Aww, don'tcha just love the bourgeois mainstream? I mean, ain’t they
precious and priceless? Isn’t their disingenuous, blithe,
untroubled faith in recieved opinion; and their unquestioning belief in the fundamental goodness and honesty of the world
they live in; just kind-of adorable? Like toddlers who treat Mummy and Daddy like all-knowing, ever-protective gods. And aren't they sweet the way they get all serious about pondering the eternal verities they take for granted, like the way little kids are when
they get all serious about a let’s-pretend game they’re playing.
I
mean, look at this...
Dostoyevsky’s characters “justify murder in the
name of
ideological beliefs” which, according to the BBC, means he “foresaw the
rise of the totalitarian state”.
Because it goes without saying that
‘democratic’ states never ever justify murder ideologically. Nuh-uh.
The idea.
Mindless, vacuous, unconcerned contentment of this type is
sort-of cute, like the way cattle just mooch aimlessly around fields taking in the same sights over and over again, and happily munching on the cud.
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Saturday, 22 August 2015
Wednesday, 9 July 2014
Déjà bloody vu
I was going to do this post all over again... (this is what we do with Palestine: say the same bloody things over and over again, because the same bloody things keep happening over and over again)... but Richard Seymour has already done it for me, very succintly.
(EDIT: I originally posted a screencap of Seymour's tweet of a screencap. But Seymour has now posted the original screencap itself on his blog. So it seems only fair to remove my screencap of his tweet and just link to him. Not that he needs hits from me.)
(EDIT: I originally posted a screencap of Seymour's tweet of a screencap. But Seymour has now posted the original screencap itself on his blog. So it seems only fair to remove my screencap of his tweet and just link to him. Not that he needs hits from me.)
Labels:
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Friday, 23 May 2014
UKIP SURGE AHEAD ON SHABOGAN GRAFFITI
The main headlines today.
THE BBC NEWS DIVISION HAS TAKEN OVER OWNERSHIP OF OBSCURE DOCTOR WHO BLOG SHABOGAN GRAFFITI
"The blog will now be run according to proper BBC guidelines of impartiality," said that lying Zionist shitsack James Harding, head of BBC News.
In other news...
UKIP SURGE FORWARD AND ONWARDS TO CERTAIN FORWARD MARCHING MARCH OF ONWARD SURGING SURGENESS AHEAD ON SHABOGAN GRAFFITI.
The BBC Newsroom is reporting that despite there being no sentiments ever expressed on Shabogan Graffiti that a Ukipper would ever find acceptable, UKIP have broken through with a breakthrough on Shabogan Graffiti and are now surging forward and ahead to breakthroughs and surges on the unpopular blog.
"Apparently the vast majority of the British electorate do not read Shabogan Graffiti," said a hairdo on top of a suit behind a desk, "but even so, the fact that UKIP have now broken through and surged across the blog shows clearly that the British public think UKIP are a force to be reckoned with and a reckon to be forced with and surging and breaking through and getting the mainstream establishment parties running scared."
Finally...
BBC ANNOUNCES NEW SERIES OF POSTS ON SHABOGAN GRAFFITI, TO BE ENTITLED 'IMMIGRATION: ASKING THE DIFFICULT QUESTIONS THAT MOST WHITE WORKING CLASS PEOPLE WANT ANSWERED BUT WHICH THE POLITICAL CORRECTNESS NAZIS REFUSE ANY OF US TO TALK ABOUT'.
Andrew Marr is 412 years old.
THE BBC NEWS DIVISION HAS TAKEN OVER OWNERSHIP OF OBSCURE DOCTOR WHO BLOG SHABOGAN GRAFFITI
"The blog will now be run according to proper BBC guidelines of impartiality," said that lying Zionist shitsack James Harding, head of BBC News.
In other news...
UKIP SURGE FORWARD AND ONWARDS TO CERTAIN FORWARD MARCHING MARCH OF ONWARD SURGING SURGENESS AHEAD ON SHABOGAN GRAFFITI.
The BBC Newsroom is reporting that despite there being no sentiments ever expressed on Shabogan Graffiti that a Ukipper would ever find acceptable, UKIP have broken through with a breakthrough on Shabogan Graffiti and are now surging forward and ahead to breakthroughs and surges on the unpopular blog.
"Apparently the vast majority of the British electorate do not read Shabogan Graffiti," said a hairdo on top of a suit behind a desk, "but even so, the fact that UKIP have now broken through and surged across the blog shows clearly that the British public think UKIP are a force to be reckoned with and a reckon to be forced with and surging and breaking through and getting the mainstream establishment parties running scared."
Finally...
BBC ANNOUNCES NEW SERIES OF POSTS ON SHABOGAN GRAFFITI, TO BE ENTITLED 'IMMIGRATION: ASKING THE DIFFICULT QUESTIONS THAT MOST WHITE WORKING CLASS PEOPLE WANT ANSWERED BUT WHICH THE POLITICAL CORRECTNESS NAZIS REFUSE ANY OF US TO TALK ABOUT'.
Andrew Marr is 412 years old.
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
10
"We waited here in the dark space," booms the Dalek Emperor, "damaged but rebuilding. Centuries
passed, and we quietly infiltrated the systems of Earth, harvesting
the waste of humanity. The prisoners, the refugees, the dispossessed.
They all came to us. The bodies were filtered, pulped, sifted. The
seed of the human race is perverted. Only one cell in a billion was fit
to be nurtured."
So, In Russell's rewrite of 'Revelation of the Daleks' (which would be a better title for this story than it was for Saward's script), the Daleks are no longer harvesting the elite. Brought to the brink of extinction, they have been forced to resurrect themselves from the 'dregs'... which seems to be synonymous with the contestants who lose game shows. The Daleks take the people who get knocked out before the finale. Because the Daleks have become TV producers. They've become the people who run Big Brother and Trinny & Susannah and The Weakest Link. They've become the bosses of reality TV. They've become Simon Cowell. (Which is kind of an insult to the Daleks, if you ask me.)
Big Brother, in our polity, in our system of media signs, is no longer Orwell's omniscient totalitarian leader; he's now the eternal, ever-watching viewer. He's us. Just like the Daleks are now us.
"So you created an army of Daleks out of the dead," says the Doctor.
Again, the gothic, the monopoly, and the zombie labour.
"That makes them half human," mutters Rose... as always, she is straight to the quick.
"Those words are blasphemy!" bellows the Dalek Emperor.
The Daleks chant in unison...
"Do not blaspheme! Do not blaspheme! Do not blaspheme!"
"Since when did the Daleks have a concept of blasphemy?" asks the Doctor.
"I reached into the dirt and made new life. I am the God of all Daleks!"
The Daleks chant in unison...
"Worship him! Worship him! Worship him!"
Bringing back the Daleks in 2005, four years after 9/11 and the start of the 'War on Terror', two years into the conquest and occupation of Iraq, Russell T. Davies makes them religious fundamentalists. The world is in the middle of an apparent 'clash of civilisations', with religion as the supposed organising logic. But are these new fundamentalist Daleks - 'Fundamentaleks' - supposed to be Osama and Al Qaeda? Are they Bush and the neocon Christian crusaders? Both? Two sides of the same coin?
To me, they look more like another kind of fundamentalism, a more prevalent and destructive kind.
They run a massive media system based on ruthless competition. The housemates who lose the battle for popularity get ejected into nothingness. The Trinny & Susannah bots encourage people to carve into their own flesh in order to look right. The weakest links get zapped, and the strongest link is the one who most effectively and ruthlessly competes, who must callously fucks over his competitors. Society has become "a charnel house" in which people compete in competitions of spectacular triviality which are framed as epic battles. You have to step on the other poor schlubs in order to win. This system is publically fronted by celebrities reconfigured as hollow, inhuman monsters. It is run by ordinary people who do evil things not because they're personally evil, but because they are employed by a systemic evil. And it's all owned and controlled by Daleks who have absorbed a feverish and callous determination that can best be described, at least as far as RTD is concerned, as fanatical religion.
The Daleks have become neoliberals. Capitalist crusaders, ruling a resurgent yet insane system, presiding over a world divided between the starving and the obese who "just watch telly", absorbing the working body utterly and assimilating it into themselves. And the logic behind it all has penetrated human culture to the extent that TV runs the world, and relentlessly pushes an ideology of total competition, total dog-eat-dog. (That this is, essentially, the world we live in is obvious since RTD uses shows of the present day, projected into the future.) Survival has finally been formally and openly marketised. The spectacle is omnipresent and it brazenly expresses the relations at the base of society: compete with each other so that your rulers can profit.
The Daleks have become market fundamentalists.
So, In Russell's rewrite of 'Revelation of the Daleks' (which would be a better title for this story than it was for Saward's script), the Daleks are no longer harvesting the elite. Brought to the brink of extinction, they have been forced to resurrect themselves from the 'dregs'... which seems to be synonymous with the contestants who lose game shows. The Daleks take the people who get knocked out before the finale. Because the Daleks have become TV producers. They've become the people who run Big Brother and Trinny & Susannah and The Weakest Link. They've become the bosses of reality TV. They've become Simon Cowell. (Which is kind of an insult to the Daleks, if you ask me.)
Big Brother, in our polity, in our system of media signs, is no longer Orwell's omniscient totalitarian leader; he's now the eternal, ever-watching viewer. He's us. Just like the Daleks are now us.
"So you created an army of Daleks out of the dead," says the Doctor.
Again, the gothic, the monopoly, and the zombie labour.
"That makes them half human," mutters Rose... as always, she is straight to the quick.
"Those words are blasphemy!" bellows the Dalek Emperor.
The Daleks chant in unison...
"Do not blaspheme! Do not blaspheme! Do not blaspheme!"
"Since when did the Daleks have a concept of blasphemy?" asks the Doctor.
"I reached into the dirt and made new life. I am the God of all Daleks!"
The Daleks chant in unison...
"Worship him! Worship him! Worship him!"
Bringing back the Daleks in 2005, four years after 9/11 and the start of the 'War on Terror', two years into the conquest and occupation of Iraq, Russell T. Davies makes them religious fundamentalists. The world is in the middle of an apparent 'clash of civilisations', with religion as the supposed organising logic. But are these new fundamentalist Daleks - 'Fundamentaleks' - supposed to be Osama and Al Qaeda? Are they Bush and the neocon Christian crusaders? Both? Two sides of the same coin?
To me, they look more like another kind of fundamentalism, a more prevalent and destructive kind.
They run a massive media system based on ruthless competition. The housemates who lose the battle for popularity get ejected into nothingness. The Trinny & Susannah bots encourage people to carve into their own flesh in order to look right. The weakest links get zapped, and the strongest link is the one who most effectively and ruthlessly competes, who must callously fucks over his competitors. Society has become "a charnel house" in which people compete in competitions of spectacular triviality which are framed as epic battles. You have to step on the other poor schlubs in order to win. This system is publically fronted by celebrities reconfigured as hollow, inhuman monsters. It is run by ordinary people who do evil things not because they're personally evil, but because they are employed by a systemic evil. And it's all owned and controlled by Daleks who have absorbed a feverish and callous determination that can best be described, at least as far as RTD is concerned, as fanatical religion.
The Daleks have become neoliberals. Capitalist crusaders, ruling a resurgent yet insane system, presiding over a world divided between the starving and the obese who "just watch telly", absorbing the working body utterly and assimilating it into themselves. And the logic behind it all has penetrated human culture to the extent that TV runs the world, and relentlessly pushes an ideology of total competition, total dog-eat-dog. (That this is, essentially, the world we live in is obvious since RTD uses shows of the present day, projected into the future.) Survival has finally been formally and openly marketised. The spectacle is omnipresent and it brazenly expresses the relations at the base of society: compete with each other so that your rulers can profit.
The Daleks have become market fundamentalists.
Labels:
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capitalism,
culture industry,
gothic,
ideology,
market,
media,
neoconservatism,
neoliberalism,
parting of the ways,
religion,
rtd,
society of the spectacle,
TV,
war on terror,
zombies
Saturday, 16 November 2013
20
For March Against the Mainstream Media Day
The Editor (apparently he edits the whole of human society) has uncovered Suki's true identity. Instead of being just another inoffensive wannabe employee, she's actually...
"Eva Saint Julienne, last surviving member of the Freedom Fifteen. Hmm, self declared anarchist, is that right?" His tone is patronising. Non-mainstream political principles are a quaint and amusing affectation.
"The Freedom Foundation has been monitoring Satellite Five's transmissions," says Suki, pulling a gun on the smug bastard, "We have absolute proof that the facts are being manipulated. You are lying to the people."
"Ooo, I love it," he giggles, still in the same tone of amusement, as though he's listening to hilariously naff dialogue in a period drama, "Say it again."
"This whole system is corrupt. Who do you represent?"
The Editor is self-aware enough to know that, for all his power, he's a slave himself.
"I answer to the Editor in Chief.... If you don't mind, I'm going to have to refer this upwards."
Suki looks up, to see what the Editor is referring to.
"What is that?" she asks.
"Your boss. This has always been your boss, since the day you were born."
Lower down Satellite 5, the Doctor is quizzing Cathica, who has lived all her life on one level.
"I don't know anything," she says proudly.
"Don't you even ask?"
"Why would I?"
"You're a journalist."
"What's that got to do with anything?"
She genuinely doesn't understand him. She doesn't know what is on the floors above her... except that on the executive level, the place she's been trained to yearn for, "the walls are made of gold". She doesn't know why "immigration has tightened up". Forced to guess, she flails around and suggests some vague notions, all based on the random 'shit happens' model, none of which point any blame at anybody powerful or any powerful structures. And this is a member of society in which people are surrounded by 'News', in which they have holes carved into their own heads so information can be beamed directly into their brains. For all the 'news' and 'information', they don't know what's going on or why.
"This society's the wrong shape..." says the Doctor.
When the Doctor and Rose reach the top floors, the walls aren't made of gold, they're made of frosted steel, and the workstations are manned by zombies - including Suki.
"I think she's dead," says the Doctor.
"She's working," says Rose.
In capitalism, mindless labour transforms you into the walking dead... or, in this case, the sitting at a desk dead.
"It may interest you to know," smarms the Editor, "that this is not the Fourth Great and Bountiful Human Empire. In fact, it's not actually human at all. It's merely a place where humans happen to live..."
There is an angry snarl from the ceiling.
"...yeah, sorry..." the Editor corrects himself, jumping at the growl of his boss, "It's a place where humans are allowed to live by kind permission of my client."
His client (he's a banker) is a gigantic slab of meat. The whole system of Satellite 5 is set up to keep it cool and fresh, to stop it turning and rotting. The Empire is system of air conditioning; designed to stop zombie meat from spoiling. But the creature is also a huge, roaring, slavering mouth. At the centre of the Empire, yet again, there is consumption, insatiable hunger... but this mouth also speaks. It speaks its version of truth directly into the brains of the human race.
"Create a climate of fear and it's easy to keep the borders closed,"explains the Editor, "It's just a matter of emphasis. The right word in the right broadcast repeated often enough can destabilise an economy, invent an enemy..." (it seems redundant, but I'll mention the word: Iraq) "... or change a vote."
"So all the people on Earth are like, slaves," says Rose, cutting straight to the quick as usual.
"Well, now, there's an interesting point..." returns the Editor, "Is a slave a slave if he doesn't know he's enslaved?"
"Yes," says the Doctor simply. He won't debate the issue, despite the Editor's more-grown-up-than-thou goading. If you just concede that it's even up for debate, the Editors of this world have already won. It becomes Question Time. It becomes safe.
Perhaps a slave is even more a slave if he just takes it for granted that he's free.
The Editor (apparently he edits the whole of human society) has uncovered Suki's true identity. Instead of being just another inoffensive wannabe employee, she's actually...
"Eva Saint Julienne, last surviving member of the Freedom Fifteen. Hmm, self declared anarchist, is that right?" His tone is patronising. Non-mainstream political principles are a quaint and amusing affectation.
"The Freedom Foundation has been monitoring Satellite Five's transmissions," says Suki, pulling a gun on the smug bastard, "We have absolute proof that the facts are being manipulated. You are lying to the people."
"Ooo, I love it," he giggles, still in the same tone of amusement, as though he's listening to hilariously naff dialogue in a period drama, "Say it again."
"This whole system is corrupt. Who do you represent?"
The Editor is self-aware enough to know that, for all his power, he's a slave himself.
"I answer to the Editor in Chief.... If you don't mind, I'm going to have to refer this upwards."
Suki looks up, to see what the Editor is referring to.
"What is that?" she asks.
"Your boss. This has always been your boss, since the day you were born."
Lower down Satellite 5, the Doctor is quizzing Cathica, who has lived all her life on one level.
"I don't know anything," she says proudly.
"Don't you even ask?"
"Why would I?"
"You're a journalist."
"What's that got to do with anything?"
She genuinely doesn't understand him. She doesn't know what is on the floors above her... except that on the executive level, the place she's been trained to yearn for, "the walls are made of gold". She doesn't know why "immigration has tightened up". Forced to guess, she flails around and suggests some vague notions, all based on the random 'shit happens' model, none of which point any blame at anybody powerful or any powerful structures. And this is a member of society in which people are surrounded by 'News', in which they have holes carved into their own heads so information can be beamed directly into their brains. For all the 'news' and 'information', they don't know what's going on or why.
"This society's the wrong shape..." says the Doctor.
When the Doctor and Rose reach the top floors, the walls aren't made of gold, they're made of frosted steel, and the workstations are manned by zombies - including Suki.
"I think she's dead," says the Doctor.
"She's working," says Rose.
In capitalism, mindless labour transforms you into the walking dead... or, in this case, the sitting at a desk dead.
"It may interest you to know," smarms the Editor, "that this is not the Fourth Great and Bountiful Human Empire. In fact, it's not actually human at all. It's merely a place where humans happen to live..."
There is an angry snarl from the ceiling.
"...yeah, sorry..." the Editor corrects himself, jumping at the growl of his boss, "It's a place where humans are allowed to live by kind permission of my client."
His client (he's a banker) is a gigantic slab of meat. The whole system of Satellite 5 is set up to keep it cool and fresh, to stop it turning and rotting. The Empire is system of air conditioning; designed to stop zombie meat from spoiling. But the creature is also a huge, roaring, slavering mouth. At the centre of the Empire, yet again, there is consumption, insatiable hunger... but this mouth also speaks. It speaks its version of truth directly into the brains of the human race.
"Create a climate of fear and it's easy to keep the borders closed,"explains the Editor, "It's just a matter of emphasis. The right word in the right broadcast repeated often enough can destabilise an economy, invent an enemy..." (it seems redundant, but I'll mention the word: Iraq) "... or change a vote."
"So all the people on Earth are like, slaves," says Rose, cutting straight to the quick as usual.
"Well, now, there's an interesting point..." returns the Editor, "Is a slave a slave if he doesn't know he's enslaved?"
"Yes," says the Doctor simply. He won't debate the issue, despite the Editor's more-grown-up-than-thou goading. If you just concede that it's even up for debate, the Editors of this world have already won. It becomes Question Time. It becomes safe.
Perhaps a slave is even more a slave if he just takes it for granted that he's free.
Sunday, 10 November 2013
37
A flying ship has plunged into a tall public building, causing panic.
Outside 10 Downing St., the media have been sat around for hours with their cameras trained on the closed black door, waiting for someone official to come out and hand them their version of events... which will, of course, be repeated verbatim as The Story.
Luckily for these relentless seekers after truth, a politician comes out to give them a press conference.
"Our inspectors have searched the skies," he tells the journalists, "and they have found massive weapons of destruction, capable of being deployed in 45 seconds. We face extinction unless we strike first." He goes on to beg the UN for "an emergency resolution" which will give them permission to launch this pre-emptive strike. His words are relayed on the TV news without comment... except by the Doctor and the other people watching.
As satire, this isn't subtle. It's like a sledgehammer to crack a nut... because that's what the WMD story always was: an easily cracked nut. But in a world in which barely anyone in the global media is capable of cracking nuts even with a nutcracker, maybe it's time to get out the sledgehammers... if only to make a sarcastic point.
As a satire of US/UK foreign policy in the wake of 9/11, it's crude... but then US/UK foreign policy in the wake of 9/11 was crude. It didn't need to be anything else. The media could be relied upon to discount the idea that respectable politicians in 'democracies' might have cynical or imperialistic motives. They could be relied upon to train their cameras at closed doors. They could be relied upon to accept the contents of press conferences as basic common sense, and then amplify those press conferences and call them The Story.
This is the aspect of RTD's satire that is so often overlooked: what we might call 'the Andrew Marr aspect'. Marr did a cutesy little cameo in this episode, in which he stands outside 10 Dowing St., wittering about personalities and process, while the government within - which now comprises evil, sniggering babies hidden inside the fleshsuits of respectable, well-groomed, sincere professionals - plots mass murder in order to make a killing on fuel profits. Again, about as subtle as the truth.
On April 9th 2003, as the invasion of Iraq proceeded, beginning a process which would lead to the takeover of Iraq's economy and perhaps more than a million Iraqi deaths, Andrew Marr stood outside 10 Downing St. and said this:
Outside 10 Downing St., the media have been sat around for hours with their cameras trained on the closed black door, waiting for someone official to come out and hand them their version of events... which will, of course, be repeated verbatim as The Story.
Luckily for these relentless seekers after truth, a politician comes out to give them a press conference.
"Our inspectors have searched the skies," he tells the journalists, "and they have found massive weapons of destruction, capable of being deployed in 45 seconds. We face extinction unless we strike first." He goes on to beg the UN for "an emergency resolution" which will give them permission to launch this pre-emptive strike. His words are relayed on the TV news without comment... except by the Doctor and the other people watching.
As satire, this isn't subtle. It's like a sledgehammer to crack a nut... because that's what the WMD story always was: an easily cracked nut. But in a world in which barely anyone in the global media is capable of cracking nuts even with a nutcracker, maybe it's time to get out the sledgehammers... if only to make a sarcastic point.
As a satire of US/UK foreign policy in the wake of 9/11, it's crude... but then US/UK foreign policy in the wake of 9/11 was crude. It didn't need to be anything else. The media could be relied upon to discount the idea that respectable politicians in 'democracies' might have cynical or imperialistic motives. They could be relied upon to train their cameras at closed doors. They could be relied upon to accept the contents of press conferences as basic common sense, and then amplify those press conferences and call them The Story.
This is the aspect of RTD's satire that is so often overlooked: what we might call 'the Andrew Marr aspect'. Marr did a cutesy little cameo in this episode, in which he stands outside 10 Dowing St., wittering about personalities and process, while the government within - which now comprises evil, sniggering babies hidden inside the fleshsuits of respectable, well-groomed, sincere professionals - plots mass murder in order to make a killing on fuel profits. Again, about as subtle as the truth.
On April 9th 2003, as the invasion of Iraq proceeded, beginning a process which would lead to the takeover of Iraq's economy and perhaps more than a million Iraqi deaths, Andrew Marr stood outside 10 Downing St. and said this:
Well, I think this does one thing - it draws a line under what, before the war, had been a period of... well, a faint air of pointlessness, almost, was hanging over Downing Street. There were all these slightly tawdry arguments and scandals. That is now history. Mr Blair is well aware that all his critics out there in the party and beyond aren't going to thank him - because they're only human - for being right when they've been wrong. And he knows that there might be trouble ahead, as I said. But I think this is very, very important for him. It gives him a new freedom and a new self-confidence. He confronted many critics.
I don't think anybody after this is going to be able to say of Tony Blair that he's somebody who is driven by the drift of public opinion, or focus groups, or opinion polls. He took all of those on. He said that they would be able to take Baghdad without a bloodbath, and that in the end the Iraqis would be celebrating. And on both of those points he has been proved conclusively right. And it would be entirely ungracious, even for his critics, not to acknowledge that tonight he stands as a larger man and a stronger prime minister as a result.
Saturday, 12 October 2013
Nearly Silent
Simon Schama gets a huge slab of BBC money and airtime to obfuscate the truth in the service of Apartheid state Israel, taking official Israeli lies as the basis of his 'case'. See here.
Licence-fee money well spent there.
Best bit, on the wall:
“I want to say, nobody, including me, ultimately has the moral right to say that shouldn’t have happened, the wall shouldn’t have happened. Before the wall happened, hundreds of people were dying every year from terrorist attacks; after the wall happened very, very few...."
Actually, since the start of the wall, over 4,000 Palestinians have died... but they obviously don't come into the category of 'people' for Professor Schama, no more than the Haitian slaves who didn't get mentioned in his massive book on the French Revolution.
He continues:
"In some senses, if you don’t live in Israel — I don’t live in Israel — you are morally obliged to be nearly silent.”
So shouldn't that mean that Professor Schama should be "nearly silent" about it? No, of course not. He means that people who disapprove of the wall should be "nearly silent". That's the viewpoint that is invalid if it comes from a non-Israeli. Fascinating how clever people can talk circular, babyish drivel and think it profundity... while being totally unconscious of how they themselves are broadcasting - in this case literally - their own moral hypocrisy.
Or maybe Schama's programme constituted 'near silence'... it was, after all, of little substance.
If only the Palestinians were allowed to be as "nearly silent" on the 'objective' BBC as the Zionists.
![]() |
Simon Schama, thinking profound thoughts about history 'n' stuff. |
Licence-fee money well spent there.
Best bit, on the wall:
“I want to say, nobody, including me, ultimately has the moral right to say that shouldn’t have happened, the wall shouldn’t have happened. Before the wall happened, hundreds of people were dying every year from terrorist attacks; after the wall happened very, very few...."
Actually, since the start of the wall, over 4,000 Palestinians have died... but they obviously don't come into the category of 'people' for Professor Schama, no more than the Haitian slaves who didn't get mentioned in his massive book on the French Revolution.
He continues:
"In some senses, if you don’t live in Israel — I don’t live in Israel — you are morally obliged to be nearly silent.”
So shouldn't that mean that Professor Schama should be "nearly silent" about it? No, of course not. He means that people who disapprove of the wall should be "nearly silent". That's the viewpoint that is invalid if it comes from a non-Israeli. Fascinating how clever people can talk circular, babyish drivel and think it profundity... while being totally unconscious of how they themselves are broadcasting - in this case literally - their own moral hypocrisy.
Or maybe Schama's programme constituted 'near silence'... it was, after all, of little substance.
If only the Palestinians were allowed to be as "nearly silent" on the 'objective' BBC as the Zionists.
Labels:
bbc,
bias,
colonialism,
imperialism,
israel,
media,
palestine,
racism,
simon schama,
zionism
Thursday, 15 November 2012
Children in Need
The BBC's failure to protect kids from Jimmy Savile is revolting, but it's hardly the beginning or the end of their disinterest in violence against children. Certain children, anyway. The keepers of Pudsey are strangely uninterested in the child victims of powerful and influential people... be they depraved DJs or depraved states that happen to be Western allies.
For instance, as I write this, the state of Israel - a brutal, aggressive, nuclear armed, apartheid state which is mysteriously supposed to be less of a threat to world peace than Iran - is murdering Gazan children. (It does no good, by the way, to trot out that old chestnut about them not deliberately aiming at the kids... if you get a machine gun and spray bullets blindly into a school, it's no good later claiming you were only trying to hit the cigar-smoking TV personality lurking in the corner.)
This is nothing new, nor is the BBC response, which is as routine as it is pusilanimous. Indeed, cowardice in the face of the powerful Israeli lobby (not to mention the backing Israel gets from the USA and our government) is the most charitable interpretation. A less charitable - and probably more accurate - interpretation would be that those BBC content providers covering the 'conflict' in Gaza are unaware of the way they are loading and slanting their words.
Some examples? Try these from the BBC website today. Click on them to make them bigger.
Note that the 'Key Points' are all to do with the so-called 'targeted assassination' of a Hamas leader. Note the phrase "militant groups", presumably including Hamas, a democratically elected party. Note the prominence given to Israeli officials, who are allowed to frame the Israeli operation as being aimed at "terror targets" in response to "days of on going rocket attacks on Israeli civilians", the aim being to "protect Israeli civilians" (the only civilians who matter, or even exist, apparently).
No mention of the Gazan civilians, including young children, slaughtered. Can you imagine how differently the page might read if the Palestinian rockets had caused any comparable damage to Israel, or if Iran had bombed somebody and caused as much suffering?
This one from today too:
Here's the headline. Note the relative sizes (and thus importance) given to Israeli and Palestinian deaths... bearing in mind the ratios and the fact that Israel is immensely better armed. Notice the decontextualised way the attack becomes "cross-border violence" in line with the BBC's usual way of depicting Israel/Palestine as a two-tribes-squabble issue, rather than the brutal domination of a subjugated captive minority by a powerful state.
Yesterday, the blog Electronic Intifada published a "statement from international academics who recently particpated in a conference on linguistics at the Islamic University of Gaza which decries major media outlets’ failure to report on recent killings of Palestinian civilians by Israeli forces in Gaza." The statement spells out the issue far better than I could, and takes in the BBC's role as peddling the unbalanced and dishonest message. You can read the whole thing here. Here's a quote:
Here's a shot of the BBC article the statement links to:
This is an earlier report, from 12/11/12. Note that no Israelis are reported as killed by rockets before the Israeli attack on Gaza. The shocked Israelis are higher up the article than the dead Palestinians, who don't make it into the headline. Would dead Israelis be mentioned as an afterthought in paragraph 3? I'm guessing not. Still, two of the dead Palestinians were "militants", so that's all right then.
Just as the media is now engaged in a concerted effort to derail the child abuse scandal into a relentless concentration upon the Newsnight scandal (thus drawing all our eyes away from the possibility that the several sectors of the British establishment - including the government and Conservative Party - were engaged in paedophile rings) so too the real issue in Palestine must be obscured. Just as the BBC is happily flagellating itself to appease the unappeasable reactionary press, so it is voluntarily refusing to see the ongoing horror of Israel's behaviour in Palestine... but it seems unfair to pick on them particularly. As the linguists' statement says, the BBC are just going with the general flow.
I bang on about the BBC because I pay for it directly. Just as my taxes and the taxes of Americans go to support Israeli aggression (through aid and government sponsorship of UK arms sales, for instance), so my licence fee goes toward helping them get away with it.
*
ADDITIONAL:
http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/asa-winstanley/when-bbc-ignores-israeli-murder-its-own-cameramans-baby-what-hope-other
http://www.leninology.com/2012/11/defend-bbc.html
*
MORE DETAIL (ADDED 20/11/12):
http://www.medialens.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=706:gaza-blitz-turmoil-and-tragicomedy-at-the-bbc&catid=25:alerts-2012&Itemid=69
http://www.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/159-stop-the-war/16148-gaza-bbc-re-writing-history-as-it-happens
*
21/11/12:
http://occupynewsnetwork.co.uk/bbc-reporting-is-legitimising-and-encouraging-israeli-war-crimes-in-gaza/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/nov/20/palestinians-have-right-defend-themselves
*
25/11/12:
http://www.newstatesman.com/world-affairs/world-affairs/2012/11/gaza-savaged-again-understanding-bbcs-role-requires-more-sentim
For instance, as I write this, the state of Israel - a brutal, aggressive, nuclear armed, apartheid state which is mysteriously supposed to be less of a threat to world peace than Iran - is murdering Gazan children. (It does no good, by the way, to trot out that old chestnut about them not deliberately aiming at the kids... if you get a machine gun and spray bullets blindly into a school, it's no good later claiming you were only trying to hit the cigar-smoking TV personality lurking in the corner.)
This is nothing new, nor is the BBC response, which is as routine as it is pusilanimous. Indeed, cowardice in the face of the powerful Israeli lobby (not to mention the backing Israel gets from the USA and our government) is the most charitable interpretation. A less charitable - and probably more accurate - interpretation would be that those BBC content providers covering the 'conflict' in Gaza are unaware of the way they are loading and slanting their words.
Some examples? Try these from the BBC website today. Click on them to make them bigger.
Note that the 'Key Points' are all to do with the so-called 'targeted assassination' of a Hamas leader. Note the phrase "militant groups", presumably including Hamas, a democratically elected party. Note the prominence given to Israeli officials, who are allowed to frame the Israeli operation as being aimed at "terror targets" in response to "days of on going rocket attacks on Israeli civilians", the aim being to "protect Israeli civilians" (the only civilians who matter, or even exist, apparently).
No mention of the Gazan civilians, including young children, slaughtered. Can you imagine how differently the page might read if the Palestinian rockets had caused any comparable damage to Israel, or if Iran had bombed somebody and caused as much suffering?
This one from today too:
Here's the headline. Note the relative sizes (and thus importance) given to Israeli and Palestinian deaths... bearing in mind the ratios and the fact that Israel is immensely better armed. Notice the decontextualised way the attack becomes "cross-border violence" in line with the BBC's usual way of depicting Israel/Palestine as a two-tribes-squabble issue, rather than the brutal domination of a subjugated captive minority by a powerful state.
Yesterday, the blog Electronic Intifada published a "statement from international academics who recently particpated in a conference on linguistics at the Islamic University of Gaza which decries major media outlets’ failure to report on recent killings of Palestinian civilians by Israeli forces in Gaza." The statement spells out the issue far better than I could, and takes in the BBC's role as peddling the unbalanced and dishonest message. You can read the whole thing here. Here's a quote:
Articles that do report on the killings overwhelmingly focus on the killing of Palestinian security personnel. For example, an Associated Press article published in the CBC world news on November 13, entitled Israel mulls resuming targeted killings of Gaza militants, mentions absolutely nothing of civilian deaths and injuries. It portrays the killings as ‘targeted assassinations’. The fact that casualties have overwhelmingly been civilians indicates that Israel is not so much engaged in “targeted” killings, as in “collective” killings, thus once again committing the crime of collective punishment. Another AP item on CBC news from November 12 reads Gaza rocket fire raises pressure on Israel government. It features a photo of an Israeli woman gazing on a hole in her living room ceiling. Again, no images, nor mention of the numerous bleeding casualties or corpses in Gaza. Along the same lines, a BBC headline on November 12 reads Israel hit by fresh volley of rockets from Gaza. Similar trend can be illustrated for European mainstream papers.
News items overwhelmingly focus on the rockets that have been fired from Gaza, none of which have caused human casualties. What is not in focus are the shellings and bombardments on Gaza, which have resulted in numerous severe and fatal casualties. It doesn’t take an expert in media science to understand that what we are facing is at best shoddy and skewed reporting, and at worst willfully dishonest manipulation of the readership.
Here's a shot of the BBC article the statement links to:
This is an earlier report, from 12/11/12. Note that no Israelis are reported as killed by rockets before the Israeli attack on Gaza. The shocked Israelis are higher up the article than the dead Palestinians, who don't make it into the headline. Would dead Israelis be mentioned as an afterthought in paragraph 3? I'm guessing not. Still, two of the dead Palestinians were "militants", so that's all right then.
Just as the media is now engaged in a concerted effort to derail the child abuse scandal into a relentless concentration upon the Newsnight scandal (thus drawing all our eyes away from the possibility that the several sectors of the British establishment - including the government and Conservative Party - were engaged in paedophile rings) so too the real issue in Palestine must be obscured. Just as the BBC is happily flagellating itself to appease the unappeasable reactionary press, so it is voluntarily refusing to see the ongoing horror of Israel's behaviour in Palestine... but it seems unfair to pick on them particularly. As the linguists' statement says, the BBC are just going with the general flow.
I bang on about the BBC because I pay for it directly. Just as my taxes and the taxes of Americans go to support Israeli aggression (through aid and government sponsorship of UK arms sales, for instance), so my licence fee goes toward helping them get away with it.
*
ADDITIONAL:
http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/asa-winstanley/when-bbc-ignores-israeli-murder-its-own-cameramans-baby-what-hope-other
http://www.leninology.com/2012/11/defend-bbc.html
*
MORE DETAIL (ADDED 20/11/12):
http://www.medialens.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=706:gaza-blitz-turmoil-and-tragicomedy-at-the-bbc&catid=25:alerts-2012&Itemid=69
http://www.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/159-stop-the-war/16148-gaza-bbc-re-writing-history-as-it-happens
*
21/11/12:
http://occupynewsnetwork.co.uk/bbc-reporting-is-legitimising-and-encouraging-israeli-war-crimes-in-gaza/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/nov/20/palestinians-have-right-defend-themselves
*
25/11/12:
http://www.newstatesman.com/world-affairs/world-affairs/2012/11/gaza-savaged-again-understanding-bbcs-role-requires-more-sentim
Friday, 27 April 2012
Opposite Reaction
The TARDIS Eruditorum blog recently took the opportunity to connect 'The Caves of Androzani' with the 1984-85 Miner's Strike. In the process, Philip Sandifer (the author of the blog) writes:
Sandifer mentions police savagery and also the wholesale media propaganda assault against the NUM (though he talks about the 'redtops', as though it was a purely tabloid phenomenon). Ultimately, however, he seems to imply a plague upon both Thatcher's and Scargill's houses.
In the various permutations that this view takes, the heroic resistance of 150,000 workers and their families over a year of struggle is always deemed to have been overshadowed by the lack of a formal vote on it. Here's a vital corrective to such apparently reasonable 'even-handedness', courtesy of Paul Foot in The Vote: How It was Won and How it Was Undermined:
In the 'waaaaah waaaah, they didn't have a ballot!' version, all this is minimized, if not entirely forgotten. The explosion of democracy 'from below' is written-off, as is the specious falsity of democracy 'from above'. The government conducting this war against the miners had been elected in 1983 with under 43% of the total votes cast, in an election in which under 73% of the electorate turned out. This same government had no mandate to destroy the British coal industry but nevertheless set an unelected Coal Board onto the task. The aim was the destruction of the most militant and powerful union, one which had humiliated the Tories in the past (a story well worth remembering these days). The entirely foreseeable result was the decimation of the lives, livelihoods and communities of hundreds of thousands of working people.
On the ballot question, Scargill gives his side of the story - replete with details that contextualise the matter - here. To quote:
Of course, Sandifer is right to say that the decision not to take a ballot handed the Tories and their compliant media a stick with which to beat the strikers. But, as Paul Foot pointed out, it was either that or give up before the start of the fight. The government wasn't playing nicely by any rule book. They weren't letting an absence of democracy impede them in their ferocious prosecution of class war. And can anyone really be naive enough to think that the government and the media wouldn't have found some other equally-effective pretext for declaring the illegitimacy of the strike and its leadership? Indeed, a glance at the media coverage of the time shows that they could and did. The media constantly harped on about false and unverified reports from the Coal Board about a 'drift back to work'. Coal Board figures turned out to have been artificially inflated... with Murdoch's Sun simply adding numbers itself. Stories about police brutality were consistently ignored or downplayed. This was a media environment in which BBC television news could reverse the order of filmed events in their report of a clash between miners and police at Orgreave, making it appear that the miners had attacked the coppers (when in fact it was the other way round), and never apologise, passing the lie off as a mistake made during editing. They didn't do that, or get away with it, because Scargill didn't hold a ballot.
Undoubtedly, some used the lack of a ballot as an excuse to weasel out of supporting the strikers. The Labour Party under that cowardly windbag Kinnock basically allowed the miners to sink or swim on their own, showing an utterly shameful refusal to support a mass working-class action that had created its own legitimacy. Scargill may not have balloted NUM members, but he was the elected president of the NUM (by a majority of more than 100,000), his decision to call the strike was ratified by a national conference, and the majority of the NUM members responded to his call with awesome determination and solidarity. The call for action was only ignored in areas (like Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire - see above) where the miners thought (wrongly) that their jobs were safe. Scargill was widely derided at the time for his predictions of the scale of Tory plans to close pits... predictions that were eventually proved optimistic. To put the blame upon his "inept politicking" is a classic example of blaming the victim. In this view, he should have made every effort to play by rules that the other side was ignoring, and tried to placate a media establishment ferociously hostile to him.
And the supposed failure of the strike to win the support of the country obscures just how much support was forthcoming. In one instance, the print workers at the Sun refused to print a proposed front page featuring a picture in which Scargill had been photographed to look as though he was giving a Nazi salute. The planned headline was 'MINE FUHRER'. The Sun journalists didn't think that way because Scargill hadn't held a ballot. The printers didn't let the lack of a ballot stop them putting their foot down to stop it. A bit more of that kind of thinking, and a bit less victim-blaming, and maybe things could've been different.
But it wasn't just a "propaganda war" anyway. To quote Seumas Milne, in his explosive book The Enemy Within - The Secret War Against the Miners, the Thatcher government launched
Given the forces ranged against them, I think Scargill, the NUM leadership (with the exception of those members who were spooks) and the miners can be congratulated on doing as well as they did.
However, there is something to be said about mistakes made by the union leadership. It wasn't their failure to be well-behaved boys and surrender in advance, thus staying in the good books of the media. It was their failure to take the fight further. To quote Paul Foot again, the Government's victory was by no means inevitable, but it had been
Maybe the people in the Labour Party or the TUC who sold out the miners were worried about the lack of a ballot. Maybe that was why leaders of other unions (like the EETPU or the Engineers and Managers Association) instructed their members to cross picket lines. If so, it was a grotesque failure of proper priorities.
Speaking of which... Sandifer goes on to say:
Sandifer here makes his own unexamined assumptions: that profitability is how one decides if an industry is worth preserving; that Scargill must take all the responsibilities for decisions made by his union; that his choice was to defend "the moribund coal industry" rather than, say, the lives of working people.
But Scargill was part of a leadership that took a decision that was ratified by conference... and then overwhelmingly supported, with great courage and grit, by the membership. They were fighting to keep their jobs, to stop their communities being laid waste. To call this "mercenary" is, frankly, as bizarre as it is offensive. The other side were the ones concerned about profits... and, even more, about the power of the miners.
That's called the class struggle. It's not a "false opposition". And it doesn't go away if you play nice. This is the biggest "unexamined assumption" in the paragraph: that there was some way in which the whole thing could just have been sorted out sensibly, with no fuss and no suffering and plenty of economic hard-headedness ameliorated with compassion... if only the two warring parties had just been sensible. Well yes... except that the irreconcilibility of the two sides was not a folie à deux. Their interests and priorities were - are - fundamentally opposed. In a panglossian world where the rulers of society might base their decisions on anything other than naked self interest and shoring up their own power, maybe the workers of society could sit back and wait for their mining jobs to be smoothly and gradually replaced by new jobs at wind farms... but that ain't the world we live in.
Sandifer realises that Thatcher was "never" going to take the nobler course. But still, there seems to be an idea lurking beneath this paragraph: that, if only people like Thatcher and Scargill did realise that "economic progress and development" doesn't have to "carry a human price" then, hey presto, it wouldn't have to. But that isn't how capitalism works. Capitalist 'progress' is built on the exploitation of labour. That is its inbuilt "human price". Capitalism sucks 'progress' out of the people it exploits. It can't be changed by people examining their assumptions, unless it's the people who are being sucked from. They can realise that they don't have to lie back and let 'progress' steamroller them. And when that happens, you get explosions of resistance like... the miners' strike!
And then there's that word: "wealth"!
In his recent book Chavs - The Demonization of the Working Class, Owen Jones writes:
This guy wasn't fighting for the "moribund coal industry". He was fighting for his kids' right to have a chance at a job when they grew up. You can equate that kind of self-interest with the self-interest of people like Margaret Thatcher, Nicolas Ridley and Ian MacGregor if you like. You can call what they have "wealth" and use the same term to apply to the chance for a working person to toil underground... if you like. But I think the elision obscures more than it reveals.
...Arthur Scargill, head of the NUM, made an egregious political miscalculation. Faced with an accelerated schedule for closing the pits and afraid that he’d lose the vote, Scargill declined to submit the strike to a national vote. This was against NUM rules and allowed Thatcher to delegitimize the strike, which she wasted no time doing, comparing striking miners to Argentina in the Falklands.and...
The propaganda war, combined with Scargill’s inept politicking, kept the strike from gaining broad support with the public, and it ended in failure a year later, leaving the mining industry and union a shadow of its former self.
Sandifer mentions police savagery and also the wholesale media propaganda assault against the NUM (though he talks about the 'redtops', as though it was a purely tabloid phenomenon). Ultimately, however, he seems to imply a plague upon both Thatcher's and Scargill's houses.
In the various permutations that this view takes, the heroic resistance of 150,000 workers and their families over a year of struggle is always deemed to have been overshadowed by the lack of a formal vote on it. Here's a vital corrective to such apparently reasonable 'even-handedness', courtesy of Paul Foot in The Vote: How It was Won and How it Was Undermined:
Scargill had failed to win three strike ballots because of the divisions among miners caused by the incentive agreements that had been pushed through by the employers in spite of a ballot vote against them. The ballot results left NUM leadership with the agonizing prospect that pits could be closed piecemeal, one by one, or two by two, and that the union would be prevented by hostile ballot results from responding. This was the background to the confrontation that was started by the closure, without consultation, and in defiance of all agreements, of Cottonwood colliery in Yorkshire. Encouraged by the executive, and by a wave of flying pickets from the threatened pits, strike after strike led very quickly to a massive national confrontation, in which pretty well all the pits in Yorkshire, Scotland, Wales and most of the Midlands were on strike, leaving only traditionally less militant areas, Nottinghamshire and Leicesterhsire, at work.
To those who bleated, 'I wish Scargill had had a ballot', there was a prompt reply: 'Suppose he had had a ballot and lost it - what then?' Were the miners leaders expected to stand aside while the Government and its newly appointed Coal Board laid waste to the British coal industry? The truth was that actions spoke louder than ballots. The sheer size and breathtaking solidarity of the mass strike was the fact, and the suggestion that the action should have been put at risk by a ballot was an argument that could be sustained only by the enemies of the miners' union. Very soon, moreover, the democratic potential of the miners' strike was every bit as obvious as it had been in 1921 and 1926, if not more so. Anyone who visited any of the areas affected by the strike was struck by the extraordinary changes that took place in the strikers and their supporters. The traditional insularity of the pit villages was shattered by the need to seek support, including financial support, across the country. Miners and their families travelled far more widely than in the strikes of the 1970s - both inside Britain and outside. Even more than in the conflicts of the past, the women in the miner's areas emancipated almost overnight. Technically, they had been emancipated in 1918 and 1928 by the granting of the suffrage. But the emancipation of women in the mining areas in 1984 and 1985 far outstripped the emancipation of the suffrage. Ideas of women's liberation, about male chauvinism and the role of women in the household flourished in the mining areas that spring and summer of 1984 as never before.
In the 'waaaaah waaaah, they didn't have a ballot!' version, all this is minimized, if not entirely forgotten. The explosion of democracy 'from below' is written-off, as is the specious falsity of democracy 'from above'. The government conducting this war against the miners had been elected in 1983 with under 43% of the total votes cast, in an election in which under 73% of the electorate turned out. This same government had no mandate to destroy the British coal industry but nevertheless set an unelected Coal Board onto the task. The aim was the destruction of the most militant and powerful union, one which had humiliated the Tories in the past (a story well worth remembering these days). The entirely foreseeable result was the decimation of the lives, livelihoods and communities of hundreds of thousands of working people.
On the ballot question, Scargill gives his side of the story - replete with details that contextualise the matter - here. To quote:
The NUM's rules permitted areas to take official strike action if authorised by our national executive committee in accordance with Rule 41. If the NEC [National Executive Committee] gave Scotland and Yorkshire authorisation under this rule, it could galvanise other areas to seek similar support for action against closures.
...
On 6 March, at a consultative meeting at NCB [National Coal Board] London headquarters, the coal board chairman, Ian MacGregor, not only confirmed what we had been expecting, but announced that in addition to the five pits already earmarked for immediate closure, a further 20 would be closed during the coming year, with the loss of more than 20,000 jobs. This, he said, was being done to take four million tonnes of "unwanted" capacity out of the industry, and bring supply into line with demand.
The Scotland and Yorkshire NUM areas did vote to seek endorsement from the NEC for strike action, and at the NEC meeting on 8 March were given authorisation under Rule 41. South Wales and Kent then also asked for authorisation. The NEC agreed, and confirmed that other areas could, if they wished, do the same. We realised that the NCB announcement on 6 March had amounted to a declaration of war. We could either surrender right now, or stand and fight.
A question that has been raised time and time again over the past 25 years is: why did the union not hold a national strike ballot? Those who attack our struggle by vilifying me usually say: "Scargill rejected calls for a ballot."
The real reason that NUM areas such as Nottinghamshire, South Derbyshire and Leicestershire wanted a national strike ballot was that they wanted the strike called off, believing naively that their pits were safe.
Three years earlier, in 1981, there had been no ballot when miners' unofficial strike action - involving Notts miners - had caused Thatcher to retreat from mass closures (nor in 1972 when more than a million workers went on strike in support of the Pentonville Five dockers who had been jailed for defying government anti-union legislation).
McGahey argued that the union should not be "constitutionalised" out of taking action, while the South Wales area president, Emlyn Williams, told the NEC on 12 April 1984: "To hide behind a ballot is an act of cowardice. I tell you this now ... decide what you like about a ballot but our coalfield will be on strike and stay on strike."
However, NUM areas had a right to ask the NEC to convene a special national delegate conference (as we had when calling the overtime ban) to determine whether delegates mandated by their areas should vote for a national individual ballot or reaffirm the decision of the NEC to permit areas such as Scotland, Yorkshire, South Wales and Kent to take strike action in accordance with Rule 41.
Our special conference was held on 19 April. McGahey, Heathfield and I were aware from feedback that a slight majority of areas favoured the demand for a national strike ballot; therefore, we were expecting and had prepared for that course of action with posters, ballot papers and leaflets. A major campaign was ready to go for a "Yes" vote in a national strike ballot.
At the conference, Heathfield told delegates in his opening address: "I hope that we are sincere and honest enough to recognise that a ballot should not be used and exercised as a veto to prevent people in other areas defending their jobs." His succinct reminder of the situation we were in opened up an emotional debate to which speaker after speaker made passionate and fiercely argued contributions.
Replying to that debate, I said: "This battle is certainly about more than the miners' union. It is for the right to work. It is for the right to preserve our pits. It is for the right to preserve this industry ... We can all make speeches, but at the end of the day we have got to stand up and be counted ... We have got to come out and say not only what we feel should be done, but do it because if we don't do that, then we fail."
McGahey, Heathfield and I had done the arithmetic beforehand, and were truly surprised that when the vote was taken, delegates rejected calls for a national strike ballot and decided instead to call on all miners to refuse to cross picket lines - and join the 140,000 already on strike. We later learned that members of one area delegation had been so moved by the arguments put forward in the debate that they'd held an impromptu meeting and switched their vote in support of the area strikes in accordance with Rule 41.
Of course, Sandifer is right to say that the decision not to take a ballot handed the Tories and their compliant media a stick with which to beat the strikers. But, as Paul Foot pointed out, it was either that or give up before the start of the fight. The government wasn't playing nicely by any rule book. They weren't letting an absence of democracy impede them in their ferocious prosecution of class war. And can anyone really be naive enough to think that the government and the media wouldn't have found some other equally-effective pretext for declaring the illegitimacy of the strike and its leadership? Indeed, a glance at the media coverage of the time shows that they could and did. The media constantly harped on about false and unverified reports from the Coal Board about a 'drift back to work'. Coal Board figures turned out to have been artificially inflated... with Murdoch's Sun simply adding numbers itself. Stories about police brutality were consistently ignored or downplayed. This was a media environment in which BBC television news could reverse the order of filmed events in their report of a clash between miners and police at Orgreave, making it appear that the miners had attacked the coppers (when in fact it was the other way round), and never apologise, passing the lie off as a mistake made during editing. They didn't do that, or get away with it, because Scargill didn't hold a ballot.
Undoubtedly, some used the lack of a ballot as an excuse to weasel out of supporting the strikers. The Labour Party under that cowardly windbag Kinnock basically allowed the miners to sink or swim on their own, showing an utterly shameful refusal to support a mass working-class action that had created its own legitimacy. Scargill may not have balloted NUM members, but he was the elected president of the NUM (by a majority of more than 100,000), his decision to call the strike was ratified by a national conference, and the majority of the NUM members responded to his call with awesome determination and solidarity. The call for action was only ignored in areas (like Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire - see above) where the miners thought (wrongly) that their jobs were safe. Scargill was widely derided at the time for his predictions of the scale of Tory plans to close pits... predictions that were eventually proved optimistic. To put the blame upon his "inept politicking" is a classic example of blaming the victim. In this view, he should have made every effort to play by rules that the other side was ignoring, and tried to placate a media establishment ferociously hostile to him.
And the supposed failure of the strike to win the support of the country obscures just how much support was forthcoming. In one instance, the print workers at the Sun refused to print a proposed front page featuring a picture in which Scargill had been photographed to look as though he was giving a Nazi salute. The planned headline was 'MINE FUHRER'. The Sun journalists didn't think that way because Scargill hadn't held a ballot. The printers didn't let the lack of a ballot stop them putting their foot down to stop it. A bit more of that kind of thinking, and a bit less victim-blaming, and maybe things could've been different.
But it wasn't just a "propaganda war" anyway. To quote Seumas Milne, in his explosive book The Enemy Within - The Secret War Against the Miners, the Thatcher government launched
the single most ambitious 'counter-subversion' operation ever mounted in Britain. This was a covert campaign which reached its apogee during the 1984-5 strike, but continued long afterwards. In its breach of what had long been seen as the established rules of the political game, it went beyond even the propaganda, policing and industrial effort openly deployed by the government to destroy the country's most powerful trade union. As far as the Thatcherite faction in the Cabinet and their supporters in the security services were concerned, the NUM under Scargill's stewardship was the most serious domestic threat to state security in modern times. And they showed themselves prepared to encourage any and every method available - from the secret financing of strikebreakers to mass electronic surveillance, from the manipulation of agents provocateurs to attempts to 'fit up' the miners officials - in order to undermine or discredit the union and its leaders. It is a record of the abuse of unaccountable power which is only now returning to haunt those who pulled the strings and those who carried out the orders.
Given the forces ranged against them, I think Scargill, the NUM leadership (with the exception of those members who were spooks) and the miners can be congratulated on doing as well as they did.
However, there is something to be said about mistakes made by the union leadership. It wasn't their failure to be well-behaved boys and surrender in advance, thus staying in the good books of the media. It was their failure to take the fight further. To quote Paul Foot again, the Government's victory was by no means inevitable, but it had been
assisted at least in part by the consistent failure of the NUM leaders to use the power at their disposal - the involvement of mass pickets. In area after area, even in Yorkshire, the management of the strike was left to the leadership. Again and again, too, there were opportunities for other unions, notably in the docks and railways, to invigorate the strike by solidarity action. That these opportunities were not taken was largely due to the passive reaction of the TUC, whose officers, like the Labour Party leaders, intervened again and again to discourage such action.
Maybe the people in the Labour Party or the TUC who sold out the miners were worried about the lack of a ballot. Maybe that was why leaders of other unions (like the EETPU or the Engineers and Managers Association) instructed their members to cross picket lines. If so, it was a grotesque failure of proper priorities.
Speaking of which... Sandifer goes on to say:
In more fundamental terms, of course, the strike is a classic example of the false opposition. Of course closure of collieries had to happen. The coal industry was increasingly unprofitable, and even in 1984 it was clear that in the medium to long term a transition away from coal mining and towards other forms of energy was necessary. Equally, however, closing the pits devastated local economies and communities. The unexamined assumption here, however, is that economic progress and development has to carry a human price. Thatcher’s government was never going to seriously consider coupling the pit closures with efforts to provide new economic stimulus to the affected regions, and Scargill opted to defend the moribund coal industry in the general case. In the end, every side was mercenary and aiming primarily to protect their own wealth.
Sandifer here makes his own unexamined assumptions: that profitability is how one decides if an industry is worth preserving; that Scargill must take all the responsibilities for decisions made by his union; that his choice was to defend "the moribund coal industry" rather than, say, the lives of working people.
But Scargill was part of a leadership that took a decision that was ratified by conference... and then overwhelmingly supported, with great courage and grit, by the membership. They were fighting to keep their jobs, to stop their communities being laid waste. To call this "mercenary" is, frankly, as bizarre as it is offensive. The other side were the ones concerned about profits... and, even more, about the power of the miners.
That's called the class struggle. It's not a "false opposition". And it doesn't go away if you play nice. This is the biggest "unexamined assumption" in the paragraph: that there was some way in which the whole thing could just have been sorted out sensibly, with no fuss and no suffering and plenty of economic hard-headedness ameliorated with compassion... if only the two warring parties had just been sensible. Well yes... except that the irreconcilibility of the two sides was not a folie à deux. Their interests and priorities were - are - fundamentally opposed. In a panglossian world where the rulers of society might base their decisions on anything other than naked self interest and shoring up their own power, maybe the workers of society could sit back and wait for their mining jobs to be smoothly and gradually replaced by new jobs at wind farms... but that ain't the world we live in.
Sandifer realises that Thatcher was "never" going to take the nobler course. But still, there seems to be an idea lurking beneath this paragraph: that, if only people like Thatcher and Scargill did realise that "economic progress and development" doesn't have to "carry a human price" then, hey presto, it wouldn't have to. But that isn't how capitalism works. Capitalist 'progress' is built on the exploitation of labour. That is its inbuilt "human price". Capitalism sucks 'progress' out of the people it exploits. It can't be changed by people examining their assumptions, unless it's the people who are being sucked from. They can realise that they don't have to lie back and let 'progress' steamroller them. And when that happens, you get explosions of resistance like... the miners' strike!
And then there's that word: "wealth"!
In his recent book Chavs - The Demonization of the Working Class, Owen Jones writes:
Unlike most Nottinghamshire miners, Adrian Gilfoyle went on strike until the bitter end. Above all, he remembers the comradeship of working down the pit. 'The strike were important because of saving jobs,' he says. 'I've got two lads - obviously I wouldn't have wanted them to go down pit if they could get another job, but at least, when they grew up, there was that opportunity if there weren't any other jobs, to go there, and it was a good apprenticeship. It was worth fighting for.'
This guy wasn't fighting for the "moribund coal industry". He was fighting for his kids' right to have a chance at a job when they grew up. You can equate that kind of self-interest with the self-interest of people like Margaret Thatcher, Nicolas Ridley and Ian MacGregor if you like. You can call what they have "wealth" and use the same term to apply to the chance for a working person to toil underground... if you like. But I think the elision obscures more than it reveals.
Tuesday, 4 October 2011
The Logic of the Work
"Interested parties explain the culture industry in technological terms. It is alleged that because millions participate in it, certain reproduction processes are necessary that inevitably require identical needs in innumerable places to be satisfied with identical goods. The technical contrast between the few production centers and the large number of widely dispersed consumption points is said to demand organisation and planning by management. Furthermore, it is claimed that standards were based in the first place on consumers’ needs, and for that reason were accepted with so little resistance. The result is the circle of manipulation and retroactive need in which the unity of the system grows ever stronger. No mention is made of the fact that the basis on which technology acquires power over society is the power of those whose economic hold over society is greatest. A technological rationale is the rationale of domination itself. It is the coercive nature of society alienated from itself. Automobiles, bombs, and movies keep the whole thing together until their leveling element shows its strength in the very wrong which it furthered. It has made the technology of the culture industry no more than the achievement of standardisation and mass production, sacrificing whatever involved a distinction between the logic of the work and that of the social system.
But any trace of spontaneity from the public in official broadcasting is controlled and absorbed by talent scouts, studio competitions and official programs of every kind selected by professionals. Talented performers belong to the industry long before it displays them; otherwise they would not be so eager to fit in. The attitude of the public, which ostensibly and actually favours the system of the culture industry, is a part of the system and not an excuse for it. If one branch of art follows the same formula as one with a very different medium and content; if the dramatic intrigue of broadcast soap operas becomes no more than useful material for showing how to master technical problems at both ends of the scale of musical experience – real jazz or a cheap imitation; or if a movement from a Beethoven symphony is crudely “adapted” for a film sound-track in the same way as a Tolstoy novel is garbled in a film script: then the claim that this is done to satisfy the spontaneous wishes of the public is no more than hot air.
We are closer to the facts if we explain these phenomena as inherent in the technical and personnel apparatus which, down to its last cog, itself forms part of the economic mechanism of selection. In addition there is the agreement – or at least the determination – of all executive authorities not to produce or sanction anything that in any way differs from their own rules, their own ideas about consumers, or above all themselves.
In our age the objective social tendency is incarnate in the hidden subjective purposes of company directors, the foremost among whom are in the most powerful sectors of industry – steel, petroleum, electricity, and chemicals. Culture monopolies are weak and dependent in comparison.
The dependence of the most powerful broadcasting company on the electrical industry, or of the motion picture industry on the banks, is characteristic of the whole sphere, whose individual branches are themselves economically interwoven. All are in such close contact that the extreme concentration of mental forces allows demarcation lines between different firms and technical branches to be ignored.
The ruthless unity in the culture industry is evidence of what will happen in politics. Marked differentiations such as those of A and B films, or of stories in magazines in different price ranges, depend not so much on subject matter as on classifying, organising, and labelling consumers. Something is provided for all so that none may escape; the distinctions are emphasised and extended. The public is catered for with a hierarchical range of mass-produced products of varying quality, thus advancing the rule of complete quantification.
Everybody must behave (as if spontaneously) in accordance with his previously determined and indexed level, and choose the category of mass product turned out for his type. Consumers appear as statistics on research organisation charts, and are divided by income groups into red, green, and blue areas; the technique is that used for any type of propaganda."
- The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception, Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer, 1944
***
But any trace of spontaneity from the public in official broadcasting is controlled and absorbed by talent scouts, studio competitions and official programs of every kind selected by professionals. Talented performers belong to the industry long before it displays them; otherwise they would not be so eager to fit in. The attitude of the public, which ostensibly and actually favours the system of the culture industry, is a part of the system and not an excuse for it. If one branch of art follows the same formula as one with a very different medium and content; if the dramatic intrigue of broadcast soap operas becomes no more than useful material for showing how to master technical problems at both ends of the scale of musical experience – real jazz or a cheap imitation; or if a movement from a Beethoven symphony is crudely “adapted” for a film sound-track in the same way as a Tolstoy novel is garbled in a film script: then the claim that this is done to satisfy the spontaneous wishes of the public is no more than hot air.
We are closer to the facts if we explain these phenomena as inherent in the technical and personnel apparatus which, down to its last cog, itself forms part of the economic mechanism of selection. In addition there is the agreement – or at least the determination – of all executive authorities not to produce or sanction anything that in any way differs from their own rules, their own ideas about consumers, or above all themselves.
In our age the objective social tendency is incarnate in the hidden subjective purposes of company directors, the foremost among whom are in the most powerful sectors of industry – steel, petroleum, electricity, and chemicals. Culture monopolies are weak and dependent in comparison.
***
The dependence of the most powerful broadcasting company on the electrical industry, or of the motion picture industry on the banks, is characteristic of the whole sphere, whose individual branches are themselves economically interwoven. All are in such close contact that the extreme concentration of mental forces allows demarcation lines between different firms and technical branches to be ignored.
The ruthless unity in the culture industry is evidence of what will happen in politics. Marked differentiations such as those of A and B films, or of stories in magazines in different price ranges, depend not so much on subject matter as on classifying, organising, and labelling consumers. Something is provided for all so that none may escape; the distinctions are emphasised and extended. The public is catered for with a hierarchical range of mass-produced products of varying quality, thus advancing the rule of complete quantification.
Everybody must behave (as if spontaneously) in accordance with his previously determined and indexed level, and choose the category of mass product turned out for his type. Consumers appear as statistics on research organisation charts, and are divided by income groups into red, green, and blue areas; the technique is that used for any type of propaganda."
- The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception, Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer, 1944
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