Obituary

Farewell, John Pilger, Lunatic of One Idea

John Pilger, Australian journalism’s most embarrassing export, has died at the age of 84 in London. His mourners, I’m sorry to report, are not confined to the tinpot dictators and terrorists he drooled over and excused during his long and shabby career. Instead, most obituarists, in a Pilger-like series of omissions and prevarications, have chosen to honour the Australian for his”truth-telling” dissents, or his bravery for “saying the unsayable”. Even in unfriendly quarters like The Times, one finds mere teasing of Pilger for his haughty demands for expensive shirts and first-class flights, as he pretended to be the lone voice of the poor and downtrodden. This is annoying, too, but only for the impression it might give that Pilger’s worst or only vice was his hypocrisy.

No obituary writer bothered to note that Pilger, in the company of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, viewed al-Qaeda’s 9/11 terrorist atrocity with unmistakable giddiness. “Their distant voices of rage are now heard,” he ventriloquised. “The daily horrors in faraway brutalised places have at last come home.” America, in other words, deserved precisely what it got.

As if this wasn’t contemptible enough, Pilger soon strengthened his solidarity with these comrades in the aftermath of the Iraq War. When former Ba’ath loyalists and Islamist psychopaths allied in the cause of mutilating Iraqi innocents and erasing civil society, Pilger knew exactly who his new friends were. “We cannot afford to be choosy,” he declared, when asked whether the international Left should back the anti-occupation forces. “We have no choice but to support the resistance.” And yes, he added for clarity, this made Australian and other coalition troops perfectly legitimate targets for murder.

Pilger’s resistors, it’s also been forgotten, would later go on to found Islamic State. This explains why, even as its militants attempted genocide, conducted eschatological warfare, and reintroduced both the Islamic slave trade and methods of execution such as crucifixion, Pilger could never quite find a stern word to say about them, let alone suggest any acceptable means by which Western or Iraqi or Kurdish forces might destroy them.

The warm-up act for all this, the obituaries also failed to mention, was Pilger’s propaganda work for Slobodan Milosevic and his fascistic dreaming of a Greater Serbia in the Balkan wars of the 1990s. In certain corners of the radical Left, NATO intervention, no matter what, could never be justified. And so, Pilger, along with genocide deniers and moral cretins like Diana Johnstone and Edward S. Herman, argued that the real victims were not the Bosnians, but the beleaguered Serbs, and the mass graves of Srebrenica were a Western fabrication. Pilger stuck with Milosevic to the very end, and was one of the very few who lamented his lonely death in prison. As ever, in his default mode of mendacity, he continued to invent stories for his readers about the war criminal’s innocence and acquittal.

In fact, it’s hard to think of a modern dictator or authoritarian who missed out on Pilger’s encomia.

Bashar al-Assad and Vladimir Putin, for example, could always rely on Pilger to cover up or excuse their respective barrel bombings or annexations. Perhaps the most risible was Pilger’s swooning over Hugo Chavez and his successor, Nicolás Maduro, the leaders who brought nothing but economic and social ruination to Venezuela. Pilger, as usual, blamed everything on Tío Sam and never lost his faith, even as Venezuelans resorted to stealing zoo animals to relieve their chronic hunger.

With this odious record, John Pilger, more than anyone else in the rogue’s gallery of the anti-imperialist Left, embodied Wallace Stevens’ image of “the lunatic of one idea”. This could be easily summarised as whatever happens in the world, it is the West’s fault. The West’s enemies, then, became Pilger’s friends and allies, alleged to be misunderstood victims of a campaign of propaganda. This was the conclusion he reached before undertaking any actual investigative work, which is why he never really bothered to do any.

What’s “unsayable”, then, about Pilger’s journalism may only be at the ironic expense of his sooky obituarists. Intelligent and well-adjusted readers would never repeat what Pilger said all his life because it was always so morally reprehensible, not because he was bravely speaking truth to power. And he said it all while living and working in places he loathed, like Australia, the UK and America. Of course, these are the only countries in the world where someone like Pilger could prosper and be rewarded for his loathing. Just about every article on his death mentioned his receipt of the Sydney Peace Prize in 2009, which was based on the obviously erroneous assumption that Pilger was some kind of anti-war advocate, or that his journalistic interventions were aimed at creating the conditions for peace in our time. This misses the point that Pilger was always an enthusiast for war; he simply wanted the West’s opponents to achieve a decisive and bloody victory.

Pilger’s one idea unhinged him and disfigured and corrupted his journalism, making his documentaries unwatchable and his dispatches unreliable, to put it as charitably as possible. Unfortunately, he still has his groupies and imitators in much of the media and the academy, so his legacy isn’t likely to diminish anytime soon.

An alternative and cheerier scenario here is still one that includes a proper consideration of his work. It could be part of the curriculum or training that serves as a model of what not to do for those entering a career in reporting or filmmaking. This leads me to what is perhaps the most salient oversight in all the obituaries, one that I’ll try not to repeat going forward. With his eschewal of complexity and nuance, and his unthinking cheerleading for despots and thugs, it’s worth wondering whether John Pilger should be thought of as a journalist at all.

14 thoughts on “Farewell, John Pilger, Lunatic of One Idea

  • DougD says:

    Well at least he’s left us with one useful verb – to pilgerise.

  • wdr says:

    Now one less dungbeetle left in the world. He is, however, useful in showing just what scum the Left admires. Not greatly different from the Hamas lovers today.

  • GaryR says:

    It was always a joy to read Auberon Waugh’s takedowns, including his creation of a new verb ‘to Pilger’, inspired by the Australian journalist’s strident left-wing fact-free emotionalism. On second thoughts, was the man merely ahead of his time?

  • Ian MacDougall says:

    When the ‘Coalition of the Willing” (CoW) invaded Iraq in 2003, that action split the international Left into two factions, labelled by the later and great Christopher Hitchens as the ‘Pro-Totalitarian Left’ and the ‘Anti-Totalitarian Left.’ Hitch himself identified strongly with the latter, and gave the said Coalition pretty-well 100% support. Pilger went 100% the other way, and opposed the Coalition, claiming that while Saddam was not exactly the nicest of men, he was on the way out anyway.
    Pilger also claimed at the time that the anti-Iraq War movement was going start with the mass-support in Australia and elsewhere that the worldwide movement against the Vietnam War had built up in the period 1965-75.
    A few desultory street demonstrations against the CoW occurred in Sydney and elsewhere, and then the whole miserable thing just fizzled out. Those demonstrators somehow could not muster much enthusiasm for supporting the gory Saddam, who had made it into Nigel Cawthorne’s Tyrants, a book on history’s ‘100 most evil despots and dictators.’ Saddam was no. 96 in that list.
    (https://www.google.com.au/books/edition/Tyrants/N9xVAAAACAAJ?hl=en)

    • David Isaac says:

      ‘What then is, generally speaking, the truth of history? A fable agreed upon.’ – Bonaparte

      I’m not carrying water for John Pilger, who was a Chomsky-style ‘truth-teller’ but with the caveat that I was not present at the march, a quarter of a million people protested in Sydney against Australian involvement in the final destruction of the secular Muslim nation of Iraq, before it happened. Although one might argue whether the resultant chaos in the Middle East was in ‘Western interests’ the pretext for the war was an obvious and provable lie.

  • Tony Tea says:

    In times when retribution meant a little more than being chastised on Twitter, someone whose pamphlets were so uniformly pro the enemy du jour and anti their own country would have been tagged a traitor and met a traitor’s end; Haw Haw, for instance. But Pilger, safe in his western sinecure, where left wing internationalists are free to publish without fear, could plug his anti-western meal ticket with impunity, all the while singing the praises and selling the calumnies of our ostensible enemies. There needs to be a word which covers all of contemptible, coward and traitor.

    • David Isaac says:

      Unfortunately those left-wing internationalists serve the interests of the global plutocracy which is the ultimate ruler in the West. Pilger was just another useful idiot.

  • john mac says:

    I say BIH to this truly nasty and sanctimonious fraud . Thankyou for addressing it , Timothy . He and the Michael Moore’s of the world serve no good whatsoever except to enrich themselves peddling propaganda .

  • Ian MacKenzie says:

    Waugh’s verb “to pilger”, defined as “to present information in a sensationalist manner to reach a foregone conclusion”, was included in the Oxford Dictionary of New Words in 1991, but removed from the subsequent edition after Pilger complained. Now that he’s gone, can it be re-included?

  • Michael says:

    The Green-Left is fully “pilgerised”, peopled almost entirely now by lunatics of one idea who believe that all wrongs in the world are the West’s fault.

  • Macspee says:

    He will not be missed. Am I right or has age muddled my brain, I have in mind that he supported Pol Pot and the Cambodian killers.

  • Oblomov says:

    How good that Pilger the Pilferer is no longer with us. His passing restores my belief that there is a place called Hell to which serial liars are sent..

  • Daffy says:

    I”m glad no one succumbed to the reflexive admiration of the dead that dogs society.
    |
    I’ve instructed my friends to eulogize me with: “He was an average sort of guy, quite mean at times. plain rather than handsome. Intolerant, unsuccessful in almost everything he did and a pain to his family. He will, however, be missed by the tax man and with pleasure by all ducks.”

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