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Father of the murdered children Aaron Cockman
The hideous murder of four children and two adults by husband, father and grandfather Peter Miles at Margaret River in Western Australia last week, produced the same disturbing mass media responses as most such rural family annihilations usually do. The event was labelled as a “tragedy” — which it was, but it was a crime that was a tragedy, not a natural accident, and the crime bit was left out — and the murderer was labelled as a “good bloke”.
As several commentators pointed out, the “good bloke” narrative was applied and put up in quotes, even when family friends hadn’t used the phrase. The narrative has by now become so rigid — and tied to certain Australian conceptions of self, masculinity, self-reliance, etc — that it is now wholly projected onto more complex situations.
But this sort of reporting produced an equal and opposite simplification in the reaction to the “good bloke” narrative. Not the dim-witted statements of the West Australian journalist who called people who objected to it “the outrage brigade”, but the argument that all family violence, by a man against women and children, can be assessed as a manifestation of a single process running underneath. (In The Saturday Paper, Martin McKenzie-Murray has an interesting, related piece on “morbid altruism”.)
Thus Van Badham in The Guardian puts the Margaret River killing as all male violence against women, which is usually about control, and concludes:
We do not owe sympathy to perpetrators. We owe it to the abused, dead and living, to condemn their suffering without equivocation. When we personalise tender excuses for male violence, we don’t, actually, minimise the hateful horrors that curdle beneath it. We do, alas, encourage them.
The problem is that family annihilation is a specific form of crime which, where it is not intended to cause pain — killing a woman’s children in front of her, for example — is committed by both men and women. Thus Miles killed his entire family; in 2015, Akon Guode killed three of her four children by driving into a lake. This triple murder was written up by Helen Garner in The Monthly, and titled “Why She Broke: the women, her children and the lake — Akon Guode’s tragic story”. No one objected then to a triple murderer being described thus; nor should we.
As Garner’s story made clear, Guode life’s, in South Sudan and after, was so bloody awful — war, desertion, exhaustion, depression, family illness, debt, community pressure — that even if one concluded that she had planned the killing of her children, and may have done so for the possibility of escape to a free adult life, some form of “understanding” should not be withheld.
Perhaps we will find out some things about Peter Miles, and his killings will be revealed as about control and outrage; but at the moment, the Margaret River killings appear to be closer to the Guode family murders than they are to the controlling or jealous man who kills a partner, an ex-, and/or their children. Women don’t kill men, by and large, but they do kill children: to the age of eight, the person most likely to murder a child is their mother. What evidence is there that family annihilations — these rare events — would be lessened by simply refusing any form of interpretation of events, or differentiation between different types of crime?
There’s nothing remotely progressive or radical about such a refusal. It is the logic of the repressive right, of the carceral state and de Maistre’s executioner: that a social order can only be protected by the refusal of all humanity to the wrongdoer. Yes, the “good bloke” myth has to go; but the programmatic refusal of any capacity to think and judge between events is the very opposite of the wisdom it purports to be.
You can reach Lifeline on 13 11 14. If you or someone you know is impacted by domestic or family violence, call 1800RESPECT on 1800 737 732 or visit 1800RESPECT.org.au. In an emergency, call 000.
I don’t really know much about this particular shooting, so I’ve no specific comment on it. But one thing that generally holds true in all horrific crimes (or terrorist attacks) is that there may be no excuse for it, but there are always a reasons. Whether those reasons are valid is a different matter. But the sooner we understand the reason crimes like these happen and move away from oversimplified “good guy”, “patriarchy”, “they hate our freedom” nonsense, the better we can work towards preventing crimes like these.
I couldn’t agree with you more Saugoof..we need to be able to understand & have some sort of help for people, so that these sort of incidence are less likely to happen…I would also suggest that this man was struggling & if he hadn’t been too proud/or in too deep, it may well have been diverted….but we will never know….these things are complex & the fact the media is looking for, quick in a nutshell major occurence/incidences to report on, the truth around this may never reach the light of day……
“The event was labelled as a “tragedy” — which it was, but it was a crime that was a tragedy, not a natural accident, and the crime bit was left out — and the murderer was labelled as a “good bloke”
Guy, just think about it. On the one hand it seems to me that you have read very little German or Russian literature and, correspondingly, have read (over read?) a heap of Brit (and to a lesser extent yank) literature. For the Brits (generalising – but not too much – for space) the characters tend to be uniform; the good guys are good and the bad guys .. well they seldom change. Read something German where, inspired by an opera of Wagner’s, a young educated man resolves to murder his father upon returning home after the evening’s concert (and does, in fact, murder his father).
The problem, and you are no less a culprit than anyone else who gets paid for writing on current affairs, is that you (singular and plural) insist on doing “everyone’s” thinking for them. Just read any damned article from the ABC’s news/justin
To be fair your reference to “[v]an Badham in The Guardian” is noteworthy for, as you convey, its irrelevance. Appealing to what we ought to learn from (German and Russian) literature – and as you observe – this family was not the first to be zapped by a family member nor will it come to be the last to be zapped by a family member. No one is likely to be happy about it but we ought to be accepting of such (by no means exceptional) events.
Lastly, referring to implied(?) manipulation and censorship(?) by the media your failure to mention Aaron Cockman’s nocturnal stalking proclivities in regard to his wife and the hours he (apparently) spent observing the house contribute to the very behaviours you criticise.
What Saugoof deems a “reason” I would identify as an “explanation”. But the point here is : “just how could we (i.e. the community) ever know”; death-bed confessions notwithstanding.
Mental illness is complicated?
The manifestation of someone’s breakdown are hardly the place for our insensitive, sensationalist, hyperventilating, hyperspeculating moron media to go stomping.
17 hours in moderation?
One less adjective and it might have passed the Crikey filters!
I think Klewso you have a point there about the media…there seems to be far too much media interest in gossip around the famous & popular…with little interest in how this breakdown not only affects the community, but also in showing the vulnerability’s of these types of family’s…..
Finally…. an article that speaks to the complexity of such a sad event. Agree entirely with your thoughts on Badham’s predictable response – to slot this crime under the ‘all men are bad’ trope achieves nothing, and only serves to validate entrenched views.
I got nothin’ – “nobody’s right when everybody’s wrong”.
deep AR : deep!