
March/April 2022 53
also underlies the idea that whistleblowers tend
to be “egoists”. But this is just a dierent name-
calling that has a similar eect of causing people
to believe that they somehow deserve their mal-
treatment through some character defect.
Whistleblowers
One of the things that happens to a person when
they become the target of injustice, is that they
become rattled, and when it comes time to say
exactly what it is they are rattled about, the story
tends to come tumbling out in a disjointed, often
garbled way, having the unfortunate eect of
causing people to back o in uncertainty rather
than engage with the story the person is trying
to tell.
Village magazine’s series of articles on Frank
Mulcahy, former CEO of business group ISME, ,
who has been in such a conflict with various
heavyweight parties for the past 20 years, dis-
plays this quality of tumbling grievances.
Perhaps Frank McBrearty too.
This is possibly why it is so easy to side-line
whistleblowers, because often they are alone,
usually against an organisation or a collective
of some description, and they are rattled as indi-
viduals, for very human reasons related to group
dynamics and a sense of belonging.
It is easy then, and even amusing for some, to
gaslight such people. This is a standard weapon
used by organisations and groups against indi-
viduals, often supplemented by accusations
and charges of sexual impropriety, as hap
-
pened with Julian Assange and Maurice McCabe.
Primitive Groups
In Janice Harper’s case, when she found herself
the target of a faculty mobbing, her training as
an anthropologist kicked in to find some per-
spective in the otherwise traumatic experience
she was undergoing.
She was able to bring her learning to bear on
the situation, providing some striking insights
as to what was actually going on in terms of pri
-
meval Human group dynamics that are still
installed in our biological makeup.
In ‘Mobbed’, she shows how ancient group
dynamics are triggered by dier
-
ence, and also shows the manner
in which the group behaves to
expel unwanted individuals from
the group.
For instance, in hunter-gatherer
groups, one of the safeguards for
group survival in a world where
wild animal attacks were still a real-
ity, was to have a standby sacrifice
should the group find itself having
to oer up a member to an animal
to ensure the survival of the group.
This would usually be an individual
marked in some way by dierence
and regarded as more expendable
than others in the group. The
dierence might be a physical defect, or it might
be some characteristic the group considered dif-
ferentiated a “foreigner” or “outsider” in one
way or another. “Dierence”, no matter how triv-
ial, was the deciding factor.
According to Harper it is these primitive con
-
siderations that are triggered when someone,
such as a whistleblower, moves against the
group. A new ruthlessness towards that individ-
ual is triggered in the group, and has the eect
of causing the group to bondagainstthe indi
-
vidual, more determined than ever to expel
someone now regarded as a danger to the secu-
rity of the group.
Loyalty
So, in this primitive blood-like group dynamic,
the accusations of whistleblowers, become not
crimes of the group - though in our world they
may well be crimes – but instead positive or
intrinsic characteristics of the group being
attacked by a perceived “outsider” or traitor.
A neutral individual happening upon such a
conflict is likely to be first greeted by an
aggrieved and frightened individual – in primi-
tive society it is death to be expelled from the
group – with a cascadling narrative of serial
injustices perpetrated by various group
members.
The neutral individual, being themselves nat-
urally group-oriented, will, in most cases, be
inclined to side with the group. And this is the
tragedy of whistleblowing. Though often well-
intentioned, the resulting conflict has less to do
with right and wrong and more to do with blind
biology, inadvertently triggering primitive
hatreds and alliances, and often only succeed-
ing in expelling the individual from the group, to
the extent even of destroying that individual,
and the Village piece made the case that nearly
all whistleblowers get destroyed, rather than the
intended reform of group practices which the
whistleblower initially might have hoped for.
In this respect, it is crucial to enact laws that
convincingly protect whistleblowers, not in the
often-mistaken belief that such laws will protect
the whistleblower only, but in the knowledge
Schoolyrd whistleblower?
that such laws will protect the wider society from
the emergence of primitive and often violent
group dynamics.
Ireland and Whistleblowers
The ‘Enemies of the People’ articel, by Michael
Smith and David Langwallner, paints a depress-
ing picture of Irish society. A society that
appears often to be “underworld” in its outlook
and practices, to borrow a concept from Eric
Berne’s 1964 book ‘Games People Play’. For
instance, we’ve seen time and again that an Irish
politician caught in some corruption scandal,
and even expelled from the party, is returned to
power as an independent with more support
than they ever had before.
This can only be due to a post-colonial hango-
ver of Us vs Them, where Dublin is seen as the
home of Them. But “They” shipped out one hun-
dred years ago. Since then, there has been only
Us.
This would also explain the Ansbacher scan
-
dal, where a bank Guinness Mahon, founded by
tos provided funds for a chippy elite who
regarded themselves as entitled, even if nobody
else did. It accounts for much of the weakness
of Charles Haughey who considered horse-rid
-
ing, and a taste in historic houses and Charvet
Shirts would somehow elevate him to what can
only be described as colonial levels of big-man
ascendancy.
Conclusion
Though it may be more comforting to think that
whistleblowing is ultimately about some errant
individuals who can’t keep their egos in check,
and get their noses bloodied for their eorts, the
truth may be that whistleblowers are those indi-
viduals who have seen through the hypocrisies
of the group, inadvertently triggering primitive
group dynamics related to survival, a situation
further complicated in Ireland by the tendency
of groups to adopt underworld understandings
as a hangover of colonial rebelliousness.
Many of the same
psychological processes
that enable a population
to follow an autocratic
leader to genocide are
apparent in the manner
in which management
can lead workers
towards demonising an
individual