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Griffiths / When the thrill is gone, racism remains

Lonely hero… August Landmesser refusing to give the Nazi salute in a large German crowd in 1936.
Lonely hero… August Landmesser refusing to give the Nazi salute in a large German crowd in 1936.
BEING part of a large crowd baying for blood is immensely fun.

Doubt and anxiety disappear. We’re no longer scared little creatures in an uncaring universe and, suddenly, we feel powerful, part of something bigger than ourselves.

Similarly being part of an internet lynch mob is exhilarating. Even if the cause is tenuous at first, the camp followers keep dragging in more reasons to loathe the target of the hatred.

I’ve been part of both.

What I’ve never seen is the Adam Goodes abuse saga bursting out of the cliques of the AFL and into the wider consciousness as occurred this past week.

The internet hate boards fuelled the baying crowds, the crowds fuelled the righteousness of the hate boards and the next thing we know Australia was looking terrifyingly like Germany of the 1930s.

Arguably the most moving photograph of the 20th century was August Landmesser refusing to give the Nazi salute in a large German crowd in 1936.

That’s a real hero. Looking at the hysteria everyone else is tumbling into and one person saying: “Nope, not me; I’m not having a piece of this”.

As the Adam Goodes saga has unfolded sane Australians have at least not been as alone as that man was.

When Colin Barnett, the Liberal Premier of WA, is willing to call it out as racism to boo Adam Goodes by his own West Coast Eagles fans we can at least take comfort that a broad plurality of the sane citizens of this country are disgusted by this behaviour.

When the famously cautious AFL is willing to, if not call it racism, at least acknowledge there is an element of race involved, at the danger of alienating thousands of ticket-buying fans, one can begin to hope this country isn’t all that bad yet.

Because thousands of white people booing a football player for being indigenous is, let there be no doubt, unbelievably bad.

Forget any risk Islamic State poses to Australia. If our friends and allies paid enough attention to AFL to realise what was going on, this country would be facing an existential threat.

If we don’t get a grip on this garbage we could end up like South Africa in the 1980s. The crucial difference being that South Africa at that time was not surrounded by rising powers. We need friends and allies now in ways they never did.

I like a good “boo” at the footy. When I think the officials have made a bad call, when I think I’ve seen cheating or foul play, it’s fun to get involved.

To boo a player for something he did months or years ago? For standing up to racist abuse or doing an indigenous dance in an “indigenous round”?

That’s not the Australia I want to live in.

Almost as ugly as the fans has been the old white commentariat wanting to tell the indigenous man how he should respond to their racism. The bullies wanting to dictate how the bullied should respond.

It wan’t Australia’s best week. But if we take the right lessons from it some good may come.

 

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5 Responses to Griffiths / When the thrill is gone, racism remains

Moir says: 1 August 2015 at 5:17 pm

If this is racism why is the only black to be booed? Oh i know! We are not allowed to say the inconvenient truth & must paint blacks like [not-so] Goodes a victim of imaginary racism, but him bullying a 13 year old girl is fine & we absolutely must liken him to a heroic opponent of N.A.Z.I.sm. Good[es]on you lefties!!

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Steve says: 2 August 2015 at 2:03 pm

This would have to be the worst written article, on this subject, that I have read, and I’ve read a lot. Comparing us to Germany of the Nazi era is an insult, of the most obscene kind, to every AFL supporter who attends a game. The booing of Goodes isn’t just about his past behavior. It is about his ongoing behavior both on and off the field. His on field antics of playing for free kicks and his perceived preferential treatment by the umpires start the booing. His off field tactic of continuing to play the race card just incites the crown to boo more. His made-up Aboriginal war dance and his gestures towards the crowd have just inflamed the situation further. Goodes, if he looked in the mirror, would see who is responsible for this entire saga.

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Stanza Matic says: 6 August 2015 at 1:34 pm

The attempts to justify the targeting of Goodes are sickening.

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Moir says: 7 August 2015 at 5:44 pm

How is it sickening to boo a man because of his unacceptable conduct? On the contrary, it is sickening when the race card is played to stifle legitimate expressions of disgust, disaproval of or contempt for conduct unbecoming of anybody especially a highly paid public figure, and the appeal to non-existent racism that exists only in the minds of the race card players shows how pitiful & desperate they are!

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