
Clive Hamilton is again posing as a lonely truth-teller on the left, railing against cowards and apologists. His聽hit-piece聽fingers Gerald Roche and me as Chinese Communist Party (CCP) dupes who 鈥渟ide with the persecutors鈥 and use 鈥渞ace-reductionism鈥 to brand critics of Beijing as racist.
Characteristically, his case is light on evidence. In fact, he hasn鈥檛 cited a single thing that I have written.
I will happily set my record as a critic of Beijing鈥檚 policies alongside Hamilton鈥檚. As a聽聽of Xinjiang, I聽听补苍诲听聽on the crisis there regularly, and my聽聽engages much more seriously with the repression in Xinjiang and Hong Kong than either of his two works.
Hamilton might not be a racist bigot, but I have always held that his exaggerated 鈥渟ilent invasion鈥 narrative was likely to generate suspicion and racist hostility towards Chinese Australians. His paranoia, let us remember, extends as far as聽聽at the Australian Defence Force Academy.
A rise in anti-Chinese racism has聽, and Hamilton wants to duck any accountability for his role. As he sees it, this has been 鈥渢riggered largely by COVID-19鈥.
That will be news to Asian Australians who face聽聽of spying for Beijing when they enter public life. But even to say that racism has been 鈥渢riggered鈥 by COVID-19 is evasive. Can this 鈥渢riggering鈥 really be so easily divorced from the hunt for CCP 鈥渓inks鈥 that Hamilton has long engaged in, or dubious theories like聽听辞苍听Sky News?
When a man stood outside the People鈥檚 Republic of China consulate in Sydney,聽聽鈥淵ou fucking knew about it, it鈥檚 your plan鈥 at those lining up, was this to do with COVID-19, or a view of Chinese people as all in some way tied to the CCP? Clearly, it was a toxic mix of both.
Maintaining his denials, Hamilton makes a predictable move to absolve himself of any taint of racism: there are Chinese Australians who share his views.
He is right about this. He is quite wrong, though, when he claims that I 鈥渙bliterate the wide political, economic, cultural, linguistic and ethnic differences within the diasporic community in Australia鈥.
Among critics of the CCP in the Chinese diaspora, there are聽a diversity of views: there are leftists, there are liberals and then there are those who have taken a sharp rightward turn in the age of Donald Trump.
It is Hamilton who is obliterating difference here, by presenting one particular circle of dissidents 鈥 those who support him 鈥 as the sole authentic voice of opposition to the CCP.聽
Hamilton claims I am 鈥渟ilent鈥 on these particular Chinese Australians. On the contrary, I discussed them in my聽听辞蹿听Silent Invasion. There, I said that聽Hamilton鈥檚 allies in the聽聽(AVA) espouse 鈥渁 love-it-or-leave-it brand of Australian patriotism, which, predictably enough, leads in the direction of apologies for Australian racism鈥. I stand by that.
, AVA President Feng Chongyi recently held a conference in Canberra where he聽聽as聽pointing the way forward on China.
Hamilton spoke alongside Liberal Senator聽Eric Abetz, notorious for his聽聽of Chinese Australians (), as well as Liberal National Party MP George Christensen, possibly聽聽in the country.
Railing against 鈥渋deological purity,鈥 Hamilton feigns ignorance of any choices for the left here, urging us to simply join him on his hawkish bandwagon.
But while support for United States militarism from a section of the Chinese diaspora might be understandable, it is not something that progressives can invoke as an alibi for their own rightward lurch.
From the very beginning, Hamilton鈥檚 stance on China has led him to make common cause with the hard right. Witness, for example, his聽鈥聽of Chinese Australians with right-wing columnist Andrew Bolt, a man who counts the number of Chinese-born people in Australia to聽.
Hamilton鈥檚 own rhetoric, sad to say, has not been much different. When a business association in Fujian Province held an聽聽in the Northern Territory, he聽: 鈥淏eijing is encouraging migration to northern Australia to populate it with people who鈥檒l promote [the] CCP鈥檚 strategic power program of One Belt, One Road.鈥
Was this flight of old-school yellow peril 鈥渢riggered鈥 by COVID-19?
In responding to China, Hamilton exhibits a familiar聽modus operandi: identify a problem; push for punitive solutions that empower the Australian state; and throw principles to the wind in seeking allies.
Think back to his campaign against pornography, in which he聽聽and collaborated with the聽听补苍诲听. His proposal to filter the web reflected the same authoritarian mindset that we see today in his call, for example, to deny residency to any Chinese student who is identified as actively pro-Beijing.
It鈥檚 not Roche and I, but Hamilton who is abandoning 鈥渂asic principles that progressives have always defended鈥. The course he is聽advocating will not do anything to defend democratic rights in Australia, nor will it help anyone in China. We are hardly going to be in a position to oppose Beijing鈥檚 treatment of ethnic minorities as a subversive fifth column if we are doing the same thing to Chinese Australians.
What we need is an internationalist alternative that combines solidarity with victims of repression in China with opposition to racism and warmongering at home.
I am sure Hamilton will scoff at that. The rest of us should just get on with it.
[David聽Brophy聽is senior lecturer in modern Chinese history at the University of Sydney.]