Leftie Daniel Ziffer – not a household name – wrote a book called A Wunch of Bankers: A Year in the Hayne Royal Commission (2019). One friendly critic called it “wucking funderful”.
Justice Kenneth Madison Hayne, the retired High Court judge, did a great, indeed, a heroic job of defenestrating Australia’s protected banker class for their many crimes against their customers, exposing the crooks and shysters we all knew existed in that industry. A few bad apples? Maybe. They got up to all sorts. Charging fees to dead people. Ignoring conflicts of interest. Taking a billion in fees from customers that they weren’t entitled to. Book reviewer “Sammy J” spoke of the “barren soul of the banking industry”. Indeed.
The bankers resisted a royal commission with all their might. They were helped, no doubt, by the fact that the then Government was led by an ex-banker. One Malcolm Turnbull, who, sadly, just won’t shut up these days. Nationals including John “Wacka” Williams, another hero in the tradition of old Nats like Ron Boswell, insisted that Turnbull cave and allow the Royal Commission. Eventually, he did.
It seems an age since large corporates had the remotest concern for their customers. Just think unattended queues in store, call centres peopled by voices you cannot understand, CCTV surveillance of customers, price gouging, collusion, using automation to make customers do the former work of the employees and the rest. This is ironic, since their primary concern in life now seems to be “reputational risk”. While not giving a fig about individual customers, they seem bent on leaving no stone unturned in their quest to please customer “groups”. Especially homosexuals, “people of colour”, “first nations” peoples and the “transgendered community”. People of pride, you might say.
All this has come to the fore these past weeks in Britain. This has been almost the only story making headlines over there. We even have a new word – “debanking”.
Nigel Farage calls on NatWest board 'to go' after chief executive's resignation
YOU TUBE
Almost unbelievably, it has come to the public’s attention that banks have been cancelling customers’ accounts for their views. An obscure bank called Coutts, a subsidiary of another bank not so obscure, NatWest, has been at it. Most infamously, it was Nigel Farage. But not only him. All sorts of stories are emerging. A British vicar has been debanked.
An Anglican church leader has slammed Yorkshire Building Society (YBS) after he pushed back against the company’s alleged pushing of transgender ideology.
The Reverend Richard Fothergill had held an account there for 17 years before writing what he called a polite rebuttal of their promotional output during Pride month this June.
An Anglican church leader has slammed Yorkshire Building Society (YBS) after he pushed back against the company’s alleged pushing of transgender ideology.
The Reverend Richard Fothergill had held an account there for 17 years before writing what he called a polite rebuttal of their promotional output during Pride month this June.
https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1786541/bank-closes-vicars-account-after-farage-warning-spt
Meanwhile, NatWest’s FTSE index share price has (mercifully) gone through the basement floor. It is, to borrow from Tamie Fraser, lower than a snake’s duodenum. The CEOs of both Coutts (an Aussie, no less) and NatWest have been forced to resign. Dame Whatsername won’t be collecting her annual ten million pound salary, any more. A bit of reputational risk, right there. The Board is under pressure. Part of the problem is that Dame Alison Rose admitted to having leaked Nigel Farage’s private information to the BBC. The BBC even double-checked with the Bank that it was ok to publish. That’s illegal, isn’t it?
Here is Nigel Farage:
I believe Coutts targeted me on personal and political grounds, for its report reads rather like a pre-trial brief drawn up by the prosecution in a case against a career criminal. Monthly press checks were made on me. My social media accounts were monitored. Anything considered "problematic" was recorded. I was being watched.
This report is proof that any Coutts customer who holds even vaguely conservative views should be treated with disdain. My friendship with the family of Novak Djokovic, who stood firm over his belief that he should have the freedom to choose whether to receive the Covid vaccine, is mentioned on the charge sheet....
At all times, the report's tone is accusatory and reproachful. The fact that Brexit is mentioned on 86 occasions perhaps tells us all we need to know.
As Tom Woods notes, quoting The Telegraph:
The Coutts papers read as if written by gullible schoolchildren with a Marxist teacher. Criticising BLM is 'incit[ing] race hate.' Wikipedia is cited as if it were a reliable source – as is the far-Left boycott group 'Hope not Hate.' Even the repeated comment that Farage is 'polite to staff' is revealing, as if they find it surprising from someone with his opinions."
The report in question was produced at Farage's request, since he has a right to see the personal information they held about him. The resulting 40 pages contained criticisms of his political opinions, some of which the Bank described as "distasteful and appear increasingly out of touch with wider society.
https://mailchi.mp/tomwoods/farage?e=a8fd3706b2
We are now only very, very short steps from full-blown social credit, Chinese Communist Party style. Who or what will prevent it in this compliant-rich times, one can but wonder?
There are many angles on this story. So many things to worry about that one hardly knows where to start. Frederick Edward at The Conservative Woman (TCW) notes, for example:
Take, for example, the debacle regarding Nigel Farage and Coutts bank. Until 2022 NatWest Group – Coutts’s parent – was majority-owned by the taxpayer, needing to be subsidised by the public because of its serious business failings. Today it is still 38.6 per cent owned by the government. It was nobody less than the CEO of NatWest Group who passed inaccurate information to a BBC journalist (another state-owned institution) to smear the reputation of one of the most successful politicians in recent British history.
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/government-and-the-media-spot-the-difference/
His point is about the unity ticket that is the modern relationship between the State and the media. One might just as easily focus on the Fact Checker Industrial Complex. One branch of the FCIC is the silencing branch. This is alive and well in Canberra. ACMA (the Australian Communications and Media Authority), our very own communications regulator was active on Peter Dutton’s watch, getting anti-vaccine mandate voices shut down, and now we have Albanese’s Ministry of Truth bill. The Brits, as we know from Mark Steyn, have Ofcom.
MORE HERE https://www.advanceaustralia.org.au/open_letter_ministry_of_truth?
Then there is the banning branch. This is what the British wunch of bankers attempted with Farage. Ban him as a customer. Prepare a forty-page dossier on him, outlining his thought crimes that do not “align” with the bank’s corporate values of inclusion, or whatever. Then cancel his accounts with the bank. In happier times, no one gave a flying fig what bankers thought about homosexuals of “people of colour”, and no one knew here celebrities and politicians banked. Happy times.
A legitimate question that might be posed by bank shareholders is – how much do they spend on these teenaged fact checkers, none of whom are likely ever to have heard of George Orwell, let alone been worried about his message?
Another point is that banks and other corporates have been doing this for yonks, without anyone really knowing. The incomparable Katie Hopkins hasn’t been able to get a mortgage for decades. Her children have to use false names to find a school that will have them.
https://www.steynonline.com/mark-steyn-show/13610/welcome-to-the-club
The most obvious angle is – shouldn’t banks just be about, well, banking?
The fact that even British Cabinet Ministers have been taking to Twitter to support Farage – their greatest political threat and enemy – suggests that, this time, the woke corporates might just have gone too far. Up until now, they have believed that they can simply do anything they please, to anyone, at any time. If the politicians are up in arms, it means that we-the-people are up in arms. That is how it works.
Perhaps we-the-people should try kicking up a fuss more often. Especially when the perps are just a wunch of bankers.
Let Professor Wanjiru Njoya of the University of Exeter have the final word:
Almost all the defenses of free speech and the argument that people's bank accounts should not be canceled for their opinions begin with a progressive caveat. "I don't agree with Farage, but..." Which is a way of saying, "Please, lefties, don't cancel me, too." Everyone is afraid....
Rights stand on their own. Everyone has a right to free speech. There's no presumption that if you defend free speech you agree with and admire what's said. Progressive caveats reverse that presumption. Now unless you begin with a caveat it's presumed you agree with the speaker.
Moreover, if everyone begins with, "I'm no fan of Mr. Farage, but..." how is that different from what the bank said in their Stasi-style dossier, where they made it clear they're no fans of Mr. Farage, either? Mr. Farage is not on trial here. Everyone doesn't have to denounce him.
(Quoted in Tom Woods, source above).
Indeed. Virtue signalling and calling on Voltaire at the same time.
It is often said, rightly or wrongly, that free speech is the first and greatest freedom. Sad to say that a recent American poll showed that over half (55 per cent) of those asked thought that shutting down first amendment rights was quite ok, in the cause of silencing “misinformation”. That word again.
It is abundantly clear that we live in Chinese times.
Paul Collits 28 July 2023
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Woke corporates risk bankrupting democratic ideals
To say Nigel Farage, leader of the Brexit movement, is a controversial public figure is an understatement. People love or hate him, and not just on Brexit. Lately, he has publicly, on British television and other outlets, expressed unfashionably woke views on a whole range of subjects, largely in line with what might be called “old-fashioned” conservative values. These views have been expressed by many other citizens of the kingdom that regards itself as the harbinger of modern democracy.
So, what of the latest outrage by the warriors of woke who cancelled his Coutts bank account? In the bank’s own words, because “he didn’t align with our values. His publicly stated views were at odds with our position as an inclusive organisation”. He was deemed a “politically exposed person”.
A “politically exposed person” is a broad term financial institutions use to cover any person who would bring the bank into disrepute and covers people such as arms dealers, Russian oligarchs, mass-murdering dictators, whatever; not normal, if vociferous and politically aligned, citizens. Farage supporters have warned the rules about “politically exposed persons” are now being used to turn away any customers whose views banks might disagree with. So, it turns out more people have been de-banked, including a Brexit MP and even a vicar in Yorkshire who complained to his building society about its support of Pride month.
This is another, more egregious form of cancel culture, much worse than being banned on social media or Twitter, because to physically cancel a bank account deprives a person of the ability to function in the modern economy. Nor could Farage open an account elsewhere. He found himself rendered almost a non-person. Branding someone a “politically exposed person” for their political views is seriously dangerous for the individual; however, it is very dangerous for a free society. If this could happen to Farage, a well-known personality, a privileged person with powerful contacts, what about the rest of we less powerful types? This points to where the tendency for private companies to get involved in every social and political issue will lead.
Farage’s crime was that he was “seen as xenophobic and racist” and (worse) “considered by many to be a disingenuous grifter”, whatever that is. But read that carefully. “Seen as”; who sees? “Considered by many”; how many and who are “the many”? The answer is the modern thought police, represented by the bank, with its flashy Pride signs, claiming to speak for minorities, who nevertheless override every other “many”.
The bank even comprised a dossier that went on for 42 pages, which, it became clear, had been compiled by monitoring him, and not just his publicly stated views, but his social media and his family’s too. Several of them have also been de-banked. Brexit was not the only “problem” these modern-day Dzerzhinskys had with Farage. His anti-LGBTI Pride statements got up their noses, as did his admiration for Donald Trump and even his friendship with Novak Djokovic.
READ MORE: Bank of royalty wrong on Farage | Moderate Liberals split on Farage call | Australia ‘now the wokest place on earth’ | Coutts cut Farage ‘because of views’
Then, compounding this outrage, the bank leaked to the BBC that he didn’t have enough money, even though the bank repeatedly says he “meets the economic contribution criteria for commercial retention”. What is really worrying for a democracy is that this blatant lie, fed to the BBC, was swallowed by the national broadcaster without a second look.
This fiasco went on for weeks and it was only on Tuesday that the NatWest group chief executive finally admitted it was she who was the source of the BBC story. She leaked Farage’s private banking information, which she called “a serious error of judgment” – a pretty poor excuse for a mea culpa. Of course, now the situation is that the bank is falling over itself to apologise to Farage. But what about all the other people who have had this happen to them, and the rest of us without the profile and heft of a Nigel Farage? What about our own country, where the Big Brother of woke seems to be more powerful by the day?
We are supposed to have freedom of speech and conscience, but huge private companies, from Qantas to financial institutions and even football clubs, were all partisan in the gay marriage debate, a serious moral issue. They threw millions at it, and woe betide any lowly individual, even a young footballer who doesn’t want to wear the rainbow colours, as even the greatest of them found. Now the voice is the big social issue and all the same private institutions, joined by others, have a well-financed partisan position. Big W actually imitated Big Brother and streamed the Yes case over its loudspeakers.
However, what makes this particular issue so dangerous for those concerned about freedom of speech is the voice is a stated policy of the government – a government now set to bring in new laws about “misinformation”. Governments setting up censorship in the middle of an emergency such as war or even a pandemic is one thing, but what’s next when well-financed capitalists in concert with governments decide to do the same thing? Where does this stop? The possibilities are frightening.
COLUMNIST - ANGELA SHANAHAN
Angela Shanahan is a Canberra-based freelance journalist and mother of nine children. She has written regularly for The Australian for over 20 years, The Spectator (British and Australian editions) for over 10 years, and formerly for the Sunday Telegraph, the Sydney Morning Herald and the Canberra Times. For 15 years she was a teacher in the NSW state high school system and at the University of NSW. Her areas of interest are family policy, social affairs and religion. She was an original convener of the Thomas More Forum on faith and public life in Canberra. In 2020 she published her first book, Paul Ramsay: A Man for Others, a biography of the late hospital magnate and benefactor, who instigated the Paul Ramsay Foundation and the Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation.
Original article here