{"id":19542,"date":"2015-04-07T06:00:24","date_gmt":"2015-04-06T19:00:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=19542"},"modified":"2015-04-07T00:25:00","modified_gmt":"2015-04-06T13:25:00","slug":"lee-kuan-yew-and-oz-white-trash-or-white-tribe-of-asia-1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/lee-kuan-yew-and-oz-white-trash-or-white-tribe-of-asia-1\/","title":{"rendered":"Lee Kuan Yew and Oz: white trash or white tribe of Asia (1)"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"Australia:<\/a><\/figure>\n

Pinning down great quotes can be an experience as ephemeral and exasperating as hunting the snark.<\/p>\n

Lee Kuan Yew\u2019s warning that Australia could become \u2018the white trash of Asia\u2019 has snark-like qualities. Yet having tracked the trash line through several decades, this column is ready to do pin-down duty.<\/p>\n

My previous piece<\/a> on LKY and Oz ended with some thoughts on the white trash quote. And, as with earlier writings on this subject, I got several inquiries about dating and even accurate attribution.<\/p>\n

My short answer to the question is that the starting point for the white trash thought process was Lee\u2019s first visit to Oz in 1965, a reference mark he often used in talking about Australia. Some of the old Asia hands (journalist genus) had LKY making the white trash prediction in private in the early 1970s. And in an interview with me decades later, Lee himself dated the quote from 1978 or 1979 and asserted his ownership.<\/p>\n

Snark caught, case closed? Up to a point. Part of the problem is that through much of the 1980s, LKY disowned white trash. Asked about it at the National Press Club in Canberra on 16 April 1986, Lee denied the trash thrust, saying he was sure he could not be so rude. The hacks gathered there thought he certainly could. And, further, hacks tend to work to the rule that nothing is to be believed until it has been denied.<\/p>\n

Over the decades, LKY\u2019s white trash cogitation went through several phases and he put it to different uses. The denial phase in 80s marks a period when it was too explosive an idea, too close to Australia\u2019s own fears. That\u2019s why when some Federal Parliamentary researchers went looking for authorship of white trash, the earliest attribution they could find was to Rod Carnegie, the Australian mining executive. Here<\/a> is Carnegie doing trash talk in 1982.<\/p>\n

Bob Hawke\u2019s dating of it as an LKY utterance is 1980\u2014a bit late. White trash became part of the Oz chattering class zeitgeist<\/em> through the later years of the 1970s. In discussing the quote quest, the journalist Nate Cochrane pointed me to this promo<\/a> for a six-part ABC radio series in July 1979:<\/p>\n

Australia\u2019s Asian Future: Will Australia become the \u2018poor white trash of Asia?\u2019 Can Australia increase investment in Asia and accept more Asian imports without further disruption at home? Will increased trade in the Pacific Basin benefit the poor masses of Asia and the Australian workforce or will it simply benefit small elites and multi-national corporations? Will coming changes in the region restore our prosperity, or turn us in the \u2018poor white trash of Asia?<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

As an exercise in snarking and quote pinning, I\u2019ve trekked through the archives to trace Lee Kuan Yew\u2019s tracks. LKY\u2019s conception of Australia changed markedly over the decades, demonstrating how politicians can shape shift so that an attitude or even a phrase can take on different shades and meanings. In the Lee Kuan Yew telling:<\/p>\n