Them: Adventures with Extremists by Jon Ronson
Author:Jon Ronson [Ronson, Jon]
Language: eng
Format: azw3
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Published: 2011-06-28T00:00:00+00:00
But it was over. The professor had blown it.
IN THE DAYS that followed this TV debate, some of the coalition began privately admitting to me the whole thing was beginning to backfire. David Ickeâs fans were not, by and large, anti-Semites. It was more alarming than that. They were, in fact, the coalitionâs core constituentsâliberals and antiracists and left-wingers concerned with the perils of global capitalism. These people were beginning to look upon the coalition as the villains, as the hidden hand, as them.
When three representatives of the coalition appeared on a radio phone-in show to drum up support for a mass protest against David Icke, they received a volley of antagonistic questions. Why were they obsessed with denying freedom of speech to someone who clearly wasnât an anti-Semite? Who was really behind the coalition? What were they hiding? And so on.
The coalition hastily convened a meeting at a downtown coffee bar to discuss new tactics. Sam suggested producing a press release announcing that David Icke was suffering from some form of mental illness.
âTo me he sounds schizophrenic,â he said. âHearing voices.â
âHaving visions,â agreed Rob from Anti-Racist Action.
âThe nutcase stuff,â said Sam. âDo we want to hang him on that?â
But the others argued forcibly that the coalition should avoid these areas.
âWeâre not here to do a psychological analysis on him,â said a woman called Julia. âJust leave it. Letâs leave it.â
But as the evening wore on, the gathering began to seem more like a postmortem than a strategy meeting. A young activist called Ali said she felt she had pinpointed the coalitionâs tactical error: They had made young people feel stupid.
âYoung people are seeing this big task before them,â explained Ali, âtrying to combat economic global corporatization. And a lot of them have read David Icke and thought, âHey! Heâs on our side. Iâm looking for answers and he seems to have them.â And weâve made them feel stupid, like theyâve done something bad by getting sucked in.â Ali paused. âAnd now theyâre saying to us, âDonât tell me Iâm stupid!â What we should have said to them was, âYouâre not stupid. We understand why you thought he was OK.â But we didnât. And now they think we think theyâre stupid.â
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