Pink Fire Pointer August 2012

Something that may interest you...

Speaking of police and anti-fascist demos. Two police officers have been summonsed by York Magistrates on a charge of perverting the course of justice:

Insp Robert Cantrell, 39, a member of Greater Manchester Police’s elite Tactical Aid Unit, was praised for his bravery after last year’s riots. But the M.E.N can reveal he has been summonsed to appear before magistrates following an investigation into policing of a demonstration by the far-right English Defence League.Pc Alan Glover, 31, a member of the same TAU team, has also been ordered to appear at York magistrates court to face a charge of perverting the course of justice...The IPCC probe, which lasted 16 months, investigated ‘the apparent difference between the footage and the account given by officers which resulted in criminal charges’ as well as the level of force used in Mr Clough’s arrest...A CPS spokesman said: "Both have been summonsed to appear before York magistrates court on charges of perverting the course of justice."The footage - shot by Granada TV - emerged after Mr Clough was charged.Police admitted that the video ‘appears to show a man being inappropriately struck during his arrest’.
The footage appears to shows an officer taking hold of Mr Clough by the neck.A second officer wearing a riot helmet and uniform, apparently hits him once in the jaw.
Yep, and this is the footage:
It's good to have the cops on the back foot but don't hold out too much hope, this is the British 'justice' system we're talking about. These are coppers. Odds are they'll be back on the streets and beating people up before you can say "there's no intelligence to suggest the EDL march will result in violence".

Tomorrow...

Stick together, stand up to the police and leave no one behind. Together we can roll the nazis like a barrel.

Thoughts for the Brain

Or, oh boy, politics, that's where I'm a Viking!

A fascinating, if lopsided post is topping the Tomb at the moment.

I say lopsided because it is focused on intra-left discussion and interaction; probably because the original article was focused on the idea of a Coalition of the Radical Left (if anyone cares to respond to this you’ll be responding to a response to a response). A small observation: the word ‘radical’ has been bled of almost all meaning. Applying radical politics should mean going to the root of a problem. One of the earliest uses of this metaphor was in the English Revolution, the Root and Branch Petition, which called for the abolition of the church hierarchy.

And it’s just here we can get ourselves into all sorts of difficulty. Just what is the problem and exactly how do we get to the root of it? For example: in some quarters you’ll hear no end of arguments about whether the current crisis is due to capitalism or corporatism. Leaving aside the whether we can do something about either of these two phenomena right now, the two problems posed, capitalism and corporatism, suggest two very different solutions. This means two forms of activity, two movements, in the end two parties, not one.

But, I guess, at this point, radical can be fairly well understood as opposed to austerity politics, not a bad means for regrouping. The immediate job is to clarify and popularise anti-austerity politics. The difficulty (for the British left) identified by the original author is the very loaded, winner-takes-all political system. Another, more important, difficulty is the monolithic nature of British trade unionism. There’s only one meaningful federation of unions and it’s tied to the Labour party. Though it could be powerful it is often the Lion that Squeaked.

The point is, without some surprising social upheaval, a British May 68 (and with hindsight the original May 68 wasn’t so surprising), a new left is going to be stuck for many years, unable to make an impact or even regularly manifest itself.

Some points then:

1)      If we’re talking about a Coalition Against Everything then the net shouldn’t be cast too widely and the aims should not be too high. The thing has to hold together through difficult times.

2)      If we’re talking about at Coalition Against Something, a particular aspect of austerity, then it makes perfect sense to widen the coalition within the bounds of effective action.

3)      Two axioms – limited initial success plus the need for effective action equals concentrating on areas where progress can be made. For example: building a rank and file group amongst workers with sectional strength that can press its claims against the bosses and the union leadership. Narrow campaigns, as opposed to broad, demonstrative ones – we are not a Feb 15th Re-enactment Society.

4)      Everything Lenin says about the conduct of debate, but in particular the righteous urge to demand everyone bury their differences – NOW. Sometimes it’s not the People’s Front of Judea vs the Judean People’s Front. Sometimes, every now and then, arguments happen over important principles. Any formal structure must allow for this.

For no raisin

As we know TV is an accurate measure of the downward spiral of civilisation, and we are still braced for Monkey Tennis small screen debut (note: It didn't strike me when I first thought about it but Gordon Ramsay has actually brought Cooking In Prison to TV). In that spirit, brace yourself for:

Drunk Horseracing 
It's an Atos Knockout (1st prize - 8 weeks unpaid labour in Poundland) 
Don't Tell The Relatives (stupid men handpicked by BBC3 are given a funeral parlour to run)
Don't Tell The Owners (ditto, but for a dog walking service) 
Don't Tell The Regulatory Authorities (the same, but for banks) 
Whatever Happened to Dad's Army? 
Tightly Scripted American Comedy Import About Twenty-Somethings With Snappy Comebacks (on E4 because there's just not enough) 
Celebrity CAT Scan 
Celebrity Dogging 
Celebrity Exhumations 
Pimp My Wheelie Bin 
Muslamic Eye for the Racist Guy 
Ku Klux Makeover 
EDL Cribs 
Brass Eye - the musical 
Respect MPs Say the Funniest Things 
Republicans vs Science

The revolution against the revolution


From a document After the Coalition: A Conservative Agenda for Britain, primarily written by Dominic Raaaaaaaaaaaab, Tory MP:
 
"The last 30 years of public debate in Britain has been dominated by leftwing thinking…”
 
It’s all there in black and white. Being exact, “the last 30 years” means since 1982. Since 1982 there have been 15 years of Tory government and two years of Tory-led government. In between there were the Blair/Brown years. New Labour was rightly described as Margaret Thatcher’s greatest achievement. Mad, isn’t it?
 
This is where the destruction/abandonment of class-based politics gets you. This is anti-logic in action. This is what we have to look forward to if the forward march of the austerity is not turned back.
 
The statement aims to frame the debate even further to the right, useful for a group of right-wing thinkers wanting to hack away at employment law, trade union rights and generally drive working class living standards down to Chinese levels. It is also a mobilising statement.
 
Since universal suffrage the Tories economic base, the high bourgeoisie, has never been big enough to win elections. Its electoral base, the middle class, is shrinking also. As they have nothing to really offer the working class, it is perfectly plausible that the Tory tactics will become more Jacobin-like. They will seek to mobilise people and bind them together on some ideological basis, religion, racism, small-state fanaticism and such like, to achieve right-wing goals. While this isn’t fascism it would be borrowing from fascism. After the coalition expect a British Tea Party to be launched, especially if there is Labour led-government.
 
A revolution against the revolution (the American hard-right uses revolutionary rhetoric all the time) is impossible without an enemy and an order to overcome. It makes perfect sense, from that perspective to say "the last 30 years of public debate in Britain has been dominated by leftwing thinking…” It’s not true, of course, but don’t like little considerations like that get in the way of your argument.

Breivik


Anders Breivik has been found to be mentally competant during the vicious rampage he carried out last year. He wanted to be judged sane, and smiled when the verdict was announced. Despite the urge to confound the nazi bastard, it is right that he has been judged responsible for his crimes. 
 
Now begins the job of making sure something like this never happens again. It starts with why it happened in the first place. 
 
Breivik is a fascist (amply demonstrated here). That was his motive behind killing 77 innocent, defenceless people, many of them children. Judging him criminally insane would have depoliticised the atrocity, turned him into the 'lone wolf' he is sometimes portrayed as. Even if he somehow managed to fund, plan and carry out his atrocity all by himself (he didn't) Breivik emerged out of an environment of mainstream racism and bigotry, which, on its fringes, has grown ever more violent (in rhetoric) as the years have passed. Breivik simply transformed words into action.
 
We must take on the racists and the fascists wherever they emerge. In Britain they are currently gathered round the EDL, an organisation Breivik says he admires. On September 1st the EDL want to riot in Walthamstow. Be there to stop them.
 

Novels etc



Opinions are like bums, everybody has them and, unfortunately, far too many people seem to be proud of them, at least that is in online comment boxes.

There are times when as a Marxist you argue something that is reasonable, forward thinking and correct but it so offends people’s notions of common sense it just doesn’t go in. One topic I’ve noticed is police, prisons and the law, the other is art and copyright.

(As far as it matters) China Mieville has chucked a grenade into a debate at the Edinburgh Book Festival, and good on him:
China Miéville, author of novels including The City & the City and Embassytown, has described anti-piracy measures for literature in the digital age as "disingenuous, hypocritical, ineffectual" and "artistically philistine". Speaking in Edinburgh at a debate on the future of the novel, Miéville said that just as music fans remix albums and post them online, so readers will recut the novel.He and his fellow writers should "be ready for guerrilla editors", he said, adding: "In the future, asked if you've read the latest Ali Smith or Ghada Karmi, the response might be not yes or no, but which mix?" There was, he said, a "blurring of boundaries between writers, books and readers, self-publishing, the fanfication of fiction".
This is very offensive to authors and publishers (and wannabe ubermensch in comment boxes). One participant described his ideas as “dot communism”, which is a) red baiting and b) rubbish. Another argued "original text will always still be there. It will not be stolen”.

What China is describing is not communism but capitalism in action. The reproducability of art is both the guarantee of capitalist culture and its doom. It means novels, for example, can be mass produced and sold. Mass literacy and mass publishing are a condition of each other. Yet it means as more and more text is produced and published more and more people are capable of producing and publishing text. 

Copyright laws exist firstly to protect the owners of the means of cultural production, in this case the publishing companies, but it also preserves the aura of sacred creativity around authors. Long fiction has been trapped in the artisan stage of production. There is no such thing as a one-person film set or one-person newspaper. Why should fiction be the preserve of literary titans? 

Attempts to preserve the aura of the original text are reactionary, whether we realise it that or not. Mieville is right, if fiction has a future it belongs to editors, not authors. Collective creation is only ‘communism’ to the small group of people privileged by current relations of artistic production. Capitalism is collective labour plus private appropriation. If you want a true creative commons you have to take over the publishing companies, record companies, film studios etc.


Assange...


I remember reading on the Unrepentant Marxist about The Arab Revolt and the Conspiracist Left this neat little definition:

 Marxism is based on a class analysis but the conspiracists essentially subscribe to a Great Man theory of history in which the CIA and parastatal institutions pull the strings in a global puppet show. 
They think that the left’s main purpose is to pull back the curtain like Toto in The Wizard of Oz and expose the puppeteers…

Now, the Unrepentant Marxist was talking about something else, but it’s a neat little summation of the epistemological difference between ourselves and the likes of Julian Assange and the broader movement, sometimes known as Troofers . What would, for example, the conclusive exposure of 9/11 as some kind of inside job actually achieve, the proof that US Presidents are murderers and the US secret state an instrument of infinite subtlety and great reach and no moral boundaries? Well blow me down!
In other words let’s be clear, when discussing the Assange case we’re not talking about international solidarity between the organised left. Wikileaks is not part of left, neither is Assange.

There’s a strange vehemence about some arguing the case, where it’s come down, virtually to a choice between being pro-extradition or pro-rape, which surely nobody is. As far as I can see, if he is innocent, Julian Assange dug a big, big hole for himself by skipping Sweden before the allegations against him were investigated (Roobin's note: I've now heard that this was not the case - he left the country before the charges were brought). There is a third possibility, less discussed, is that Assange has a case to answer in Sweden, but that the US state is also trying to get hold of him in revenge for the Bradley Manning affair (which everyone has more or less forgotten about).
As far as we’re in a position to do or demand anything it should be along the lines of what Lenin suggested:
 If this needs to be expressed in a concrete demand, then the demand should be for the Swedish prosecutors to facilitate justice - which will not be served by Assange's extradition to the US - by arranging a safe way for him to answer police questions, where he doesn't risk being abducted.  That would be best both for Assange and for his accusers.  See?  It isn't hard.  

Otherwise do we wait until Assange is extradited into the American justice system, international meat-grinder that it is, before we boldly leap into action?




Just a thought



The history of Russia is the history of the 20th Century, for better and for worse. It is a true shame to see what Russian society has become, from the rebellious, forward-looking days of 1905 and 1917 to today a bigoted, prejudiced and fearful society run by a corrupt elite, headed by the uncrowned Emperor Putin. The disgraceful imprisonment Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alekhina and Yekaterina Samutsevich, members of the group Pussy Riot may even be one of the smaller incidents, but it has galvanised world opinion: all power to the band, and to anyone in Russia who stands up for true liberty and justice.
What else can we do for Pussy Riot, apart from state our solidarity? How about we get their Punk Prayer to number one? It's just a thought...

Thoughts for the brain - brain wax


State capitalism, the permanent arms economy and deflected permanent revolution are the three pillars of our little tradition. Taken together they make an excellent compass to find ones way through the history of the 20th century.

We are naturally quite proud of the intellectual tradition of the IS, yet there is a mildly demagogic argument that says “if you’re ideas are so great why don’t more people support you”. Such an argument skips over why an idea’s verity should depend on mass acknowledgement and how this is to be realistically achieved in a capitalist society under bourgeois ideological dominance. It also underestimates how popular the ideas actually are. Over the decades tens of thousands of people have been schooled in IS theory, many times more have been exposed to it. No one today seriously equates the former Soviet Union with workers power, even if they might call it socialist. But this gets onto why the notion of Actually Existing Socialism endured.

The Eastern Bloc was a source of hope for many people who aspired to a better society. The history of the old CPGB was paltry next to the French or Greek CP, let alone the Russian or Chinese parties, yet it stands out proud against the meagre achievements of the rest of the pre-war left. To argue against this is to argue against hope. Nonetheless the state capitalist argument appealed to specific groups of people, such as radicalised students or union shop stewards, a large minority who did not want to act out the foreign policy of an unattractive state. Instead of socialism existing somewhere beyond, to be defended by them, IS theories put the job realising socialism back into their hands.

Where is Actually Existing Socialism today? Well, there is Latin America. Though the continent has undergone progress beyond in 1980s, Bolivarianism is hardly the deadly rival Bolshevism was, hence, amongst other things, left-wing governments in South America have not gone through an experience comparable to the Russian Civil War. There is no world-movement of Bolivarianism. In Britain, for example, there is a small, internet cadre who pray to Caracas and use mental gymnastics similar to the old Stalinists in debate, but this is Actually Existing Socialism Lite.

So who do we address such arguments to today? There is the human-nature-will-to-power-Lenin-led-to-Stalin train of thought that rules out all movements for progress. A comic example: I remember in the depths of a comment box underneath a CiF article on Occupy London people berating the camp members to read 1984 and think again: because camping on the steps of a church leads to gulags, you understand? But that can only really be answered negatively. You can’t conclusively disprove that Lenin led to Stalin because it’s impossible to rerun history under different conditions. People you convince over this will already be half-convinced in the first place.

So who is the positive argument with? Who are we pitching a slogan to, such as Neither Washington nor Moscow but international socialism, for them to turn into action?

Like we said, there is no Actually Existing Socialism, no fully-formed alternative route to socialism, complete with state power and prestige. While a perfectly valid set of theories with plenty more to offer, state capitalism is alive and well in the 21st century, but, for the time being, they are not part of day-to-day agitation.

Special relativity? Liberal rubbish!

Just ask this scientician. He'll tell you that there's no evidence (apart from all that meticulously gathered evidence) that energy equals matter times the speed of light squared. Modern science is a just liberal conspiracy to promote thinking.

News and spews...


Jaz Coleman of Killing Joke has been found in Western Sahara. Tut, the lengths some people went to avoid the Olympics. But the Sahara, in August; are you sure about that? Here’s the Wikipedia page on Western Sahara:. By all accounts it’s a vast, bleak area. It is a disputed territory, part of an ongoing struggle between The Kingdom of Morocco and the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, a government in exile. There was a war from 1975 (following the end of Spanish rule) until 1991. A ceasefire was brokered on the agreement Morocco would organise a referendum on independence. Such a referendum has failed to materialise. There was a protest movement in 2010-11, a far-western echo of the Arab Spring.

Less than a sixth of the population thinks the coalition government will last until 2015. Either that’s wishful thinking (and not necessarily left-wing wishful thinking – there are many, far too many people out there who don’t think this government is right-wing enough, hurting the working class enough) or it’s a political misunderstanding.

All three mainstream parties are committed to Thatcherite principles of government. They are committed to these principles against the population and against any democratic formal or informal process if needs be. Disputes about boundary changes or social housing schemes mean nothing next to the fact that the Liberal Democrats will be annihilated at the next general election while the Tories are unlikely to win a majority of seats. They will use as much time as possible to rig the terms of national politics for as long as possible.

Koranon cilaria ozu mahok! Hard line Republican Paul Ryan accidentally hailed by Mitt-for-Brains Romney as “the next president of the United States” is considered by conservatives to be the ideal candidate, including by squeaky clean, mentally competent, octogenarian media magnate Rupert Murdoch.

Laugh, but if in January next year he’s Romney’s organ grinder he’ll be the second most powerful man in the world, a man who opposes healthcare, welfare support, pay equality legislation and abortion even after rape… and a fine mahok to you all.


Olympics games bring everyone together... 55% of everyone.

Still a depressing figure :

The warm glow of Team GB's best performance in 104 years and pride in an Olympic Games well received at home and abroad have led a clear majority of the British public to conclude the £9bn they cost is good value for money. 
Clearly, very few of the respondants to the poll come from East London, where rents have more or less doubled in a year. But it's interesting given the relentless, noisy and often illogical promotion this event has been given. Not everyone loves Seb Coe. The Olympics is a brute festival of corporations and states. Despite the soft-left wishing really wishing hard, you just can't square that with any kind of progressive agenda, and it shows:

Despite the success of minority ethnic Britons such as the Somali-born 10,000m champion, Mo Farah, voters remain inclined to doubt that most newcomers do anything positive for Britain.

By a narrow 53%-47% margin, the survey finds agreement for the suggestion that "More often than not immigrants … do not bring anything positive, and the likes of the Olympic-winning athletes are an exception".

Faith in the contribution of immigrants is much stronger in London, where 62% disagree with this statement, and a majority of respondents aged under 45 likewise disagree, but among pensioners there are particularly marked doubts about newcomers – with 64% of the over-65s describing the Olympians as "exceptions".

Attitudes harden further when the question switches to immigration in general. Only 32% of respondents say the Olympic successes make them "more positive (or less worried)" about it, against just 68% who disagree.
This is just one example, albeit the most pointed. This is where nationalistic tubthumping gets you, regardless of your intentions. Everyone in the mainstream wants to graft their own political outlook onto the Olympics, but some philosophies will do better than others. For David Cameron the British team's success at the Olympics proves that there is scandalous lack of competitive sport in schools (as opposed to "Indian dancing or whatever"). By that logic Britain's schools need more inclusive activities, not fewer. This is also something which he has only just noticed as, clearly, his mind was on something else when he got rid of the two-hour a week target, set by the previous Labour government.

The entire political class thinks though whimsy and daydreams (Boris Johnson wants state school sports to be just like it was when he was inb Eton - oh how jolly). We have to live with the nightmare.

Curiosity probe reaches Mars

The more Curiosity finds the more likely there will be further missions to the solar system. At the moment NASA's schedule is looking fairly sparse. This Mars rover is due to last 98 months, it could go on for longer, but, bear in mind, it is very sophisticated and possibly more prone to malfunction.

New Horizons will say Hi/Bye to Pluto in 2015. The Dawn probe will have reached the end of its official mission by then as well. The Juno mission to Jupiter is expected to finish by 2016. Unless there are more probes planned now, there will be no more (NASA) missions for the forseeable future. The ESA has a probe going to Jupiter, due to arrive in the 2020s.

Humanity is now the biggest factor shaping the planet Earth. We use more energy than all indigenous natural processes combined. Welcome to the Anthopocene. Our future is in space. We have outgrown the Earth in the same way we have outgrown capitalism, i.e. without successfully replacing these systems. Part of getting through the next hundred years with civilisation intact will be colonising the solar system.

Endless Brainless

It's hard not to get sucked into the Olympic fervour. It's relentless and all pervasive. Londoners have been advised to get ahead of the games. It's difficult to see how, they're everywhere. The actual sport is great, well, mostly great; gymnastics, swimming, canoeing, road-racing etc, though I'm not sure of the spectator value of sailing or pistol shooting. The silly, silly nationalism is unbearable. It feels like the death of any radical alternative in Britain for goodness knows how long. Large swathes of people are being made to feel happy despite having no objective basis for feeling so.

I can just see the Tories using Team GB as an all purpose metaphor. Boris Johnson upfront going on about years of hard work and sacrifice etc. If Team GB can do it then public sector workers can work for half-wages/unemployed people beg for scraps/disabled people can die in a ditch. It's all about pulling together to make Boris and co very, very, very... rich.

We will have to see how things look in two weeks when we have literally nothing to talk about anymore.

For no raisin

Here's Troy McLure's resume:




Regular Movies


  • The Boatjacking of Supership '79
  • Christmas Ape
  • Christmas Ape Goes To Summer Camp
  • The Contrabulous Fabtraption of Professor Horatio Hufnagel
  • Cry Yuma
  • David versus Super Goliath
  • Dial M for Murderousness
  • The Electric Gigolo
  • The Erotic Adventures of Hercules 
  • Give My Remains to Broadway
  • Gladys the Groovy Mule
  • Good-Time Slim, Uncle Doobie, and the Great 'Frisco Freak-Out'
  • The Greatest Story Ever Hulaed
  • Hitler Doesn't Live Here Anymore
  • Meet Joe Blow
  • "P" is for Psycho
  • Preacher With a Shovel (with Dolores Montenegro)
  • The Seven-Year Old Bitch
  • Sorry, Wrong Closet
  • Today We Kill, Tomorrow We Die
  • Jagged Attraction
  • Look Who's Still Oinking
Educational films and self help videos
  • 60 Minutes of Car Crash Victims
  • Adjusting Your Self-O-Stat (with Brad Goodman)
  • Alice's Adventure through the Windshield Glass
  • Alice Doesn't Live Any More
  • Birds: Our Fine Feathered Colleagues
  • The Decapitation of Larry Leadfoot
  • Dig Your Own Grave and Save
  • Firecrackers: The Silent Killer
  • Fuzzy Bunny's Guide to You-Know-What
  • Get Confident, Stupid!
  • The Half-Assed Approach to Foundation Repair
  • Locker Room Towel Fights: The Blinding of Larry Driscoll
  • Man Versus Nature: The Road To Victory
  • Meat and You – Partners in Freedom (a Meat Council film, part of the "Resistance is Useless" series)
  • Mommy, What's Wrong With That Man's Face?  
  • Mothballing Your Battleship
  • Phony Tornado Alerts Reduce Readiness
  • Shoplifters BEWARE
  • Smoke Yourself Thin
  • Someone's in the Kitchen with DNA!
  • Two Minus Three Equals Negative Fun
  • Welcome to Springfield Airport
  • Where's Nordstrom? Whoa! Don't Touch Me There!
Television - TV specials


  • Alien Nose Job
  • Carnival of the Stars
  • The Miss American Girl Pageant
TV series 


  • AfterMannix 
  • America's Funniest Tornadoes
  • Buck Henderson, Union Buster
  • Handel with Kare
  • I Can't Believe They Invented It!
  • Shortland Street 
  • Troy and Company's Summertime Smile Factory
Cartoons


  • Christmas Ape
  • Christmas Ape Goes to Summer Camp
Other - Celebrity funerals
Musicals