We need to talk about ideas, good ones and bad ones.
Speaker:We need to learn stuff about the world.
Speaker:We need an honest, intelligent, thought provoking and entertaining
Speaker:review of what the hell happened on this planet in the last seven days.
Speaker:We need to sit back and listen.
Speaker:To the iron pest and the velvet
Speaker:glove.
Speaker:Ciaron, thanks for agreeing to do this interview.
Speaker:Um, by way of background for the people listening, uh, we actually
Speaker:went to the same high school together.
Speaker:I was about four years after you, and I remember seeing you walking the, the
Speaker:playground, tall, lanky, big mop of hair.
Speaker:Even in those days, you were already protesting as a high school student.
Speaker:You were sort of in the media.
Speaker:and things at that time you're known as a protester.
Speaker:Yeah, well my last year at high school was when the Queensland government suspended
Speaker:civil liberties, so, and um, that just happened to be converging with a large
Speaker:anti nuclear movement throughout Western Europe and North America, and the response
Speaker:to that in Australia was an anti uranium.
Speaker:mining and export movement.
Speaker:So we began blockading the wharf when I was at high school and then Bioka
Speaker:Peterson suspended all street marches and gatherings of three or more people and
Speaker:handing out leaflets and all that stuff.
Speaker:So, um, My initial arrest at school, there were 418 of us arrested, uh,
Speaker:including, um, the lead guitarist of the Saints and, um, Ed Cooper and the
Speaker:lead guitarist of the Go Betweens, Grant McLennan, and a lot of other good people.
Speaker:You're in good company.
Speaker:And you were still at high school when you
Speaker:got arrested for the first time.
Speaker:Yeah, well, yeah, I, um...
Speaker:You know, just where we're here doing this interview, um, is where I grew
Speaker:up and we literally share a back fence with the military, uh, it's now called
Speaker:Gallipoli Barracks, and the Aboriginal word Anogra, uh, it's a suburb.
Speaker:And, um, so, you know, the sound of gunfire and helicopters going over the
Speaker:house, it was, um, part of growing up during the Vietnam War here in the 60s
Speaker:and 70s, so that was quite an audio backdrop, and a lot of the kids at my
Speaker:primary school, parents would have been in the military at that stage, and,
Speaker:um, And then also my father was very much an Irish Republican Socialist,
Speaker:I guess, and a very good singer.
Speaker:So, we were brought up with a lot of rebel songs and
Speaker:then...
Speaker:So, around the dinner table when you were growing up, was he quite strong
Speaker:on advocating for the sort of causes that you ended up getting involved in?
Speaker:Well, his father was a member of the IRA and, um, arrested during...
Speaker:The War of Independence, uh, and accused of killing a British soldier and then
Speaker:released with the treaty, and then during the Civil War in Ireland, he
Speaker:had to do a run at a Canada, and he got picked up crossing the Canadian border.
Speaker:And he ended up in jail in Auburn in New York, that I kind
Speaker:of ended up in 70 years later.
Speaker:Um, before being deported back to Ireland and Mountjoy Prison in Dublin.
Speaker:Um, so that was a very celebrated legacy in the family.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And my father was raised by his maternal grandparents who were big fans of
Speaker:James Connolly, who was not only an Irish Republican, but a socialist.
Speaker:And um, so, you know, when I was about eight or nine years of age, uh, the
Speaker:war in the north of Ireland kicked off again, um, following the repression
Speaker:of the civil rights movement and provisional IRA developed, et cetera.
Speaker:So, um, it was...
Speaker:Quite an intense, you know, what was happening in Belfast and Derry were
Speaker:more present to us than what was happening in Vietnam, which ironically
Speaker:was happening from behind our house.
Speaker:And um, my mother had three uncles who went through the base
Speaker:behind our house to World War I.
Speaker:One who was at Gallipoli, um, one who came back quite PTSD and lived for another
Speaker:40 years without contact in the family.
Speaker:Uh, so there's kind of a rich kind of history.
Speaker:And then we're going to school in the valley, which was a
Speaker:red light district at St.
Speaker:James, located there, Christian Brothers School.
Speaker:And then a lot of the police corruption was very overt in the
Speaker:valley with the prostitution and the gambling, which is now quite legal.
Speaker:But back then it was a source of, um, Police corruption
Speaker:and, and organized crime.
Speaker:So you are a bit of a product of your environment and your
Speaker:culture from your early days.
Speaker:It was, because most people, you know, I would have at least been
Speaker:terrified at the prospect of being arrested as, as a, as a teenager.
Speaker:So, you know, I look at it and think, well, you were quite brave and courageous
Speaker:and fearless to be prepared to do that.
Speaker:But I guess you were mixing in a circle, or you had family stories that made that
Speaker:a bit more commonplace than most people?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I guess I always viewed political activism in Queensland as a body
Speaker:contact sport, you know, and I'd grown up playing a lot of soccer,
Speaker:football, so I was used to body contact.
Speaker:But um, it was quite brutal.
Speaker:Uh, a Queensland police force and quite amateurish.
Speaker:Um, I was beaten up my first week at university and framed with assault.
Speaker:And the guy who beat me up was John Frederick Johnson of the Consorting Squad.
Speaker:And, you know, the Consorting Squad were a squad supposed to
Speaker:consort with criminals and...
Speaker:And he eventually got three years...
Speaker:He got sentenced to three years in prison by the end of that year.
Speaker:Um...
Speaker:And, and he beat you up, like he arrested you and beat you
Speaker:up, or he just found you in a...
Speaker:He beat me up,
Speaker:then he arrested me.
Speaker:I mean, on other occasions I've been arrested, then beaten up in the wash
Speaker:house, but this time it was on TV footage and everything, and um, and yeah, and
Speaker:then they charge, but when they beat you up, they usually charge you with assault
Speaker:to justify if any footage has been caught as a response, and I was very skinny, um.
Speaker:Kid, as you remember.
Speaker:And, uh, so yeah, that, that, uh, was, yeah, I was only 17 when that happened,
Speaker:so.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:So, just, um, just reading from the Wikipedia page on you here, um,
Speaker:yes, you took part in the, uh, civil rights protests against the Premier,
Speaker:Joe Bidjoy Peterson, in the 80s.
Speaker:And you came into contact with the Catholic Worker movement, and you
Speaker:subsequently founded Brisbane's West End Catholic Worker community.
Speaker:Yeah, we founded the Catholic Worker and West End in 1982, and prior
Speaker:to that, a group of us who were at Griffith University were developing
Speaker:an interest in the fusion, um, of Christianity, anarchism and pacifism.
Speaker:And I guess at that point we were...
Speaker:Quite influenced by an academic out there, Brian Laver, who had been like, one of the
Speaker:student leaders of the 1960s in Australia.
Speaker:And he was a libertarian socialist and had a radical critique of Marxism.
Speaker:Um, and then, during that period, we stumped, you know, we thought
Speaker:that we'd, uh, come up with this.
Speaker:Uh, intersection between Christianity, anarchism, and pacifism.
Speaker:Then we heard about Leo Tolstoy, read him.
Speaker:Then we stumbled across Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement
Speaker:that was actually putting this philosophy into practice since
Speaker:the 1930s in the United States.
Speaker:So we wrote to them, different communities over there, started swapping newsletters,
Speaker:and then we thought, oh, we'll open a house for Aboriginal street kids.
Speaker:And we'd had contact with, uh, there was a radical nun on the West End who
Speaker:was raising four Aboriginal children.
Speaker:And, um, I had contact with her, Cass Dawson, since I was at high school,
Speaker:and it just became very obvious that Aboriginal people were living in
Speaker:a parallel universe in Queensland.
Speaker:Until I was 8, it was illegal for an Aboriginal to vote in an election.
Speaker:Until I was 13, it was illegal to cohabitate with a Native
Speaker:under the Vagrancy Act.
Speaker:And, um, so it became...
Speaker:And my father had always drummed into us, you know, what's happened
Speaker:to the Aboriginal people in Australia, what's happened to
Speaker:the Irish in Ireland, and, um...
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:which a lot of Irish...
Speaker:Don't make that connection can be quite racist, you know?
Speaker:You know, I've never heard the connection myself until
Speaker:just now go colonized people.
Speaker:We've been colonized 800 years.
Speaker:So, you know, the term paddywagon is like nigga wagon.
Speaker:It's like bandwagon.
Speaker:It's an innately racist term, , but it's so mainstream.
Speaker:Even the left in Australia use the term paddywagon, you know, so, yes.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So, um, So, let me see here, um, you were looking to address youth homelessness
Speaker:among the Aboriginal community, and you described the Catholic Worker Movement
Speaker:as comprised of three practices, um, in order to constitute a life of
Speaker:integrity, according to this Wikipedia page anyway, correct me if it's wrong,
Speaker:um, one is living in intentional community, the second is practicing the
Speaker:works of mercy, and the third is non violent prophetic witness, so, um, And
Speaker:you aim to enact this through living in community with the poor, uh, prison
Speaker:visitation and direct action against war.
Speaker:So in your early days, you sort of came up with that philosophy of life as what
Speaker:your guiding principles were going to be?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I guess, yeah, I would probably say prophetic resistance and, um...
Speaker:And, and looking, you know, at the early church before it got co
Speaker:opted by the Roman Empire as these kind of autonomous, relatively
Speaker:autonomous, utopian communities.
Speaker:And, um, and then also discovering the contemporary people who are
Speaker:still alive at that point, Dorothy Day and the two radical priests,
Speaker:Philip and Daniel Berrigan.
Speaker:Who led the draft board raid movement of the 1960s during the
Speaker:Vietnam War in the United States.
Speaker:So, they were kind of role models for us and um, so we began living
Speaker:off the grid together in West End.
Speaker:Our living out of baking bread, making candles and soap and um, homemade
Speaker:beer, and um, then inviting into that community, well primarily it was
Speaker:Aboriginal street kids, but we also had a few people released from Bogger
Speaker:Road as well, and um, and we would, we ourselves would, would be put into
Speaker:Bogger Road for like, being arrested for free speech, um, violations and, uh,
Speaker:blockading nuclear warships and stuff.
Speaker:So, and when they put us in Bogle Road, they put us in with the lifers
Speaker:and the heavies to scare us, but we eventually got on quite well with
Speaker:them and, um, we helped start, uh, the radio show on 4 Triple Z Prisoners
Speaker:Program that's still going, I think.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So...
Speaker:That was a lot of good interaction with the prison scene,
Speaker:and um...
Speaker:So, if you're entering, so Boggo Road, dear listener, if you're not familiar
Speaker:with Brisbane, was sort of a notorious old style prison, and um, it has a reputation
Speaker:that it was very rough, and, and, but you're, really the hardcore prisoners,
Speaker:are you saying, treated you not too badly?
Speaker:Is that what you're saying?
Speaker:Um...
Speaker:So, usually the chaotic factor in any prison is young people proving themselves,
Speaker:you know, people who are established or serious criminals, they just want to get
Speaker:out of that environment back to whatever.
Speaker:Anyway, um, so the chaotic factor is usually young people and, uh,
Speaker:And Bogger Road was largely staffed, there was a lot of ex British
Speaker:military, uh, with crews there.
Speaker:And a lot of them had done, a substantial number of them had done tours of
Speaker:Northern Ireland and the British Army, so they didn't like my name for a start.
Speaker:And um, yeah, so there was a lot of interesting interactions and uh, I was
Speaker:actually in there in 88 when the guys were on the roof, uh, which led to the
Speaker:Kennedy Inquiry that closed the jail.
Speaker:So we were able to do a lot of solidarity work and, uh, we were
Speaker:kind of well respected by people, um, who were active inside the jail.
Speaker:So you
Speaker:took this as an opportunity.
Speaker:to do more of the work that you were aiming to do anyway.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:It's just another
Speaker:environment.
Speaker:Yeah, it was quite funny in 88, um, we're, after the guys were on the
Speaker:roof, we were back in and we're in the maximum security area in the
Speaker:old jail that's still standing.
Speaker:And this guy we knew is now dead now, Gary Gray, that he'd been on the roof and,
Speaker:um, They came up, approached us about, they were planning an escape, you know,
Speaker:and they, they'd managed to saw through the bars in their own cells and get into
Speaker:one guy's cell, which was near the wall.
Speaker:And they asked if we would help them with this escape.
Speaker:So me and this other Catholic worker, we said, Oh, can you give us five minutes?
Speaker:I'm all trapped in this small yard.
Speaker:And I said, yeah.
Speaker:So I went over and said, look, went back to him and said, look, if you
Speaker:can commit to non violence, we know you're not pacifists, they're like
Speaker:armed robbers and So the length of your escape attempt, then we'll help you, and
Speaker:they're like, yeah, we'll be non violent.
Speaker:So, okay, okay.
Speaker:So we told them where our car was and where they could hide out and come up
Speaker:as soon as we were released and give them some money and clothing and stuff.
Speaker:And, uh, we stayed up selling the rosary for a safe escape.
Speaker:And, and, but we, about three in the morning we heard screams and they were
Speaker:getting bashed and they got caught.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, uh, that was interesting extension of the X mas, you know,
Speaker:and, uh, Preach liberty to the captives and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:so, um, Joby, Jockey Peterson, um, your time in Boggo Road,
Speaker:uh, you know, Brisbane, a bit too small for you at that point.
Speaker:You were ready to spread your wings and head to America to look around and
Speaker:see the rest of the world.
Speaker:Yeah, well, I felt, you know, in an old Catholic term, it was a vocation
Speaker:that I wanted to do this for life.
Speaker:And I really felt in some ways I was leading the group.
Speaker:And Brisbane, I was the youngest, I was only 22, 23.
Speaker:So I felt the need to go and live with some elders and, and
Speaker:get advice about how do you make this a lifelong thing, you know?
Speaker:So, um, initially I went over, and 87, I also had wanted to do a plowshares
Speaker:action in the United States, because I saw that as the central empire
Speaker:in the world, um, and that, um,
Speaker:So you went to the States in about late 80s, 89?
Speaker:I went for 87 and, um, I was, uh, visited a number of communities.
Speaker:I was in a plowshares group preparing to do an action.
Speaker:And then, um, I came back, uh, a romance was falling apart.
Speaker:So I kind of came back suddenly here.
Speaker:And then 88, which was a bicentenary, which is when the guys were on the roof of
Speaker:the jail and the nuclear warship visits.
Speaker:And then I, that's when I got my last haircut, I think, in Bogger Road there.
Speaker:And then I went back in 89, um, with Moana Cole, who I'd met here.
Speaker:And, uh, we visited a number of communities and worked with
Speaker:communities, and then we...
Speaker:We're part of a ploughshares process that went for about 11
Speaker:months.
Speaker:Yep, so any initial, can you remember any initial things that struck you
Speaker:on the difference when you moved to America with the communities?
Speaker:So the, from the poor, you know, Aboriginal communities you're dealing
Speaker:with in West End to the, to the poor.
Speaker:Black and, I guess, Hispanic communities you might have
Speaker:been dealing with in America?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I think, well, a couple of differences about America.
Speaker:America is probably the only, for what it's worth, church
Speaker:going part of the First World.
Speaker:Western Europe is largely post belief.
Speaker:You know, there's about a million practicing Anglicans in England
Speaker:who are mostly English and a million practicing Roman Catholics
Speaker:who are mostly not English.
Speaker:And then there's probably more, more practicing Muslims and
Speaker:Christians in England now and stuff.
Speaker:Um, so it's a big, you know, when you speak with language of faith
Speaker:in America, you're still in the mainstream, where you have to speak
Speaker:that way here on the left or whatever.
Speaker:You see, you know, you've kind of marginalized quite quickly.
Speaker:So that was interesting.
Speaker:The intent's different.
Speaker:Differences between poverty and wealth in the States is mind blowing.
Speaker:Yeah, the inequality.
Speaker:Yeah, and the lack of health care.
Speaker:And the AIDS thing was just really kicking off in a big way
Speaker:then, and the crack epidemic.
Speaker:And it's just a much bigger scene than Brisbane, you know, and uh, as is London.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:so you were mentored or you're seeking some mentoring from Daniel
Speaker:Berrigan and Philip, who are they?
Speaker:Yeah, I'd met
Speaker:Daniel in Melbourne, um, Daniel.
Speaker:He joined the Jesuits at 16.
Speaker:He was quite a celebrated poet in the 1950s.
Speaker:He was part of the Kennedy circle, President Kennedy, and his
Speaker:brother Philip had gone to war.
Speaker:He was in the Battle of the Bulge, killed a lot of people in his late teens and
Speaker:saw a lot of death and he came back and joined the He actually, when he came back,
Speaker:he went to college at GI Bill, and he shared a room with John Cusack's father
Speaker:for three years thereafter, and that's how John Cusack's kind of connected with us.
Speaker:And, um, so...
Speaker:What advice did they have for you, because you were
Speaker:looking for advice Josephite order, which was working with black Americans, and
Speaker:he was influenced in Louisiana by Martin Luther King's movement, and then they...
Speaker:Then brought that kind of experience to the anti war movement and they broke into
Speaker:a draft board, nine Catholics, called the Catonsville Nine, and um, it was a kind of
Speaker:iconic photograph from the Vietnam period of them burning draft cards with homemade
Speaker:napalm on the front page of Time magazine.
Speaker:So it was that significant, quite centrally placed in the 50 million
Speaker:Catholics in the United States.
Speaker:And then the FBI had a meeting in Nixon and they effectively marginalized
Speaker:them in a very similar way that Julian Assange has gone from front page of Time
Speaker:magazine to, you know, rarely being seen.
Speaker:Um, so they, they were the first ones who really introduced me to the scripture.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:And they were part of Ploughshares,
Speaker:was it?
Speaker:They, well, following the resistance of the Vietnam War, which was largely
Speaker:breaking into draft boards and destroying draft files, uh, in the late 70s
Speaker:and 80s, they began to beat swords into Ploughshares, literally break
Speaker:into companies that are developing nuclear weapons systems and military
Speaker:bases, and with hammers, disable.
Speaker:Those
Speaker:weapon systems.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So, Plowshares is a reference to the biblical prophecy of Isaiah, Chapter 2.
Speaker:And Micah, Chapter 4.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Which says, They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and
Speaker:their spears into pruning hooks.
Speaker:Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither
Speaker:shall they learn war any more.
Speaker:So, taking swords and converting into weapons.
Speaker:Agricultural Implements Plowshares movement.
Speaker:That's correct, yeah.
Speaker:And so you, you became a member of the ANZUS plowshares.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:sewage plowshares.
Speaker:It's like each Catholic working community is autonomous.
Speaker:So four of us, uh, grouped together, two Americans, Moana, who's from
Speaker:New Zealand, and myself, and we just called ourselves the ANZUS Plowshares.
Speaker:And we prepared to break into a B 52 bomber base as America was gearing
Speaker:up to bombing Iraq in the late 1990s.
Speaker:So you became aware of the bombers that were out there?
Speaker:Griffis Air Force Base?
Speaker:Yeah, there
Speaker:had been a plowshares action earlier there when they were being made nuclear
Speaker:capable in the late 80s, and we knew some of the people involved with that, and
Speaker:we also had, uh, Peter DeMott now, he's passed away, he was a Vietnam veteran,
Speaker:his, his job I think was guarding B 52s in Vietnam, but uh, he had access
Speaker:to the base, uh, being a veteran.
Speaker:Ah, right.
Speaker:So we had a lot of intel and, uh...
Speaker:Okay, because as I'm reading about your exploits there, I'm
Speaker:thinking, how did you pull this off?
Speaker:I mean, you would normally consider these things to be, you know, so unsecured.
Speaker:Impenetrable.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So that's, you know, what we say is, the actions show the weapons aren't
Speaker:secure and they don't secure us.
Speaker:And, um, yeah, so, You know, other groups have got even more hardened
Speaker:sites and, uh, yeah, we just did our homework, said our prayers.
Speaker:We did surveillance of the base, we'd stay out overnight outside the base and time
Speaker:security vehicles and stuff like that.
Speaker:But it was high risk that we could have been shot.
Speaker:So, for those who don't know, um, after cutting through several fences, Bill
Speaker:and Sue entered a deadly force area and hammered and poured blood on a KC 135, a
Speaker:refuelling plane, and then proceeded to hammer and pour blood on the engine of a
Speaker:nearby cruise missile armed B 52 bombers, or bomber that could be used in Iraq,
Speaker:and then somewhere else, simultaneously, You and Cole, is that, is that Moana?
Speaker:Moana, Cole, yeah.
Speaker:Entered the base at the opposite end of the runway and made a sign of
Speaker:the cross with blood on the runway.
Speaker:Spray painted, love your enemies, Jesus Christ.
Speaker:Um, and you hammered upon the railway, chipping at two sections,
Speaker:one being nearly five feet in diameter, before you were detained.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So a month before we had broken in, but we couldn't get to the B 52.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And we broke out and kind of went on the run for a month, and then we went back
Speaker:on New Year's Day, which was a good day.
Speaker:Time to do it.
Speaker:And, uh, which was about 14 days before the war was launched.
Speaker:And, uh, this time we decided rather than going collectively, we'd split up.
Speaker:Give yourself two different options.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so you must have been there quite a while.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Like Bill and Sue were arrested, I think, within four or five
Speaker:minutes after doing the disabling.
Speaker:And we were out there for an hour.
Speaker:Like, um, it was dawn.
Speaker:It was winter.
Speaker:It's heavy snow.
Speaker:And we could see security vehicles whizzing around the perimeter road.
Speaker:So when we saw them, we'd put our hammers down so they wouldn't
Speaker:think they were firearms.
Speaker:Held up a banner, but they just kept going and they were like detaining
Speaker:joggers jogging past the base.
Speaker:Then eventually, the daily, the air traffic controller of the base drives
Speaker:up checking for debris, basically.
Speaker:And, um, and that's when we were discovered.
Speaker:We invited him to join us, but he wasn't up for
Speaker:it really.
Speaker:And so you got about 12 months in
Speaker:prison for that?
Speaker:Yeah, so there was a debate between the Air Force and the Prosecution Department.
Speaker:The Air Force one was charged with sabotage and two of our people were
Speaker:sentenced to 18 years for sabotage.
Speaker:I think about five received sentences of eight years.
Speaker:And the Prosecution Department...
Speaker:I think they thought the war wasn't going to go as well for the United States as
Speaker:it did, and thought by the time we came to trial there'd be anti war feeling.
Speaker:And also they had prosecuted the previous Plowshares group at that base on sabotage,
Speaker:and they had successfully argued that the B 52 isn't innately offensive, not a
Speaker:defensive weapon, so sabotage is about.
Speaker:affecting the national defense.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And B 52s, well, the opening shots of the first Gulf War were eight B 52s took
Speaker:off from Louisiana, flew the longest combat mission ever flown, fired 35
Speaker:air launched cruise missiles at high priority targets, and flew back and
Speaker:refueled four times, where KC 135s.
Speaker:And then B 52s went to drop 30 percent of everything that was
Speaker:dropped in the first Gulf War.
Speaker:Um, that was equivalent to eight Hiroshima's and the B 52's from our base,
Speaker:the ones that were still operative, were moved to England and they bombed daily.
Speaker:Napalm, fuel explosives, cluster bombs.
Speaker:So, um, but ours didn't fly for, for that whole period, in the
Speaker:garage or whatever.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And so prison in America, you'd been to prison in Australia on many occasions.
Speaker:Was there any?
Speaker:Differences or how did that?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I guess we were assuming we'd get three to five years.
Speaker:So we've got one year.
Speaker:It was quite a pleasant surprise.
Speaker:And then also assumed that I'd be doing my time in a penitentiary
Speaker:in the northeast and playing bocce ball with them after or whatever.
Speaker:But, um, they put.
Speaker:Put me on Conair, and they flew me to Oklahoma, which is the central hub.
Speaker:So Conair goes out northwest, northeast loops, southwest, southeast, brings
Speaker:people to this penitentiary in Oklahoma, and then designates you.
Speaker:So from there, they flew me to El Paso on the Mexican border, and then they shipped
Speaker:me Uh, about eight hours, I think, into the outback to a little place called
Speaker:Paikos, which was a county jail, and there were 24 of us in a cage, and six
Speaker:cages welded together, and 16 hours a day, those six cage doors were open, so I was
Speaker:effectively in a room of, you know, 140 men, and I was the only, uh, white boy in
Speaker:the jail for most of the time, uh, so it was 500 Mexicans and 50 of us who weren't
Speaker:Mexican, including about 25 Africans and Jamaicans and a few Filipinos.
Speaker:And, and was there a reason why they shipped you all the way over there?
Speaker:They generally have a policy in the States called diesel therapy, which is...
Speaker:to keep political prisoners on the move or geographically isolated.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And, um, they achieved that.
Speaker:Like, all my connects were really in the northeast.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Uh, west coast a little bit.
Speaker:But, uh, yeah, I didn't know anyone in Texas.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I didn't get visited for three months.
Speaker:And then, um...
Speaker:And did, so you...
Speaker:Again, it's so courageous to, to be prepared to do that exercise thinking
Speaker:you're going to get three to five years.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:it's a sense...
Speaker:I remember I was, like, handcuffed.
Speaker:They were taking me in my first quarter, for instance, here in New York.
Speaker:And the television crew were there, and they shoved this mic in front of
Speaker:my face and said, Are you prepared to go to jail to stop this war?
Speaker:And I'm, like, handcuffed, and I said, Well, I guess I haven't
Speaker:got any choice now, you know?
Speaker:So it was just, like...
Speaker:You know, and a sense of abandonment.
Speaker:And, um, there's footage of me on YouTube being interviewed from the jail in Texas.
Speaker:And I, you know, I haven't been drinking.
Speaker:I've been exercising every day.
Speaker:I look, I look quite healthy.
Speaker:And, but it was a pretty stressful environment.
Speaker:Um hmm.
Speaker:Uh, you know, some really real brutality, uh,
Speaker:there.
Speaker:And were you a victim of that or were you just an observer?
Speaker:Ah,
Speaker:Initially, no one would eat with me.
Speaker:It's really interesting.
Speaker:Um, so I ended up eating with about ten transsexual prostitutes.
Speaker:So I used to have breakfast with them.
Speaker:And, um...
Speaker:People are quite willing to do other stuff with them, but not eat
Speaker:with them, which, when you look at scripture, it's quite interesting who
Speaker:you're allowed to eat with, who Jesus eats with, and the kind of laws he's
Speaker:breaking there, or cultural codes.
Speaker:Um, you know, I was on the only African soccer team in the jail.
Speaker:There were about seven Mexican teams, one African team.
Speaker:So whenever we played, there'd be like 400 Mexican screaming racists, as you said.
Speaker:So it was very atmospheric.
Speaker:Um, and you know, there were times when...
Speaker:They just ethnically cleansed the wing of any black people by just bashing them.
Speaker:And as soon as something like that would kick off, the guards would
Speaker:disappear and they wouldn't be back for like 45 minutes, you know.
Speaker:Yep, and they didn't care about your politics and what you'd done, like, did
Speaker:they see that as, were they supportive or they didn't care, or they were
Speaker:against you?
Speaker:A lot of the guards were ex military or presently serving in the National
Speaker:Guard and were initially hostile.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And then, um, I was popular amongst the Muslim population, and people were like
Speaker:introducing me, oh, this is the guy who's hijacked a plane or blew up a plane,
Speaker:I'm like, oh, whatever works for you.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:So, I was getting, what saved me, literally saved my ass, was um, how
Speaker:much support correspondence I got.
Speaker:So after the first few weeks, the mail, I, I think I received like 2, 000 letters.
Speaker:Oh, wow.
Speaker:And I became quite a celebrity, especially amongst stamp collectors in the jail.
Speaker:And um, that helped me, playing football helped me, soccer, and um,
Speaker:then I started, I'd go to mass and I'd be the only non Mexican at mass.
Speaker:I played, uh, I wrote, I started writing letters in English to
Speaker:people's lawyers and girlfriends, and that made me quite useful.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So I just built up my base from there and, and, yeah, I was probably in
Speaker:about five physical altercations.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Which is quite a lot for a pacifist.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:But when you're backed into a corner, that's all you can do, I guess.
Speaker:So you got out of there and it's some, somehow you ended up, um.
Speaker:Uh, in London or in, in the UK, did you come back to Australia
Speaker:and then off to the UK?
Speaker:Yeah, I
Speaker:got, eventually, essentially yesterday was the anniversary of the date I was
Speaker:supposed to get out, June 15th, and before that they, they transferred me to
Speaker:a penitentiary in Louisiana where they had two federal courts and they charged
Speaker:me with being guilty of a crime of moral turpitude and overstaying a visa.
Speaker:And put 50, 000 bail on me, and, um, I'd never heard the word
Speaker:turpentry before, had no clue what it was, you know, and, um, so...
Speaker:I was there for another six weeks after my release date and
Speaker:then people raised the 50, 000.
Speaker:Casey Kasem, do you know Casey Kasem?
Speaker:He's the voice of Shaggy on Scooby Doo and he's quite a big DJ, America's Top 40.
Speaker:He put 20, 000 in and different people put money in and Moana had 25, 000.
Speaker:She was up in a jail in Pennsylvania.
Speaker:So eventually we, we got bailed.
Speaker:I'm assuming you can't go back to
Speaker:America?
Speaker:No, well, in the bail application.
Speaker:The Air Force said it was a national security threat to the United
Speaker:States, which was very flattering but hardly anything to do with reality.
Speaker:And uh, being, if you're convicted of a crime of moral turpitude,
Speaker:that's what they got Charlie Chaplin on, to keep him out of the States,
Speaker:so they eventually dropped that.
Speaker:And um, I had my deportation hearing actually, where Julian's going to be
Speaker:brought to in Alexandria, Virginia, which is very CIA dominated, uh,
Speaker:with Langley there and stuff.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And just leading up to my deportation hearing.
Speaker:Uh, the World Trade Center bombing happened, uh, Waco happened, and
Speaker:half of them were Australians and Kiwis and English, non Americans.
Speaker:And then two CIA were shot at Langley by an Al Qaeda
Speaker:operative, um, leading up to...
Speaker:So it was a bad atmosphere to have a deportation hearing, where Moana had one
Speaker:five months earlier and she got a plea bargain where they didn't deport her.
Speaker:Oh, right.
Speaker:And she left
Speaker:voluntarily.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So, um, you, you, you make your way to the UK.
Speaker:Did, did you have a passport?
Speaker:Like, you're a dual citizen to get, did they, they were happy to have you?
Speaker:Okay,
Speaker:so I got deported back here.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And the Christian Brothers gave me a job teaching truance out at Logan.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then, I went to New Zealand, uh, helped start a Catholic Worker there in
Speaker:Christchurch with Moana, then came back here and we started a Greg Shackleton
Speaker:house at St Mary's in South Brisbane, and that was focused on East Timor before
Speaker:it became mainstream popular, really.
Speaker:And, uh, named after the Queensland journalist who was killed at Balibo,
Speaker:Greg Shackleton, and we brought his widow Shirley up to, to open it.
Speaker:And we did a lot of good activism around that.
Speaker:And then, and...
Speaker:At the beginning of 96, four women broke into a British aerospace
Speaker:facility in Lancashire in England, and I knew one of them.
Speaker:And ironically, there's such respect for private property in America,
Speaker:if not for human life, that when we got out of jail, they gave us our
Speaker:hammers back and our bolt cutters.
Speaker:And we sent them off to England, and they were used twice, three times there.
Speaker:And they kept getting them back, and then we used the
Speaker:same hammer in Ireland in 2003.
Speaker:So where's that hammer now?
Speaker:It's in a, it's in a hammer, a pacifist dump in Kilkenny, I think, it's still,
Speaker:they haven't been put beyond use.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:They're still out there.
Speaker:All right, haven't been lost.
Speaker:No, no, no.
Speaker:Obviously got historical.
Speaker:No, an artist friend of mine used them for a few art projects and stuff, yeah.
Speaker:But one of them's done quite a few million dollars worth of disarmament, yeah.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:So in 96, I went to organize around these women's trial in
Speaker:Liverpool and they were acquitted.
Speaker:It's the first time a plough shares group.
Speaker:Had ever been found.
Speaker:Now guilty.
Speaker:The lawyer in that case was Gareth Purist heard, freed the Guilford
Speaker:four on the Birmingham six.
Speaker:She's Emma Thompson, placed her in the name of the father.
Speaker:She's now defending Julian Assange.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:She's about 18 now.
Speaker:Gareth and John Pilger gave evidence in that case.
Speaker:Jose Rumors ter, that it becomes President Prime Minister.
Speaker:His Timor gave evidence and the local Scouses in Liverpool mobilized.
Speaker:There's a lot of really good solidarity.
Speaker:So, we end up forming a community and these East Timorese that
Speaker:occupied embassies in Jakarta, who'd been given safe passage
Speaker:to Portugal, came and joined us.
Speaker:We kept breaking into BAE every three or four months and BAE
Speaker:took me to the High Court.
Speaker:They also put a spy in our group for three
Speaker:years.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Did you expect to have a spy put in
Speaker:the group?
Speaker:Well, as soon as the women were acquitted, the Lancashire Special Branch approached
Speaker:a former policewoman to infiltrate us, and she went to the Guardian, got
Speaker:wired up, went to a second meeting with Special Branch, and exposed it.
Speaker:And then we were pretty stupid not to expect them to try again.
Speaker:And this time, BAE approached a private security firm, uh, who'd
Speaker:already had infiltrated the campaign against the arms trade, including
Speaker:that of a guy who was a full time...
Speaker:paid worker and he was working for this security group and they got this guy who
Speaker:went under the name Alan Fossey but who you'll learn is Sergeant Alistair who
Speaker:used to be in 14 Company and they're the ones who did the spying and targeting
Speaker:for the SAS in Northern Ireland.
Speaker:So he was in and around our group for three years and that was eventually
Speaker:exposed by the Sunday Times.
Speaker:Right,
Speaker:must have been a shock for you when you found out.
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:I didn't like him.
Speaker:And I, I had a kind of intuitive feeling, but I was saying that's, you know, I
Speaker:was, I was raised kind of, I don't know, anti English, but definitely sceptical
Speaker:of them, so I was kind of telling myself, no, that's just your prejudice against
Speaker:English and stuff, and I should have went with my gut feeling, really, you know.
Speaker:Anyway.
Speaker:So, you were...
Speaker:Because he would be feeling...
Speaker:The dangerous thing was he would have been feeding intel back to the
Speaker:Indonesian embassy in London, putting people's lives in danger and his team
Speaker:of the guys who were active in England.
Speaker:So subsequent to that, did you in your activities then
Speaker:have to be mindful of spies?
Speaker:Did you change your practices thinking?
Speaker:Could be a spy amongst your crew.
Speaker:Yeah, in retrospect it's 2020 vision, so even in the late 70s, most, the
Speaker:anarchists used to gather at Planet Press in the Valley, and now we learn that
Speaker:Dan Van Blakham, who ran that press, was recruited by Don Lane into the Special
Speaker:Branch, as a Special Branch informant in the late 1960s, initially portrayed
Speaker:the Nazi party, and then later he turned his attention to the anarchists.
Speaker:So, we were infiltrated pretty early on, and then, in Dublin I think we
Speaker:were infiltrated, and I think we were infiltrated in London as well, so,
Speaker:anyway.
Speaker:It's pretty hard to, it's pretty hard to sort of know what to do.
Speaker:What do you do?
Speaker:You've got a group of a handful of people, or dozens, and if you're
Speaker:going to organise something, it's, it'd be difficult to try and...
Speaker:Well, if you're doing, if you're doing anything high risk, it's
Speaker:got to be on a need to know basis.
Speaker:So I've been in environments where I sense something big is going to
Speaker:happen, but I'm not involved in it, so I don't need to know, so I don't ask.
Speaker:If someone doesn't need to know, you don't tell them, because that
Speaker:makes them vulnerable to conspiracy charges, so you have to be quite
Speaker:disciplined about that, and uh,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:So, you had an, um...
Speaker:There's Northwood Headquarters in Northwood, Hertfordshire, it was
Speaker:sprayed some red paint on a sign, got arrested for that, and...
Speaker:Yeah, so we,
Speaker:we had two Catholic, we started a Catholic Worker House in Haringey, Giuseppe
Speaker:Conlin House in 2010, and there's also a Catholic Worker Farm at Hertfordshire.
Speaker:And also out there is Northwood Headquarters, and that's a NATO
Speaker:base, and it's also where they ran the Falklands War from.
Speaker:It's a very, very significant base and like the mainstream anti war movement run
Speaker:by the Trotskyist groups and the Labour Party never took people out there, you
Speaker:know, they had people marching in their tens of thousands up and down empty
Speaker:streets in London, but we focused on resistance there and that was the place
Speaker:to go, you know, and, and, you know, these groups infiltrated the highest levels as
Speaker:well, they've stopped the war coalition in London, our anti war movement.
Speaker:And, uh, they basically steered people into these dead end protest channels
Speaker:and, um, yeah, the movement never significantly moved from protest to
Speaker:resistance in Ireland or England, really.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so, yeah, we were arrested out there.
Speaker:We were raided by the counter terrorist squad at the farm.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:I think I was, I was detained six times in two years under
Speaker:counter terrorist legislation.
Speaker:Dublin, Belfast, London, and,
Speaker:uh, And did you think to yourself at the time, gee, we've been unlucky
Speaker:to be caught this many times?
Speaker:How
Speaker:did we end up?
Speaker:Did you ever think?
Speaker:No, they're, they've got unlimited resources.
Speaker:And especially what we did in Ireland just totally embarrassed them.
Speaker:And they spent millions and millions of Euros on us in Ireland.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, uh.
Speaker:So, so maybe talk about what happened in Ireland with the Pit Stop plough shares.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, or the Pistol
Speaker:Flash, yes, Pistol Flash, at Shannon Airport.
Speaker:Okay, so, after doing the, the last thing with the T Marie stuff, I did about a 10
Speaker:week vigil outside the Indonesian Embassy in London as they were leading up to
Speaker:voting for independence there and stuff.
Speaker:And then I came back and we did the action at Jabalooka, where we
Speaker:disabled uranium mine equipment and so I ended up in jail in Darwin.
Speaker:And um, Um, went back, went to, moved to Ireland in 2002 and the Americans
Speaker:had already started bombing Afghanistan and Dan Berrigan was visiting and Dan's
Speaker:quite well known in Ireland when Bobby Sands was dying he requested to meet
Speaker:the Berrigans, they flew over but the Brits wouldn't let them in to visit him.
Speaker:Um, So we had an event and 2, 000 people turned up to it.
Speaker:We only had room for 1, 000, people away.
Speaker:And that was in mid 2002.
Speaker:And then, quite rapidly at the end of that year, five of us got together.
Speaker:Eight days before the action, two people had never met the other two.
Speaker:Whereas in America, we were...
Speaker:Marlana and I were processed for 11 months, every second weekend we were taken
Speaker:to a secret location for preparation, and different people came in, left
Speaker:the group, and then in the August of that year, Bill and Sue joined, and we
Speaker:closed the group, we were ready to act then, and it was another six months
Speaker:before we did, but we were meeting every two weeks in a very disciplined way.
Speaker:This one was kind of thrown together, and We broke into Shannon Airport, which
Speaker:was a civilian airport on the West Coast that had been rapidly militarized to
Speaker:refuel for American troop movements.
Speaker:And, um, we were able to disable a US Navy warplane that was en
Speaker:route to Iraq, and we turned it around and sent it back to Texas.
Speaker:So, we were arrested, um, denied bail initially.
Speaker:So I was in Limerick Prison for about a month, and then when I was, took bail.
Speaker:Uh, because we were being misrepresented, like the mainstream media was saying
Speaker:a police officer was assaulted during the action, and obviously I was being
Speaker:my size, that was the likely suspect.
Speaker:And then, you know, when we went to trial, three times we went to trial.
Speaker:Two years later, that police officer got up and said that I had comforted
Speaker:him while he was having a stress attack.
Speaker:But, you know, on the front page of the Irish Times, it was
Speaker:that I had assaulted the police.
Speaker:You know, it's bullshit.
Speaker:And also, it's, the other lie they said is we cost the Irish taxpayer,
Speaker:we charged them two and a half million dollars criminal damage, and
Speaker:the Irish taxpayer was going to pick up that bill, which was bullshit.
Speaker:Um, and, uh, So I had to come out and like explain the action, uh,
Speaker:so I was going around giving talks in different places, and the other
Speaker:people finally all came out, and um, the bail conditions were quite harsh.
Speaker:I had to sign on every day at a specific police station, Pier
Speaker:Street, near Trinity College there.
Speaker:And I wasn't allowed into County Clare, where the airport was, and
Speaker:also banned from two mile radius U.
Speaker:S.
Speaker:Embassy in Dublin.
Speaker:So it was very restrictive of our conditions, and in that period I
Speaker:was working in a homeless shelter for chronic alcoholics in Dublin.
Speaker:So there were three trials, the first two were aborted, so, um, the first one, let
Speaker:Judge, Judge O'Donnell agreed with defense counsel arguments that his adjudication
Speaker:was tainted with a perception of bias.
Speaker:Yeah, he was so keen to jail us that he pulled the trigger too early.
Speaker:So he, we had two of the top, two barristers in Ireland who...
Speaker:Volunteer their services, you know, agree with their action, basically.
Speaker:And a very good gin, Javaris, a very good solicitor.
Speaker:Uh, but we later learned that this was his first criminal trial, actually.
Speaker:He didn't tell us that, but it was very, very good.
Speaker:It came all the way from Cork.
Speaker:We had a very good legal team.
Speaker:So I guess we kind of gifted our liberty.
Speaker:And these people gifted their legal skills and other people,
Speaker:musicians were doing stuff for us and
Speaker:people driving us around.
Speaker:So in his comments or directions he made it clear he was biased.
Speaker:They
Speaker:say, yeah, so they, outside tried to introduce a witness
Speaker:and he ruled out a defamation.
Speaker:It's our defense without hearing defense arguments, because
Speaker:they're that keen to knock us off.
Speaker:So, but he had the presence of mind, he said, he'll think about this over the
Speaker:weekend, and he came back and um, he, he ruled, like we disabled the plane and
Speaker:then we formed a circle and prayed, and he said that we weren't serious about
Speaker:disabling the plane because we stopped.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And we said, obviously he doesn't believe in the efficacy of prayer, but um, he, he
Speaker:had the presence of mind to say the media couldn't report on, on what had happened.
Speaker:And uh, so six months later we went back to trial.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And it went for 11 days and we had a kind of apparition on the
Speaker:11th day that this judge was a personal friend of George Bush.
Speaker:How did you find that out?
Speaker:Well, we put it down to an angelic apparition, I can't really say.
Speaker:Anyway, so, um, so we're in this meeting and we're like, you know, should we
Speaker:go back and confront him with this?
Speaker:And I'm like, what's the negatives?
Speaker:And they said, well, you know, he might sentence heavier.
Speaker:And we all looked at each other and said, yeah, let's go and get him.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So we went back into court and he.
Speaker:He fled the court in such a panic that he forgot to put a media ban.
Speaker:So the next day, the next day, there's photos of him and George Bush.
Speaker:Now, right at the beginning of that trial, when they're picking the
Speaker:jury, he was saying that if there's any perception of bias, you should
Speaker:recluse, you know, stand down.
Speaker:And a woman had already been chosen, got up and said, Look, I just recalled
Speaker:my daughter's an airline stewardess and might look that I'm prejudiced.
Speaker:And our barristers got up and said, I want to thank you on your integrity.
Speaker:And the judge said, I too want to thank you on your integrity.
Speaker:Well, this guy had no integrity.
Speaker:He'd attended the first inauguration of George Bush.
Speaker:You know, he'd been invited to both inaugurations.
Speaker:So then we went to trial a third time and, um, we ran out of the fence
Speaker:and we were unanimously acquitted.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So Judge Miriam Anderson had agreed on day nine.
Speaker:Um, so, um, acquitted because, uh, the jury feels you honestly believe
Speaker:that you were acting to save lives and property in Iraq and Ireland.
Speaker:And the disarmament action was reasonable, taking into consideration all of the
Speaker:circumstances.
Speaker:Yeah, so we had a reasonably held belief, which is subjective,
Speaker:that in the circumstances we understood them to be subjective.
Speaker:That by damaging property, Shane Airport Island would trigger a chain of events
Speaker:that would preserve life in Iraq.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And we called this expert witness, who was a former RF Wing Commander,
Speaker:who came out from England.
Speaker:And he talked about logistics, you know, and, uh, and that helps.
Speaker:And we also had U.
Speaker:S.
Speaker:military veterans, you know, including guys who killed people at
Speaker:a checkpoint and stuff, uh, testified of the brutal nature of the war.
Speaker:And we had Dennis Halliday, who's the U.
Speaker:N.
Speaker:guy running the All for Food program.
Speaker:He resigned denouncing the sanctions as genocidal.
Speaker:The Irish Quaker guy, he testified with Cathy Kelly who was there
Speaker:under the bombing in Baghdad.
Speaker:So the jury ended up hearing a lot of good evidence.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:And it took them four and a half hours to decide.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:So, when, when after four and a half hours they said the jury's ready, you must have
Speaker:felt confident.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, I'm like my mother, I'm a natural pessimist.
Speaker:And I was packed, cleared my social cover with that, and I was
Speaker:told I was going to get at least three years, uh, in my history.
Speaker:When you were doing the action, did you have any idea that this possible defence
Speaker:was there that you might be able to use?
Speaker:Um, I don't know.
Speaker:I think Damien, Damien was young, he'd never been arrested before, he's
Speaker:a seminarian, he was in our group.
Speaker:And he's a lot brighter than me, and I don't know if he had looked at that.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I hadn't.
Speaker:I'd really...
Speaker:Because you went into it expecting, again, to go to jail for three to four years.
Speaker:Yeah, I also assumed, like, in New York we defended ourselves.
Speaker:We had co counsel that advised us, um, and I thought at least
Speaker:some of us would defend ourselves.
Speaker:But the group...
Speaker:There were two, two Irish born people who had never been arrested before,
Speaker:done these kind of things and then the Scottish woman, the American woman had
Speaker:done actions before, but not, not facing this much amount of time, so in the, in
Speaker:the end, I had, I deferred to the group.
Speaker:That, um, would all be represented, yeah.
Speaker:And they did a very good job, the legal team, so, I thought, well, I've
Speaker:done the action now, they can run a trial, if someone wants to write a
Speaker:song, they can write a song about it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, so, you know.
Speaker:And then we got a lot of support about, first trial, about 50 Catholic Worker
Speaker:Plowshares people came from the States.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So it was a big reunion, hadn't seen these people in 10 years and stuff.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And, um, Yeah, it was, and then, uh, yeah, it was great.
Speaker:Now,
Speaker:these days, you're living in Brisbane.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you're playing soccer with refugees.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Because, we had to work around that for this interview.
Speaker:What else are you doing
Speaker:here?
Speaker:Well, I came back two years ago because my mother's developing dementia,
Speaker:and she can't really be left alone.
Speaker:So, the last, the previous ten years, you know, helped start
Speaker:this Catholic Worker House.
Speaker:Uh, housing about 22 homeless refugees in London.
Speaker:And, um, and then I met Julian late 2010.
Speaker:So it was Julian and Chelsea Manning were my big focuses.
Speaker:And I hooked up with Chelsea Manning's family in Wales and we did a lot of good
Speaker:solidarity work, especially Dublin Wales.
Speaker:And, and you know, where Julian used to visit him in the embassy
Speaker:and I had a God, I, I've got a godson who was in the British s a
Speaker:s, who became a Catholic pacifist.
Speaker:So for a while we were Julian security, getting him into court, out of court,
Speaker:kind of running the scenes outside the court scene, scenes at the High
Speaker:Court, and then outside the embassy and inside the embassy visiting him.
Speaker:And then at the beginning of 2018, I was asked to, I was, I went back
Speaker:to Ireland and I was asked to keep a presence up outside the embassy because
Speaker:I think from March 2018 when they turned the internet off on Julian, they
Speaker:felt that it could happen at any time.
Speaker:And then November.
Speaker:2018, it was getting really bad, but they were pretty much live streaming to the
Speaker:CIA and back to Ecuador, and the local cops were live streaming outside, uh, the
Speaker:special branch was visibly there, outside, um, and they asked me to move, to be 24 7,
Speaker:so I, I took up residence on the street.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And it was like English winter, you know?
Speaker:And then the royal family of Qatar turned up, they owned the building, and
Speaker:Harrods, the building's real name was in.
Speaker:And so, you know, there's just heaps of security and eventually these three
Speaker:guys, the Belgian guy, the German guy...
Speaker:They walk into a
Speaker:bar.
Speaker:They walk into a bar, yeah.
Speaker:Sounds
Speaker:like the start of a joke.
Speaker:And they're all very skilled, manually skilled.
Speaker:And they, these Belgian guys, just went around these worksites, got
Speaker:all this wood and built me like a coffin with wheels and handles.
Speaker:And, um, so I could sleep in this...
Speaker:Coffin box, really.
Speaker:And so I was sleeping on Hans Crescent.
Speaker:This is like the wealthiest part of London, full of Saudi princes,
Speaker:Russian oligarchs, football managers and players and stuff.
Speaker:And, and then all of a sudden there's 18 princesses there, you know.
Speaker:And, um, so I end up getting fed by the Royal Family for a while.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Yeah, so anyway, I was getting harassed.
Speaker:They were threatening to get rid of me with an ASBO.
Speaker:And, uh, I thought, oh, they've got an ASBO for Hans Crescent.
Speaker:They haven't got one for this dead end lane under Julian's bedroom.
Speaker:An ASBO?
Speaker:Antisocial Behavioural...
Speaker:And, uh, which they needed very little evidence from.
Speaker:So, the night they raided me, I got up, emptied my box.
Speaker:A special branch light directly opposite.
Speaker:And, and I wheeled it down to the dead end between Julian's window.
Speaker:And this other building that goes down seven floors where all the Harrods
Speaker:trucks warehousing would happen, that 11 loading ramps down there.
Speaker:So the last 15 metres of this lane was kind of a dead zone, no one used it, and
Speaker:I just stopped, you know, pulled up there.
Speaker:But there was just heaps of security, those Harrods had their own security, then
Speaker:there was Special Branch, then there's the local Plod, and then there was SO18, and
Speaker:then there's Ecuadoran security, and then the Royal Family had their own security.
Speaker:So, it was just layers and layers of security, and a lot of the time, I had
Speaker:a small group of people who were like, supporting me, uh, but a lot of the time
Speaker:I was just there by myself, you know.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And uh, and in this lane there were 23 cameras, so it
Speaker:was very...
Speaker:And you were there for the purpose of, of what?
Speaker:Well I knew Julian and, and you know, um, and we were friends and like, he,
Speaker:he likes me, like he, I think he kind of finds me pretty humorous, and um...
Speaker:Because I'm not techy at all, all this stuff goes over my head.
Speaker:So he could look out the window and he'd see a friendly face, you know,
Speaker:and then they weren't allowing anyone there after 5pm, so he's by himself.
Speaker:from 5 p.
Speaker:m.
Speaker:through till 9 a.
Speaker:m.
Speaker:in the morning and, um, you know, they were suspecting they'd be raided and
Speaker:that I was supposed to give an alert or something and, uh, I was also doing
Speaker:counter surveillance like, um, I began recruiting people around the area to
Speaker:help and then also working out where Special Branch were and, and stuff
Speaker:and feeding that back into Julian.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So, we're recording
Speaker:this on the...
Speaker:I was going through the embassy's trash as well.
Speaker:I'm kind of trying to find anything relevant.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, we're recording on the 16th of June.
Speaker:Uh, we've recently had a new government in Australia, a Labor government.
Speaker:So, there's a, I don't know, in the circles I frequent, a sort of
Speaker:a, a bit of an optimism that maybe the Albanese government will...
Speaker:The working in the background to hopefully get something done in Julian's favour.
Speaker:What's your feelings or thoughts on his prospects?
Speaker:I think, you know, I think the national security state would have
Speaker:even stopped Trump parting him.
Speaker:I Snowden.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:And Pompeo, I think, is a driving force to crucify Julian.
Speaker:I think the Americans must feel that damaged him enough physically and
Speaker:mentally now that he won't ever have the capacity he had in 2010, you know.
Speaker:And, uh, If the Hill was a popular figure in Australia, which I can't
Speaker:see any evidence that he is, um, the Americans would let him go, saying,
Speaker:because they need Australia in terms of their strategy to encircle China.
Speaker:Um, the Labor Party people, except for Julian Hill and some backbenchers,
Speaker:but the heavyweights, they never say anything off principle.
Speaker:They don't talk about free speech.
Speaker:Barnaby Joyce actually talks about, not that I'm a fan, but free speech, national
Speaker:sovereignty, he's Australian, and Bob Carr, now that he's retired, you know,
Speaker:talks about these principles, but the only thing you get out of Barnaby, uh,
Speaker:Albanese and Penny Wong is, it's gone on too long, which is a bit like, I'm
Speaker:bored, it's gone on too long, and maybe...
Speaker:You know, maybe there's something happening in the background, but
Speaker:in the foreground, you need a lot of noise and interventions.
Speaker:And, uh, and it's very hard since back in Brisbane, I don't even know where to stand
Speaker:with a sign in this town, really, you know, where the context would make sense.
Speaker:So, um, so, you know, the most.
Speaker:You know, I've accompanied Julian's dad on speaking gigs and stuff for Nimbin
Speaker:and there's more in here, and I've, um, I've done a bit of solo vigilling, um,
Speaker:but, uh, you know, like I confronted Boris Johnson in Dublin by myself, and I
Speaker:confronted Alexander Downer in London on the street as well, so those opportunities
Speaker:don't seem to arise here that much.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So you sound a bit pessimistic really still.
Speaker:You're not...
Speaker:I'm naturally
Speaker:pessimistic.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:And I told that to Julian, you know, I remember saying to Julian, I don't, I
Speaker:don't think your feet are ever going to touch the pavement again, given that it
Speaker:was carried from the Jembassy to the, to the, yeah, it's prophetic so far.
Speaker:And um, You know, I was very pessimistic about his fate, really, and they did
Speaker:such a job, especially in England, on character assassination, and the
Speaker:lazy, cowardly response to the plot of Julian Assange is some cynical
Speaker:quip, but if you look at it closely...
Speaker:You'll see that what they've done is, and the Guardian's worst culprit,
Speaker:is to weaponize his disability, his asperges against him, and somehow
Speaker:present him as an arrogant arsehole, which I know him personally is not.
Speaker:And uh...
Speaker:It's, uh, it's a slow motion crucifixion and it's, it's tragic,
Speaker:uh, and, uh, and yeah, he's done a lot better than I thought he would
Speaker:in jail, uh, that he hasn't died.
Speaker:Um, like I ended up, I lived on, once he was taken, I then moved to Belmarsh
Speaker:Prison and I had a set up on the traffic island at the front of Belmarsh
Speaker:Prison for about six weeks and then the Labor Council, Woolwich Labor Council.
Speaker:Not only took my stuff, they actually cut down the little trees I used to hang
Speaker:a banner between, like a little scorched earth, like through a wood chip, you
Speaker:know.
Speaker:You must be quite adept at living rough
Speaker:on the streets.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah, well, yeah, I mean, you soften up pretty quickly, don't you,
Speaker:get used to things and stuff, but um.
Speaker:Yeah, that was pretty wild.
Speaker:Yeah, um, so given the circles you mix in and the circles he mixes
Speaker:in, it just, you naturally came across each other at some point.
Speaker:Is that what happened?
Speaker:Yeah, I mean, at the moment, as you're saying, I don't
Speaker:get out of this house much.
Speaker:I go, I try and go to church in the soup kitchen, South Brisbane on a Sunday.
Speaker:I try and play soccer with the refugees on a Tuesday afternoon.
Speaker:I try and go to the pub once a week with a Welsh mate.
Speaker:And, but most time I've you know, pretty much stuck in the house with my mum.
Speaker:Um, I knew he was in real trouble in the end of 2010.
Speaker:I was at his first court appearance and I thought that really, you know,
Speaker:people will be distancing themselves, you know, very quickly from him.
Speaker:And um, and I had to think for 24 hours, you know, do I risk what
Speaker:credibility I have, um, supporting him and I decided to do that.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And, uh.
Speaker:And, uh, it's just the people, it's like two million people marched
Speaker:against the war that he opposed.
Speaker:Two million people in London marched against that war.
Speaker:And there were hardly any English people around the embassy supporting him at all.
Speaker:They were mostly South Americans and Australians and Irish and stuff.
Speaker:So, you know, you just think where's solidarity gone, you know,
Speaker:where's the culture of solidarity?
Speaker:Speaking of solidarity then, Chelsea Manning, parts I've read, has been
Speaker:incredibly courageous in dealing with the US authorities when they were
Speaker:wanting sort of further dirt on Julian or cooperation regarding Julian and Chelsea.
Speaker:Said no, she struck me, yes, struck me as somebody very tough, very courageous.
Speaker:Yeah, and Yeah, we had a great time with her mother and uncle and aunts and very
Speaker:working class Welsh family and Haverford West and the mother's passed away now
Speaker:and the uncle's passed away, but yeah, Chelsea Chelsea, Chelsea was tortured,
Speaker:you know, I think in Kuwait and in, um, Quantico, and then ended up in a
Speaker:military prison and seemed to handle that quite well, I think, as things go.
Speaker:But it was looking at, it was doing 35 years, and you, you watch
Speaker:Obama's last speech as president.
Speaker:He's at a press conference explaining why he hasn't pardoned Manning.
Speaker:He was commuting the sentence and at no point does he mention the word Iraq.
Speaker:This is a war that he opposed, he voted against as a senator, denounced as a
Speaker:stupid war, um, and the only thing you hear from him is, Chelsea's done hard
Speaker:time, I mean, we've tortured the person, and, and some other thing, but um.
Speaker:Yeah, I don't think Obama, and Chelsea had attempted suicide twice at that
Speaker:point, and I don't think Obama wanted that on his liberal record, that death.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And Chelsea will never be in a situation to cause that damage to the empire again,
Speaker:like, neither will Snowden, you know.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Where Julian, they perceive, has the capacity.
Speaker:It's fascinating,
Speaker:Ciaron.
Speaker:It's quite a
Speaker:life.
Speaker:It is fascinating.
Speaker:So, um, I'm interested in your combination of religious belief
Speaker:and political activism, and you mentioned earlier that one of the
Speaker:differences when you went to America was there was an acceptance of Yes.
Speaker:Faith and religiosity, whereas in Australia, when you're perhaps dealing
Speaker:with left wing groups, when you, when religion is brought up, it's, it's quickly
Speaker:dismissed, and I have to confess, I've got, uh, my personal dislike of religions.
Speaker:Um, yeah, I've done my intel on you.
Speaker:And so,
Speaker:I find it...
Speaker:Uh, unique that you're able to combine what I find is a distasteful,
Speaker:um, practice with something that is a positive practice.
Speaker:So if you weren't religious, I mean, you can consider yourself Catholic
Speaker:still, you identify as Catholic or spiritual or Catholic, yep.
Speaker:So, you know, if, if you didn't have that faith.
Speaker:Would all, could you have done all these things anyway?
Speaker:Would it have all made sense and have been a life that you could have done
Speaker:in the absence of faith and religion?
Speaker:Um, I think, uh, it wouldn't have, if God doesn't exist, it doesn't make,
Speaker:if God does not exist, this life wouldn't have made much sense, no.
Speaker:There's no rational basis for it and, you know, I think we're all...
Speaker:Given my background, and um, you know, I was raised anti imperialist, Irish
Speaker:Catholic, and Irish Catholic meant being oppressed rather than oppressing, and
Speaker:um, and you know, the Christian Brothers were kind of working class, and uh,
Speaker:and so I guess culturally, and I was an altar boy for eight years, so, I...
Speaker:And the thing about Catholicism is that most of our history we've been illiterate.
Speaker:So how things are handed down, it's not through the word,
Speaker:which is very Protestant.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Those traditions of Al Bab and the printing press.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it's all about ambience and costume and the sacrament and
Speaker:ritual and movement, art, you know.
Speaker:So I'm very comfortable and familiar with that and, um, and the Irish thing
Speaker:being more figurative and literal and...
Speaker:So, you know, I can immediately relate to Irish Americans and Irish
Speaker:in London or Irish in Ireland, like, there's a cultural thing there as well.
Speaker:Um, and, you know, I guess the conclusion I reached early was that as soon as
Speaker:Christianity, Christian discipleship, uh, compromises on the issues of an
Speaker:anarchist orientation toward power and a pacifist orientation toward violence,
Speaker:um, it's just been co opted, you know.
Speaker:But Everything faces co option.
Speaker:Punk Rock, Irish Republicanism, Feminism, Green Party.
Speaker:So what's the anarchism aspect of your philosophy?
Speaker:So when I think anarchism I think just Chaos without
Speaker:organisation or hierarchy, I guess.
Speaker:It was
Speaker:really funny, I was down in Liverpool in the 90s, this guy came up to me and
Speaker:said, I just bought this really big book on anarchism, Demanding the Impossible.
Speaker:It's a military helicopter, see?
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, it's the
Speaker:military passing overhead.
Speaker:And he goes, um, he goes, I just bought this big book on anarchism,
Speaker:Demanding the Impossible.
Speaker:He says, you're on the index!
Speaker:It's between Oppenheimer and Orwell.
Speaker:Oh, that's, that's great.
Speaker:O'Reilly between Oppenheimer.
Speaker:Oh, that's good.
Speaker:So, I kind of think, you know, a theologian I'm into, written on Mark's
Speaker:Gospel, Ched Myers, in his second book, he posits that Jesus asked
Speaker:questions rather than giving answers.
Speaker:He says the only thing he tells us to fend for is to pick up the
Speaker:cross, you know, but everything else is like a Zen Koan question.
Speaker:Um, So I think both.
Speaker:Because anarchism and pacifism are negative definitions, they're much
Speaker:better questions than answers.
Speaker:So an anarchist should be someone who lives with the question, how do I live
Speaker:a life without exploiting anyone, or lording it over anyone, as in scripture.
Speaker:And pacifist, how do I live a life without violence, you know.
Speaker:And I think those two things are implicit to Christian discipleship, but obviously,
Speaker:I thought we had a pretty good run for the first 300 years, and then we get co opted.
Speaker:by Constantine and, um, it goes from a very short period of being illegal
Speaker:to be a Christian in Rome for being an atheist, because you're not worshipping
Speaker:the God, sanctioned gods, uh, to being illegal not to be one, you know,
Speaker:and, uh, but in all these traditions.
Speaker:There's radical, right, the word radical is Latin for return to the roots.
Speaker:There's, you'll still meet radical punk rockers and radical feminists, even
Speaker:though those traditions are largely co opted, um, right, and trade unionists.
Speaker:And so these things related in the gospel to the temptations of the
Speaker:desert of power, wealth, and status.
Speaker:And that, you know, we just did a vigil outside the Anzac Day Mass where
Speaker:they've got guns in the cathedral.
Speaker:Yes, yeah,
Speaker:I saw that
Speaker:on Facebook.
Speaker:You know, there's the bishop, quite comfortable with the governor turning
Speaker:up in a Rolls Royce and with the head of the police chief and all these
Speaker:securocrats and, you know, and totally uncomfortable with his flock holding a
Speaker:banner up, you know, no guns in churches.
Speaker:And just thinking, oh well.
Speaker:And I think my father was kind of relatively anti clerical.
Speaker:See, wouldn't you be better suited in some way with the Protestant world, because in
Speaker:the Protestant world, anyone could be a minister, and people work out the faith
Speaker:for themselves from the book, and it doesn't have the hierarchy of the Catholic
Speaker:Church, so um, wouldn't, wouldn't So, in a sense, that philosophy be more suited
Speaker:to anarchism than a Catholic anarchism.
Speaker:Yeah, there are.
Speaker:Because Catholic's about hierarchy and, and...
Speaker:I
Speaker:think it's easier to go from a feudal society to an anarchist utopia than
Speaker:it is for an industrial society.
Speaker:And obviously, Catholicism historically is more related to feudalism, you
Speaker:know, and the Protestant work ethic to capitalism, industrialism, and
Speaker:the traditions and cultures.
Speaker:Um, and there are...
Speaker:Look, I'm not saying Christianity has monopoly on anarchist expression, there
Speaker:are Anabaptists and Quakers, radical Quakers, Richard Nixon was a Quaker,
Speaker:but um, and humanists and Buddhists who are anarchists and pacifists and um.
Speaker:They asked James Joyce when he left the church, are you going to adopt
Speaker:one of the Protestant denominations?
Speaker:And he said, I've lost my faith, not my mind.
Speaker:But um, yeah, and I have good Protestant, some of my best friends are Protestants.
Speaker:And also, they've obviously got the scripture, and we took the
Speaker:sacraments in a general kind of way.
Speaker:I think Pagans and Catholics are the best at organizing demonstrations
Speaker:because they've got a sense of, of, um, choreography and ritual.
Speaker:So I've done a few workshops with Starhawk.
Speaker:Ever heard of Starhawk?
Speaker:No.
Speaker:She's the only, um, witch denounced by the Vatican in modern times.
Speaker:And she was on Matthew Fox's, uh, thing at Berkeley.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But she does these workshops day on spirituality and day on activism.
Speaker:And, um...
Speaker:I think her long term partner is an ex Catholic worker who went
Speaker:to jail during the Vietnam War.
Speaker:But, uh, the Protestant and the Marxist who, you know, come after
Speaker:the printing press, their rallies are just speech after speech after speech.
Speaker:They've got no sense of choreography or nuance or...
Speaker:And, um, they really believe in the spoken word and the, uh...
Speaker:Of the book.
Speaker:So they're partly cultural things, I guess, you know, so I don't go
Speaker:recruiting for the Catholic Church.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And, uh, uh, I don't think the Catholic Church is that big on
Speaker:recruitment, like, uh, I don't think Jews and Catholics recruit that much.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Whereas, you know, if you ask someone, Brisbane, what do you associate with
Speaker:socialists, it would be the same what do you associate with born again Christians
Speaker:who are trying to convert you, you know, and sell you a newspaper or recruit you.
Speaker:Yeah, they're more low key for sure.
Speaker:The traditional churches are more low key than the new muscular
Speaker:evangelicals coming out of America.
Speaker:Yeah, well, that's,
Speaker:those, that form of Christianity is overtly a part of their foreign
Speaker:policy, just like the Sauds have their own form of Islam that they wield.
Speaker:Uh, the Americans have developed this prosperity gospel that fits
Speaker:into imperialism and capitalism, and the CIA have actually pushed it to
Speaker:counter liberation of intelligence in South America, not America.
Speaker:And that's where you find, what you were talking before, people breaking up the
Speaker:scriptures themselves and lay groups.
Speaker:So in Ireland, we would, um, on a Sunday, we'd have a liturgy, mostly without a
Speaker:priest, and we'd, um, you know, say a few prayers for people, and then we'd read the
Speaker:scripture and we'd go around a circle and people would give their feedback on it.
Speaker:And then we'd break some bread and share some wine, you know, and, and I felt...
Speaker:Most comfortable in that atmosphere, and you know, ideally, that's what I'd
Speaker:be doing on a weekly basis and maybe going to church once a month, just to
Speaker:keep in contact with the tradition.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, but that hasn't been happening for me for the last couple of
Speaker:years, so I've just started going to this Mass in a soup kitchen.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:Now, you've, you mentioned before about you got some mentorship by
Speaker:the Berrigans, I think, you were to mentor somebody, a young person
Speaker:who wanted to change the world...
Speaker:today, but maybe didn't want to go so far as getting arrested.
Speaker:What, what,
Speaker:what's your advice to the young people who want to change the world today?
Speaker:Yeah, I don't think, yeah, I don't think prison should be entered in too lightly.
Speaker:And I think there's parts of my personality that are quite...
Speaker:suited to the environment or that I was robust enough to survive it.
Speaker:Partly that was, um, Christian Brothers education, but um, You know,
Speaker:so I wouldn't be looking for, like, plowshares, cannon fodder, um, and
Speaker:you've really got to be convinced that this is so significant, and for some
Speaker:young people it is the environment.
Speaker:You've got to be convinced that waking up every morning in jail
Speaker:is where you need to be to say a very loud no to what's going on.
Speaker:There's only going to be a limited number of people with that level of commitment.
Speaker:Yeah, but even the basic...
Speaker:The praxis of the Catholic Worker, which is like serving, dash,
Speaker:solidarity with the poor or the homeless, mixed with prophetic, I'd
Speaker:say, resistance rather than witness.
Speaker:Um, so you meet some people who are just into, you know, crying out for peace
Speaker:and justice and often they get co opted by NGOs and end up part of managing the
Speaker:empire, or you get some people who are just working with the homeless and they
Speaker:get kind of co opted by social work, managing the, managing the homeless.
Speaker:I lived with a Christian Atheist in London for about a year, and um, he,
Speaker:uh...
Speaker:So a Christian Atheist, let me guess, did not believe in a divine God, but believed
Speaker:in the, the ideals of Christ in terms of loving your neighbor and helping the poor.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Is that
Speaker:a Christian Atheist?
Speaker:He'd also argue that each political change revolution was preceded by a
Speaker:religious one, and the obvious one was Protestant Worker Ethic and Capitalism,
Speaker:but I can't really articulate it.
Speaker:I'll send you a little video about him, Peter Lumsen his name was, but he used
Speaker:to volunteer at three soup kitchens, he was kind of retired at that stage,
Speaker:two Christian ones and a Jewish one.
Speaker:And what he noticed was that people were willing to volunteer and
Speaker:work in the kitchen, talk to other volunteers, but very few were willing
Speaker:to actually eat with the homeless and break bread with the homeless.
Speaker:And that, he wrote this thing on the Eucharist from an atheist perspective
Speaker:about this is what Jesus did, you know, and um, it was funny because
Speaker:that related to my experience in jail, with people willing to.
Speaker:Have sex with the transsexual prostitutes, but not eat with them, you know?
Speaker:We're always kind of willing to eat with them, but not have sex with them.
Speaker:So
Speaker:when you go to a soup kitchen, you eat with the...
Speaker:Well, that's what I did today.
Speaker:Like, you know, I looked around and they seemed to have enough staff, so...
Speaker:And I told them, if you want me to do anything, I'll do it.
Speaker:But I just sat there for a couple of hours, chatting to
Speaker:people.
Speaker:So, in Australia or in Brisbane today, someone who's homeless
Speaker:and is at a soup kitchen...
Speaker:Um, is it because of, I have the impression that mental illness
Speaker:would be a major factor in that.
Speaker:Because I, my impression would be that there are programs and
Speaker:facilities out there for people and I, I sort of hear stories of.
Speaker:of government workers trying to bring people into housing but the people
Speaker:wanting to stay on the streets and I feel, is that, am I completely right
Speaker:or wrong or somewhere in between?
Speaker:Is mental illness and people's reluctance to come in part
Speaker:of it?
Speaker:It's real child abuse and mental illness and...
Speaker:Like, some of the shelters in the States run by the state were brutal,
Speaker:you know, worse than prisons really, and that some people would feel more
Speaker:vulnerable there to being bullied or robbed or whatever, and, um, but the
Speaker:place I went to today has obviously got a very disciplined environment
Speaker:that people realise that they're entering into a safe space and stuff.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, um, so yeah, it's interesting.
Speaker:But, I mean, I've largely been away from Australia a long time and the
Speaker:last two years I haven't been out
Speaker:that much.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay, now just to finish off, Ciaron, and you'll be very generous with your
Speaker:time, but we're home straight, last bit.
Speaker:Just in terms of, um, Today's big problems, so, I'll give you a
Speaker:couple, and I'm interested in how you would rank them, in terms of what
Speaker:you see as the most important, so.
Speaker:One would be, sort of, Murdoch and media manipulation of the agenda and truth.
Speaker:So, media and information and monopoly control.
Speaker:Second one might be just the U.
Speaker:S.
Speaker:Empire and its control of so many aspects of the world.
Speaker:Uh, third might be inequality in terms of worldwide inequality.
Speaker:Climate change, or any other, you know, topic that you might think,
Speaker:when you think about what the big problems are in the world.
Speaker:What, what do you see as the prime?
Speaker:Yeah, I think, I'm trying to remember them all now, but, and obviously
Speaker:there's been a big change that I haven't been that sensitive to about,
Speaker:you know, the internet and media.
Speaker:Um, like I remember in the eighties, a few of us troop down to this migrant resource
Speaker:center to watch a film about El Salvador.
Speaker:We'd never heard of El Salvador before really?
Speaker:And it was this brutal film.
Speaker:And then we marched off to the pub, you know, about a dozen of us and
Speaker:like, what are we gonna do about this?
Speaker:And now we're kind of probably getting more information, but
Speaker:we receive it totally isolated.
Speaker:on the internet, on a laptop or a phone, and, you know, back then, you'd watch this
Speaker:film, you'd turn to the person next to you and go, fuck, that's bad, isn't it?
Speaker:What are we going to do?
Speaker:Whereas now you turn, fuck, that's bad, and there's no one there.
Speaker:And I've really, I've always enjoyed soapbox speaking.
Speaker:I did a lot of that in Hyde Park, I used to do that in Brisbane.
Speaker:And, um, where people can interject and you want people to interject
Speaker:because that gives you time to rest.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you want debate.
Speaker:As soon as you get debate, the crowd builds and stuff.
Speaker:And then things happen in that environment that don't happen in a lecture theatre.
Speaker:People aren't as passive.
Speaker:And I remember being in Hyde Park and one guy said, I was in Iraq,
Speaker:now a total stranger on the other side of the crowd was in Iraq too.
Speaker:So they peeled off and probably had a really high quality conversation, you
Speaker:know, so it's not all about the speaker.
Speaker:And I just think it's such a shame, like, my father used to go to St.
Speaker:Henry Park there in the 1950s and stuff, and uh, that went through the 1960s, but
Speaker:the lack of that speaker's corner thing.
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:And...
Speaker:Yeah, I'm not sure, like this German woman West End recently told me that,
Speaker:I don't know if it's a German saying, she said, yeah, 10 percent wolves, 10
Speaker:percent shepherds and 80 percent sheep.
Speaker:I'm not sure that's accurate, but um, yeah, the media is
Speaker:so centralised, isn't it?
Speaker:And um...
Speaker:Our mutual friend Mario has been banging on about Murdoch's for decades
Speaker:now.
Speaker:Yes, yes.
Speaker:Um, yeah.
Speaker:Hey Mario.
Speaker:Like, he's a lot more moderate than I am politically, you know, so we have the same
Speaker:argument every week for the last 10 years.
Speaker:And then environmentally it looks, it kind of looks like it's too late
Speaker:really, but um, it's good that people are pushing back and, but I think in
Speaker:the last period too, you've got a layer of management which is NGOs, you know,
Speaker:and they're occupying a space that the Used to occupy, and the left has
Speaker:collapsed since, probably since the collapse of the Soviet Union, actually.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And, um, so...
Speaker:And then, say, the Catholic Worker's always interacted with the left, and the
Speaker:1930s it was the working class left, so it was trade unions, the IWW, the 60s it
Speaker:was an anti imperialist left for Vietnam.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Now it's like...
Speaker:Now
Speaker:who is it?
Speaker:Is there anyone...
Speaker:It's the
Speaker:identity politics crowd claiming to be the left, and they're like, you
Speaker:know, in the 70s our critics used to...
Speaker:Joke about us saying, you know, land rights for gay whales, you know, and
Speaker:it's, it's pretty close to that now, you know, so, and that's, that ideology
Speaker:just comes off the elite campuses in the United States and you see
Speaker:Australian young people adopt it just like the right wing adopt Trumpism or
Speaker:whatever, you know, so, you know, even.
Speaker:You know, how are we just a suburb of the USA, or is there any identity here
Speaker:that comes out of reflecting on our history, or is it just straight off TV, or
Speaker:Disney World, or something?
Speaker:Yeah, so basically the left has disappeared, so the Catholic worker
Speaker:movement has no left to liaise
Speaker:with.
Speaker:No, no, we've got our own problems as a movement, and um, you
Speaker:know, if we stop doing our own thinking, all we do is tail end.
Speaker:The latest liberal bash left trend, you know, and, uh, we've lost a
Speaker:lot of our best intellectuals, you know, the Berrigans and Dorothy Day
Speaker:and stuff, and, um, so I think the good thing about Peter Morin who
Speaker:founded our movement was reflection, clarification of thought, keeping to
Speaker:clarifying, you know, what environment are we in, why do we do what we do.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And just to keep revisiting that, and there's, you know, in our culture
Speaker:there's a lot of stimulation but very little reflection going on.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Very little, you know, we're taught, uh, either explicitly or implicitly
Speaker:that you shouldn't talk about, you know, news or politics or sex or
Speaker:religion at the, at the dinner party.
Speaker:And self censoring, that way.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I...
Speaker:You know, with my podcast, I actually normally start an intro saying this
Speaker:is a politic, uh, a podcast about news and politics and sex and religion,
Speaker:all the things you're not supposed to talk about at a dinner party.
Speaker:When I attend barbecues or dinner parties or whatever and start raising
Speaker:topics, I find people love it.
Speaker:Oh, they like it?
Speaker:Oh yeah, and they get into it and they, if they, you know, disagree,
Speaker:but they enjoy the whole thing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I think people have become...
Speaker:unskilled at analyzing and thinking about society and what's good and
Speaker:bad and what we should be doing.
Speaker:I think, I think we've lost the capacity to, to talk meaningfully about things.
Speaker:And I'll get into discussions with people and I'll think, boy, I'm like an
Speaker:A grade tennis player with a beginner here, you have not learnt some really
Speaker:fundamental things about concepts, ideas, debates, exchanging ideas.
Speaker:You think you do, but you haven't left first base yet.
Speaker:So yeah, I think that's a problem.
Speaker:So anyway, a little podcast like this, with 500 people listening or
Speaker:whatever, uh, my little contribution to that, so there you go.
Speaker:Well, Ciaron.
Speaker:Uh, marvellous conversation, really enjoyed it, and um, at some stage if
Speaker:anything happens and you want to announce something, um, uh, let us know and we'll
Speaker:advertise it.
Speaker:I'll take your email address and I'll flick you a few things, like
Speaker:the interview from Jarl in Texas and stuff like that, and this
Speaker:Peter Lumsden guy.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:Alright, terrific.
Speaker:Thanks Ciaron.