Someone drew my attention a couple of days ago to a comment
posted on Twitter by a newspaper columnist named Rachel Stewart.
I hadn’t consciously heard of Stewart but she knew about me. She tweeted: “I read Karl du Fresne in the Dom
and, quite apart from the fact that I agree with him on nothing, I think to
myself they could have me.”
The first thing that struck me about this desperate cry for
attention was her stupendously inflated self-regard. A quick look at Stewart’s Twitter
account reinforces the impression that she has an ego the size of Mt Taranaki.
I imagine it’s even more rampant now, since she advertises
the fact that she was voted the top opinion writer in the recent Canon Media
Awards. I, on the other hand, have never won any sort of award. I don’t enter
awards because they don’t generally count for a hell of a lot, other than to the people
who win them.
The judges who matter, ultimately, are the people who read
the paper. And it’s just possible that one reason why I get published is that
there’s an audience for the opinions I express. This may not have occurred to
Stewart. Perhaps she’s so accustomed to bathing in the admiration of her
Twitter followers – people for whom the 140-character limit is a blessing
because it saves them from having to develop any coherent arguments – that
she’s been deluded into assuming that everyone thinks just like her.
Well, they don’t. The angry left-wing wasps who swarm on
Twitter are far less representative of mainstream opinion than I am. I suppose
that’s why they’re so bitter. They’re frustrated, and they give vent to their
frustration through infantile personal attacks on anyone whose opinions they
dislike. Just ask Mike Hosking, who weathers a barrage of venomous abuse every
day.
Same old, same old, you might say. But Stewart amps it up a
notch when she suggests I should be sacked and replaced by her, presumably
because she believes the public would be better served by reading her opinions.
This is a novel position for a newspaper columnist to take. It suggests a very
low tolerance of free speech, which ultimately is what all columnists – Stewart
included – depend on.
Am I over-reacting? Probably. “Rise above it,” a wise friend
said. But the Irish in me (du Fresne being a proud old Hibernian name) makes it
hard for me to ignore a taunt. Besides, you get to a point where you feel the
urge to strike back at the buzzing wasps.
Here’s something for Stewart to consider. I don’t object to
her having a platform for her views and I expect the same in return. Indeed I
don’t object to any left-wing commentator
having a platform. I often read them and sometimes even nod in agreement. I
have never believed that any “ism” has all the right answers.
I would go further and suggest Stewart should force herself
to read my stuff, even if she has to hold her nose while she does it. Having to
confront the unpalatable fact that other people have different opinions can
only be good for her – that is, unless she really doesn’t like the idea of a
pluralistic democracy, in which case things are worse than I thought.
And here’s something else for her to consider. There might actually
be issues on which we agree – the environmental damage done by industrial-scale
dairying, for starters. As far as I know, I was writing about this long before
Stewart launched the public crusade against the dairy industry that made
provincial headlines this week.
Trouble is, some people – and Stewart may well be one of
them – are locked into a binary view of the world that requires people to be
categorised as either bad or good, with no grey area in between.
I’ve noticed that one strange consequence of this mindset is
that when I write something that lefties might be expected to agree with – an
expression of support for trade unions, for example, or a condemnation of the
historical treatment of Maori, or the aforementioned dirty dairying – they
magically don’t see it. A mysterious fog comes over their eyes. It doesn’t register
with them because it doesn’t fit the binary world view that people must be
either totally right or totally wrong.
Put another way, they’re more comfortable seeing me as an
unreconstructed right-wing dinosaur who couldn’t possibly have anything of
value to say about anything. Nothing can be allowed to disturb settled
assumptions.
It’s all a bit tiresome and infantile, but the consoling
factor is that criticism of me by Stewart and the type of people who follow her
on Twitter is arguably the highest form of flattery. If I wasn’t getting under
their skin, they’d ignore me.
2 comments:
du Fresne Hibernian? I don't believe it - for the 56 years (or thereabouts) that I have known you lot I have always understood you to be mostly of French descent. lol.
As far as Rachel Stewart is concerned - she sounds so typical of the left wing zealots as you say. A few weeks ago I had a run in - on a friend of ours face book page - with Bruce Bissett who writes an opinion piece for the HBToday where I challenged my friends comments on Climate Change in a polite pay. The idiot Bissett entered the fray, told me to F... off and made a couple of other offensive remarks.
My/our friend is a staunch and loyal Green from the tree hugging background and was probably at the Green Party Conference this past weekend. She is a lovely lady who does not deserve to have fools and hypocrites like Bissett denigrating her facebook timeline - but like your experience it is the way of the zealots.
Donald,
I was only being half flippant when I mentioned the Irish connection. You're right - du Fresne is a a French name, but my mother was a Quin whose family were Northern Irish Catholics.
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