword of both
politicians and businesses is ‘transparency’. Everything is always supposed to
be, or more likely is going to be, ‘going forward’, transparent. We even hear that An Garda Siochana is going to be
transparent. Now, taken seriously this is just ridiculous. No police force, or
government department or business can possibly really be ‘transparent’; it
would mean having no proper security or confidentiality at all. But then it is
isn’t meant to be taken seriously because, as with An Garda Siochana, it is
used in connection with organisations and processes that are the extreme
opposite of transparent.
People say to me
One of the favourite sayings of politicians is ‘I’ve been
going round the country talking to people and what they say to me is …’
Presumably the politicians think this makes them sound in touch with the people
but what is funny is that what these people say always seems to be exactly what
the politician concerned wants to hear.
I remember Joan Burton using this device at the height of
the water charges campaign. People were marching on the streets of Ireland in their hundreds of thousands from
Letterkenny to Waterford
shouting ‘No Way, We Wont Pay!’ and ‘From the River to the Sea, Irish Water
will be Free!’. But according to Burton
what people were saying to her was‘We want clarity and certainty’. What’s not
clear and certain, you wonder, about, ‘Enda Kenny, Not a Penny!’? And of course when Joan did actually interact
with some real people they turned out to be saying something different
altogether. No doubt Theresa May is currently claiming that people are telling
her they want ‘strong and stable leadership’.
In reality politicians spend very little time ‘going round
the country talking to people’ other than to their own committed supporters and
ordinary people don’t talk in politicians’ campaign slogans. In other words
these claims are just routine lies. Actually
they along with such terms and phrases, as ‘I want to be very clear’ and ‘the
customer is always right’, are repeated
because they are familiar clichés which politicians and spokespersons think sound
good and will help to pull the wool over people’s eyes.
They are, at bottom, an expression of deep contempt for the
mass of people who they see as backward and ignorant and in need of standing up
to – they call standing up to people ‘showing leadership’ and ‘courageous’. Which
brings us back to where we started with ‘populism’. Politics is about a few serious moderate centre politicians
together with a few serious moderate
billionaires and corporations managing society on behalf of the rest of us,
because they know best after all, and everything else is just spin to keep the
masses happy. And anyone who thinks differently is probably one of those
dangerous ‘populists’.
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