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The ′shock jocks′ are in tune with the silent majority

Among the reactions to last Sunday on Cronulla beach, one was entirely predictable: blame the principal messenger. Lebanese Muslim Association president Ahmad Kamaleddine spoke for many critics when he argued that the riots had "been motivated by people on talkback radio".

Talkback has indeed come of age. It is now conceded to be, albeit grudgingly on the part of mainstream media, a significant source of news and opinion. But to declare it to be an accessory to the commission of serious breaches of the law attributes to it not only gross impropriety and possibly criminal behaviour, but also unbelievable power and influence over an allegedly gullible audience.

Talkback began to emerge as a force at precisely the same time as much of the mainstream "serious" media had found a vocation other than objective news reporting. Journalists were in the process of emerging from being largely unknown and working in a trade under close editorial supervision.

Now enjoying their new-found celebrity status, they began to offer their personal views not only on, but inextricably mixed with, the news. (Note, for instance, how many times news reporters will describe an organisation or person as "right wing" if they are conservative but insert no qualifier if they are of the Left.)

Soon, these journalists would be interpreting the events of the day according to a preconceived and generally left-wing agenda. As the doyen of Fairfax and ABC journalists David Marr argues, if a journalist does not come from a "softie Left culture", they should "get another job". This is not an isolated view. Since dispensing with the services of Gerard Henderson last June, The Age in Melbourne no longer publishes a conservative columnist on its opinion page.

In the past 10 years, the ascent of John Howard has given a new impetus and authority to talkback.

He chose not to have his words mediated and interpreted by a hostile media. Instead, through talkback radio and also breakfast television, he speaks directly to the people more often and more effectively than any other leader. Talkback was now not only reporting and commenting on the news, it was the news.

Meanwhile, the move of much of the mainstream media to left-wing campaign journalism meant that many Australians moved to talkback radio, where opinions, often robust, are largely unfiltered and where the Left′s agenda could be openly challenged.

This is what so upsets the David Marrs of the media. The elites believe that once part of their agenda is in place, it should not be reversed, and that criticism is out of bounds for any reasonable person. But while they can filter their letters columns, they just cannot control talkback.

Now among the favoured policies of the elites is the doctrine of multiculturalism. A Humpty Dumpty word, multiculturalism means whatever the user chooses it to mean, neither more nor less. If it is used in the sense requiring tolerance - and treating all Australians of whatever colour, religion or ethnic background in identical ways - then it is superfluous. Australians had already achieved that with the waves of migration after World WarII and well before they had ever heard that word, multiculturalism.

If it is used to mean that people should be classified and then advantaged or disadvantaged according to some ethnic tag, or that the essential principles and values of our Australian culture must give way, this is unacceptable to most Australians.

Australians have never agreed to this and they never would. The problem is, they have never been asked. No wonder they recorded their vehement opposition to the doctrine on one of the few places where this was tolerated: talkback radio.

When it comes to the events in Cronulla, the reality is that rank-and-file Australians have been long concerned about the problem they could see emerging, but which their state political elites refused to acknowledge. They have been raising this issue on talkback for years. They had strongly supported the Howard Government′s firm policy of border control and the return to an immigration policy based on need and assimilability. But the problem was that in NSW, the state Labor Government had abdicated its responsibilities.

Cronulla was a response whose violence must be deprecated, and was deprecated, on talkback; it was never planned, called for or condoned. But it was a response that followed the failure of NSW governments for many years to perform their most basic function: the proper provision of law and order.

This resulted from a pincer movement. On one side, there was the progressive neutering of the police, which reached its zenith just as the most violent ethnic gangs emerged. On the other side of the pincer, the criminal justice system began to demonstrate an extraordinary bias towards the accused. The resulting and often unnecessary technicalities have made it difficult to obtain and confirm a conviction, or to impose adequate punishment.

The result were increasing no-go areas across Sydney, where the criminals and the drug dealers reigned supreme. The state Government even threw in its own heroin injecting rooms. All of this was reported, discussed and almost universally condemned on talkback for years. NSW governments took little notice, apart from the ritual of an appropriate expression of indignation by the premier or some minister at a press conference timed for the evening news bulletins.

After Redfern last year and Macquarie Fields earlier this year, there was widespread indignation on talkback. The bashing of the lifesavers was the last straw. In the vacuum of law and order that Bob Carr had bequeathed to the state, the youngbloods revolted and chose the only course that seemed to be left to them: the path of the vigilante.

As the rank and file know, this will not do. Innocent victims will suffer, and law and order is the function of the state, not the vigilante. Only a policy of zero tolerance by an empowered police force and by the courts will bring the gangs to reason, and that requires not more spin, but true leadership. p>

David Flint, a former chairman of the Australian Press Council and the Australian Broadcasting Authority, is author of Twilight of the Elites and Malice in Media Land (both Freedom Publishing).


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Original piece is http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,17569271%255E7583,00.html


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