Hi David,
Nice hearing from you, I'm glad to hear you're getting by okay in these grim times.
You asked how’s it going for us back here in New Zealand.
You would have heard that the whole country is locked down and with breaks for exercise and shopping, we’re all living
under a sort of voluntary house arrest.
The start of the lock down triggered in me an old feeling from past years.
From those car assembly strikes we took back in the ‘70s. The feeling at the strike’s onset; after our vote to stop, the
conflicting feelings, the element of excitement, dare I say it, of fun. The usual boring routine suddenly wiped away,
all of us together on the brink of an adventure, with a strong sense of collective purpose. A feeling of being vibrantly
alive.
Then, as days passed, bills came and arguments at home increased, anxiety. The ‘shit, how will we come out of this one ‘
feeling.
Well, this time we can’t hand the dispute over for the Trades Council to save our face, we can’t even call a mass
meeting and agree to go back on the bosses terms.
We can only stay staunch and hold out for a win.
Of course a factory strike analogy goes only so far, like the analogies with World war 2 several people have cited.
Today we’re not in a strike or a war but confronted with international spread of a frightening virus with no known
antidote.
Yes, hunger, wars, alcohol, tobacco and existing influenza kill millions more than this virus every year, that’s still
no reason to take Corona virus lightly. The disease spreads quickly from carriers before they show symptoms, it's
incapacitated and killed many people. It’s devastating major cities world wide.
So the authorities here have chosen to impose a lockdown, to try and break the chain, a strategy which so far seems to
make sense.
It’s been quite a ride and we’ve found out some interesting things, even after just three days.
It’s possible to get by without organised sports, Friday drinks,Sunday drives, restaurant dinners, trips to the Op shop.
We are apparently quite able to live without the TAB, without McDonalds, without prostitution.
Some of us are much better placed than others. Despite government relief measures, thousands of workers will be
struggling desperately. Some will lose their homes, many workers won’t get their jobs back.
The more conscientious union organisers are working harder than usual, from home, fielding calls for help. Hotlines for
domestic violence calls are also on the up.
The situation in some deprived overcrowded New Zealand homes right now doesn’t bear thinking about and its still just
early days under lockdown.
At the moment there’s understandable faith in the authorities line of march and positive response to the Prime
minister’s injunction for everyone to be “kind to each other”. Some people angrily dismiss any questioning of our
government over this.
I think at such a time we need our critical faculties more than ever. As my friend Renée Anna put it:
“The state is made up of a network of institutions and those institutions are simply not basically “nice.” Asking
questions about the response also does not amount to minimising the threat that COVID-19 represents or thinking it is a
conspiracy, or even that it’s being purposefully exploited right at the moment or whatever. The destructive systems we
live under are bound to produce epidemics, and it’s surreal but it’s not really surprising to be facing a global
pandemic. It would be weirder if we *didn’t* experience that, really. The thing is that it is totally possible to
realise it’s reasonable to adopt extreme measures because of a pandemic, while still seeing that those measures have
their own relationship to other political trends, and also have their own momentum and possible long term implications”
Already in the short term, different class interests here have sharply asserted themselves. For example, some employers
have insisted on unsafe work practices and there’s been workers strike action in response.
In the new circumstances there’s a sudden social awareness of low paid workers vital importance. Society's dependance on
rubbish collectors, drivers, cleaners, hospital workers and, not least, checkout operators.
Today the working class is in from the margins, it’s value strongly apparent.
When we get through the present stage of the drama, will these realisations translate into a revived socialist current?
During the last few weeks, the capitalist class has shown they can make radical decisions. I’m hopeful that our side can
too.
Best to your and yours,
Don