Propoganda OR the Truth?
Under all the political squabbling, you can see the real effect that globalisation has on the movement of vulnerable people escaping the devastation in their own country. It is worthy to note that the political debate is centred only on boat people, not the large amount of individuals that come in via aeroplane, illegal or legal – they still inhabit our land just like the boat people are wishing to do.
The centre around boat people is a political struggle for
power; globalisation has created this movement, and boat people are a perfect
example that globalisation cannot have a fixed meaning because some people win
and some people lose. In this context constant media coverage has allowed politicians to exhaust this method by promoting their policies. Without the media coverage policies would be essentially useless in the power struggle without the plastering and preaching that politicians do so repetitively.
As Peter van Onselen puts it (in the Australian):
‘…the political debate is centred on boatpeople,
partly because it plays into people’s (inaccurate) fears about hordes of
arrivals from underdeveloped countries who threaten our way of life, and partly
because opinion polls continue to show that most Australians oppose illegal
immigration. (Evers, 2010, p.1)
Globalisation
and the Media: trying to gain political support through mediatising vulnerable lives being condescended by
globalisation.
Olsen V.P in Evers, C 2010, Boat People, Kurungabaa-a journal of literature, history and ideas from the sea, retrieved 17 July 2012, http://kurungabaa.net/2010/04/05/boat-people/.