As I recently drove through Greece I noticed repeated graffiti seemingly everywhere on every available wall. In large blue letters it said WAKE UP WAKE UP. It could almost have been written with the British public in mind, because although the spirit of 1939 Germany now pervades throughout media-brand Britain, the 2013 grotesque inevitability of Lord and Lady Beckham (with Sir Jamie Horrible close at heel) is, believe me, a fate worse than life. WAKE UP WAKE UP.”
Steven Patrick Morrissey [Pitchfork]
LOL, OMG.
“The insurrectionary youth seem to understand better than most what these goods are – theirs. They grasp the fetish character of commodities and the theft of property as time. In a radical way, the youth grasp, and break, the distinction between use value and exchange value.” via RogueishFLIP LIFE TV: UK RIOTS DEBATE IN CLAPHAM
Following up on my thoughts on the London riots that expanded across the UK this week I wanted to share a must see debate on the streets of Clapham South London about the riots. The biggest misunderstanding between us in the UK is that those on the right assume that those of us who are trying to understand the reasons behind the rioting are justifying the violence. I am not a rioter. I do not justify the looting. But I understand my community and I understand that if children are not invested in and have no infrastructure they will grow up feral and misguided. Children with little or no education will express themselves in a language that is not socially acceptable. As a country we either criminalise, ghettoise or ignore the underclass. In the mean time we celebrate tokenism as part of a pseudo-liberal agenda. This is the status quo and we usually get along fine in this matrix.
The undercurrent of the UK riots is the recession, a context in which young people experience the brunt of unemployment, the government abandons pre school programmes like Sure Start, cuts youth services like connections, youth clubs and initiatives to get unemployed youth into work and triples the cost of university education. This is a context that promotes individualism above everything, but expects the poor to be passionate about their communities. Personally I see no difference between the opportunist banking strategy of the sub prime mortgage crisis that leaves people homeless and an opportunist young person burning down someone’s property. I see no difference between MP’s looting the public by filing illegitimate expenses paid for by the public and a teenager stealing a plasma TV. The leaders of the UK speak in terms of the acquisition of things, money and power and the looting youth maybe maleducated but they have been socialised into the same language and have shown us this violently. The reason why the riots in the 80’s had a clear ideological agenda is because the 80’s were political. You had the Conservative Tories on one side and the Liberal Labour party on the other side of the swinging political pendulum (the Lib Dems were still irrelevant). You now have less clear ideological differences between Tory and Labour and a society and youth governed by consumerism. This is why we have the looting of TV’s and jeans instead of the burning of books.
So how do we move forward? Not by employing a strategy of blame towards the poor and dusting white collar crime under the carpet. We need to invest in young people across class by prioritising education, sport and extra curricular activities for a start. When I say invest I mean both the government and individuals like me and you mentoring where we can and setting up initiatives for young people because it’s all about using individual responsibility for the collective good. Most of all we need communion across the different social and economic spheres. The way the police and government talk at eachother and the conservatives and liberals talk at eachother and the adults and the youth talk at eachother - but not WITH eachother is bound to continue the cycle of conflict.
(via soupsoup)
LONDON (The Borowitz Report) - News Corporation chief Rupert Murdoch blasted the British rioters today, telling reporters, “These people are criminals. If you don’t believe me, listen to their voicemails.” Mr. Murdoch said that although he had been listening to the rioters’ phone calls for days, “I had no idea that they were actually going to go through with something this beastly.” The News Corp chief said he was saddened by what he sees as “the decline of the rule of law in this great nation.” “These thugs seem to think they can just go out there and break the law, willy-nilly, however they please,” he said. “I don’t know where they get crazy ideas like that.” He said that he had confidence that the British police could defeat the rioters, “but if not, I’m going to send in my wife Wendi.”
Richard Seymour of The Guardian and Darcus Howe on today’s Democracy Now talking about the riots in london - amazing piece of journalism and very well worth a watch/listen
One of the most visible Marxists in the UK and an important black journalist, they also kept today’s buzzword, “lumpenprole”, out of their mouth.
So, even if politicians are in denial, the rich aren’t. You may well say, “bollocks, they’re not taking on the ruling class, they’re just destroying their own nest, hurting working class people and small businesses”. I can hear this, just as I can hear the sanctimony in its enunciation. The truth is that riots almost always hurt poor, working class people. There’s no riot that embodies a pure struggle for justice, that is not also partly a self-inflicted wound. There is no riot without looting, without anti-social behaviour, without a mixture of bad motives and bad politics. That still doesn’t mean that the riot doesn’t have a certain political focus; that it doesn’t have consequences for the ability of the ruling class to keep control; that the contest with the police is somehow taking place outside of its usual context of suspicion borne of institutional racism and brutality. The rioters here, whenever they’ve been asked, have made it more than abundantly clear what their motives are - most basically, repaying years of police mistreatment.
Somewhat less on your high horse, you may go on: “but even if there is some sort of mediated logic of political class struggle unfolding here, the rich have nothing to fear as this sort of destruction is at best counterproductive”. That may be correct, though it’s the sort of thing people tend to assume rather than argue for. Major riots in the twentieth century included Soweto, in South Africa, and in US inner cities in the 1960s up to and including the Watts rebellion. Major riots in recent British history have included those in Brixton in 1981, and Broadwater Farm in 1986, as well as the poll tax riots in 1990. It would be foolish to claim that these made no contribution to achieving the objectives of their participants. The fact is that whatever problems riots bring to the communities affected by them - and they’re real, no question - it can’t just be assumed that they’re stupid. The participants may not be glibly articulate, and some of them may be engaging in indefensible behaviour, but they shouldn’t just be written off as mindless, apolitical thugs.
A more sensible assumption, perhaps, is that you have a lot of young people with complex motives - avarice and adventure, sure, but also anger and defiance - some of whom are educated in certain traditions of resistance. For example, The Guardian reporter Paul Lewis (who is worth following on Twitter, by the way) was surprised that Tottenham residents all knew of the IPCC and were very critical of it. This surprise was misplaced. Those who are most likely to suffer police repression, and thus have to make use of complaints procedures, are of course going to be in possession of certain repertoires of knowledge concerning policing and the criminal justice system. They would make it their business to be informed, out of self-defence. I don’t buy the idea that these kids are just clueless about the political background of their oppression. And I think they’re most likely on a learning curve now, as yet undecided as to what wider political conclusions they will draw from all of this. Like it or not, they are now part of the wider ideological crisis, now a key ingredient in the slow-motion collapse of the political leadership. How they see their involvement here, and how their perception changes, long after the smoke has cleared and the empty rhetoric has stopped, should be of some interest.
”Tuesday, August 9, 2011 - 04:52 - UK Riots - Al-Jazeera UK Riots Live Blog
How’s that for some understanding, huh?
(via readnfight)