
Introduction: The Seeds of Understanding
When I was younger, I dated a woman who was a doctor. During our relationship, she confided in me about a traumatic experience: she had been raped. This revelation was not just a moment of vulnerability; it carried with it a profound insight into human psychology. She explained that men who don’t go around raping women often have a hard time accepting that some men do rape women because they can’t relate to it. It’s an act so alien to their own moral compass that they struggle to acknowledge its prevalence. I’ve thought about that conversation for many, many years. It has shaped how I view denial in the face of uncomfortable truths.
This anecdote isn’t isolated; it parallels other societal blind spots where personal experience, or the lack thereof, creates barriers to empathy and action. One such area is racism. Let me be clear from the outset: I have absolutely nothing against white people, or anyone for that matter. My life has been enriched by relationships across all backgrounds. But I do believe that white people, as a group insulated from the daily realities of racial discrimination, often have a hard time grasping what racism really is. It’s not about labelling everyone as bigoted; it’s about recognising how inexperience breeds indifference or disbelief.
In this post, I’ll explore this analogy in depth, drawing connections between personal denial and systemic inaction. I’ll relate it to real-world events, like Australia’s Voice to Parliament referendum, and delve into a specific, longstanding issue that has personally affected me for over two decades. This matter, driven by racism at its core, highlights how non-racists enable racists through passivity. I’ll argue that true leadership, whether in government, law, or community, demands calling out racism, even when it’s inconvenient. Failure to do so isn’t overt hatred; it’s a subtle, insidious form that perpetuates harm. Finally, I’ll identify key figures in this saga whom I believe embody this racism, not to vilify, but to underscore the need for accountability. Through it all, my goal is to foster understanding, not division, in a world where empathy is our greatest tool against injustice.
The Analogy: From Rape to Racism – The Role of Relatability
Let’s unpack the doctor’s insight further. Rape is a horrific crime, one that most men rightfully abhor. Yet, because they can’t fathom committing it themselves, some dismiss its frequency or severity. Statistics tell a different story: according to global reports from organisations like the World Health Organisation, one in three women experiences physical or sexual violence in their lifetime. But without direct experience as a victim or perpetrator, it’s easy to compartmentalise this as “not my world.” This denial isn’t malice; it’s a cognitive shortcut, a way to preserve one’s view of society as fundamentally just.
Now, apply this to racism. The vast majority of people are not racist. It’s absurd to claim otherwise. For instance, in Australia, the 2023 Voice referendum, where voters decided against enshrining an Indigenous advisory body in the Constitution, saw a “No” vote from about 60% of the population. To paint all “No” voters as racists is totally absurd; people had many and varied reasons, from concerns about divisiveness to scepticism about government overreach. Economic worries, misinformation, or simply a preference for the status quo played roles. Yet, amid this, racists exist in our communities, and they thrive because others can’t relate to their bigotry.
White people, particularly in majority-white societies like Australia, often grow up without experiencing racial profiling, microaggressions or systemic barriers. They might see racism as historical artefacts, slavery, colonialism, rather than ongoing realities. Indigenous Australians, for example, face disproportionate incarceration rates (over 30% of the prison population despite being 3% of the total), shorter life expectancies and cultural erasure. But if you’ve never been followed in a store because of your skin colour or denied opportunities due to your heritage, it’s hard to internalise these truths. Just as non-rapists struggle with rape’s ubiquity, non-racists struggle with racism’s persistence.
This lack of relatability fosters denial. People might say, “I’m not racist, so how can it be that bad?” Or, “Things have improved, why dwell on it?” But improvement doesn’t erase inequality. The doctor’s words echo here: without experience, acceptance is tough. This isn’t an attack on white people; it’s a call for self-reflection. Empathy requires bridging that gap, perhaps through education, listening to marginalised voices, or examining one’s privileges.
To expand on this, consider how relatability influences policy. In rape prevention, campaigns like “It’s On Us” succeed by making men see themselves as allies, relating through shared humanity rather than distance. Similarly, anti-racism efforts like Reconciliation Australia encourage “walking together,” inviting non-Indigenous people to experience Indigenous culture firsthand. Without such bridges, denial persists, allowing issues to simmer unchecked. This analogy isn’t perfect; racism is systemic, rape often interpersonal, but both reveal how personal disconnection enables societal harm.
The Voice Referendum: A Case Study in Varied Motivations and Hidden Bias
To illustrate, let’s examine the Voice referendum more closely. Proposed as a way for Indigenous Australians to have a formal say in policies affecting them, it was rooted in the Uluru Statement from the Heart, a poignant call for recognition after centuries of dispossession. The “Yes” campaign emphasised justice and reconciliation; the “No” side highlighted risks of inequality or bureaucracy.
Many “No” voters weren’t racist. Some were progressive allies worried about tokenism. Others, from migrant backgrounds, feared it prioritised one group over others. Fiscal conservatives saw it as unnecessary spending. These are legitimate debates in a democracy. For example, some argued the Voice lacked detail, potentially leading to legal challenges. Others pointed to past advisory bodies’ failures, like the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), dissolved amid controversy.
However, racism lurked in the fringes. Far-right groups spread fear-mongering narratives, portraying the Voice as “reverse racism” or a threat to white land ownership. Social media amplified slurs and stereotypes. Polls showed that while most “No” voters cited practical reasons, a subset harboured prejudiced views. The Australian Human Rights Commission noted spikes in anti-Indigenous hate speech during the campaign, with reports of increased vilification.
This is where the analogy holds: non-racists, unable to relate to the bigotry, often dismissed it as “fringe” or “exaggerated.” They voted “No” for their reasons, turning a blind eye to how racists co-opted the narrative. This passivity allowed racism to influence the outcome indirectly. It’s not that every “No” voter is complicit, but that collective denial lets hate fester.
In broader society, this pattern repeats. Workplace discrimination, racial profiling by police, or cultural insensitivity in media, non-racists see these as isolated incidents because they don’t experience them. Victims, however, know the cumulative toll: higher stress, poorer health outcomes, and intergenerational trauma. Bridging this requires active allyship: educating oneself, amplifying voices, and challenging bias when seen. Post-referendum, initiatives like local truth-telling circles offer hope, fostering relatability on a grassroots level.
The Personal Saga: A Two-Decade Ordeal Driven by Racism
Now, I turn to the matter that’s personally impacted me for over two decades. I don’t intend to let it go, as it’s emblematic of how racism operates in shadows, enabled by inaction. This isn’t a vague complaint; it’s a specific saga involving institutional failures, personal vendettas, and systemic bias in the ACT government and Australian Federal Police (AFP) context in Australia.
It began in the early 2000s, rooted in disputes over Indigenous rights, public interest disclosures, and community leadership. What started as whistleblowing on financial misconduct and policy inequities escalated into targeted harassment, fuelled by racist undertones. A pivotal incident was a letter dated May 9, 2002, from Angel Marina, a mid-level ACT public servant, to then Chief Executive of ACT Treasury, Howard Ronaldson. The letter contained overt racial slurs and generalisations against Indigenous Australians, framing them as inherently problematic and untrustworthy. This wasn’t isolated; Marina’s actions, protected by layers of bureaucracy, led to career destruction, legal battles, and family trauma for those targeted, including the Indigenous whistleblower, the Commissioner for ACT Revenue (the Commissioner).
The AFP’s involvement compounded the issue. In 2004, Constable Rowena Penfold led an investigation into related disclosures, executing a search warrant on an Indigenous household. Public records and court testimonies reveal Penfold made racially charged comments during the raid, turned off audio recording equipment repeatedly, refused to provide a copy of the warrant, and failed to properly receipt or account for seized items including an irreplaceable photo of a Stolen Generations survivor with his father, which was “lost” and never returned. Under cross-examination in court, Penfold admitted to ignoring AFP protocols, such as documenting all evidence, yet faced no significant repercussions. Instead, she was transferred to the Northern Territory as part of the 2007 Intervention, a move critics saw as a lateral promotion rather than accountability. Seized materials, including hundreds of pages on public interest disclosures implicating politicians and officials, mysteriously ended up with Jeff House, Chief of Staff to then-ACT Treasurer Ted Quinlan, who used them for media defamation without consequence.
In the heart of this saga, the meeting on 6 February 2004 stands as a critical juncture, a moment when institutional forces converged to target and ultimately “fit up” the Indigenous public servant, the Commissioner, who had become a thorn in the side of entrenched power structures within the ACT government. This was not a disciplinary meeting; the Commissioner wasn’t present. Instead, it was a strategy meeting to derail the application that the Commissioner had already commenced with the Human Rights Commission. This was the culmination of mounting pressures, where personal liabilities, unaddressed racism, and a desire to avoid accountability intertwined to prioritise the protection of the status quo over justice for an Aboriginal employee. Drawing from public records, court documents, and contemporaneous accounts, this meeting exemplifies the subtle yet devastating mechanics of systemic racism: not just overt bigotry, but a calculated decision to eliminate a whistleblower rather than confront the rot within.
To understand the stakes, we must rewind to the preceding years, where Angel Marina’s overt racism had already poisoned the workplace. As established, Marina penned the notorious letter on 9 May 2002, laced with racial slurs and stereotypes against Indigenous Australians, portraying them as inherently unreliable and problematic. The Commissioner became a direct target. Marina’s actions weren’t isolated; they included assaults, racial vilification, and threats, as recorded in a 9 May 2003 letter from Glen Gaskill. Despite these red flags, no meaningful discipline followed, setting the stage for escalation.
By late 2003, the fallout was intensifying. The Commissioner, enduring unbearable workplace harassment, including racism that drove him to contemplate suicide, as noted in communications to superiors, lodged formal complaints and initiated proceedings with the Human Rights Commission. A pivotal email from Meredith Whitten, head of corporate services in ACT Treasury, to Tu Pham on 15 December 2003 highlighted the Commissioner’s distress and referenced his psychologist’s involvement. Simultaneously, solicitors from Bradley Allen sent letters on 18 and 22 December 2003 directly to Tu Pham and her superior, Chief Executive Mike Harris of the Chief Minister’s Department. These letters accused Pham of racism in her management of Marina’s attacks, demanding action. A public interest disclosure from Marina himself on 19 December 2003 further muddied the waters, attempting to deflect blame onto the Commissioner.
Pham, then Acting Chief Executive of Treasury, was staring down litigation for her handling, or mishandling, of these racist incidents. Her inaction had allowed Marina’s behaviour to fester, exposing her to personal and professional liability. Mike Harris, as the overarching Chief Executive, was equally implicated: his failure to discipline Marina despite clear evidence breached his duty to maintain a discrimination-free workplace. Harris’s oversight meant he could be dragged into the fray, facing scrutiny for dereliction of responsibility. Enter the ACT Government Solicitor’s office, deeply entangled in the mess. Officials there were fully aware of Marina’s 9 May 2002 letter and ancillary materials evidencing his racism, documents that had circulated internally. Yet, rather than recommending investigations or sanctions, the Solicitor’s advice leaned toward containment: it was deemed “easier” to neutralise the complainant (the Commissioner) than dismantle the entrenched issues of racism and incompetence.
This convergence of self-preservation created a perfect storm. Each key player had a vested interest in the Commissioner’s removal: Pham to shield herself from racism claims, Harris to avoid exposure of his lax oversight, and the Solicitor to sidestep the broader institutional reckoning that addressing Marina would entail.
The 6 February 2004 meeting was convened as a strategy session, ostensibly to address ongoing issues, but in reality to orchestrate a plan to derail the Commissioner’s Human Rights Commission application. Contemporaneous records and subsequent analyses reveal it as the forum where the final decision was made to fabricate grounds for his dismissal, a classic “fit-up” to discredit the whistleblower and halt his complaints. The Commissioner was not present, underscoring the secretive, exclusionary nature of the gathering. Attendees included:
- Tu Pham, Acting Chief Executive of Treasury: As the convener, Pham chaired the meeting. Her motivations were acute; the solicitors’ letters had landed just weeks prior, putting her racism allegations front and centre. By framing the Commissioner as the problem, perhaps through exaggerated or invented performance issues, she could deflect from her own failures in managing Marina’s racism and undermine his HRC case.
- Glen Gaskill, a senior Treasury official: Present as a witness or note-taker, Gaskill had prior knowledge of the tensions. His 9 May 2003 letter documented Marina’s assaults and vilification against the Commissioner, yet he did not intervene decisively. At the meeting, his role likely involved corroborating the narrative against the Commissioner, prioritising departmental harmony over equity.
- Mike Harris, Chief Executive of the Chief Minister’s Department: Harris’s attendance underscored the high stakes. As Pham’s superior, he was directly implicated in the litigation warnings. His inaction on Marina’s racism, despite his position requiring him to enforce anti-discrimination policies, meant the meeting offered a chance to contain the scandal. Dragging Harris into a discrimination probe would have implicated the entire Chief Minister’s apparatus, so supporting the fit-up aligned with his interests.
According to a statement Tu Pham gave, the government solicitor was physically present at that meeting. The government solicitor at that time was Mr. Philip Mitchell. While earlier records suggested the Solicitor’s influence was advisory, Pham’s statement confirms Mitchell’s direct involvement, placing him in the room during this pivotal decision. Mitchell, as head of the ACT Government Solicitor’s office, brought legal weight to the proceedings. His presence underscores the office’s complicity: fully aware of Marina’s racism, Mitchell opted for the path of least resistance, endorsing the fit-up rather than advocating for an impartial investigation. This revelation, drawn from Pham’s own testimony, highlights how legal counsel, meant to uphold justice, instead facilitated injustice.
The purpose was to strategise ways to derail the Commissioner’s ongoing Human Rights Commission application, which sought redress for the racism and harassment he faced. Discussions reportedly centred on twisting his whistleblowing, exposing potential fraud in projects like the Belconnen Pool and broader mismanagement, into insubordination or misconduct. No genuine evidence of wrongdoing by the Commissioner was presented; instead, the group leveraged his Indigenous identity and advocacy to portray him as disruptive, aiming to discredit his HRC claims. The decision: proceed with a stand-down and fabricated disciplinary actions, paving the way for his eventual dismissal and weakening his Commission case. This fit-up wasn’t impulsive; it was a deliberate calculus to protect the guilty by sacrificing the victim.
The ripples from this meeting extended far beyond 2004, manifesting in a pattern of retaliatory legal manoeuvres. The Office of the ACT Government Solicitor, true to its pre-meeting stance and with Mitchell and subsequently Peter Garrisson at the helm, twice initiated inappropriate actions against the Commissioner attempting to escalate the matter to the Australian Human Rights Commission. These included vexatious claims designed to intimidate and silence, such as mischaracterising complaints as defamation or procedural breaches. For instance, documents from 2005 onward show the Solicitor’s office pushing baseless prosecutions, echoing the fit-up’s logic: better to litigate aggressively than admit fault.
The Commissioner’s termination followed swiftly, leading to prolonged mental health struggles (as detailed in a 24 February 2007 psychologist’s letter) and family devastation. A special audit by Acumen Alliance in 2003 had already flagged issues in Angel Marina’s section, but the meeting ignored these in favour of targeting the Commissioner. The Ombudsman acknowledged the Commissioner’s 27 June 2003 public interest disclosure in a 26 June 2005 letter, yet no resolution came. Court victories, like my success in the ACT Supreme Court exposed the fraudulence, but accountability for Pham, Harris, Mitchell and Garrisson remained elusive.
Today, over two decades later, the 6 February 2004 decision plays out in real time. Marina’s racism persists unchecked, with AFP interference shielding him (as seen in the 2004 raid led by Constable Rowena Penfold, which mishandled evidence tied to this saga). Pham rose to Auditor-General despite her role, lying in court about 2002-2003 events only for her “memory” to conveniently sharpen by 2017. Harris’s legacy of inaction taints the Chief Minister’s Department. Mitchell’s involvement, confirmed by Pham’s statement, exemplifies how legal gatekeepers enable systemic bias.
I’m not suggesting every person involved is racist, far from it. Colleagues, bureaucrats, and even some AFP officers had genuine procedural concerns or were navigating complex politics. But several racists were central to the equation, their actions unchecked. The balance, the non-racists, turned a blind eye because they didn’t want to get involved. They sought an easy path through life, avoiding conflict.
This is the crux: if you’re a chief executive of a government department, the Attorney-General, or a Solicitor General, it’s your job to make hard decisions. If those decisions mean calling out racism in your ranks, you must do it. Failure makes you guilty of racism, not the active kind, like overt slurs or discrimination based on heritage, but a subtle form. It’s saying, “I’m not going to intervene, even though it’s my duty, because I don’t want the hassle.” You walk past it, empowering the racists. This indolence lets the cycle continue, on and on.
In my case, this manifested in prolonged legal battles, ignored complaints to the Commonwealth Ombudsman, and institutional stonewalling. Reports of bias were dismissed as “personality clashes.” Indigenous perspectives were sidelined, reinforcing power imbalances. Over 20 years, it’s affected my career, health, and family, echoing broader Indigenous incarceration disparities in the ACT, where systemic bias funnels marginalised people into the justice system. But it’s bigger than me, large numbers of people are involved, from department heads like Tu Pham (accused of incompetence in handling racism complaints) to legal advisors like Philip Mitchell and Peter Garrisson, all complicit in varying degrees.
This saga underscores the doctor’s analogy: those without experience of racism can’t relate, so they minimise it. White officials, comfortable in their positions, see no urgency. They rationalise inaction as neutrality, but neutrality in injustice sides with the oppressor, as Martin Luther King Jr. noted.
The Subtle Face of Racism: Passive Enabling and Its Consequences
Racism isn’t always burning crosses or hate speech; often, it’s passive. This subtle form, omission over commission, is pernicious because it’s harder to confront. It thrives on denial, where people say, “I’m not racist; I treat everyone equally,” while ignoring unequal systems.
In psychology, this ties to “bystander effect,” where individuals don’t intervene because they assume others will or fear repercussions. Applied to racism, non-racists become bystanders, their inaction enabling harm. Studies from the American Psychological Association show that passive racism perpetuates disparities in education, employment, and health.
In Australia, this is evident in Indigenous affairs. The Closing the Gap initiative aims to address inequalities, but progress is slow due to bureaucratic inertia. Officials avoid “rocking the boat,” fearing backlash from conservative elements. This empowers overt racists, who face no consequences.
Leaders bear greater responsibility. A CEO or Attorney-General isn’t just an employee; they’re stewards of justice. If racism festers under their watch, say, in hiring practices or policy enforcement, they must act. Not doing so is dereliction, a form of racism by proxy.
In my saga, this passivity has prolonged suffering. Non-racist actors chose comfort over courage, allowing biased decisions to stand. It’s a chain: one ignored complaint leads to another, eroding trust in institutions.
In the Marina-Penfold case, this passivity is stark. Marina’s letter, which vilified Indigenous staff as “lazy” and “unreliable,” was not just overlooked, it was weaponised. Penfold’s social ties to Marina during her investigation raised ethical red flags, yet no internal probe followed. Leaders like former Chief Police Officers or ACT Attorneys-General chose harmony over scrutiny, allowing racism to embed in operations. The 2004 strategy meeting, with Mitchell’s presence, further illustrates this: legal advice that could have halted the fit-up instead accelerated it, specifically to derail the HRC application.
To break this, we need cultural shifts. Training on unconscious bias, mandatory reporting for discrimination, and accountability mechanisms are starts. Personally, it means reflecting on our roles; are we enablers or challengers? Expanding accountability could include independent oversight boards for government solicitors, ensuring figures like Mitchell face review for such decisions.
Identifying the Key Figures: Accountability in the Face of Denial
While many are involved, the core racists in this saga are individuals whose actions, or inactions, have driven the racism, as documented publicly for over two decades on platforms like X and in court records. Angel Marina and Constable Rowena Penfold stand out as central figures embodying this, with Tu Pham, Mike Harris, Philip Mitchell and Peter Garrisson enabling through their roles in the 2004 strategy meeting.
Angel Marina, a long-serving ACT public servant, authored the infamous 2002 letter that sparked much of the fallout. Described in public disclosures as containing “egregious racial hatred,” it targeted Indigenous employees with stereotypes, leading to whistleblower retaliation and a cascade of cover-ups. Marina’s alleged friends “within the AFP” (as he boasted) shielded him from scrutiny, allowing his racism to persist unchecked. Despite complaints to bodies like the ACT Human Rights Commission, no formal sanctions followed, enabling further manipulations, such as fraudulent public interest disclosures used against critics. His protection highlights institutional bias: a non-Indigenous official’s prejudice is downplayed, while Indigenous voices are criminalised.
Constable Rowena Penfold, now promoted to Acting Commander despite the controversies, led the flawed 2004 investigation. Her conduct, racist remarks during the raid, evidence mishandling, and procedural violations, directly harmed an Indigenous family, including the loss of culturally significant items. Under oath, she shrugged off accountability, admitting lapses without remorse. Her transfer to the NT Intervention, rather than discipline, signalled tolerance for such behaviour. Public calls for her investigation, including on X, have gone unheeded, underscoring how police impunity perpetuates cycles of distrust.
Tu Pham’s role in the 2004 strategy meeting, as confirmed in her statement, places her at the epicentre of the fit-up. Her decision to prioritise self-protection over addressing Marina’s racism set a tone of denial, specifically targeting the Commissioner’s HRC application. Mike Harris, by attending and endorsing the proceedings, failed his oversight duties. Philip Mitchell, physically present as the Government Solicitor, provided the legal veneer for injustice, choosing expediency over ethics to derail the Commission process.
These aren’t baseless accusations; they’re drawn from court testimonies, Ombudsman reports, and detailed accounts where the saga has been chronicled since the early 2000s. Not everyone is racist, but Marina and Penfold’s roles amplified the issue, with Pham, Harris, and Mitchell enabling it. Calling them out isn’t vengeance; it’s demanding leaders fulfil duties. If they can’t relate to racism’s impact, they must learn, or step aside.
Society benefits when we name enablers. It forces reflection, as with #MeToo exposing sexual harassment deniers. Similarly, anti-racism movements like Black Lives Matter highlight passive complicity. In Australia, this case parallels broader failures, like the NT police racism admissions in 2024.
Broader Implications: Building a Society of Active Empathy
Extending this, how do we foster relatability? Education is key, curricula incorporating diverse histories, like Australia’s Indigenous perspectives. Media representation normalises experiences. Personal stories, like my doctor’s, humanise issues.
For leaders, ethical training and diversity quotas ensure varied viewpoints. Whistleblower protections encourage calling out bias.
In my saga, resolution requires investigation, apologies, compensation and reforms. But it’s symbolic of larger fights: against denial in climate change, inequality, or violence. For instance, environmental racism affects Indigenous communities disproportionately, yet non-affected groups deny urgency.
Ultimately, the doctor’s words remind us: inexperience breeds blindness, but wilful ignorance is a choice. By relating through empathy, we build inclusive societies. Community programs, like cultural exchanges, can help white Australians experience Indigenous realities, reducing denial.
Conclusion: The Imperative of Action
Reflecting on the doctor’s words, I’ve seen how inexperience breeds denial in rape and racism. The Voice showed varied motivations, but my two-decade saga, centred on Angel Marina’s bigotry, Constable Rowena Penfold’s enabling misconduct, and the 2004 strategy meeting’s fit-up orchestrated by Tu Pham, Mike Harris, and Philip Mitchell to derail the Human Rights Commission application reveals how passivity empowers harm.
Leaders must call out racism, Marina, Penfold, Pham, Harris, Mitchell and Garrison exemplify failures that demand scrutiny. Let’s choose empathy over ease, action over indolence. Only then can we build a just world.
