With
thanks to Aotearoa: a Wider Perspective
Shame
is a tool of political suppresion.
by
travellerev
4
June, 2012
"As
long as people have the strength to fight for human dignity in an age
of austerity, a poorer, meaner society, a society built on shame, may
yet be held at bay” -- Laurie Penny.
I
have long argued that New Zealanders use the weapon of shame with
incredible skill. It is used to beat single mums, people who are in
need of aid of any kind and those who stand up against unfairness in
the system.
What
most Kiwi's don't seem to get is that is just how the system likes
it.
The
system needs talk show hosts who rip into beneficiaries who have the
temerity to want a child, or a single mum who wants an education so
she can better herself. The system needs Shame in order to stop
people from asking questions, from saying no to the system when taxes
are raised and benefits are cut.
Laura
Penny makes an excellent and eloquent case for the use of what I
might term Toxic shame and the use of it as a weapon of political
suppression:
When
someone starts talking about "political violence", you
usually know what that means. It means nightsticks, kettling and riot
cops massing in the streets like giant beetles. It means young men in
face-rags throwing sticks and grown men on horses trampling them
underfoot. We know how the story goes by now. People come out on the
streets to protest against austerity. Police come out on the streets
to stop them, armed with a variety of hastily concocted anti-dissent
laws and the latest in crowd-control technology. Protesters get
angry, police get violent, and people get hurt.
This
week in Montreal, reporting on student demonstrations over tuition
hikes much like those that shook Britain in 2010, I had a perfectly
quotidian chat about the privatisation of education with a young man
who happened to have lost an eye to a plastic bullet in a protest not
two weeks before. This is the new normal wherever enforced austerity
meets public dissent. Rinse off the blood and repeat.
There
is, however, another kind of political violence, and it's much more
insidious. It's shame. When single mother Shanene Thorpe was
interviewed by BBC's Newsnight last week, she was expecting an honest
conversation about coming cuts to housing benefit. Instead,
interviewer Allegra Stratton challenged her "choice" not to
live in her mother's spare room and, according to Thorpe, asked her
whether she thought she should have aborted her daughter.
Like
many other people on housing benefit, Thorpe is employed, but relies
on the subsidy because her salary is too low to cope with soaring
London rents. This wasn't mentioned in the interview. Instead, Thorpe
was squeezed into a familiar caricature: the shameless benefit
scrounger, explaining her decision to sponge off the state.
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