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  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    Might as well bring back live football with a crowd, can't see how it will change R now.
    I understand the prem are going to put BLm on every player's shirt instead of his name for the first twelve games after the restart.

    By all means take a prolonged and determined stand against racism in football, but is that really a wise strategy?

  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    Particularly if you read it in conjunction with that Guardian piece about going to live among The Head Count. Sanders of The River was less sneering....
    Sorry, not familiar. This is a piece by him sneering at the working class, is it?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    The more you see this, the more you understand why Malcolm X wanted the white people *not* to join the movement...
    Indeed. In the USA particularly, there are huge cultural issues around race, which when combined with gun culture and police culture can lead to what we saw with the death that sparked the protests.

    The problems always occur when well-meaning protest groups get highjacked by extremist groups with their own ideologies. It appears that the BLM groups have been ambivalent to more violent far-left groups joining their protest, which inevitably leads to opposition and much confrontation than would otherwise have been the case.

    If I were in the position of a black community leader at the start of all this, I would have gone for thousands of people standing in silence, wearing masks and arranged in a grid 2m apart, over the largest space available. It would've been incredibly poignant.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,226
    kinabalu said:

    Sorry, not familiar. This is a piece by him sneering at the working class, is it?
    No - I forget the ladies name - but it was a perfect example of what he was writing about.

    You could almost *see* the pith helmet....
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    edited June 2020
    I dug our this WaPo piece that I have always found depressingly accurate - especially so given recent events

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/made-by-history/wp/2017/07/28/the-lefts-diversity-problem/

    “Yet the problem with the rising left is that it thinks working-class people in a highly diverse society will be able to put aside other allegiances such as race and gender to challenge a neoliberal economy that has, arguably, been pretty friendly to identity politics. There is simply no historical precedent for this kind of alliance, least of all in the New Deal, which Sanders holds up as his social-democratic model. The allegedly class-based politics of the New Deal era depended on social homogeneity and a manufacturing-based economy — neither of which exist today.“
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    kinabalu said:

    Sadly not. Variety of reasons for that. Have often given my analysis of GE19 so will not do again here. But his book "Chavs" is imo very good. It shows great insight into, and affection for, the working class. Which he is of course.

    Any case we all know who is really sneering at the working class. And there'll be hell to pay when they find out.
    Yep the educated left Metropolitan set. They have always sneered at the working classes and their concerns. That is why they were so shocked when the working classes turned on them.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,553
    DougSeal said:

    Defenders of a Churchill statue making Nazi salutes. I’m starting to get the impression, just maybe, that they are not quite as clued up about history as they think.

    https://twitter.com/BBCDomC/status/1271761377317851136

    The Far Right hate the police now? I'm struggling to keep up with modern Britain.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,226

    Given we were talking about Gone With The Wind yesterday I do see parallels with our world.

    The plantocarcy are our comfortable middle classes, the slaves are our cheap and servile migrant workers and the poor whites / hillbillies are our white working class.
    That analogy gets even sharper when you are in Paris - the "Districts" for the migrants, the deplorables shipped off to the satellite towns...
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited June 2020

    Given we were talking about Gone With The Wind yesterday I do see parallels with our world.

    The plantocarcy are our comfortable middle classes, the slaves are our cheap and servile migrant workers and the poor whites / hillbillies are our white working class.
    And the call centres are our new factories....
  • MangoMango Posts: 1,031



    It is Brexit rehashed, your a massive racist, because you want to control immigration. And now you are clearly a massive thick racist, because you like Churchill and are proud we won the war about the Nazis.

    Stalin also won the war against the Nazis. Do you fetishise Stalin statues too?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    MattW said:

    Agreed. On the extremes there is not that much difference in scumsucking-ness :-) .
    If it helps people on the democratic right to accept the uniquely evil place that Nazism has, and cease the false equivalence with USSR etc, I think it's fair to say that "far right" (in this Nazi sense) is not an extreme extension of right wing politics. You don't move further and further right and end up a Nazi. There's a discontinuity.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    Sandpit said:

    Indeed. In the USA particularly, there are huge cultural issues around race, which when combined with gun culture and police culture can lead to what we saw with the death that sparked the protests.

    The problems always occur when well-meaning protest groups get highjacked by extremist groups with their own ideologies. It appears that the BLM groups have been ambivalent to more violent far-left groups joining their protest, which inevitably leads to opposition and much confrontation than would otherwise have been the case.

    If I were in the position of a black community leader at the start of all this, I would have gone for thousands of people standing in silence, wearing masks and arranged in a grid 2m apart, over the largest space available. It would've been incredibly poignant.
    I actually think the Blackout Tuesday achieved more than the breaking lockdown protest.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Sandpit said:

    Indeed. In the USA particularly, there are huge cultural issues around race, which when combined with gun culture and police culture can lead to what we saw with the death that sparked the protests.

    The problems always occur when well-meaning protest groups get highjacked by extremist groups with their own ideologies. It appears that the BLM groups have been ambivalent to more violent far-left groups joining their protest, which inevitably leads to opposition and much confrontation than would otherwise have been the case.

    If I were in the position of a black community leader at the start of all this, I would have gone for thousands of people standing in silence, wearing masks and arranged in a grid 2m apart, over the largest space available. It would've been incredibly poignant.
    I get the impression that communities in the US are much, much more separated and segregated than in the UK. Even New York, where I have been a lot recently.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    edited June 2020
    kinabalu said:

    The latter means 'deadpool' triumph for me, remember.
    It shows how things have changed for the better. When DuraAce`s deadpool thingy was devised I suspect that we thought it would be settled quite quickly. Now we have the glorious outcome of "no winner" as being very possible. Seemed so unlikely. Or at least it did to me.
  • SurreySurrey Posts: 190
    edited June 2020

    Again, I think you will find plenty of historical echoes in the current events. The anti racism movement has always borrowed language, tactics and ideas from the US civil rights movement, where the struggle had deeper roots for obvious reasons. The Bristol bus boycott for instance followed similar tactics by King. (Was it in Montgomery, AL? I can't remember). I bet you had plenty of people back then complaining that we didn't need any of that American nonsense here.
    In Notting Hill 1958 it is said to have been black US servicemen who showed residents how to make Molotovs. Oswald Mosley's fascists in the form of the Union Movement (BUF -> BU -> UM) had been encouraging white-racist violence in the area.

    In NI in the 1960s both the civil rights movement and the ascendancy types looked to the US for inspiration. (On Ian Paisley, see for example this.)



  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,484


    Training up recent graduates in the company I work for, I am not sure what they are taught. It's not Marxism, but it's not really much of anything else either.

    They are especially weak in critical thinking, English grammar and basic mathematics.

    That's not to say they aren't talented. They are. They have merely been royally ripped off by the people who have taught them.

    If someone had daubed "was a Liberal Unionist" on Churchill's statue, I would have condemned the act of vandalism but would have applauded the sentiment.

    Whisper it quietly but we don't actually have a Conservative Government - the current Government is a Liberal Unionist Government calling itself Conservative.

    I don't get this one-dimensional characterisation of people. Colston was involved in the slave trade but he was a philanthropist and gave generously to charitable causes. People are complex and contradictory and their motivations and aspirations change through their lives.

    Churchill was a great war leader but he was an average politician in peace time. The Conservative Party, which now idolises him, loved him so much they tried to de-select him as an MP.

    By some standards, I am a racist xenophobic bigot and it's just as well there are no statues of me anywhere.

    The victors write the history and erect the statues - those who come later tear down the statues and re-write the history.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    kinabalu said:

    If it helps people on the democratic right to accept the uniquely evil place that Nazism has, and cease the false equivalence with USSR etc, I think it's fair to say that "far right" (in this Nazi sense) is not an extreme extension of right wing politics. You don't move further and further right and end up a Nazi. There's a discontinuity.
    socialism is class based, Nazism race based. The former were content to wipe out whole classes (the Kulaks), the latter races (the Jews).

  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280

    The Notting Hill riots say hi.
    I think you'll find that black people have been provoking outrage by existing and asking to be treated fairly for quite a while now.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-merseyside-48527393
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,484
    DougSeal said:

    I dug our this WaPo piece that I have always found depressingly accurate - especially so given recent events

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/made-by-history/wp/2017/07/28/the-lefts-diversity-problem/

    “Yet the problem with the rising left is that it thinks working-class people in a highly diverse society will be able to put aside other allegiances such as race and gender to challenge a neoliberal economy that has, arguably, been pretty friendly to identity politics. There is simply no historical precedent for this kind of alliance, least of all in the New Deal, which Sanders holds up as his social-democratic model. The allegedly class-based politics of the New Deal era depended on social homogeneity and a manufacturing-based economy — neither of which exist today.“

    You could say exactly the same about the Right.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited June 2020
    Another young upper-class opinionated 'journalist' who missed the police standing aside and letting statues get abused only a few days ago.

    (Maybe she should ask her mother something about policing and how it works).
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    edited June 2020
    Sean_F said:

    "Sir, there is no settling the point of precedency between a louse and a flea."

    Murderous violence was a feature of both ideologies, not a bug.
    But with one of them the vision itself - racial domination - was of the utmost evil and with no redeeming features.

    This is why it stands alone.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    stodge said:

    If someone had daubed "was a Liberal Unionist" on Churchill's statue, I would have condemned the act of vandalism but would have applauded the sentiment.

    Whisper it quietly but we don't actually have a Conservative Government - the current Government is a Liberal Unionist Government calling itself Conservative.

    I don't get this one-dimensional characterisation of people. Colston was involved in the slave trade but he was a philanthropist and gave generously to charitable causes. People are complex and contradictory and their motivations and aspirations change through their lives.

    Churchill was a great war leader but he was an average politician in peace time. The Conservative Party, which now idolises him, loved him so much they tried to de-select him as an MP.

    By some standards, I am a racist xenophobic bigot and it's just as well there are no statues of me anywhere.

    The victors write the history and erect the statues - those who come later tear down the statues and re-write the history.
    Indeed. Perhaps we should have no statues, to anybody!
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177

    If the people on the left (of the clip!) are the far right, in Newcastle, that is a very very high turnout for a place like that.

    Much higher than I would have expected.
    Really?
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    stodge said:

    You could say exactly the same about the Right.
    Yes. They’re playing with fire at the moment.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    Mango said:

    Stalin also won the war against the Nazis. Do you fetishise Stalin statues too?
    That argument is on the level of the idiots posting pictures of Churchill when Trump claimed ANTIFA were a far left terrorist organisation.

    How fast things have changed, two weeks ago a symbol of anti-fascism, now he is to be cancelled.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526

    I get the impression that communities in the US are much, much more separated and segregated than in the UK. Even New York, where I have been a lot recently.
    Go to the deep south and really see what segregation looks like. I told a story on here the other night.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    Really?
    There's absolutely no tradition of that sort of thing there that I can think of, but your moniker suggests you know better than me.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,359
    New thread.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    Perhaps if you call a man a racist for long enough, he has nowhere to go but to turn around and show you just how racist he can be.
    But was Churchill constantly told he was a racist?

    Not sure that theory holds water.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    IanB2 said:

    It has been the case through history that revolutionaries have been perpetually disappointed by the absence of radicalism amongst the working classes, and protests and revolutions have always been fuelled by what we would describe as middle class younger people, from 1968 back through the French and Russian revolutions. Indeed there is a theory that protest and social unrest tends to peak when there is an excess of supply of aspiring middle class youngsters compared to the number of relatively privileged opportunities that their society is able to offer.

    Some even suggest that the slaughter and devastation of the English Wars of the Roses arose simply because the royalty of the time had children and grandchildren way in excess of the number of baronial positions available to them.

    Consider the future prospects for younger graduates in the immediate post-COVID society and maybe there is a bigger picture.

    Quite.

    To paraphrase:

    Number of graduates: 400,000, number of graduate jobs: 500,000, result: happiness
    Number of graduates: 400,000, number of graduate jobs: 100,000, result: misery

    The higher education system was saddling a lot of young people with third rate degrees and huge debts, and then leaving them to get by on minimum wage crap jobs, *before* all of this kicked off. There'll be even fewer fulfilling careers available from now on.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    Indeed. Perhaps we should have no statues, to anybody!
    Unless it’s me.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    socialism is class based, Nazism race based. The former were content to wipe out whole classes (the Kulaks), the latter races (the Jews).
    As I said - if you think about it properly there is no equivalence.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,484



    Indeed. Perhaps we should have no statues, to anybody!

    Perhaps not - when the Church was the dominant political and moral authority, it had the best stone buildings on which the peasants were forced to work while they lived in wooden huts.

    The Tower of London is a fine example of power projection - the statue is the same taken down to the individual or the event. At a time when people couldn't read or write, monuments were symbols of authority.

    Now, when literacy is strong but historical knowledge isn't, statues and monuments become a physical link to a past of which so many are ignorant.

    That's why those who fear the present and the future are so desperate to hold on to the physical representation of that nostalgia, when times were better and everything made sense.

    Yet this is a wonderful time to be alive on most measures. People are healthier, living longer, living better and while there's more to be done, these are, if not the best of times, certainly not the worst.

    The past is documented and can be read, explored, seen and to a degree experienced. The symbols of a bygone age should no longer have that resonance.

  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    Stocky said:

    It shows how things have changed for the better. When DuraAce`s deadpool thingy was devised I suspect that we thought it would be settled quite quickly. Now we have the glorious outcome of "no winner" as being very possible. Seemed so unlikely. Or at least it did to me.
    Yes, that is striking. A winner would be a surprise now.

    And the atmosphere has changed. Panic over.

    I would price a serious 2nd wave perhaps as high as 5 now.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,103
    DougSeal said:

    Defenders of a Churchill statue making Nazi salutes. I’m starting to get the impression, just maybe, that they are not quite as clued up about history as they think.

    https://twitter.com/BBCDomC/status/1271761377317851136

    England is full of absolute numpties, they only understand big headlines and pictures from the SUN, not even at the level of sheep. A rosy future beckons.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,226

    Quite.

    To paraphrase:

    Number of graduates: 400,000, number of graduate jobs: 500,000, result: happiness
    Number of graduates: 400,000, number of graduate jobs: 100,000, result: misery

    The higher education system was saddling a lot of young people with third rate degrees and huge debts, and then leaving them to get by on minimum wage crap jobs, *before* all of this kicked off. There'll be even fewer fulfilling careers available from now on.
    In banking, one of the main achievements of "everyone must have a degree" has been cutting off entry for the less educated. So no more barrow boys working their way up.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    Yep the educated left Metropolitan set. They have always sneered at the working classes and their concerns. That is why they were so shocked when the working classes turned on them.
    That was the last chapter. I'm talking about the next one.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    edited June 2020

    No - I forget the ladies name - but it was a perfect example of what he was writing about.

    You could almost *see* the pith helmet....
    OK - I can well believe that. Maybe I'll look it up. Relieved it's not Owen. He really does not make a habit of sneering at the working class. Quite the opposite. He calls it out on the Left when it happens.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    Carnyx said:

    You mean the smirr. MIzzle is poncy Southronese. But I quite like this weather. No risk of sunburn to this gingery freckled chap!
    Today's rain is tomorrow's whisky.
  • sladeslade Posts: 2,162
    DougSeal said:

    Unless it’s me.
    Most people like having their photo taken but very few would like a statue of themselves made. I got as far as having a painting of me in a mayoral chain. I might post it one day!
  • DjayMDjayM Posts: 21
    Worth it ?

    Yup

    In spades

    & if the remainiacs had accepted the decision given by the Electorate in June 2016, then all this angst might have been avoided. But they didn't, & so here we are. But make no mistake, any shit that's coming down the track will be on their account, not the people who voted to Leave the EU.
This discussion has been closed.