Tim Wilson
Auckland, March 3, 2022
In our country, division is the motif of the moment.
Protesters remain camped outside of Parliament, ignored by many leading politicians.
When Wellington Mayor Andy Foster spoke with them last week, some Councillors labelled this natural and civil act as ‘dangerous.’
Economic uncertainty produced by Covid plays a role.
Omicron is acknowledged to be less deadly than Delta, but the fiscal effect seems equally chilling. Exacerbated by a rampaging real-estate market that in some areas rose by 20% in a year, the class divide has been labelled a ‘chasm.’
Small businesses are under increasing pressure, particularly hospitality and tourism.
Deafening silence
Recently I was in Queenstown for business. One of only three guests in a 52-room hotel, I was the sole breakfast diner. The clink of my spoon on the bowl in the abandoned dining room was deafening.
Even more noisy is the language of division, which has crowded our public square.
The phrase ‘anti-vax’ has become a catchall code word, and dismissal. Recipients of this epithet are anti-science, anti-Semitic, white supremacist, foul, violent, in the words one politician, ‘a river of filth.’ The great benefit of using this very baggy term is freedom to misunderstand those it is being used to describe.
Note: This mode was already present. Consider the charges that typically follow: ‘All men…’
The assumption is similar: males think and act the same way.
While convenient, it is not true.
Assumed homogeneity
Assumed homogeneity amongst the protesters is also incorrect. A recent poll of them indicates that while they have been accused of being anti-vax (three quarters are not vaxxed), overwhelmingly they are protesting the mandates.
Almost half are Labour or Green Party voters; more than a quarter voted for National or ACT in the last election. Surprised?
Data can be clarifying; so how our institutions explain us to ourselves becomes crucial. Politicians who fret about division need to do less ‘Phooey!’ and more hui. Mainstream news is welcome to its headlines, but also needs to supply the kind of texture that the quoted poll gives.
Fortunately, one institution is leading the way.
Prudent Police Commissioner
While Police Commissioner Andrew Coster has attracted criticism for being soft, in fact he deserves praise. De-escalation has been the Police’s model, as well as dialogue.
Commissioner Coster has acted with prudence and graciousness in the face of a probity vacuum from many political leaders. The strategy has not always worked out, but without this mode, the situation may well have worsened (as it did overseas).
Might the same apply to our own lives? Have you fallen out with a family member over mandates or vaccines? Perhaps it might pay to give them a call. And please, put away the divisive language and dramatic narratives, as cheaply satisfying as they may be. Civility goes a long way. It is all very well to wag a finger at our leaders but dealing with division starts at ground level.
Yes, we are at odds. Yes, we are angry. Let us break the cycle. Talking may be well dangerous; not talking at all is certainly terminal.
Tim Wilson is Executive Director of Maxim Institute based in Auckland.