Pink Fire Pointer July 2011

Nazis, everywhere, get 'em off!


EDL founder (and chief funder) likes to fantasise about ghettoising, torturing and killing 'liberal twits' (including Nick Clegg and the Archbishop of Canterbury). Is this what liberals mean by not agreeing you but defending to the death your right to say such things?

There are people out there itching to murder us, but every step we take to defend ourselves gets stymied, by the police, by the press, by Searchlight, by Hopeless Hate, by the Labour party and so on. When will Alex Callinicos be given softball interviews on Newsnight? Never, of course. We're forced to fight with one hand tied behind our backs. It's a wonder we've kept the nazis at bay for so long.

The dog ate my growth figures

Recent quarterly economic reports have been described as disappointing. But Gideon Osborne's programme of mass unemployment has not been to blame, no, it's all down to 'special factors'. The most recent ones have been the Royal wedding and the Japanese earthquake, but we've also had things like heat, snow and the Olympics affecting figtures. Here at TtSD we like to be useful, proactive and soforth. Here's some other useful suggestions, see if they crop up in the next ONS report:

The unions
The onions
The bunions
The Martians
Gordon Brown
The wrong type of leafs
The wrong type of snow
The wrong type of tsunami
The Royal divorce
Gordon Brown
Them lot comin’ over here an’ takin’ our jobs ‘n’ our women
Forgetting to sack everybody
Forgetting to carry the one
Too many nurses tending to the sick
Too many sweepers keeping the streets clean
Too many teachers teaching children
Too many children, not enough child labour
Foreigners
Foreigner
Toto
Mike and the Mechanics
Too many soft rock references
Everything that needs to be made has already been made
Gordon Brown
The Olympics starting
The Olympics finishing
Usain Bolt getting stuck in traffic
The doomsday virus
The invasion of Libya
The invasion of China
Invasion by China
Invasion of the body snatchers
Scotland declares independence
News International declares independence
Ireland declares dependence
Gordon Brown

Ain't it the truth!

As more information regarding the identity of the terrorist responsible for the massacre comes to light, articles attempting to explain his motives are starting to appear online. And beneath them are comments from readers, largely expressing outrage and horror. But there are a disturbing number that start, "What this lunatic did was awful, but . . ."

These "but" commenters then go on to discuss immigration, often with reference to a shaky Muslim-baiting story they've half-remembered from the press. So despite this being a story about an anti-Muslim extremist killing Norwegians who weren't Muslim, they've managed to find a way to keep the finger of blame pointing at the Muslims, thereby following a narrative lead they've been fed for years, from the overall depiction of terrorism as an almost exclusively Islamic pursuit, outlined by "security experts" quick to see al-Qaida tentacles everywhere, to the fabricated tabloid fairytales about "Muslim-only loos" or local councils "banning Christmas".


Charlie Brooker is right, as usual.

A portrait of the fascist as a vain man



Know your enemy, Anders Behring Breivik; look at him. He is out to kill you. He and his associates are out to destroy everyone and everything you hold dear.

Even from these collated pictures you can see he is a walking study in the fascist mindset. Megalomania, self-importance mixed with a dominator complex. The flip side of megalomania is paranoia, hence, for example, his fixation on the alleged 'marxist/multiculturalist' conspiracy. He also has severe logorrhoea.

His manifesto, which is now getting worldwide attention, is supposedly 1,500 pages long; phew! Excerpts appearing in the news, including praise for various people and groups, Mel Philips, Jeremy Clarkson, the English Defence League, have highlighted a crucial point for anti-fascist politics.

The mainstream right, populist right and fascist right are cross-fertilising. Rightists of all kinds are using racism in general, islamophobia in particular, as their wedge issue, their cutting edge. Fascist or not, they are reinforcing each other at every turn, co-ordinating across Europe and America to bring violence and fear to our streets. We need a Europe-wide anti-fascist alliance.

Phone Hacking Scandal: some facts

1. David Cameron has had more than 26 meetings with senior figures from Rupert Murdoch’s media empire since becoming prime minister. (For a full list of Cameron’s dinners with the media and his guests at Chequers, his private residence, go to wwww.socialistworker.co.uk)

2. Andy Coulson was Cameron’s guest at Chequers in March—two months after disgraced Coulson resigned over phone hacking allegations.
Rebekah Brooks was invited to Chequers twice last year, and James Murdoch once.

3. Brooks urged Cameron to scrap plans to give the job of Director of Communications to a senior BBC journalist. Cameron was told it should go to someone who was “acceptable” to News International. Coulson got the job.

4. The Metropolitan Police employed Neil Wallis, former News of the World executive editor, during the phone hacking inquiry. He “earned” £1,000 a day to advise Sir Paul Stephenson, ex-commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, and senior officer John Yates from October 2009 to September 2010.

5. Stephenson spent five weeks recuperating from an operation at a luxurious health spa in Hertfordshire in January, at the expense of Outside Organisation—a PR firm managed by Neil Wallis. Wallis was arrested last week.

6. News International offered Stephenson hospitality on 15 occasions between April 2007 and March 2010—he accepted 14 times. In one instance, he met senior executives three times in one week.

7. Stephenson and the Metropolitan Police’s director of public affairs, Dick Fedorico, twice tried to convince the Guardian newspaper that Nick Davies’s stories about phone hacking were “over-egged and incorrect”. At meetings in December 2009 and February 2010, the Met’s representatives failed to mention that they were employing Wallis.

8. John Yates was in charge of carrying out “due diligence” on Wallis before the Met hired him to give PR advice. “Wolfman” Wallis was reporting back to News International while he was working for the police on the hacking case.

9. Andy Hayman, chief of the Met’s counter-terrorism unit who ran the
investigation, attended four dinners, lunches and receptions with News of the World editors. This includes a dinner on April 25 2006, while his officers were gathering evidence in the case.Hayman left the Met in December 2007 and was soon hired to write a column for the Times, a News International paper.

10. Hayman had his phone hacked by News International. But he was happy to bug prison visits between Babar Ahmad, who was unjustly accused of acts of terrorism, and his local MP Sadiq Khan.

11. Executives and others at News International enjoy close relationships with Scotland Yard’s top officials. Since the hacking scandal began in 2006, Yates and others regularly dined with editors from News International papers. Stephenson dined with company executives and editors 18 times during the investigation—including on eight occasions with Wallis while he was still working at the News of the World.

12. The MP who questioned Brooks and James Murdoch this week when they appeared before the Culture, Media and Sport committee has close links with News Corporation.
John Whittingdale, the committee’s Tory chair, is an old friend of Les Hinton, who resigned from News Corp on Friday night, and has dined with Brooks.

13. Brooks is to receive a £3.5 million severance package after resigning from News International. Two of the company’s senior lawyers, Tom Crone and Jon Chapman, will receive an estimated £1.5 million each. Colin Myler, the final editor of the News of the World, is understood to be in line for

£2 million.

14. Rebekah Brooks’s PR firm, Bell Pottinger, has previously represented the Bahraini government, Trafigura—the oil company which was fined $1 million for dumping toxic waste in the Ivory Coast—and Alexander Lukashenko, the Belarusian dictator.

15. Yates is accused of securing Neil Wallis’ daughter a job at the Met.
Yates, Hayman and Fedorico are all being investigated by the IPCC over their links with Wallis.

16. Brooks reduced Gordon Brown to tears when she called to say that the Sun was to run a front page of private details of his baby son’s medical condition.
He omitted to say that afterwards he and his wife attended Brooks’ wedding, organised her birthday party and had her over to Chequers.

17. Piers Morgan, now a CNN broadcaster but formerly editor of the News of the World and the Daily Mirror, was aware of phone hacking during his time in charge of the Mirror. According to Morgan’s autobiography, “Apparently if you don’t change the standard security code that every phone comes with, then anyone can call your number and, if you don’t answer, tap in the standard four digit code to hear all your messages.”

18. In the US, outcry at possible hacking of 9/11 victims’ phones has led the FBI to launch an investigation.

19. News Corp donated $1 million to the US bosses’ organisation, the Chamber of Commerce, last summer. Shortly afterwards, the chamber launched a high-profile campaign to alter the foreign corrupt practices act—the same law that could potentially be brought to bear on News Corp now.


Link

Discussion on Marshall McLuhan

Listen here. Below is a neat summary of the significance of media forms. It is, of course, lacking the class dimension of understanding media. Our media, our way of experiencing the world, is owned by someone else. That ownership affects what is produced, how it is produced and for what end. None the less it is an excellent jumping off point for discussions about the clash of base and superstructure, media, society and change.

The medium, or process of our time – electric technology – is reshaping and restructuring patterns of social interdependence and every aspect of our personal life. It is forcing us to reconsider and re-evaluate practically every thought, every action, and every institution formerly taken for granted. Everything is changing – you, your family, your neighbourhood, your education, your job, your government, your relation to "the others." And they're changing dramatically.

Societies have always been shaped more by the nature of the media by which men communicate than by the content of the communication. The alphabet, for instance, is a technology that is absorbed by the very young child in a completely unconscious manner, by osmosis so to speak. Words and the meaning of words predispose the child to think and act automatically in certain ways. The alphabet and print technology fostered and encouraged a fragmenting process, a process of specialism and of detachment. Electric technology fosters and encourages unification and involvement. It is impossible to understand social and cultural changes without a knowledge of the workings of media.

The older training of observation has become quite irrelevant in this new time, because it is based on psychological responses and concepts conditioned by the former technology – mechanization.

Innumerable confusions and a profound feeling of despair invariably emerge in periods of great technological and cultural transitions. Our "Age of Anxiety" is, in great part, the result of trying to do today's job with yesterday's tools – with yesterday's concepts.

Youth instinctively understands the present environment – the electric drama. It lives mythically and in depth. This is the reason for the great alienation between generations. Wars, revolutions, civil uprisings are interfaces within the new environments created by electric informational media.

Marshall McLuhan, 'The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects' (1967).

Policing - a lottery that rewards malicious negligence

John Yates, assistant commissioner, lead counter-terrorism officer, has resigned as a result of the phone hacking scandal. He is being replaced for the time being by Cressida Dick. Ms Dick, we know, has prior experience, helping keep London safe from the scourge of Brazilian electricians. For all she knows it could happen again. If it does certain newspapers will be no doubt be on hand to spread police smears and lies.

Sideways stuff about DVDs, Victorians and Hegemony

I am the kind of person who watches DVD extras. Given digital technology allows you to load practically unlimited amounts of information onto a disc it's surprising more artists don't make creative use of this. The BBC DVD of the recent Sherlock series has an interesting 'making of...' section.

Sherlock, the series, is not as literary and refined as first it may seem. It is what the original books were, a very good genre production. It is at least a cut above other pretentious, prime-time pantomimes like Merlin and Robin Hood. It emphasises the Other London aspect of some of the original stories. Well-to-do Victorians had a turbulent attractive/repulsive relationship with the cities they'd built. It is, of course, the attractive/repulsive relationship between capital and labour; as classes, as ideas embodied they can't live with our without each other.

One of the series producers commented in the documentary that Sherlock showed a side of London she never knew existed; exotic locations you pass every single day, blazing signs you never notice, babble and slang you can never hope to understand.

The first point to emphasises is this is a normal aspect of urban life. The city is a medium for living. Each new medium is a powerful shock to our (individual and collective) system. If you walked down the street and paid attention to each and every bright, shiny thing thrust in front of you, you would be left paralysed. Numbness is essential day-to-day survival (though it is a threat to active citizenry).

An aside: our political/ideological struggle has to overcome this numbness, numbness of course suits the status quo. There are two ways to overcome numbness. First is sensationalism. In culture there is an arms race, akin to an addiction (with all the accompanying debilitation); sensationalism leads to numbness, which leads to greater sensationalism and greater numbness. Sensationalism is roughly parallel to movementism. There is no political change without a political impulse, a collective urge to right a wrong. But movementism has to lead to organisation, counter-hegemony.

The second way to overcome numbness is ambience. Ambient music is music built into an environment. Counter-hegemony is roughly equivalent to ambience, a network of organic intellectuals incorporated into the wider working class movement. Ambient music does not demand attention in the same way as, say, a pop song, but it insinuates itself so much more into the mind and mood of the listener. Revolutionary politics is not top down or one way, transmitter and receiver, but collective criticism, bringing practice up to the best levels of theory and theory up to the levels of best practice.

Back to the point: the other thing to say about the notion of Other London is, of course, why should there not be several Londons? Cities are peak communities. Human life proliferates in so many forms there. The fact that this can be new and novel shows how much the working class (as opposed to 'chavs', the 'white working class' or other ruling class inventions) has been excluded from public life for so long. No wonder the working class presence goes unnoticed, until, of course, it starts striking and demonstrating; then it gets less exotic, more fearsome.